) THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JUNE 9, 1018. - .. ; . X -:. . . i - ' - ' J -a I ' : V h . ' T X lllliiiilll i- . . .e -' . ' i msmMismmmmx ft I .. 4 5r : K MiitniViniiliiwfifnii- Emily Harris Dodd, American Volunteer Nurse in France, in the Garb She Wears as a Caretaker of Wounded Poilus and Americans. BT EUILT HARRIS DODD. American Volunteer, Servinr at th Front With the Ambulance Mobile of the Sixth French Army, and Special Correspondent tor ThU Newspaper. THE life of a music at the front is not composed! entirely of dangers and hardships. Often there are! happy Interludes, moments, and some times even days, when the cruel busi ness of war comes to a seeming pause. Before telling of my narrowest escape In the Soissons bombardment, I want to describe one of these tranquil Interludes, In which I attended a theatre performance near the trenches. The 308th regiment was spending a week "en repos," encamped In a woods between Soissons and the lines. It was a regiment as rich in talent as In cour age, and was famous for Its concerts end performances. They were planning a big affair for She afternoon of July 12, and some of the officers, hearing that two Amer ican girls were In the hospital at Sois eons. invited JLetltia and I to attend the performance. We had been work ing rather hard and Mile. St. Paul ad vised us to go. They came for us after luncheon, in big gray military car, and took us for several kilometers along a shell torn road, to the beautiful green woods where the regiment was encamped. The poilus had chosen a grassy space among the trees, well shaded by the foliage from the spying Boche planes, and had erected an Impromptu atacre. with a curtain and scenery which they tnemseives had painted. The audience, consisting of the en tire regiment, in their steel helmet and uniforms, to which still clung the mud of the trenches, was seated on the grass In close, serried rows. Some of the men had clambered Into the trees, ana Danaiea jokes about their "re served seats In the boxes." A clever programme with comic illus trations had been designed by artists in the regiment and rudely printed on a mimeograph. I have kept a copy as one of my most nrecioup souvenirs. The regimental band furnished music, and there was al3o an orchestra of stringed instruments. The Lighter Side. After a stirring overture, the curtain rose on a series of vaudeville acts and sketches, many of which had been written for the occasion, and which burlesqued with gay light-heartedness the hardships and adventures of the trenches. Among the performers were men who had been famous in Parisian theatrical circles before the war, sing ers of world-wide fame, clowns whose antics had been familiar to the pleasure-lovers of the boulevards in the old days. There was Polian, of the "Vaude ville." whose motley costume had been replaced long since by the uniform of riorfowssib Escop sis I a soldier in the ranks and whose cap and bells bad been exchanged for the steel helmet and gas mask. Ths tinsel and glitter of the "Vauda ville" seemed far away, and on his breast gleamed the "Croix de Guerre." but after three years of horror he still found strength in that great heart of TULIP CULTURE FACTS TOLD BY ONE HAVING EXPERIENCE Life History of Plant Mast Be Understood to Insure Successful Flowering. PORTLAND, June 8. (To the Edi- tor.) In The Oregonlan of May I 19 there were presented in your I columns certain opinions and recom-1 mendations concerning the culture of tulips. The writer has been for some time interested in growing tulips In this climate, and if you are willing to give me some space I will give you the result of my experiences and also rec ommendations of persons who are ex perts in this business. In the first place, to understand properly the management of tulip cul ture, certain facts concerning the life history of the plant must be under stood. The tulip Is unlike the narcis sus and hyacinth in that the bulb or root that produced the plant and flower of this season is not the same bulb or root that produced the flower last sea son. As most of your readers are aware, the narcissus bulb produces leaves and flowers year after year, and the same is true of the hyacinth: in fact, the roots of the narcissus never die once the plant is put in the ground. That Is to say. they do not wither out during the period of dormancy. The tulip bulb or root that produced the foliage this year expends all its energy In so doing, and in addition to produc ing the foliage it also produces for next season one or mere new bulbs, which remain In a state of dormancy until Fall, when they begin to produce roots of their own. All the old foliage, bulb and roots wither away and per ish. . The number of new bulbs and size vary with the variety of the tulip. As a general thing at least one bulb is produced that is large enough to flower the following Spring. In some cases more than one bulb will flower. The little bulbs that are produced will not generally flower for two or three sea sons, or until they have time to develop their offsprings each year to a size that will permit of flowering develop ment It is for this reason that the prices of varieties vary. Some tulips will not produce more than about the Emily Harris Dodd, Now at the Front, Writes About the Lights and Shadows of the Nurse's Life and Describes a Typical Moment Peril in Her Hospital Career Behind the Lines uty--" ----- xoKs . . t iSK:-' A Characteristic Group at a Hospital Headquarters Near the Soissons Sector. Emily Harris Dodd Is Seen at the Left. In thfe Group Are Fellow Nurses, Surgeons and a Number of British and French Officers. his to revive the pranks and- quips of other days for the amusement of bis comrades-in-arms. Then there was Marvin!, the. great Marvin i of the "Opera," who sang for us that day, I believe, as he had never sung for any audience in Paris. To Letty and I the' audience was as wonderful as the performance. Im agine more than a thousand soldiers, crowded together on the grass, their horizon-blue belmets and uniforms blending into the green of the foliage, the smoke from their cigarettes rising lazily through the sunshine to mingle with the haze in the leafy branches overhead. Occasionally an airplane droned In same number of bulbs for next season that were produced for this season. This makes them more costly, In the culture of tulips It is abso- lutely imperative that the foliage be left undisturbed until it withers and dies down. It is during the period after the flower has been produced and before the foliage dies down for sev eral weeks that the new bulbs are be ing developed for the next plant, and to 'disturb the foliage means that the food elaborating system of the plant has been ruined and the new bulb will not be strong and plump. There Is no objection to cutting the first leaf when the flower is cut, but it la advisable to leave the next two leaves on the stem. There are a number of objections to leaving tulips In the ground during the Summer. The principal one In this cli mate is that after the tulip stem with ers away a small hole Is left in the ground immediately above the bulb, and down in this hole the slugs and snails will crawl, and they are particu larly partial to tulip meat. A few slugs will eat the crown out of a tulip bulb in a couple Of days. Another objection to leaving tulips in the ground is that when the new bulbs start to grow they have to begin to send out their roots through a mass of old tulip bulb skins and roots, and this to a certain extent impairs their progress. After the new. roots have worked down they are still in a part of the soil that has already been depleted by the roots of last year's bulb. This has a tendency to reduce the' character of the flower that is ultimately pro duced. However, it is quite apparent that fresh fertilized soil would be a better growing place for the bulb. In addition to the above objections there is a third, and that is that many of the little bulbs begin to send up their shoots, and it is impossible to maintain a pleasing standard of flower bearing stock surrounded by a lot of little flowerless shoots coming from bulbs that are being developed. Tulip bulbs have a tendency to be developed at the base of the old bulb. of j the sky, but we were well screened, and that day. at least, the boches left us undisturbed. After the performance, by the dis creet light of shaded candles and lanterns, there was a dinner party, and we were invited to the "popote" or officers' mess. I was seated beside a young Lieuten ant, and presently it struck his fancy to ask if I would become his "mar rain e." which Is French for godmother. "It is not that I expect gifts," he said, "but I would like to have some one who will write to me when I go back out yonder." He later sent me many letters, and once a faded flower, a "fleur des tran- and this naturally has the result of the new bulb being developed farther and farther below the surface of the soil. In consequence, after two or three, years have elapsed the bulbs that are on the outskirts of the group are so far below the top they cannot reach the surface with their leaves and thus die. It Is the experience of the best growers that It Is better to lift the tulip each year after the foliage has died down. The earth should be shaken from the roots and If any foliage Is left it should be cut off. The bulb should be placed In a cool, dry place, where It will soon .cure. It is generally quite easy to determine which of the new bulbs will flower with the succeeding year, as they will be considerably larger. The little bulbs may be brought up In a nursery. The soil should not be more than an inch deep above their tops. If properly nourished after they begin to send up their own shoots many of the little fellows will bloom the next year. Of course, at the end of the season they will produce their own crop of bulbs, but as a general thing little bulbs only produce one bulb at the end of the season, which should be somewhat larger than the old one. This process will continue for three or four years, until the new bulb has reached a full-grown size, when it will have a tendency to develop at least one big bulb and possibly some smaller ones. It is not generally possible to con tinue the development of a single line of tulips Indefinitely, as the stock sometimes has a tendency to revert and become worthless. Such tulips might just aj well be taken out of the ground as soon as they have flowered, as the future bulbs will be of little value. By properly handling seed tulips which have been bought In pots from greenhouses, it is perfectly easy to save the bulb. All that is necessary is to see that the tulips are well watered when they are put in the house, and after the blooming period is over they should be carefully removed from the pot and heeled in some shady place In the ground In good soil and well watered. The writer has taken a pot of one dozen of a first-class variety bought at a flower shop, and after the blooming period in the house has heeled them In good soil, and as a result has secured from 60 to CO good bulbs for the next season, at least a third of which began to bloom the first year. In this climate the newly developed bulbs frequently lose their brown skin. This is almost entirely due to the heavy ! ill iVr ' 7 ""TTmA VrrnnTTTimjfl'l I IPl I linAV chees." which he had found wilting on the edge of a crater. Then the letters ceased to come. While I was still talking with him tnat night toward the close of the din ner, the great Marvlnl quietly pushed back his chair from the table and be gan to sing. From somewhere a little pollu had appeared with a violin, and presently another came with a flute. It was an old ISth century love song that Alarvlnl sang, to the muted obll gato of the two Instruments. Ever and anon came the poignant refrain. "Cha grin d'amour dure toute la vie." "Love's pleasure flies with dawn: Love's sorrow lasts for aye." And as those men listened there. soil. The Holland bulbs are grown In light soil.' and this does not seem to impair the skin. The writer has never been able to find that an injury to the skin affects the flowering in any way. It should be borne in mind that in planting tulips they should be put deeper In light soil than In the heavy soil, although it may be said that tu lips are very accommodating and will grow under adverse conditions. The United States Department of Ag riculture maintains a magnificent bulb farm near Belllngham, Wash., and it seems to be an established fact that the Northwestern-grown bulbs are several days earlier than the Holland-grown bulbs in this climate, and they are less susceptible to disease. Tulips can be grown from seed, although it is not certain what the result will be in the way of flowering, as they may come true and they may not. Summing up this Information, the writer Is of the belief that tulips should be lifted every year on account of slugs and insects. In this climate It Is sat isfactory to put tulips in the ground by December 1 at the latest. People who are really Interested In this matter can get excellent literature and de scriptions of the bulb farm at Belllng ham. Wash., from the Department of Agriculture. Bureau of Plant Industry, Washington. D. C. They will also give a lot of Information concerning the narcissus and hyacinth. There is one more point of Interest about the tulip, and that Is that the tulip root is not a real bulb as com pared with the narcissus or an onion. In other words, the tulip does not scale off. but is more in the nature of a solid mass of organic matter, although from a practical standpoint it produces the same results as a type of concentric bulb such as the onion. XEWIS A. Mc ARTHUR. Don't Waste Your Tarn. One woman makes this suggestion In the June Woman's Home Companion: "It sometimes becomes necessary to ravel the work of an amateur knitter, and in these daya of scarcity and high price of yarn no one wishes to waste it. It is marked and mussed up by the previous knitting, however, and new work made from this yarn Is not very satisfactory. Try this: Wind yarn in skeins, place In steamer for five or ten minutes, then let dry thor oughly before rewinding. The yarn will be found as soft and fluffy as new." grouped around the table in the dim candle light, each found an echo In his heart, for each had left behind some dearly beloved one to whom, per chance, he might never return. Out there beyond the hills the firing had ' increased in intensity, with the falling of the night. An officer touched me gently on the arm. "I think, madamoiselle. that we had best be seeing you back to Soissons. It seems safe enough here for the mo ment, but one never knows." Now let me tell you of the terrible air raid that came so near costing me my lire. it happened -at I o clock one bright afternoon In July. Literally ana iigurauveiy, the attack came out or a clear sky. Two or three boche planes had been over earlier In the morning, but they seldom dropped bombs in the daytime. We had been advised, however, to re main Indoors on account of shrapnel. I was standing at an open window in a corridor of one of the hospital wings overlooking the courtyard. There was no warning, for airplane bombs do not shriek through the air. Suddenly there was a swishing sound, followed almost Instantly by a terrific Youngr Girl's Party Bag Is Unique in Design. Little Bliss Proad ef netlevle Car ried With Party Frock. THE daintiest reticule In the world for a little miss to carry with her party frock of filmy net or ruffled or gandy. It swings from the arm on a ribbon loop and Is supposed to hold one's mouchoir and- powder puff for even very young ladles. Indeed, these days take the shine off their little loaag Oirls i'arty Aiag. noses with talcum and a wee bit of lambswool. It is quite permissible even In public. The little party reticule pictured is, you see. pansy shaped: the pansy petals made of gathered ribbon, palest in color, la the center are three Unj roar and crash as if the whole bulld- ng had been blown from Its founda tion. My ITarrawest Escape. I was hurled back from the window. deafened, sickened by the shock and covered with flying dirt and debris, too dased for an instant to realize what had happened. Then I saw Sabine Estoret. who had been standing in the corridor beside ma. Her hands were over her face, and the blood was streaming through her fingers. Because of her hands. I could not tell how badly she was hurt. But she managed to get to her feet and we both rushed down the corridor. We passed Mile. St. Paul, who had been thrown to the ground, but was unhurt. Then, in the confusion. I lost sight of Sabine. Imagine my relief, on reaching the first ward, to find that none of the men bad been injured and that the walls were still standing. They dropped two or three more bombs, but none struck the hospital. and in less than a minute it was all over. How had we escaped? It was due to a miracle performed by the cure's old sewing machine. It had been left standing in the courtyard, and the bomb before striking the earth and exploding had crashed into the sewing machine, whose steel framework had been just sufficient to divert the angle of explosion so that the fan-shaped rays of white-hot metal were mostly deflected away from the walls and to ward the open end of the rectangle. Sabine was the only victim. Her pretty little face had been gashed and scarred for life, but with splendid cour age she refused to be evacuated, though many a soldier has gone back to Parts for less, and in a few days she was on her feet again, with face ban daged, engaged in her usual duties. Imagine our happiness when a short time later Sabine received the "Croix de Guerre" for her bravery and devo tion. The heavy walls, and the fact that we had been hurled back from the win dows, saved Sabine and me from the air-shock we should have suffered had we been In the open. As it was. I was stone deaf for six hours, in addition to being terribly shaken up, but the effects gradually were off, and In a day or two I was none the worse for the experience. I don't think I quite realized the fate we had so narrowly missed until I saw a poor victim of one of the air raids brought Into the hospital. He had been caught among the ruins of a falling house a short distance-down the street, and In addition to his burns and wounds he had been horribly crushed In the wreckage. If you have ever seen a man run over and mangled by a railroad train, you can imagine his condition. He died within a few hours. Bombing the Hospitals. I have been asked If the Germane made a deliberate practice of bombing hospitals. It Is a hard question to an swer from my personal experience, for when a hospital Is located as close to the front as we were It Is bound to suffer from the general shelling and bombing. But while I could not prove that they ever picked us out as a spe cific target, I know of other hospitals which were deliberately attacked. I remember how grieved Mile. St. Paul was when a friend of hers a French nurre was killed In the hospital at Vaudelincourt. On that day they not only bombed the hospital, despite the big Red Cross on its roof, but flew low Immediately above It and poured volley after volley of machine gun bul lets Into the nurses, doctors and wounded, even killing German pris oners who were being treated in the hospital at the time. As for our hospital at Soissons, I do not think the German' fliers deliberate ly picked It as an object of attack, but on the other hand they made no effort to respect it. We felt that they were like blind snakes, striking indiscriminately at whatever they might maim or kilL In the early part of the war there was a sort of chivalry of the air, and German aviators were credited with fighting like good sportsmen. There were Instances when our own aviators flew at a great risk over the enemy lines to drop a wreath of immortelles with a message telling of the gallant fight some Individual German pilot had waged before, he was brought to earth on French soil. But ss the in stances multiplied of the bombing of hospitals and civilian cities, with the attendant murder of wounded men. nurses, women and children, we began to feel toward the aviators as we did toward all German enemies. To us they were all equally detest able and cruel. roses made of white, pale pink and deeper pink ribbon of narrow width, and a little ellver leaf Is tucked In by way of a natural effect. Both sides of the bag are alike and the inside is smoothly lined with pale pink silk. Bread Without Wheat. This recipe from the June Woman's Home Companion is recommended for a wheatless day: "Wheatless Quick Bread One cup oat flour, one cup barley flour, one half cup corn flour, one teaspoon cream of tartar, one teaspoon soda, one and one-half teaspoons salt, one-third cup molasses, one and one-eighth cups sour milk, two tablespoons melted shorten ing. "Mix and sift dry Ingredients. Add molasses, sour milk and shortening. Mix thoroughly and bake In greased bread pan." To Keep Lettuce Crisp. When you have no Ice. wash your lettuce and place In a colander, and cover closely with a piece of cheese cloth wrung out of cold water. Put In a cool place, in a draught If possible, and your lettuce will keep crisp for three or four days. L G. C. FRECKLES Deat Hide Them With a Vrlli Remove Them With the Othlae Doable Strength. This preparation for the removal of freckles Is usually so successful In re moving freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold by any druggist under guarantee to re fund the money If It fails. Don't hide your freckles under a veil; get an ounce of othlne and remove them. Even the first few applications should show a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double-strength othlne; It Is this that is sold on the money-back guarantee. Adv. , ,