- Founded on "Salt of the Earth," the famous "Saturday Evening Post" story by George Wessson (original poster)
- So they pitied him, a blind soldier, and blindly went their ways (original ad)
- And at a cabaret that night, they saw a girl dancing - just a chorus girl with the love of her kind for the gladness and glitter of life (original ad)
- Yet how little they saw! That soldier had gone blind to save a comrade's life; that dancing girl had seen him with the eyes of her soul, and, sacrificing more than they could dream, had loved him! (original ad)
- With eyes of the world the world saw him, a blind soldier; called him a hero-and passed on. But she saw him with eyes of the soul- a wonderful story. (Print Ad-Enquirer And Evening News, ((Battle Creek, Mich.)) 4 May 1919)
- In No Man's Land he had given his best and now his world was dark. And at a cabaret they saw a girl dancing. Yet how little they saw! That soldier had gone blind to save a comrade's life. That dancing girl had seen him with the eyes of her soul and sacrificing more than they could dream had loved him. What happened after that will pull at your heart strings and you will love the whole world better after seeing this splendid picture. (Print Ad- Jamestown Evening Journal, ((Jamestown, NY)) 13 August 1919)
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