The evening world. Newspaper, February 15, 1919, Page 11

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~~" oS }+/ Y \ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1919 we Gain << 1) = AAW. 1 | | | Red Cross Flying Squadrons Gave 200 American Women Organized in Units b by Mi Miss Ruth Morgan for Quick| Despatch to Mobile Military Hospitals Where Need Was Most Urgent, They Soon Proved Use- fulness by Heroically Rising to Every Emergency Despite Hardships and Difficulties—Now They’ re Winging Their Way Home. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Copsricht, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World) HE feminine Flying Squadrons of the American Red Cross are wing- T ing their home, where an appreciative welcome should await them, For they are the two hundred Am many of/ them well known in New York—who, during the past year and a half, have been speeding dowr the long, long trail of war's wreckage and misery in France and establishing a Maison of American cheer and American spirit between our wounded doughboys and the French hospitals, to which many of them were taken The Flying Squadrons were organized a year ago last September by Mis# Ruth Morgan, niece of the late ican women J. P. Morgan and President of the Colony Club, but who has been serving in F as Director of the Nurses’ Bureau of the American Red Cr It was through her instrumentality that twé hundred American 1p) -hymanem Red Cross nurses and nurses’ aids were grouped in “wee toams to be sent “flying” over France in motor cars ch mobile, evacuation or diers, brigaded with tt military hospital wheré any French, had been sent. The F’ American sol- ing Squadrons bore with them me and food delicacies, but even more valua |to commit suicide, but they stopped less tangible, was their catwo of ¢ me by ling me Americans were American smiles and speech to omit wounded men, completely su Further down the corridor a soldier rounded by ney could not | ¥ un arm shot full of apnel understand 1 they w \ 1 during respite from his in Boch hospita delirium that Ar un nurses had “Ag soon as our armies were bri-|come to treat him. As they moved gaded with the French,” explained | toward his cot he murmured Miss Morgan, who has just returned | “So glad you found me! I'm lost, to her New York home in Washing- I'm lost, but the Red Cross ig finding ton Square, “a difficulty arose which |me. So glad! That alone, the ald had been unforeseen, Wounded and) in attendance said afterward, was dyimg American soldiers were being ; worth thq hurried trip that precluded placed in hospitais which were sleeping and eating for cighteen strange to them, and where they were | hours. not understood. Our men could not, The organization of the Flying coughed all night. and the Paris office of the Red Cross Under her direction were about two they planned the teams: push, when men e to them unasked fre 2 a group During a terrific of New York women, calling them- Wundred French-speaking American were b 1 in virtually in hordes, ves “Mrs. Daly's Unit since Mrs. urees and nurses’ aids, many of them Kmily Cross stayed with @ French | George N, Daly of New York headed well known in New York society. surgeon in the operating rooin of t t. In the dand par group cquipp case the throaty of they had been trapped by the Bi When the flying sau soldiers, they relieved physicians’ curative task.” ‘As goon as the flying rived at a hospital improvement boys’ condition was immediately ticed. In reality it cure a mental condition that stationed in a foreign hospital need ed, rather than medical at- tention, as physicians in all the have conceded that the French sur- | er geons surpass all others, | One nurse and her aid arriving at Belfort were greeted by an American patient as follow | My, I'm glad you came!" Then he | added, grimly: “I thought of trying = EVENING WORLD | PUZZLES. | assed men wh ng troops. How Our Navy Boys in France Celebrated News on Peace Day teams in the n ane was the these boys merely rmies | By Sam Loyd. | W’ wun ume! Potsdam Pirates, Shy On mics." Bunk, Decide To Call It “iat: End of Imperfect “Tag” SPECIAL T0 THE PILOT: On n width, nn . Pa a aE ‘© of we Paris, Nov. 11—Armistice signed at & counted 2 Each step iy eA a """ tom, Effective at 11 a.m. diay, 108k Bow Hep ai r HE Pauillac Pilot is a litte byt very live newspaper published . Pyramid? | by the officers and men of the ited States Naval Air Station Answer to Puzzle on the Ice, | at Pauillac, France. When news of the signing of the armistice ated the mile in] John must have 4 4 minutes to James's 10, being two and @ half times as. qui and allow- ing Jqpn to win by 6 minutes. was flashed to Pauillac the editors in true newspaper fashion rushed an extra to press with a first page result shown above in the photographed headlines, Often the Ameri- | speak French. The French staffs | Squadrons was managed by Miss Mor. | COUBICY MBB AY Me tue Mae | alk English, Somethin. o had 2 advantage of her| °° iat , soldi ene aed aes td stele 0 who: 7 rations, espe- ‘The French Service de Sante ap-| vice Bureau of Bellevue Hospital, and| ‘ ae Ai be hace a4 eats nt pealed to the American Red Cross. | by the chief nurse of the American Red cantata ih gin) Alice Fitzgerald, the Edith Caveti Miss Julia Stimson, who was| ‘sterul. Wh e Germans were nearin memorial nurse, and an American! also chief nurse of the American Ex-| - foes Cob amg ghd who had lived and travelled much peditionary Force and had been chief] (Ou Omi, | TuOe Una ie abroad and understood the F nurse with the British forces. Miss] ‘ : hospital system, was delegated to Stimson yperated with Dr, Bur- Gunaae Moose ten tor CAN ae make a liaison between Commandant linghame, acting chief surgeon of the}! | tients who could be left in their Verdi Kieber of the Service Sante American Red Cross, and together! 1 oita) even though unassisted. Ald ‘When the supervising physician of hospital two nights and a day with- |, MAAsseAlBy Ran Gran Gere a French hospital found America out relief, in ting the nature of| {imi Scott and Janet Fish and the boys in his wards ho would despatch the wounds de: on the medical | \igses Fowler, word to Paris, and immediately cards written by the English and! all through the drive th: ayed flying squadron would be sent to him, American doctors, Many other girls on at the hospital, stanchly caring ‘At the briefast notice the women in worked without complaint for| yor the wounded, undaunted by tae| the squadrons sped to any point 1M stretches of two days and a night.| approach of the Germans. There was France, often hurrying from one hos- Dorothy Cheney, Mary Hoyt an!) no delay in decorating the entire unit pital to another as the need for thoir Miss Barclay of New York all wer’! when it was cited for exceptional services at any given point was ‘l- especially com < Frenca , bravery, tensified. surgeons, At > ily, 8. George! stn gratitude for the service our “No one but the patients themselve? Munroe and Mrs, W. K. Vanderbilt | troops and our nurses rendered them wilt ever fully realize the tonic thes® trained many girls as flying aids, | French army surgeons doubled their women were,” said Miss Morgai.) Not only did the nurses and aids! zeal in treating our men in their “Men who had gone over the top, Who work with the physicians, but they hospita declared Mine Marwan: abe had become unconscious on the batt.é | stayed in the wardy all night, taking received many letters of commenda ground and were carried into A messages from the boys to be sent|tion for the Flying Squadrons from French hospital, woke out of their tg Red ‘Cross Headquarters and) prominent Fi h officials: and man sick faint fearing they had been thence home to their families in th peg tnd gga ths taken prisoner by the Germans. When state cooking eggs a GHINKAN | VARIA shaman (ORC Tha they found they could not under | over solidified alcohol lamps; pre- | which flew with the Red Cre stand the language, they were sw" | paring con saianili and honest aniinic ts HOMltaL Gahind the bet 4 3% be WY Ae N \ ea i AW Wi Gtr Se \\ \\ N Chance for Heroic Service Here’s Your Hat—Spring Is Hurrying | DISTINCTIVE TYPES OF MILLINERY OFFER WIDE RANGE OF CHOICE IN DESIGN TOQUE OF OLD BLUE PLUSH TRIMMED WITH NTWISTED SILK OF GRAY WOOL. e—__ tlon papers of candidates for matri- | — mony t i) ausing Adam to fal] inte @ Far too many intelligent and sup while Eve was made from posediy housebroken husbands and |t to mean merely that Adam wives are shockingly careless, if not | fell in love, and wh under the witty nd delightful as Hernard | distrust as Eve Shaw's comedies are they respon Men and women who marry without sible for this condition. Shaw has |love are like those red-blooded chile had the worst possible effect on {dren of natur ton having matrimonial manners as well aw on their teeth p at gas, with the relations of parents and chil-|the idea that t ire being strong dren, young men and matiens. jan 1 noble Ho has, in fact, corrupted all the| Their sufferings are their own fault, casual observances of the mo@ern| As for those who do take life with an family. In “The Philandere nd anaesthetic, some are made sick and “Man and Superman,” “Pygmalion,” | some are not, But no person has ever Misallian (ting Married,” | decided to have another tooth out just |“Wanny's First Play,” in some de- | because the first operation was not @ |ree in every comedy written by | success, yet we all know individuals \shaw, are evidences that the most|who take new second husbands and \diintillating of English dramatists| wives after divorcing thelr first \belie-es that men should be emanel-| mates AND SEMNMED. WITH Oe eae cone | pated from civility and women from| While under the influence of love OSTRICH PLUMES. everything else, © {nearly all husbands and wives have 4 | (Conyright, Underwood & Tderwood, } if such a condition should come] good manners, tt is after they have | © and the times are not with ered from the magic spell that | (cations that it may, the|selfishness and indifference cause & League of Matrimony might as well] relaxation of small coremonials, Sot wires Gneut PoLionas om OF TULLE, TRIMMED. shut up shop. For the most difficult| day some one will offer a prise Ol i‘ : PRECIOUS STONES. ¢ of soctul relations has been preserved,| $1,000 or more to he awarded to the so far, neither by law nor morals) husband who can allow hia wife to = ae — ~ = - a oe é but by good manners, a sense of pro- | complete anecdote without taking a . a 5 |portiog and a sense of humor. it away from her, and to the wife who Aviators Fought Death in Midair {inate tov mention the tenae of] han never been known 0 Ineerug humor, because persons who talk]her husband with the impatient ree } a ° ° ° |about it so rarely have any, Never-|mark: "No, that isn't the way it hap- From Ignited Bomb in Their Plane s\n waste ven’ Yotve eo i iene |who provide newspapers and divorce} me toll it | Half Conscious From Deadly Fumes, Their Plane Plunging Un- |ourta with 9 andal. sen nad women | Good raanners when they anole i 2 jwho know how to take a joke rare! S, are involuntary, ve | controlled, They Won, but Barely in Time to Save Themselves Jeall upon the courts to solve their!/man who has one notion of behavior domestic dificultie n fact they arelto govern his demeanor from ten to IT\! ARTAGNAN of t brave,|man plant, lit by the glimmering | floor with the bomb In your arms—T]not likely to have any that require/five and another for his uptown Mfe laughing young an, in lights of smelting furnaces, which| «grabbed it, and over she went—-what| serious consideration | cannot be said to have manners at all. love with the re of they had come out to destroy. They | saved me was fainting with my head} No woman, for example, who has! Women who encounter such men, fighting for the fighting’s sake—t!at/ let go their bombs, then turned for | hanging out a ray of humor in her soul could be] downtown feel sincere sympathy for is Chignole, as vars in © home, Came a startling discovery. ‘The draught brought you to your-|a yampire. For she would burst out] their wives, Yet they say to each Flying Poilu,” one of the bomb hasn't fallen!” self Haughing in the midst of her own en-Jother: “If she had brought him up ¢ lightful books the war has given us. * to you, you had alre gotten |chantments, No man with lau | Properly he would not yell at his stem- |» It ix written by Marcel Nad: und] “Jamemed in the elide!" a whiff of the gus, and what @ whiff.|in hig heart could go through the) ographer or talk to women custoe ranslated by Baroness Huard, the! “Push! Push down on it! Quick! | But 1 hadn't time to look you. |pathetic farce of trying to rediscover) mers with hia hat on.” “L used to American wife of a Frenchman, who! T's ignite Our taxi without a driver was dun-|with an affinity the platitudes of} mind g n to talk to (be Tame herscif written two books of Pull her up then and tip her over wround like a mad au A | marria if 1 may borrow t N-} because he ne took his feet from 1 onal experiences in the Fr regular tango! So I left my seat and | mort ise Gustay i t 8 desk and used to blow 1 theatre of wa marehi th ach -| climbed into yours, 1 curled you up ense of humor preserves Coan archi at had been fol 5 wup}And as & 1 smoke in my face,” a woman buyer | Chignole had been a slangy lowing us for a long time caught us “8 best I could, and by the way I|him from bélieving that Miss Twee-| said to me last week, “but now I feel Jurchin of the Montmartre distri n its beam," old Charlie's narrative Hever saw such | legs, [t's time jdiedum can add a single note to (he) sorry for him, I know he must have Par he days bef H14, and had | continues. “By manoeuvring brusque- | You sawed off a foot or tw » then | ¢ ence sung by Mrs, Tw narried the wrong woman.’ graduated from Hirst J nb I tried to avoid tt I tried to get the old thing ly, |diedee, #0 a sense of propor hie atitas : utomob rer J Var f t 4 ™ bu were pitching down at a gree |save him tearir ae Universal becetgs nician in the Aviation ¢ Falls Pg RR al a is te : ehalie : A i men look upon each other as the 4 ut and choked me, The bomb Ta! ome to build anothe diane of manners ond thar ae But there was far too ¢ b already ienited, the chemtcal| They sped on safely and with the|the same materials und according witha. paseonalble 77 : ueceeded in persuading t Biot lincecd 46 had bunly Ganan Jin the me factory chimneys jurchitect, Vor he tired play et many marr whose muchine he cared for : 1 turned pane augers seat; | mad sth landing at the shed fwith b “ oe nurse oe ee ne . we nen suffer him up as aerial ¢ fi sole had fainiedic hin Waal: Was n which they started to be met 1 nners, mutually practised s rishness Of Siam He became the pet he squ "| hanging out of the cockpit, while the| With a sb salute of honor from |enuble one couple to ex peacefully een pe rps in the us d f tH aig 1g Fk ryan I jumped The Flying Poilu’ is publi »y Januesthetic of lov 1 alwa : rs . .”» fely belief that tea anu n 5 hbed the thing from hix|“eorge H. Doran Company ken the F ty a the | Manners, Ike complexions, should ig nd t downward f nbrace, At the same moment an ving tho. noe pumped Far ReR-aTPeRanHieeanate tetra ere’s “ity at nvente .o fe husbands and wives to be When n th 1 stifled me. An invisible hand EHERAN, Pe aims the dise)a barr ige to each often Tt: 1h '® oie nad been given ad nae t ad be gripping Be ahs T iinet hae invented tha lax a a i e send le hope Will pass, since no other bad weather, C ; pu ¥| throat High of Living. brings ar merchant can| of modern life so threatens k up a ma | Lignole! Chignole! Help! ! that war prices for food | get, many arid core pert founda f domestic happi- ing Boche plang and drov ff. Yor! «phe biplane, left to itself, con his old town before Cain | cuk eigners who |! this exploit he ved the Me lca dea anions’ of wena mitccat t smashing blow in| imagi haee ap. A annot be beautiful, But Militaire, but becaus an | rang, thinge flitted t my| arprise attack upon that noted | fairly good pair of shoes may be had either beautiful nor bril- had no F to p Be 4 y » quickly, all seemed it must be true, for) for $25. he will take the pains to be s Captain o 1 > other way of explain It atill Ix ponmible to exist pretty |COUrteous. agreeable and chadming, 1 of diselp ( yd aries! Old Charles! wa Butter that must | cheaply if ‘ rite qualities are rarer to-day nole € y 4 ee sako wake U d away in somebody's ce Raraahi aie j = ne r brains or beauty and are There he expiated his fault by 1 aN d me by the collar, | fn those days of the begin-|Chickens ure produced Wy in| More Permanent ng to mem, SM ee AREER We ne r 1 finally I found my things, is selling here now for! great quantities, and almost every ous charge, and was promised si aaaied. damnmied into & cork per pound met nates in . Ad YOKE CANDOR, atement with his be A aviat cr between the pilot seat and the| Flour, ‘Made ta Persia.” is selling | qock, so chickens may had in the} GRICULTURAL PARISHTON- on his recovery edge of the cockpit for $55 a barrel, t some stores, bY] market for 80 cents each and eggs for Pr EK (wishing to ingratiate C4 | obably hts m: t ne ex-| quick! take the wheel of mystic figuring, manage to| 4; cents a dozen ‘ yee mself with the new curate, BY perience came on a night raid, for ¥ Look at the altimetre! Per bread for cents a) plentiful and y broke w j\s given @ lecture on the pre- é }which he and his pilot, "Old p Fifty 4 Hurry! There is a, Coa s for $30 a m Tey pe Bee t for ents a pou vious ng)--Thank ye, sir, for 4 | i at it would tak wr reading to ast night. 4 Hing of the Os . Mechanjcally I seized the wheel, my |" ’ a from Atty of ay sh New H ad you liked ft, 7 i Mme, Cabaht € ox nd num ‘ Abaport a an. 1 FA t ive been just a Httle tea ploded, Killin at th vor I managed t tablish| Sugar brings $1 per pound t tity te a eiataae fi very he inning of t tr Jan eq n, | pulling parties are not much indy Eve * 1m alath er—No, bless you, sim Meni |_ ‘It's up to us now,” Chignole re-| "We started upwards. Chignole|in. Fulrly good coffee may be bought | on donkey back or by came An au- q Why, we In these parts be | minted hia companion Go to It, ‘Old | wedge t In ide me spoke in synco for $1.80 a o und, mad toa for $1.65, | (omobile in the streets of Teheran at” just ike ducks, We do gobble Up aries e mus! pated phr jour from Europe, from which real t snerating Ob a New Yo! nyth Birmin; Boon they dovered over the op ‘L woke up—I saw you on the|bread may be made, i» held at $160 or Chicago operating o6\e New ork SVS ee cham (aagtand ‘ SS ‘ a Ss ai \ \ ANY N AQIS ee Ou AN x The Man Who Has One Set of Manners for Use Downtown and Another for the Home Is Un- civilized, but No More Than the Woman | Who Applies Her Courtesy as She Does Her Complexion on Leaving the House. By Nixola Greeley-Smith Copyright, 191%, by The Press Publishing Co. (Tho New York Kvening World). E have all heard that after five years of marriage it does not mat to a man’s happiness whether has domesticated the most beautiful woman in the world or the Witch of Endor. While I do not quite accept I am willing to believe that mo permanent league of matrimony can be founded on beauty ajone, I know that however complicated and de: lightful certain human intellects may be, a day must come wien one realizes one has been around every con- volution of the most brilliant brain so thoroughly that even @ vacuum cleaner would not discover anything new ter he this, too in it ! What, then, does last in marriage? ‘The answer, in my opinion, is good manners In the enlightened days of the future when all wives will be selected by a permanent committee of old women, of domestic relations to which I trust | shall be ¢ good manners will be rated at least 25 per cent a sort of senate tod if [ live long enough, in marking the examina- '

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