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Conger Reynolds correspondence, July 1918
1918-07-06 Conger Reynolds to Daphne Reynolds Page 2
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there - provided we don't find somewhere else we think we like better. With all my might I'm hoping your kodak pictures turned out well enough that I'll get some of you. I'd rather have them than anything else you could send me. In return you are to have prints from the films Frank Taylor made on our trip the first of the week. You'll notice of course that I have been sending your letters to Adrian in care of F. J. Kilpatrick, whom I assume to be your Aunt Flo's husband though you don't say so. If you are at their house when this arrives I think it would be clever of you to tell my new uncle and aunt that I send my greetings to them and look forward ambitiously to the day when we can have an opportunity to receive them as our guests. I'd very much like to know them. When the time comes that I can, I'll try to make the shock upon them as bearable as possible. I'm wondering how our mother is behaving herself in health by this time. Like you, she was pretty thoroughly worn out at the end of the school year, I think, and needing the change of diet and scenery that your travels have furnished. Am I correct in my understanding
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there - provided we don't find somewhere else we think we like better. With all my might I'm hoping your kodak pictures turned out well enough that I'll get some of you. I'd rather have them than anything else you could send me. In return you are to have prints from the films Frank Taylor made on our trip the first of the week. You'll notice of course that I have been sending your letters to Adrian in care of F. J. Kilpatrick, whom I assume to be your Aunt Flo's husband though you don't say so. If you are at their house when this arrives I think it would be clever of you to tell my new uncle and aunt that I send my greetings to them and look forward ambitiously to the day when we can have an opportunity to receive them as our guests. I'd very much like to know them. When the time comes that I can, I'll try to make the shock upon them as bearable as possible. I'm wondering how our mother is behaving herself in health by this time. Like you, she was pretty thoroughly worn out at the end of the school year, I think, and needing the change of diet and scenery that your travels have furnished. Am I correct in my understanding
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