"-.1 rJY.f . --a Did one of these 200 letters come to you? A DUSTY courier slid cff his motor-cycle at the big double hut JrjL in a French town and tramped up to the canteen. "Got a note for the secretary from my commanding officer," h? r id. He handed a piece of paper across the counter to a smiling xniucie-aed man. This is the note the Secretary read: We landed here three days ago milesfiom anywhere. Can you send us some supplies, especially writing paper? This is the first chance the boys have had to write home and we have no paper to give theni. The older man looked up and grinned. "Got you away off in the woods, have they?" "I'll say they have!" "Can you carry anything?" "All you'll give me!" From the shelves the secretary took big packages of paper and envelopes. "Too much?" He asked. "It will be gone ten minutes after I get back I" said the boy. "Tonight," the secretary went on, "I'll drive out a truck with more supplies and a man to stay with you. And tell the boys that if their letters are finished, I'll bring them back with me tonight, and get them into the mails." An hour later that motor-cyclist whizzed into camp, loaded down with writing paper, and in ten minutes letters were being written to 200 American homes. Thu United War Work organizations know what letters mean to American soldiers. They know that fighters want to get letters and want to write letters. So in every hut and on every 5;hip your boys find writing paper, envelopes, ink, pens and pencils, and tables where they can get off by themselves and tell the folks back home how things aie going. Millions of sheets are given away free every week to American boys overseas. That is why the letters you get from ycur boy are written on the stationery of one of these organizations. It is one of the plans to bridge the Atlantic. Help keep the letters coming I Your dollars will supply a whole Company for several days. Dig dcop today; help to bind together France and here. Why you should give twice as much as you ever gave before ! The neci! is for a sum of 70fc greater than any gift ever asked fot since the world N-c.rfii. The Government has fixed this Sum at $170,500,000. My giv ing to these seven organizations all at ones, the cost and efl.irt of six ad. dir.Mial campaigns is saved. Unless Arm-mans do give twice as much as ever before, our soldiers and sailors may not enjoy during 1919 their i 3,n00 Recreation Buildings 2, Libraries supplying 5,000,000 books l.lHiO Miles of Movie Film H5 Hostess Houses ll'O Leading Huge Stsis .",i!0 Big-brother "secretaries" 1,000 Athletic Directors Millions of dollars of home comforts When you give double, you make sure that every fighter has the cheer and comforts of these seven oigani.ations every step of the way from home to the front and back again. You provide him wiih a church, a theatre, a cheerful home, a store, a school, a club and an athletic field and a knowledge that the folks buck home are with him, heart and son 1 1 Yi.u have loaned your money to supply their physical needs. Now give to maintain the Moiale that is winning the war I UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN . 7 llouit .1.a il.i;. i ill i:IA. N'nVKMl'.i:!: II l.is j zr OnEf" : : " w CAMP A,' IJ COMMUNITY btKVirC VI """""".'"-vict J A,rtN-,.,VAB, , l CAN L XAK 1 j OllAIIUN y V f . ""V" VVA ls lv.t,oN Av J jr L sUVAfivN Aft M V J Vjr V, ggr& k nH: When the Engine Stalls on Dead Mail's Curve! THEY climb nboard their loaded truck at sundown, fifteen miles behind the lines. They rumble through the w inding streets, out on the white road that leads to Germany I The man at the wheel used to be a broker in Philadelphia. Beside him sits tin accountant from Chicago. A news paper man from the P cinc Coast is the third. Now they all wear the uni form of one of these organizations. The road sweeps round a village and on a tree is nailed a sign: "Attention! L'Ennemi Vous Voit! The Enemy Sees You!" They glance fur up ahead and there, suspended in the evtning light, they see a Hun balloon. "Say, we can see him plain tonight!" murmurs the accountant from Chicago. "And don t forget." replies the Phila delphia broker, "that lie can see U3 just lis plain" The packing cases creak and groan, the truck plods on straight toward that hanging menace. They reach another village where heaps of stone stand under crumpled Walls. Then up they go, through the strange silence broken only when a great pro jectile inscribes its arc of sound far overhead. They reach a turn. They take it. They face a heavy incline. For half e mile it stretches and they know the Germans have the range of every inch cf it. The mountain over there is where the big Boches' guns are fired. This incline is their target. The three men on the truck bring up their gas masks to the alert, settle their steel helme ts closer on their heads. At first the camion holds its speed. Then it slackens off. The driver grabs his gear-shift, kicks out his clutch. The engine heaves and heaves and stalls! "Quick! Spin it!" calls the driver. The California journalist has jumped. He tugs at the big crank. "Wh-r-r-r-r-r-r-room!" The shell breaks fifty yards behind. Another digs a hole beside the road just on ahead. And then the engine comes to life. It crunches, groans and answers. Slowly, with maddening lack of haste, it rumbles on. UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN 5v 1 ( rrs sss-. -x "Wh-r-r-oom!" That one was close behind. The fragments of the shell are rattling on the truck. Now shells are falling, further back rlong the road. And the driver feels the summit as his wheels begin to pick up speed. Straight down a village street in which the buildings are only skeletons of buildings. He wheels into the court yard cf a great shell-torn chateau. "Well, you made it again I see!" says a smiling face under a tin hat a face that used to look out over a congrega tion in Rochester. "Yep!" says the driver glancing at his watch. "And we came up Dead Man's Curve in less than three minutes including one stall!" Later that night two American boys, fresh from the trenches bordering that shattered town, stumble up the stairs of the chateau, into a sandbagged room where the Rochester minister has his canteen. "Get any supplies tonight?" they ask. ' You bet I did !" is the answer, "What will you have?" "What's those? Canned peaches? Gimme some. Package of American cigarettes let's see an a cake of chocolate an' some of them cookies!" "Goshl" says the other youngster when his wants are filled. " What would we do without you?" You hear that up and down the front, a dozen times a night "What would we do without them?" Men and women in these organiza tions are risking their lives tonight to carry up supplies to the soldiers. Trucks and camionettes are creeping up as close as any transportation is permitted. From there these people are carrying up to the gun-nests, through woods, across open fields, into the trenches. The boys are being served wherever they go. Things to eat, things to read, things to smoke, are being carried up everywhere along the line. With new troops pouring into France, new supplies must be sent, more men and women by the hundreds must be enlisted. They are ready to give every thing. Will you give your dollars to help them help our men?