PAGE SIX . THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1918. " ' ' "Gee! but it's nice to see a girl like i von IT was In a hut at one of the training schools frT France."! He was, a non-commissioned officer. He had been in France for eight months, and now was back from the front as an instructor. He hadn't seen a girl of his own kind, a girl like his sisters, for weeks. And there she stood behind the canteen counter in this big, roomy, comfortable hut He bought a bar of chocolate. Then he drifted over to the group around the piano. . presently he went back to the canteen for a package of cigarettes. He strolled to the reading table and leafed over a magazine. Again he returned this time for a cake of soap and some tooth-pasta For a moment the rush at the canteen was over. He loitered at the counter and looked at the girl. She smiled. So did he. Then he blurted out what he had been trying to say for 20 minutes: "Gee! but it's nice to see a girl like you!" There are girls like that all over France in camps, in towns, in the big cities even at the front itselt They are serving the canteens, Why you should give- twice as much as you ever gave before f The need Is for a sum 70 greater than any gift ever asked for since 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 2500 Libraries supplying 5.000,000 books 65 Hostess Houses 15.000 Big-brother "secretaries" Millions of dollars of home comforts When you give double, you make sure that every fighter has the cheer and comforts of these seven organizations 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 club and an athletic field and a knowledge that the folks back home are with him, heart and soul I You have loaned your money to supply .their physical needs. Mow give to maintain the Morale that is winning the wart 1000 Miles of Movie Film 100 Leading Stage Stars 2000 Athletic Directors running restaurants, handing out hot chocolate or cotiee, pies and doughnuts. They are giving the huts a look of home putting bright curtains at the windows, posters on the walls, making flower-gardens at the doors. They are mending for the soldiers. But, most of all, they are just being there! They talk about the things that sound like home. Perhaps they know the very towns and streets and girls. that these boys know. They bind together home and France! They' are the girls beside the men behind the guns! Without the organizations whose uniforms they wear, these girls could accomplish nothing. However eager to nelp, they could not even travel as individuals. But with the backing of these established, rec ognized and regulated bodies, they can work wonders. When you think of war as a brutalizing force, think of Ameri can womanhood work ing with the soldiers in this war then give, to support the organiza tions which make this possible. UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN 'Vine, (WOt, ff yiSSS.- ' vw -V ' C0 (Taj