The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Page ,e favorite rra n How They Devote Themselves to Nursing the Wounded and Amusing the Men in the Trenches rTIOU-PIOU." as the French' con r" mon soldier Is called, and Tomm: x Atkins, as the English privats Is nick-named, though much of the time fcelf troien In the trenches of the allies and frequently food for German powder nevertheless are having In one war very enjoyable and nnusual time. These common soldiers of the French and Eng lish armies find themselTes being nuned and entertained by the most famous and singers, !aneera and y . ? beauties of Europe. V k Noble duchesses visit , (hem at the front with gifts of pipes,' cigarettes end tobacco. Famous feeadllners la vaudeville warble tmialo hall du ties to them in trench!. 'I, m f -- t V V l.seuaisi '.fifx X 'vivn--;' i bv :: v-'IpA i -, ; . v-. 1 j h.- ;,J .::-v ..... ' ; ; fc x -L - The Photograph Below Shows Ida Rubensteln, the Idol of the Parisian Stage, Entertaining in her Nurse's. Dress a Wounded Turco. The Toet D'Annunzio Threatened Suicide Because Mile. Rubensteln Would Not Smile Upon II Ira Half so Charmingly as She Is Smiling i . for the Foor Soldier. On the left Is Seen Mile. Rubensteln in One of the Very Different DressesShe Wore Before the War. ) 'An Unusual Photograph from France Showing Anna Held, the Well Known Musical Comedy Star, About to Start for the Trenches In Her Ambulance. Miss Held Is in Her Service Uniform. Her Gun, How ever, Is Only to Be Used for Defense. German Helmets Decorate the Car's Front, and on the Right Is Anna Held in One of the Frivolous Dresses She Wore Before the War Sobered Her. J- fx , C J 1 htt fA ... PNaro Of OTro . .1 H-7 . V And when thy are wounded and sent to the hospital they have the Joy of being nursed by grand opera prima donnas, ladies lot tbe celebrated Russian ballet and prize (beauties of the Paris stage. "Literally "Plou-Hou" and Tommy have 'turned the tables on fortune's darlings of 'the epposite sex. Those plpfs and cigar jettes and tobacco, and warm socks knitted S fair hands, and songs heard In the trenches which they never would bave heard otherwise, and tender nurslug In tbe hospital, exlt them in the same way that applause In tbe theatre and offerings of flowers. Jewels, pet dogs of pedigree and limousines formerly exalted the givers. "Plou-Plou" and Tommy have been trans formed into prima donoss, and great sing ers and dancers whose notes and pirouettes have a market value of a dollar or so apiece are tbe first to do them honor. Mme. Calve, the idolized Carmen of New York Metropolitan Opera audiences. Is Ited Cross nurse lu the French hospltsls ai Toulon. It is re ported that Calve la an excellent nurse, shirking none of the disagreeable duties of that profession. Hor greatest reward comes with "Plou-Plou's" amaze tcent and dtllght on learning that it la tbe treat Calve herself who has Just sung to iiim at UU bedside tbe "Cigarette Bong" from Carmen." Calve enjoys H ss much as ' Piou-Plou' does, phe writes about It to her friends: v "I sing duties to tbe wounded to soothe in? in and lull then to aleep when they are f elting ?eur seet songs of France that snake them abed tears of jor, and war aongs for those who, after the healing ot their wounds, are going back to defend poor France " Ida Rubensteln, most famous ot all Rus sian dancers, whom D'Annunslo loved, and for whom he wrote his drama "Saint Se bastlen," presented to Francs In Paris a fully equipped hospital. Including her own services as nurse. It Is said that she de votes not less than sixteen hours out of each twenty-four to these duties Ma Rubensteln. wbo up to the beginning of tbe war waa probably the most luxurious, pet ted and spoiled stage beauty In Europe! Mme. Line Cavalleri probably the most celebrated opera singer and beauty In the world, ts devoting all her time to the care of wounded soldiers in French hoepitala. Altbouga aot a robust woman, aha performs all the duties ot a nurse. And when her grateful charges are convalescent she de lights In astonishing them with such sing In if as tbey never dreamed of hearing end nevdr would have been able to bear without Brit serving as a target tor a Uer man bullet. Duting holiday week Tommy Atkins, at the battle front In Flanders, enjoyed a per tet riot of English plum pudding and Eng lish musio hall entertainment. Seymour Hicks and his London theatrical company, together with half a hundred vaudeville ar tints, crossed the channel and motored to the firing line In Belgium. Their arrival threw a whole army corps of Tommies Into spasms of Joy. ' Among aiage people well known In Uls country who are devoting themselves to making French and English soldier tented In the trenches Is Anna Held- She frequently visits different points along '.he battle front with gifts for the soldiers. From Psrls she sends the following account of some of her exciting experiences: "I bave always bad to move about tbe roads -warily when making these trips be cause ot JofTre's veto on women, for it the wrong kind of officer meets you he sends you bsck to Paris. On this occasion I passed through the French tines without knowing It this war Is so unspectacular and almost before I was aware ot what was happening my car was surrounded by a squad of Uhlans. "1 explained to the lieutenant who I was and my mission, pointing to the heap of tobacco and cigarettes In the car, but he replied in perfect English: M 'Oh, that's an old trick. It won't work again. You are not the first woman spy we have caught. You must come and see the major.' . . . "There waa nothing tor It but to comply. I was caught near Albert, and very soon I was in the German camp near Peronne. Terribly frightened I was, too; tbe Uhlans were ao big and strong sad stern. The major turned out to be a short, stout msn with a grizzled gray mustache. I showed him my passport, but he dldnt seem to un derstand and summoned a Junior officer. "A taU. slender young man with an ideal tango figure appeared, glanced at the doc ument, and in perfect Eugllsh with Just a alight Yankee twang that made me th'ill with hope, aaid: 'Why, yes. Herr Major, it's all right. This Is Mlaa Held. Don't you know her? he ts ot tbe theatrical world.' "After that all wet well. I was treated with great courtesy and was cheered en thusiastically when I distributed my tobac co and cigarettes In one ot the trenches In return I received several spiked helmets as eouvenlra and was escorted safely out of the lines. "All my women friends are asking me what is the chief Impression I have re ceived from my visits to tbe front. It Is the extreme,' unbelleveable contrast be tween the carnage and gayety In the trencher Both the Germans and the alllaa have turned their trenches into veritable vaudeville halls, and often tbe troops spend the evening singing, dancing and reciting. "Sometimes the Oermana alng to thu French and vice-versa, each song being ap plauded. The trenches In places are ao near one another that It ts quite easy to hear. This gayety follows tbe grm busi ness of death-dealing. Imagine men who spend the day" hacking one another with bayou eta and pouring lead out by the ton, and then afterward ainging aongs to one another! It only shows that men can make the best ot fighting, Just aa they can of everything. "Another impression I have ts one ot In tense admiration for the women nurses, es pecially those at the base hospitals. No body w ho haa not aeen the thing can Imag ine the horrors ot a base hospital. It is there that you realize what a frightful thing, a wicked thing, a basely Inhuman thing U war. "I am no suffragette, but let me say here and now that the women are facing the or deal magnificently.'' ' Ns ' Una Csvalierl, in the Costume In Wh ch She Nurses and Sings to Wsuu Soldiers. Copyright, 1015. by tbs Star Company. Great Britain Right Reserved. I ;