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: he yg Set! Sapper padi ss ih q gate By bet yi Nate y Med hashes”. THE EVENING WORLD, WEpwEspay, , NOVEMBER 13, 1918, es Sallead D 4 . | cét, but only one much parcel ean fe is | be went to the same individual, “Upon approval of suck requeet, B the Red Cross will furnish the | eaut y sender a carton of the prescribed FAR elve (3 inches by 4 inches by 9 | eae firs wh iecl treed j in which to inolose the | Cayes x the Cheeks and Ruins | jes to be mailed, When Med, the Complezion. How to | arton must be returned un- Get Kid of Dyspepsia. | } sealed and unwrapped to the | } wot recelving station, dosige | by the Red Cross for in- | a | sakes |Red Cross Will Receive One| Parcel for Each Man and Woman on Duty Overseas. iz that the. | howing dr texto Bs se eon Inspected and | I mali twon or be. { Wk (except in | 1 and Porto Rico, raveels will be » and tueluding | ‘ | spection, wrapping, addressing, | aifixing of stampa, do, under the | | supervision of the Red’ Cross, The | parcel must be left at the fed oss recelving station, which will ng of the oix| ns in Man- | yevterday to | ered tv then *@he Most Beautiful Cur in America Tablets if You Want Digestive troublen r ne sour, ferm: the blood, draw the’ rob you of Gry, haggar, Meraing and you hot what you oat tion that hurts. fod let Stuart's Dye in | “Take My Advice and Use Stuart s,Drmensa| : eee | idiers continue to | iy ‘ | @ time Hmit for re- | 8 is November 20, but at those who Intend to ) i not delay until the laa: re, as this might interfere siy with the eucceasful distri- f the parcels abroad. The} n of pence, It was stated, | ep. BiY tn, tt ta] eens, the ment ni Now for Peace food, tone your ver ‘ vill have no effect on the arrange: with nourishment Vora : ned | «s for sending the parcels to @ healthy appearance « 1 : @oon return. Get a Btuart’s Dyspepsia Tab tore, They are real hei n Red Cross has noth. With (ife distribution of the When the filled parvel is re- turned to the purvel station 1t {9 ine | od States of the | spected by Red Cross officials, sealed | t ie ts ees OO | propos 4 desires to | und stamped, and then delivered to | the nearest “LET’S GO!” an, ee held mae 0) ° as par. | the pustal authorities, Already sev- 7, Measeare affice F 9 : : eral thousand parcels have been 3 ' 5 passed on by the Red Cross parvel | a here. | it with our courage, our brains and our brawn. Now let us turn from War to the Work and Responsibilities of Peace. We Americans have a gigantic task before us. It is our job to clear away the wreckage of War, to rebuild and reorganize half the World. Let’s start this instant to do it—start with the calm confidence, the } ingenuity, the thoroughness, the resistlees erergy with which we started to Win the War. It was the great privilege of the Paige to stand shoulder to shoulder with scores of other great American Companies and fight, not in trench and turret, but beside lathe and drill-press. In this Hour of Fulfillment we wish to speak a word of apprecia- tion to those who have worked whole-heartedly with us, who have expressed gH their own red-blooded Americanism in a way to make our course and ac- ga complishment possible. The A glorious and e:.during Peace! And we and our Allies have won PRINCESS PAT | | We all had many difficult and weighty problems to solve. And yet, we realize, these War readjustments of business brought much graver uncertainty and greater privations to the 2,000 Paige Dealers throughout the world than they did to us. They were forced ¢ to make heroic sacrifices in order to save their undertakings, and their investments. They responded magnificently. We shall remember ihose Dealers and the way they met and passed the Test. Our service with the Colors has brought us a recompense, which lies, not only in the consciousness of having given our best to Uncle Sam and Victory, but actually, in the invaluable experience we have secured in meeting and solving the unpresedenied problems which War forced upon the resourceful men, the strong men, the indomitable men of American Mdustry. G | These Are Days of i So Many More Steps | Our engineers ¢.owded into the War Period years of priceless ex- perience, years of creative work. | We have learned new methods of manu- facture, new standards of precision, new tests of quality. Here is a shoe to help women. It has been called “The Army Shoe for Amer- ican Women.” But army shoes can’t have the graceful lincs of shoes de- signed for the smaller feet of women Weprefertocallitasioccupation-shoe— aget-things-done shoe, aidful to our voi- | We have built new factories, added vastly to our equipment, ex- i | unteer women-workers in the numerous { | panded our facilities tremendously. We were given by the War and War Work new Visions of the need of motor cars and motor trucks. And now that Peace has corne and the Markets of the World are re-opened to us—- we are prepared, ways they keep busy for their country, Ithasa restful street-arch, an attract- ive toe, anda military heel. Aservice- able heel makes every step Icss tiring in these days of somany moresteps. Letus show you how well it looks on your foot. The name Walk-Over means good choes the world over. Walk-Over Shoe Stores Vor’ Chip Paige Owners, Paige Dealers, Paige Patrons throughout the World, whose support and patience so long sustained us, will now find a Paige Company amazingly expanded in ide:! and physicel asset, in vision and fac- tory equipment—a Paige Company, noi merely of Detroit and U. S. A.— but a Paige Company of the World. PAIGE- DETROIT MOTOR | CAR COMPANY, DETROIT, U. 5. A. Beeodive Paige Detroit Co. of New York, 1886 Broadway, Tel, pair us 67 20. Paige Detroit Agency for Brooklyn, 1491 Bedford Ave., Tel. Prospect 5134, ‘MURDER WILL OUT; The Big Detective Story of the Year. FACT, NOT FICTION! NEXT SUNDAY WORLD, J