. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . e turned and saw Mary standingabove him with a great light shining inher eyes. The Author df the Prize Story aModern Woman in the BestSense of the Term ROM her story you will guessthat Mrs. Cora M. Turner, thewife of our agent at Butler, Pa.,and the author of The Heartof the Engineer, this months prizewinning story, is a modern woman, inthe best sense of that much abused broad view of life, expressed in herstory, is further proved by the lettershe sent us in answer to our requestthat she tell the readers of the Magazinesomething about herself.


. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . e turned and saw Mary standingabove him with a great light shining inher eyes. The Author df the Prize Story aModern Woman in the BestSense of the Term ROM her story you will guessthat Mrs. Cora M. Turner, thewife of our agent at Butler, Pa.,and the author of The Heartof the Engineer, this months prizewinning story, is a modern woman, inthe best sense of that much abused broad view of life, expressed in herstory, is further proved by the lettershe sent us in answer to our requestthat she tell the readers of the Magazinesomething about herself. After pro-testing that there is nothing that I cansay of myself that would be of interestto anyone, she says: I am very proud to be a resident ofButler. Our worthy judge has takenour county out of the class of followersand placed it in the front rank with theleaders, thereby conserving the bestenergies of every citizen for our belovednation when the call comes. I am a very fortunate woman—I havea daughter and a perfectly good husband,. MRS. CORA M. TURNER who has been with the Baltimore andOhio for—well, I dare not say how manyyears, for he is still posing as a youngman. Just now we are very busy launchingour agricultural work. Our good friendsHonorable and Mrs. J. M. Galbreathhave generously divided their gardenwith Dr. Atwell, one of our leading-physicians and with us. I have a suspicion that the Judgeand the Doctor and Mr. Turner maydeem it necessary to sit in the shade andponder on great matters of state whilethe women folks till the soil—but weshall see. If our garden dreams mate-rialize we will not only be able to feed afew soldiers but may have sufficient forthe Baltimore and Ohio commissaries. Mrs. Turner is proud of Butler—and weventure a guess that Butler is quite asproud of Mrs. Turner. Nature is neither kernel nor shell,She is both, one and the other as well;Make it your aim, yourself to discover—If you are the inside or only the cover. —Goethe.


Size: 1331px × 1878px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbaltimo, bookyear1912