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Laura Davis letters to her husband Lloyd Davis, 1945
1945-08-08 Laura Davis to Lloyd Davis Page 4
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4 Mr Beeson said to me this noon when I ate in their shop he had been out with the road dept. seeing about crushed rock and pulling in the shoulders of the road past the farm. He didn't realize until he'd talked with George for awhile that "Pell Davis as your father-in-law." They tried to interest Geo in checking the rock loads but he told them he was too busy to more than help out in a pinch. Just two days ago he asked me where you were and what you were doing. He called you "Mr. Davis" then, "Slim" today. It is so funny to me because I think when I think of your surname or of an introduction of you "Sgt. Davis" now because I write you that way all the time whenever I think of you in any way except "Dearest" or "my husband". Military things soak in
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4 Mr Beeson said to me this noon when I ate in their shop he had been out with the road dept. seeing about crushed rock and pulling in the shoulders of the road past the farm. He didn't realize until he'd talked with George for awhile that "Pell Davis as your father-in-law." They tried to interest Geo in checking the rock loads but he told them he was too busy to more than help out in a pinch. Just two days ago he asked me where you were and what you were doing. He called you "Mr. Davis" then, "Slim" today. It is so funny to me because I think when I think of your surname or of an introduction of you "Sgt. Davis" now because I write you that way all the time whenever I think of you in any way except "Dearest" or "my husband". Military things soak in
World War II Diaries and Letters
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