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AUX \ pe mS : \| MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1918 . ° i \ \y \P A\\\ \\ \ gAN \S AY . oung American Soldiers VC bal i.) | TD me! |Nurses’ Work Under Fire Should Marry Sweethearts = saint Proves American Women Before Sailing to France”| Which Type of Beauty As Heroic as Our Men “And All Old Maids and Old Bachelors of Means ae : oa Ee } |Miss Julia C. Stimson, Chief of American Red Crosa © Should Endow All Such War Marriages,” Says Ss : Be en Nursing Service in France, Gives Instances That | Maria Thompson Daviess, Author of Love Stories, Prove Our Girls Who Are Serving “Over There’’, we Re S “MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 ‘ : Are Giving We Shining E. le of Splendi Who Offers First Constructive Suggestion for Will the American soldier in France wait | ‘ies tect id —e © a | &dmsurance Against American Girls Having to i ite | nd ihes i . 2 g ican rls 9 j until his homecoming and choose his wife || ‘ Yield to Young French Women Their Right to from among American girls, whose beauty | \ Win American Husbands After the War. finds its highest expression in Maxine ' P By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. t 4 Elliott, star of the American stage — : Copyright, 1018, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World) k x ‘ 66] VERY young man who goes overseas to fight for America should Or, will he succumb to the charms of be married to an American girl before he sails. This country . a & a needs all the war babies it can produce, and if their parents |}. 7) >) some French girl of the type moulded to its } @annot take care of them other persons should do so.” That is bow Maria Thompson Daviess, author of “The Melting of Molly,” “The Golden Bird” and other charming and popular love stories, Would dea) with the proposal to marry off our young men in khaki to | Brench girls and scttle them and their children under the Tricolor. i ‘The possibility of such war unions between Americans and French ba geems to please the latter mightily, and so far as I have discussed {t with * Tepresentative Americans, seems equally DISpleasing to them. But of all ‘the les Miss Daviess has offered the only constructive suggestion, the only {nsurance against the fires of romance which propinquity and home- ‘Sitk bachelorhood may set blazing on French sot). Hi Pa perfection in Mme. Marguerite Carre, of the | | Opera Comique, the reigning French beauty [| j 1 ‘ ‘ he or she needs. Somebody ought to |step forward ready to place in the bank a sum sufficient to take care of the little war baby which may be the result of the war wedding of a boy and girl who are poor in money |but rich in health and devotion, If | the father returns before the money is all used up, it may be returned to the donor or applied to the future jeducation of the child. “Every girl who has money enough ! to tnke care of herself and a baby! |should consider it her patriotic duty | to fall in love with some nice, alean, |strong young man tn our military forces and to become his wife before he leaves the country. The economte- ally independent woman tn love with a soldier who dodges a war marriage | Mot that Miss Daviess loves France | !* cowardly and @ slacker.” Eiieek Gut that she loves Ameria more. ‘Of course, if our men were mar- ried to American girls before they ‘Phere is much that she would do for! sasieg they could not marry French AMERICAN NURSES’ DIVISION IN The Fi PARAS IN PARIS week Mallat By Helen H. Hoffman. Copyright, 1918, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Brening Worl.) ARIS, Aug. 15..—“There is no sex in heroism. Every day activities P in the war zone prove that women possess courage of a degree equally as fine as that of our men.” ‘ 1 | None of the many American women who have been rendering splendid service here for the past two or three years is perhaps better qualified to discuss the subject of the heroic work of women in the danger zone than Miss Julla C. Stimson, Chief of the American Red Cross Nursing Service in France, A St. Louis girl, her work radiates that tremendous energy4 ,j | that {8 always somehow associated with the people of the Middle West! States. However, Miss Stimson received her final nursing education at {the New York Hospital, where she spent three years. I saw Miss Stimson at her Red Cross headquarters upon return from an inspection trip to several hospitals near the front “There is no in heroism," re-@———————_—_________| | Miss JULIA STIMSON, Chief Nurse, LEADING The | | | Fearne area ogee Koo Pete 28 y peated Miss mson. “Under the! "~ ‘and des + the tana of Lafayette; in fact, whe ts later on,” I observed. 7 most harrowing circumstances women | Me hoteee and qhliatee most actively affliated with Miss| “Exactly!” exclaimed Miss Daviess, have shown a magnificent courage. | street with debris, this young nurse, é (Amne Morgan's Committee for the] triumphantly, ‘And wo need the chil- “Only recently, I had occasion to |‘? the mitch darkne 8 of ight, went ! ie dren of the four million fine men visit a hospital near the front, where rk an ‘ “Reliet of Devastated France, and great anxiety to s those boys with the frst royalties from “The whom we are to send to the front. |@ group of young nurses were em-| were safe 5 rt t ime | Golden Bira”—which is an actual| Think what contribution to the wel- | Ployed. Their services were needed, | belied her to take a risk ‘e . a * e Al he shell stth-; ‘ [pains chicken and brother of the|fare of the country would be two and they were plunged into this work ol ao © | Upon their arrival tn France without | so; Preliminaries or any sort of| he gradual acquaintance with the work |! . of caring for the freshly wounded. | 8"! wich he - ‘ | When she found that t! “What I saw of their work,” said) injured by the bomt @ampion e—she plans| MilMon youngsters, each of whom t buy Sir dRor engaged ns he ‘on | Could call one of these heroes ‘father, Wrench farms. “We'll give them| It’s all very well to adopt French and c ) @Bickens, cows, kitchenware, shevs—| Belgian war babies, as so many of us everything almost that they necd—|have done in the past few years, but This determination inspired wi over piles of brick and came to the r patients, Yy were un- he bombardment, her joy Tet, tt you please, we'll keep our|Just now it's time to think about Miss Stimson, “made tho finest, most] was actually a personal matter. ‘ & tive husbands at home,” she| American war babies, bred of the inspiring picture of self sacrifice and A ee ae ert oe spirit : ia see. with smiling docision, in her| very best of our stock, physically, courage that one can imagine. ee ead thule Vins aa ‘Apartment at the National Arts Club, | mentally and morally, That's why I To illustrate the spirit of the| the ‘service they are ii ' ‘When she outlined her plan of mat-|say people with money should do f8 eis! v Maxine emart. women coming from the States for| Miss Stimson, "Pimonial insurance, taken out in| everything they can to further war] |!’ we ae ape nbent Miss Stimson told; eS Ly America, for our young soldiers, weddings, F Ohi aerate eee gernteit . ial - Kchaal usenet te th S Dinu : ip with twenty nurses to Cincinnati 3 Statue SS Wtery boy who goes over there} “Romance {s drawing together i ae ‘ he front on a recent occasion, | * foe ; ‘¢ ‘who is in love ought to be mar-| thousands of youngsters in uniform 3 Re : The procession of motor trucks of ‘‘Germania™” Made to the girl before bho leaves|and sweet little American girls. Let ssc Rabie th iti carrying the nurses and necessary | ae ghe said. “There aro quanti- this romance flower in the best possi- PReASe g0\ UnGeE way: 108 C8 Bo8>)| Into a “Columbia. ‘of war weddings, of course. Put ble way—a marriage, with possible . 66 2. e 99 Z Jo te ayeRIOR( he aaa. Mare nov as many aa there ousht children fully protected againat want. L isten to ucile .Feached the town in which | $0 be, Secause lots of little girls are|Why should our soldiers repopulate the lines, the village was in suc | | Java, and while I’m getting "em he] the new nurses wov 'g) Dre 3| Right, and volu |Slips out. Pretty soon he returns) /: ery one of the “‘Ig the Irish stew any good?’ Result Contracted the Retreating Habit. REHDRICH WILHELM VICTOR | and old J. Caesar, Also Pa provided ERMANIA—Chip, chip, chip, chip’ Columbia, ‘That's what has “No. ‘There's one more anyway. “It was yesterday, but I gue: t nty nur didn't sleep last night because it's] With a newspaper, ‘and justifiably afraid of re-| France? Let them repopulate Amer- weer is ; u . ee . solute blackness that it was i ‘ BUN cay cons to then | tea? “This New 1845 Draft Law’’ Is Served by the Conversational Waitress to the Friendly sible to read the signa in the streets 4 rh, : : : a er eve: 0 ee 2 | ier are earning their own living;| “And let this suggestion of the at- Patron Along With His ‘Ham and’’, ‘There’s Something in Both Love and War roud, ‘The hospital, when wo arrived, ‘Mikel: ember’ of | traction our men have for the French 4 sy : was in complete darkn' ‘6 drove | ERECT co sno can help them.| iris be a timely warning to our own That Makes a Newcomer in Eyether Forget His Appetite,” She Preambles, Then Into the courtyard of what we could » 2 7 ” 2 ,, : "y * : . make out was & building made © } bs well. But, if one of theso girls| xpung women, sade ae Daviess, Spins the Yarn of the “Regular Victim’”’ of the Destructive Appetite Which De- Uhree fides “of a quadrangle. Some @ soldier lover and her little|in conclusion. “French women are elbgr zs : ; voices were heard and some peoplo i comes isi the world while its] proverbially fascinating. If you are veloped Flat Wheels, and Whose Chilly Feet She Warmed to War Fever by Methods "By ue 1H Mine senile d Miss } Er pc] PAL el dante arsed baiedearg rival Peculiarly Original. Stimson, “the siren was sounding and somewhere in France, how] forget to write him plenty of letters j cine wars booming, ‘The purses gam the girl mother both take care|and send him all the comforts you By BIDE DUDLEY were hurried across @ cloister-like } SE her bahy and carn its living and|are permitted to ship, Make very] Garnrieht, 20:8, ty Tue Proms Putiiahing Co, ) peared a lot of our best citizens, 60] “I don't want to go to war,’ he] my system you want to contammany pereiden, iat & vit BIAE een pee own? sure that he knows he is appreciated HEY Bes Raber Teate the |t? chatter, Just this morning one| says. ‘I'm a man of peace.’ me again?” It sure was some dra- e for them to stay ou ppen, War marriages ought to be en-/at home—then he won't go looking | 66 : a cike Mepis comes in here and fre-empts a stool,| ‘All right, 1 says. ‘Why not have| matic moment.’ It impossible to see the faces of by every old maid or old|for appreciation from some pretty Waltress, as the Friendly ooking like the last sad rites. It was a plece of roast beef? It's terrible} “ ‘Jimmy had good sense,’ says the He people who. wale Spenklog, and who has more money thin|little daughter of France.” Patron launched an offen-|the way he acted that put this line, to-day, | scared man. ‘Say, I wish I could eat} lowed. { e sive against a fly on his bald head, | of dialogue into my steeple, “ ,’ he says very disconsolate.) like those guys in the army.’ i “Oaee soctriolty Rot we her, me | “ ¢Yan" n had been rendered c » he pl H B Yl g h t B oO y s F “that all's fair in love and war, but| “‘Morning, Mr. Sad!’ I says with| ‘How's the hash? You'll be doing it in a couple of} My uy's bomb: ment, ahd opera Fs ‘ ary . . , g| “rey ell,’ say: hs, you lucky dog!’ I says, tions had been carried on the é ' that isn't the only similitude be-|a merry, cute little smile, me being It's far from well, I says, ‘The; months, 3 ; on the | Crown Prince F. W. V. A. 5. Hohensotiern Made Bis First “ ef re pe ities.” sa npr —— last man who tried it went outside| ‘He actually grins, Then he or|vefore by light of hand f ween those two calamities, ; | / : 7 Military Blunder When a Mere Lad and as a i acim apa Good mo Jand took a punch at a chauffeur’ | ders a piece of cake and a cup of | "1: Was stated that at least « = there’ mething both love red, As the trucks containing the ‘ . (QWGUSTE ERNEST HOHEN-|a wonderful sot of lead soldiers which) Wee's Something tn Both love and eryoghil Je bad fe ‘Look! he says, pointing at an|lurcage Id not arrived, the nurses hap} © the goddess of the s, e - 1 1 , ower i eye- ; very ly day - . t ‘ork i thelr lue serge | Poches n ns nee co any OULERN, Not-Quite-the-}could be passed in review all over] War that makes a newcomer in eye ry = i oT me Ot an} went to work in ‘ance’ company Highest of Ger-|the nursery floor. ther forget his appetite. It's a note Any white bread item, ‘this paper says they'll begin} grosses building in Cincinnati, and, unlike the “*No, and the sugar's out.” ing the morning there was th, 4 many, did not have] This Crown Prince was to be - * | | are 4. | Statue of Frederick the Great, which synonym that a man in love can save Hes peta’ b ere on ever : Fe 2 a hand in picking! humdinger or Pa Hohenzollern wouta | °?"°"¥ | ‘Oh, gosh!’ he sighs. ‘Where can} number of patients w ated | has merely been rolled wp and stored the names bi! know the reason why a lot of money on his board pro- I get something fit to eat?’ and others were ad 1. Nurses] away in a basement in Washington, proud Pa and Ma] But one day Freddy, &c., deep in a] viding he's living a la carte, It's a “There was my big chance, ‘In were put in charge of wards and in| the figure will be Columbia for all a short time everything was running smoothly, Boxes of supplies opened and equipment of all wished on him May 1882, If he campaign for the capture and plund- ering of the nursery cookey box—or always in favor of ditching old) ihe army,’ I eing out. ‘They're fecd- Gloom If I can. ‘Why all the dlue-| ing the boys in crack! like as if they time, The sculptors were so patri- otic that they even imparted a benign case of when love files tn at the window baked beans fly out. Get me, had there would] its German equivalent—fired a slug nes: i , distributed expression to the face of the old figure have been @ Cyril| from his toy cannon through the wall] Commodore?” EPR ee eer or ME fa peri yen eo eck number of the members ot the land it stands there as a aymbol ot or a Cedric or] of the nursery and smack into the] “Yes, indeed!” ‘aa atl od wa th hs be Oh OF, 28 HASTE some Praise cannot be ‘given, were fiying| the liberty for which many Cineinnats wome sweet-violet] study where Pa sat writing @ piece| 7 , ‘ interest. ‘So I ‘hear,’ he says. ‘They ppout on all kinds of errands, Some| Young men (and there are Schmidts cognomen ‘ike that] for ‘the paper on ‘How J Love Peace.” ‘Well, war hits ‘em the same way| draft thing sure. My health’s all) tel! me the soldiers get the very best | made beds, some went for food in|and Schultzes and Kipps among mixed in the! Pa charged into the nurs it they've got a dislike for going to| Tight, I guess. | food the country has got.’ their automobile trucks and others | thom) are fight for overseas, The string. However,| blood in his eye and a strap ta his|Scraphank, or whorever it is, to be| “Once more I grew merry. ‘Do| hey told you a forkful,’ I says.|calling us guys in Iess'n @ inonth | ye toh work the members of | LEUre of Germania was erected many iy, &c., staggered through an] hand Freddy, &c., was hastily crawl-|mouided into a Kaiserchaser. The| you have to guess at your health?’|«why, listen, A month ago Jimmy | Hurrah!’ janis unit has been doing for days," | Contre of colonizuion for many feu iting childhood without benefit| ing under the trundle bed, draft hits that ind of a man an aw-|I ask. ‘How about you and me pes-| peters, a bus boy here, got tangled] “And that’s that,” concluded Lu-| id Mim Stimson, ‘has been beyond | tons why their homes in Gers & pre-Raphaelite handle. “My right flank is threatened; my|¢ul wallop in the appetite. Of course, | tering the funny old chef a little?’ ar initeeidar aad ment col cemnl isla braiao. ‘Their work ie ro has been of many, With tho, way et American Precocious lad Like all the/left flank is in danger. I am execut- after the fellow gets to ‘hay-foot, “*Not hungry!’ he says. In two weeks he’ gained sixteen —— + ~<e -- “In this connection I should like to} however, tha aaae Macaca Rate ollern crowd was Freddy, &c. know—quick to learn and all Pa Hohengoliern wanted his n the soldiering trade, for ing @ strategic retreat,” chirped the cute little fellow, Py JEWS SPREAD OVER UJ, S. _¢ome in handy some time,|gN the United States there are 111 ® the boy books to read cities each of which has more = of 014} % than 1,000 Jewtsh Inhahirn straw-footing’ down at the soldier| “Now, he was a regular victim, and| pounds, Just think of that! Six-| NEW YORK, TAKE NOTICE. | mention what I consider real hero. | organixations that retained any sem- ism on the part of a young volui r)blance of Teutonic influence or cus- factory, he begins to eat like the/ his appetite in the hitherto had al:| teen pounds after him being starved ONDON has not always been am-| nurse at a nearby hospital, Only al toms, the owners of the Cincinnatl hired man, Jerry, after milking} ways been very destructive, around here by this stuff we slip you |e bitious for great size. In the short dimtance fom ies pen on building engaged several sculptors to forty-two cows. But the first hunch| “Aw, come on!’ I says. ‘Start the| unfortunates. The other day he come wixteenth century @ law to re- pet pe panially ype I + pone 4c LAY EmAnie UAL ahe became that he's got to go sure puts food] old grinders going. You ain't wor-|in here, and ‘when the boss offered | strict the city's growth was passed. | iis hospital were several American | worked under a heavy curtain bear. {nto the repulsation class for him, | ried like that about the draft, are| him maal ho eaya: “What—mot) it forbade the erection of bulldings| patients, who had been part of her| ing an American flag. ‘Thetr work ‘adn pt AMAR AxOLS JAM Roa are | our in Aster wating wi} shat anlean On a8] .2 Sam gas “OS SSNS Aleta ator she Dome ca lls Gimwiia,"* "58 8 Race OAL i Z is Gaeta les, ENE EE ee ESSN IPG NMRA! IRS ASTER SEES LS I 7 CE A OTE A