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John Haworth Drewry Letters

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house in the little car (I am sending you a picture of them both) while the rest of us walked up. They all seemed so glad to see me that I felt at home right away. On my departure they loaded me with cakes and cookies to eat at lunch-time as there are no dining cars on the trams now. Muriel seemed to have an eye to my well-being over here for she gave mea  couple of luck-charms which I now have in my machine.
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house in the little car (I am sending you a picture of them both) while the rest of us walked up. They all seemed so glad to see me that I felt at home right away. On my departure they loaded me with cakes and cookies to eat at lunch-time as there are no dining cars on the trams now. Muriel seemed to have an eye to my well-being over here for she gave me a couple of luck-charms which I now have in my machine.
  
The day we came back to France was fine and sunny and we sat on deck. The ship was in a convoy and we watched the destroyers flitting around while overhead buzzed the aerial part of the anti-submarine machine. It was a really enjoyable trip and prevented one from feeling "fed-up" with having to go back to France. Boing and coming and for a couple of nights in London I was
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The day we came back to France was fine and sunny and we sat on deck. The ship was in a convoy and we watched the destroyers flitting around while overhead buzzed the aerial part of the anti-submarine machine. It was a really enjoyable trip and prevented one from feeling "fed-up" with having to go back to France. Going and coming and for a couple of nights in London I was
  
 
BC Archives, 93-6553, Box 4, DREWRY FAMILY, Selected correspondence, 1917 – 1919.
 
BC Archives, 93-6553, Box 4, DREWRY FAMILY, Selected correspondence, 1917 – 1919.

Revision as of Jun 2, 2015, 1:07:19 PM

house in the little car (I am sending you a picture of them both) while the rest of us walked up. They all seemed so glad to see me that I felt at home right away. On my departure they loaded me with cakes and cookies to eat at lunch-time as there are no dining cars on the trams now. Muriel seemed to have an eye to my well-being over here for she gave me a couple of luck-charms which I now have in my machine.

The day we came back to France was fine and sunny and we sat on deck. The ship was in a convoy and we watched the destroyers flitting around while overhead buzzed the aerial part of the anti-submarine machine. It was a really enjoyable trip and prevented one from feeling "fed-up" with having to go back to France. Going and coming and for a couple of nights in London I was

BC Archives, 93-6553, Box 4, DREWRY FAMILY, Selected correspondence, 1917 – 1919.