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have my say now. O, Anna, how I do wish I could be at home with you for an hour and have a good lively sing in our little parlour [sic]. Does Lewis sing as much as used to and do you continue humming and sol fa ing as...as ever? But I have a word to say to Mary; so good bye and don't say I have not written to you....
have my say now. O, Anna, how I do wish I could be at home with you for an hour and have a good lively sing in our own little parlour. Does Lewis sing as much as he used to and do you continue humming and sol fa ing as untireing as ever? But I have a word to say to Mary; so good bye and don't say I have not written to you and
    Sarah


Sarah
Dear Mary,


[[letter torn]]


Dear Mary,
yesterday. I spoke to Dr. about Mary Lewis and from what you had written he seemed to think very encouragingly of her case. He said that if dispepsia is all that she has, he thinks she can without doubt be cured. You know something of how successful he is in such cases. I do not know he has ever failed to relieve dispepsia. How is cousin Mary's health. I received a letter from Thomas today requesting me to speak to Dr. Strong
 
...yesterday. I spoke to Dr. about Mary Lewis and from what you had written he seemed to think very encouragingly of her case. He said that if dispepsia [sic] is all that she has, he thinks she can without doubt be cured. You know something of how successful he is in such cases. I do not know he has ever failed to relieve dispepsia [sic]. How is cousin Mary's health. I received a letter from Thomas today requesting me to speak to Dr. Strary

Latest revision as of 15:19, 23 January 2021

have my say now. O, Anna, how I do wish I could be at home with you for an hour and have a good lively sing in our own little parlour. Does Lewis sing as much as he used to and do you continue humming and sol fa ing as untireing as ever? But I have a word to say to Mary; so good bye and don't say I have not written to you and

   Sarah

Dear Mary,

letter torn

yesterday. I spoke to Dr. about Mary Lewis and from what you had written he seemed to think very encouragingly of her case. He said that if dispepsia is all that she has, he thinks she can without doubt be cured. You know something of how successful he is in such cases. I do not know he has ever failed to relieve dispepsia. How is cousin Mary's health. I received a letter from Thomas today requesting me to speak to Dr. Strong