Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Ontario Argus. (Ontario, Or.) 1???-1947 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1918)
f! -, THKONTAMI ARtlCH, ONTAKJO. OHHOON. Till Itln NOV W. j " Tl 9ftU KOHItSDMftV VAW i 0 t 1 I l I 1 I I i I I Rader 5ros. k Co iMjf Why you should give twice as much as you ever gave before! The need is for u sum 70 greater than any gift ever atked for sine the world began. The Government has fixed this sum at $170,500,000. By giving to these seven organizations all at once, the cost and effort of six additional campaigns Is saved. Unless Americans do give twice as much as ever before, our soldiers and sailors may not enjoy during 1919 their: 3600 Recreation Buildings 1000 Miles of Movie Film 100 Leading Stags Stars 2000 Athletic Directors 2500 Libraries supplying 5,000,000 books 15,000 Big-brother Milliut of dollars of home comforts Whn vnu oriv rVMihU vou make sura that ferhtar Km th chr and comforts of these seven orsrani- sations every step of the way from home to the front and back again. You provide him with a church, a theatre, a cheerful home, a store, a school, a chib and an athletic field and a knowledge that the folks back home are wfch him, heart and soul! You have loaned your money to supply their physical MB, Now gfve to i 1 the Morale that is winning the 1 Your boy comes stumb ling out of the battle-line He wants a place to rest, a place to get warm, a place to smoke and get a hot drink and hear somebody talk United States. He sees a light ahead. It's a hut I Do you think he cares whether that hut is run by the Knights of Columbus or the Y. M. C. A Jewish Welfare Board or the Salvation Army? Not much! He knows what he wants and he knows that hell get it whatever uniform the folks inside happen to be wearing. Your boy knows what real democracy means. He's fighting to make it something bigger and better and finer than it ever was before. He's the world's greatest authority on democracy today. Take his word for it I Keep the hut fires burning! A hut is your fighter's home over there. It is his store, his theatre, his church, his school and his club. It is the place where he writes your letters. It is the place where he reads his books and magazines, where he and his friends get around a piano and sing cr listen to a phonograph. It is the place where all the movies are given, and the concerts and the minstrel shows and vaudeville. Often, it is the only place within reach that is dry and light and warm and clean. A hut may be a shed or tent or a fine old chateau or a hotel. Sometimes, at the front, it's just a" battered little shack -the only building left standing in town On the fighting line, it's just a board laid across two boxes with a sign nailed to a tree. The sign doesn't matter it's what the hut gives your fighter. Back up these seven organizations without thought of race or creed, because your boy knows that he is always welcome everywhere, and he needs them alL UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN St 1 TsWXiXsarf MftVwMaiiirSwNTamTsfi TsT aw x 11 HATX catmouc wab m . Bgj-.. JjmTaV, m fiV 2L jx I aw QataafaaHJMflT'Y aaaVasBWla arsV TT Kr S 1 sf V taaLSI - aaunarsMi east M sJf Alexander Co.