Word: missing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Miss Mabel Boardman, of the executive committee of the American Red Cross Society, spoke last night in the parlor of Phillips Brooks House on the Red Cross work being carried on in the European war zone, expressing the thanks of the Red Cross for the five ambulances which the Society was enabled to purchase with the proceeds of Tag Day. The Society has planned several important improvements in the arrangement of these ambulances, the most noteworthy of which is the rearrangement of the shelves for the stretchers. The cars are to be painted gray, with the Red Cross...
...speaking of the work which the Society is carrying on in Europe, Miss Boardman told of the terrible conditions against which the 150 nurses and 43 surgeons representing the American Red Cross, had to contend...
...Miss Boardman will find that interest in the Red Cross work has by no means subsided. While another "tag-day" is not advocated by any considerable number of men, there are plenty of members of the University who are planning to contribute not only money but their personal services to the Red Cross work. Miss Boardman will find in them an interested audience...
...Miss Mabel T. Boardman, of the executive committee of the American Red Cross Society will speak in the Parlor of Phillips Brooks House this evening at 7.45 o'clock. Miss Boardman's object in coming to Cambridge is to thank the students of the University for their contribution to the Red Cross Society, and to tell them in just what way the ambulances, which have been purchased from the proceeds of "Tag Day," will be used in working among the wounded...
...Talk by Miss Mabel T. Boardman representing Red Cross in Phillips Brooks House...