Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Nov. 8, 1918, edition 1 / Page 4
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j .—u — i-i -u -* ■ |^' Your boy comes stumb- ~ ling* out of the battle-line—- \ y*{J* He wants a place to rest, a place to get warm, a place to smoke and get a hot drink and hear | l> somebody talk United States. i fl # ,lO U A He sees a light ahead. It's a hut I ' ||| M i|l 141 . fflAT' Do you think he cares whether that hut Is run iff] r ) YOU by the Knights of Columbus or the Y. M. C. A., BIHT T I Jewish Welfare Board or the Salvation Army ? yj&S&S —" Not much! He knows what he wants and he I knows that he'll get it—whatever uniform the ™ T7 | folks inside happen to be wearing. a Your boy knows, what real democracy means. j WC 1 He's fighting to make it something bigger and J V 1 better and finer than it ever was before. He's the \ \^Li| world's greatest authority on democracy today. 4 -j WwKj J Take his word for it I 1 f J - * Keep the hut fires >|l / ll! ,• j burning! h ./ . HioifniomwiY "£u.W- ' » A hut is your fighter's home over there. It is '■* . 1 his store, his theatre, his church, his school and I his club. f 5; ———— j It is the place where he writes your letters. L k x , yA . 4__ • _ y . % fii, Why you should give twice as « It is the place where he reads his books and much as you ever gave before! magazines, where he and his friends get around a Sir /• , i. . , , u P,,; The need is for a sum 70% greater than any gift ever piano and Sing or listen to a phonograph. ■ asked for since tlie world began. The Government tuw _ . , . 11 ,i • _j ri?'; fixed this sum at $170,500,000. It is the place where all the movies are given, r . . „ * _ ° ' criife -■ By giving to these seven organizations all at once, the and the concerts and the minstrel shows and 4 r f cost and effort of six additional campaigns id saved. vaudeville. Often it is the only place within reach || that is dry and light and warm and clean. » , . 3600 Rpcreutlon Building A hut may be a shed or tent or a fine old ►' : *>* too Leading stage stars. chateau or a hotel. Sometimes, at the front, it's h t just a battered little shack-the only building left | S.ooSWSS Standing in town. j, Millions of dollars of home comforts On the fighting line, its just a board laid across \ U Sch£ two boxes with a sign nailed to a tree. V i«1 zations every step of the way from home to the front and a £ J) back again. You provide him with a church, a theatre, The sign doesn't matter —it's what the hut ' a cheerful home, a store, a an athletic & £ hi field and a knowledge that the folks back home are with gives your fighter. him, heart and soul I S» 7 You have loaned your money to supply their physical Back up these seven organizations without \] r. > needs, thought of race or creed, because your boy knows , & : ' wJt° W **** *° mamtam the Morale that 13 winnin * that he is always welcome everywhere, and he * [_ J needs them aIL ' J UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN |l[ J NATI CATHOLIC wa C*S\ MM g Mr " 1b..: Ai> : \ !:l •' ». ' This Advertisement Contributed To The United War Work Campaign By i iIiTENBERG & ABLER / & Williamston's Shopping Center. Next to Biggs drug store
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 8, 1918, edition 1
4
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