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Aug. 2nd 1921. My dear Dr. Taylor, I have carefully read the copy of the letter to Dr. Davis which you gave me yesterday, and which I here return to you. I can most highly commend it, as far as it goes, but I should most emphatically object to its going one single step further, and I am sure everyone who knows you and your work?? will also. You have done the fair and generous thing by the Seminary, but I should have a mighty poor opinion of the Trustees if they even thought of accepting your suggestion. I never heard even a whisper that you were approaching the retiring age. You are not one of the men we think of as growing old. I do not believe you are any older than when I first knew you, in spite of your saying some-