When the war broke out, she became a nurse at the Military Hospital in Užice with her sister Milica.
With the group led by Dragutin Jovanović-Lune she arrived at the Salonika front, after 23 days of evading Bulgarian ambushes, and brought the Serbian command valuable information from the occupied homeland.
Field Marshals Stepa Stepanović and Živojin Mišić, whom she met at the front, told her that she was the first messenger from Serbia.
In 1921, she married Nikola Di Sorno, son of Italian diplomat Dionisi, who was a consul in Belgrade.
[1] In 2016, her remains were transferred from Sarajevo to her native Užice and she was buried in a family tomb at the Dovarja Cemetery.