Evening Star Newspaper, April 24, 1921, Page 70

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.—ROTOGRAVURE SECTION - APRIL 24, 1921, 4 i L} N\ 4 oA The first telephone message to Cuba, with President Harding at the Washington end of the line and the President of Cuba at the other. Members of the diplomatic staff, government officials and others heard tlie reply over individual phones. Left to right: Col. Carty. J. K. Wainright, assistant secretary of war; Gen. Pershing, Dr. Carlos M. de Cespedes, Cuban minister; President Harding, Dr. L. S. Rowe, Secretary Hughes, Secretary Mellon, Undersecretarv Henry P. Fletcher, Commissioner Rudolph and Avery Marks. : Campaign for $50,000 to Continue and Expand Work of Instructive Visiting Nurse Society Begins Tomorrow Women who dircct work of the Instructive Visiting Nurse So- ciety, the officers and members of board of managers. The society was organized twenty years ago. Left to right: Mrs. W. C. Eustis, Mrs. Herbert Hoover, Mrs. G. Brown-Miller, Mrs. W. H. Wilmer. Miss E. O. Adams, Mrs. Whitman Cross. Mrs. John Newbold, Miss L Farrar-Smith and Mrs. Corcoran Thom. Back row: Mrs. Adolph C Mrs. Ada S. Hoffman, field supervisor of nurses of the Instructive Miller, Mrs. F. A. Delano, Mrs. Clarence Wilson, Mrs. R. S. Huide- Visiting Nurse Society, at her desk in the headquarters on the third i - . koper, Mrs. G. ]J. Rowcliff. Miss Sophie Sweet, Mrs. Charles Gold- floor of 1413 G street northwest. She directs fifteen nurses working 2 f smith and Mrs. R. M. Kauffmann. in nine “nursing districts.” i T / Part of the staff of nurses, the women whose work is caring for the sick who are not in Washington hospitals. They made 32.416 visits last year. Standing. left to right: Miss Isabell Buckey., Mrs. Nannie Davis, Miss Martha Pace, Mrs. Ella Prescott, Mrs. Margaret Mattos, Miss Margaret Mowbray and Mrs. Lula Hess. Sitting, from left to right: Mrs. Ada S. Hoffman, Miss Daisy Smith, Mrs. Hazel Bachschmid and Mrs. Marie Owens. The other nurses of the staff were too busy on “cases” to get in the picture. A competent nurse of the society gives electric treatment to an elderly patient who is troubled with rheumatic pains. — ture taken in a Schott alley home, not far from the Senate office ing. The child received treatment from a visiting nurse three es daily for an ear trouble Mrs. Nannie Davis, the nurse, 1s saving this infant's sight M e L T trouble had reached a critical stage when the Instrucuve sen Ll B =EEYo B2 - g : - Wi an SNussciSocieliwasicatlediupongandith eicilldp i chE }’i}ruué\c'lVb'“‘mL {i:ne— 'bdm(l}f‘y{);l:,myk,l:sxl::n;c?\l:;): st A bruise received at play made this fourtecnvycur:old girl an invalid for a year. Mrs. was saved ‘ BERE AL S s i ) : Maric Owens, District nurse, is bandaging the child’s leg after dressing it—typical work of the workers of the Instructive Visiting Nurse Society.

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