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! See. ee fae ee ee ee eG ea } i] { ) | \ | % FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1928. THE SEATTLE STAR —+—School Pupils, Notice! All the boys and girls in every public school in Seattle, as they leave their respective rooms today, will be handed Community Fund pledge cards with instruc- tions to deliver them to their parents. Teachers will tell you briefly the purpose of the card, but we ask you to read it carefully, and not fail to carry it home. Read it again to Father or Mother. Ask them to explain the Community Fund to you. Have them tell you all about the many motherless or fatherless children that are cared for and fed. The orphans and old people, the sick and the blind who are wholly dependent upon the Community Fund for shelter and uplift. Ask Daddy and Mother how much they can spare for the needy folks who do not have the comforts you enjoy. Ask them to give what they can, sign the card and let you drop it in the mail box. A little blue and white button that reads “I Have Given” will be sent ~ back to you, together with a sign to put in your window. All of which means that you, too, have helped in a wonderful cause, have brought sunshine and happiness into the lives of those less fortunate than you and me. If your parents have already given to the Community Fund, ask them how much, write the amount on the card and mail it. Whatever amount you pledge can be paid in a lump sum or a portion of it each month, quarterly, or each six months. A dollar a month—twelve dollars a year—ought to be easy to spare for welfare. Let’s Prove Seattle Has a Heart SEATTLE COMMUNITY FUND