FRIDAY EVENING, HAHRD9BURG t&S&L fc TELEGRAM MAY 2, 1919. Thousands of parents, wives and friends can / \ not get to New York to see their boys land \ \ yet all are anxious to know how the boys feel; dMHBi JS/Rl,\ \ what they say; how they act; what are their %||p home-coming thoughts; how they are handled. So Edna Ferber went on one of the big trans ~ ports, talked with the boys and rode from the] dock with them. You feel you are with our "fr' hoys: she makes you see the picture. V "Honest, Folks: .->^/BafS -No Medicine: They're Doin' • Nothin' For Me" That's what our wounded boys write home. Is it true? We have Wmii the right to know. Every father and mother who has a wounded N boy in hospital here or over there: every parent whose boy may get sick over there: every citizen who has the interest - of our brave boys at heart should know. Here is the story not from hearsay, but direct from the source. " , / 3cu<rnaj({_ Over Two Million Copies 15 cents THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA^ 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers