. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . a pigs;there were mothers with hklf-dressedbabies and many people sitting with theirfeet out in the aisles. It was certainly aconglomeration. Then, by the time wereached the dining car our appetites werenearly gone; one look into the kitchen ofa French diner will accomplish this for , I shall speak more of this featurelater when I tell you the story of a visitto the French railway station. Suffice itto say that we closed our eyes until we satdown to the tables, for, after all, the foodis appetizingly arranged and is well , ther
. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . a pigs;there were mothers with hklf-dressedbabies and many people sitting with theirfeet out in the aisles. It was certainly aconglomeration. Then, by the time wereached the dining car our appetites werenearly gone; one look into the kitchen ofa French diner will accomplish this for , I shall speak more of this featurelater when I tell you the story of a visitto the French railway station. Suffice itto say that we closed our eyes until we satdown to the tables, for, after all, the foodis appetizingly arranged and is well , there are wines to be had, which,for some peculiar reason, our own never serves as an additionalattraction on his menus. Arriving in Tours we were met by areception committee, among the membersof which were several honest-to-goodnessAmericans. Two of these, one a representa-tive of the International Harvester Com-pany, the other a former Southern PacificRailway man, were particularly nice to theBaltimore and Ohio group. The del^ates. tfl CmmX. 6> myM Uinkii* liar WHAT THE GOOD WILL GIRLS SAW IN FRANCEI. Miss Lauer (rightr and Miss Schultz, of Kenosha, Wis., looking over into Italy from LaTurbie, France. 2. Good Willers at Coucy le are seen some of the buildings of the American Committee. 3. Left to right: Mrs. Conway, of Baltimore, Miss Nina Spengler, and two Frenchofficers, looking out of the windows of the Kronprinzs observatory, near Montfaucon. 4. Miss Lauer and Miss Spengler pose for a photograph withthe Carcassonne washerwomen. 5. Children who came to greet the delegates in the gardens of Lafontaine, Nimes. 6. Baltimore girls have lunchon the street before a French cafe; left to right are Misses Stevens, Spengler, Quafles and Lauer, and Mr. R. D. Hinds, of the Associated Press, whodid much to make the journey pleasant for the Baltimore and Ohio girls. 7. Ruins of an old cathedral at Montfaucon. 8. Cartoon reminding us ofthe days of fighting, drawn by
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookidbaltimoreohi, bookyear1920