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Show Red Cross Home Service Section ' ;EnHsted Man: Bo you know about government war risk insurance? Do you know about allotments and allowances? . Do you know that the Home Service Ser-vice Section ot the Red Cross stands ready to answer these questions for you, or any other questions that iave to do with Insurance, allotments, allot-ments, allowances and compensations? compensa-tions? v Before you go, put us in touch with your families. We shall be glad to do anything in our power to nerve' them. We shall be glad to keep them Informed on any matters connected with the service and to answer any inquiries. All Information is confidential. Make use of us. - Red Cross Home Service Section, Mrs. J. A. Hendrlckson, Secretary. t 39 North Main Street, Logan, Utah "Why let the American soldier carry the burden of home worries when the Red Cross Home Service stands ready to relieve him?" The idea of Home Service has gen- I orally been considered as a relief ; - merely trom financial worries; but ' it is not for that alone. It. is for vl the relief from worries caused by '.I our dear ones away whether in the I I family of the very poor or the mll-fl mll-fl , llonalre; If the boy Is away the heart ' aches there, let the Home Service help you to carry your burden. i Let but one man become dlscour-,1 dlscour-,1 W aged, let but one man worry and he will become a drain upon the vital-'I vital-'I ity of all those who are fighting '. near him. That Is why the soldier with a buoyancy ot spirit Is more i valuable to a regiment than a squad H of sharpshooters. That, moreover, ' is why the Red Cross Is one ot the I most important factors in winning , M the war, for it is the knowledge that I all is well this side of the trenches, - In the United States, that encourages I a man to tight with the best he has in .him. Falling that knowledge ' he will know only anxiety, and will . c -Mi- ggB At Vi 4 lose the spirit ot victory. The most vulnerable part of the Army or the Navy, therefore, Is thousands thou-sands ot miles from the submarine zone or the trenches. It Is in the homes of our soldiers and sailors. Only If all Is well with the mother, moth-er, the wife, the children, tho sisters, sis-ters, and brothers, can tho man In tho service go forward, with the fullest assurance. With his family under the care of the Red Cross ho could devote undivided energy to the task boforo htm. |