.MTM3NA.MTE2ODEz: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "1202 Ashland Block Chicago Feby 1st [1915] Dear Mary How fond your letters are and how I do like to get them. No one else can write such letters. I wish I could publish th...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
How fond your letters are and how I do like to get them. No one else can write such letters. I wish I could publish them | How fond your letters are and how I do like to get them. No one else can write such letters. I wish I could publish them | ||
In a day or two I will send you a book, The one I have seen since [[unclear]] [[Chedapha?]]. A wonderful, book full of life & human nature & the meanness & littleness of it all. I wish you would write something for the Bulletin about it. I am getting people out all the time - sometimes getting money & sometimes nothing but always getting them out. The judges always seem to do what I ask them to do for the poor. The trouble is that I can only speak for a very small part of the poor | In a day or two I will send you a book, The one I have seen since [[unclear]] [[Chedapha?]]. A wonderful, book full of life & human nature & the meanness & littleness of it all. I wish you would write something for the Bulletin about it. I am getting people out all the time - sometimes getting money & sometimes nothing but always getting them out. The judges always seem to do what I ask them to do for the poor. The trouble is that I can only speak for a very small part of the poor & there seems to be no one to speak for the not in court. | ||
I am doing | I am doing more talking their usual [[unclear]] |
Revision as of 19:11, 17 April 2021
1202 Ashland Block Chicago
Feby 1st [1915]
Dear Mary
How fond your letters are and how I do like to get them. No one else can write such letters. I wish I could publish them In a day or two I will send you a book, The one I have seen since unclear Chedapha?. A wonderful, book full of life & human nature & the meanness & littleness of it all. I wish you would write something for the Bulletin about it. I am getting people out all the time - sometimes getting money & sometimes nothing but always getting them out. The judges always seem to do what I ask them to do for the poor. The trouble is that I can only speak for a very small part of the poor & there seems to be no one to speak for the not in court.
I am doing more talking their usual unclear