Monthly Archives: January 2013

And may I introduce you to….Gladys

Letter Transcription:

Kentland, Ind.

7-18-42

Dear Daddy,

I rec’d your Wed. letter this morning and from it I thought you would be on your way home but since I have not rec’d letters of later date or word otherwise I am still in a “wonder”. Well, I will send this air mail special hoping you will get it Sun. evening.

We are still in the midst of a heat wave, but it looks like we may get some rain this evening. We haven’t done much this hot weather but loaf around. Ruth¹ is still here. Hasn’t heard from Floyd² and doesn’t know when he will be back from his work in Michigan. I rather look for him sometime over this week-end but she doesn’t think so.

I haven’t tried to write this week and keep up the news because I thought you would be home. Parr resigned as county agent and took a job with Allison-They are going to sell + move to Danville-he will work in Indpls. I think the new county agent will take Parr’s house.

Mark is running around in bathing trunks this afternoon. He is going

(page 2) to turn the spray on after while –then he + Jimmy + Bobby will have a good time.

John is composing today. It is too hot for him to get out. There is a breeze stirring and we have everything open that we can so we are keeping as cool as possible with the breeze coming in now + then. The boys have been watching the thermometer all day and keep us informed as to the heat. The last report was 101°.

Will send Mark to the P.O. with this, so it will go out on the 4:30-

Love Mother

______________________

I just have to wonder, what happened to my grandfather? The last letter he wrote was postmarked July 15th. In 1942, July 15th was a Wednesday. His letter was written and shipped out at 8:30 PM the same day. My grandmother received it Saturday morning which prompted her to write the above letter. Now presumably, my grandfather went to work Thursday morning (July 16th), found his commanding officer, and firmly demanded that he be granted leave. So then what happened? When did he finally leave Norfolk? He likely took the train home since he did not have the family car in Norfolk. The trip from Norfolk to Kentland is slightly less than 1,000 miles. In an earlier letter, my grandfather was reimbursed for his travel expenses and he commented on the mileage the Navy calculated for his trip from Kentland to Norfolk. I don’t know how long the train trip was, but since they discussed my grandmother taking a pullman (or sleeping car) when she came to Norfolk to visit, I would surmise that the trip takes a couple days or is a long overnighter. In his letter on Wednesday, my grandfather said he would either write before he left or call on the way home. By Saturday, it was three days later. Did he arrive later that day? Why didn’t he send word? Or did he? Since these events fall into one of those voids where letters were not necessary, I will probably never know the answer to these questions.

I continue to sort through the documents in my grandfather’s Navy file this week. I do know that he left Norfolk before the 20th and he was definitely home in Kentland on the 22nd. I am currently working on reconstructing a timeline for the next two weeks of my grandfather’s life in 1942. I’ll keep you posted!

Notes:

  1. Ruth (Salter) Yegerlehner was Floyd’s wife
  2. Floyd Yegerlehner was my grandfather’s youngest brother.

Sometimes it is a little hard to think of things to write

Letter transcription:

Wed.

Dear Mother,

Just got home-read your short Sun letter. Sometimes it is a little hard to think of things to write about and some days one hardly feels like writing because of the scarcity of news. Just reminds me of what it might be like to be in jail only I guess we have a little more liberty.

We have another air raid warning tomorrow nite. So that means another night at the base. That’s a ‘lovely” duty. Just go there and sit and listen to the whistles blow. I’d like to know what they sound like down here once.

There is a fellow here now in the room Dorothy stayed in. The Dr. that was going to take it you remember was transferred and she hasn’t rented it until yesterday. Had plenty of chances but you know here-only the best.

I’m going after leave again tomorrow and this time I’m going to get it–maybe-at least I’m going to put up some pretty good arguments. That is If if I don’t get orders before that.

Got paid today-still had about $20⁰⁰ left

(page 2) from time before. Just about enough for the ticket home, but I haven’t gotten my laundry yet. This makes 16 days and believe me I’m getting down very low. I’ll almost have to get it before I can come home.

Got a letter from Clay City today. Things seem to be going as usual there.

Well, I’ll either write or be pretty definitely on the way home tomorrow eve. That is I’ll know pretty definitely that I’ll have a leave by then-

Love Daddy

____________________

Well, it would appear that my grandfather did get the leave he desired. This is the last letter I have from him until July 30th, just over two weeks later than today’s letter. His trip home didn’t turn out quite the way he expected though. Stay tuned for some interesting twists and surprises!

Liebster Blog Award

liebster-blog-award-small

This week I am being honored with the Liebster Blog Award. For those of you who have never heard of it before, the Liebster is given to newer bloggers with less than 200 followers. Liebster is the German word for “favorite”. The award is typically passed on once you receive it, being a sort of the chain letter for blogging. Once you have been nominated you need to answer eleven questions posed by your nominator, select eleven blogs you would like to nominate, and then come up with eleven questions for the new award recipients that you want answered. Whew!

I was honored by ljhlaura who writes the Branch and Leaf Blog. She was one of my earliest followers. Since I am still relatively new to blogging, I had a hard time coming up with eleven blogs with less than 200 followers. Many of the blogs that I follow at this point have large followings so they are ineligible for nomination. Two examples are Judy Russell’s The Legal Genealogist and Hinges of History. If you follow genealogy blogs, you KNOW who Judy is. Hinges of History is a blog that I only discovered this last week. Its entire focus is the WAVES of World War II. The WAVES, or Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service, were women who enlisted in the Navy. More than 100,000 of these amazing women signed up during World War II. I would like to think that my grandmother might have signed up if she had been 10-15 years younger and had not had a family at home to care for.

I tried to be diligent and make sure that the blogs I nominated had less than 200 followers. Unfortunately, not all the blogs I am nominating have their numbers of followers posted so I tried my best. Many of these bloggers welcomed me right from the start and I can’t wait to read each one of their new posts every day (or week).

  1. Mustang.Koji and his blog Masako and Spam Musubi
  2. Jenn, aka the Writer Gril, and her genealogy blog Unveiling My Past
  3. Donna Catterick and her new genealogy blog This I Leave
  4. Grant Davis and his blog The Stephen Sherwood Letters
  5. Kaitlin and her blog Keeping History Alive
  6. Chris Wimsatt at The Buff Genealogist
  7. Sheryl and her blog A Hundred Years Ago (I know she’s just over 200 followers, and I don’t care!)
  8. Jacqui Stevens  and her blog A Family Tapestry
  9. Gpcox at Pacific Paratrooper 
  10. Jaggh53163 at “Greatest Generation” Life Lessons
  11. Susan Buck and her blog Branches of Our Family

So here are the questions I was asked and my answers:

  1. When did I start my blog? I started my blog over this last Thanksgiving on November 23, 2012.
  2. What motivates you to write? I am not sure I have an answer to this one….I feel a great need to share my grandparents’ letters and to write down some of my family research before the stories or the letters get lost forever. I never really thought much about being a writer so I feel somewhat odd calling myself one.
  3. Do you have closer to a dearth of a plethora of writing ideas to bring to fruition? I love the word plethora. We used the word a LOT in college. I would say that I have a plethora of documents and a whole heck of a lot of source material to draw upon. I don’t see myself stopping anytime soon.
  4. Did you have a hard time naming your blog? I’ve gone by the moniker genealogy lady for awhile now (cough…well over a decade). My husband starting using it as a nickname for me when I would disappear into the office and not emerge for hours. It just seemed like the natural name for my blog.
  5. Where were you born? I was born in Gloucester, Massachusetts.
  6. How far to you currently live from where you were born? I am about as far as you can be and still be in the continental United States.
  7. Where would you live if you could live anywhere? I love the idea of living in Ireland, Scotland, Great Britain, etc. but I would probably be happiest somewhere in the mountains, in the woods near a lake, with very few people around.
  8. What’s your favorite season? Tough one as I like each season individually.
  9. Why is your favorite season your favorite? I like Winter for the snow and the holidays; I like Spring for its sense of newness and everything being reborn and the coming of warmer days; I like Summer for its heat, childhood memories of lazy days of camp on the lake, and its carefreeness; I like Autumn for the beautiful fall colors (which I rarely see anymore) and changing temperatures and the year end rituals of harvest & Halloween
  10. More introvert or extrovert? Hands down I am an introvert, and proud of it!
  11. What kind of people inspire you? Fearless & brave people; those who are not afraid to fight for their causes or against injustice; people who stand up to bullies and defy the odds.  Whether it was the brave women who fought for our right to vote, abolitionists who helped slaves escape the south, Germans who hid Jews during World War II, or the kid who stands up for his friend against the bully on the playground.

My questions for my nominees: 1) Why did you start your blog? 2) Name a hobby besides genealogy/writing that you also love. 3) Who is your favorite ancestor? 4) What is your favorite book? 5) If you could meet one of your ancestors, who would it be? 6) Why did you choose that ancestor? 7) If you could go back in time, what period would you chose? 8) Who is your most frustrating brick wall ancestor? 9) What is your favorite ice cream flavor? 10) Are you a professional genealogist or do you just this for “fun”? 11) Cat or dog person?

Wednesday’s Child – Carrie E. Steuernagel (1887-1889)

Steuernagel, Carrie - gravestone

Photograph of gravestone by Tonya & Keith Tetidrick from Find A Grave

Carrie E. Steuernagel was the youngest child of Charles A. Steuernagel and his first wife, Henrietta Paulina Yegerlehner. If you recall from last week’s Wednesday’s child, Henrietta was my grandfather’s aunt. Carrie died one month and nineteen days after her mother died, and just one month shy of her own second birthday. I do not know the cause of her death. I also find it hard to fathom the amount of grief that Charles experienced in his life. He had a rough time when it came to family. He lost his first wife and two of their three children within four years. When he married his wife’s younger sister Matilda, their marriage did not fare much better. Matilda and Charles were married seven years before she died a month after giving birth to her last child. They had five children together; two of which died as infants. Charles married a third time and lost this wife after only five years of marriage. Dorothy died within days of giving birth to her third child.  I think Charles gave up trying to find a wife afterwards.

Carrie is buried at the St. Peter’s Church Cemetery at Hickory Corner, Owen County, Indiana (FindAGrave).

____________________________________________

Letter transcription:

Mon. P.M.

Dear Mother,

It seems as if I’m getting the run around. Now the Captain has put me off until Friday. He may know of some orders coming in etc. or something else anyway today he told me to come back Fri. Fri I’m going to tell him I have some definite plans made for Sun and Mon and must get off at that time. Of course he may have other definite plans also. It might be as you said some time off between duties.

I wrote Mrs. Ahern so probably won’t be bothered by that anymore.

I’m just as much put out and feel as badly as you do about the summer but I can’t figure any solution because if there is no place to live I don’t know what can be done. These houses in Oakdale are OK but they don’t have gas or electricity so that is definitely out. A Lt. and his wife and 7 children are living in one and cooking in the fireplace but I don’t want that. They have been there 3 wks. Yesterday. Sounds

(page 2) like Wittenberg, but they can’t get the stuff to finish the lines.

Maybe we can talk those things over when I get home. I’ve been more dissatisfied here in the last 2 wks than before because its just like you said, the whole summer is almost gone, but I can’t see what can be done about it.

Got a letter from Uncles Wess today¹. They are in Mich., spending the summer. He still writes about the Spanish + American War². Guess it was as big to him as this one is now.

I washed out a suit of underware today. Mine are all in the wash. One bunch has been there since June 30, Maybe they will be out by Fri. Hope so or I’ll have to come home dirty.

Well, as I said last week. I’ll keep on writing each day because Fri. he may put me off again.

Love Daddy

Notes:

  1. Uncle Wess was Silvester Schiele, Roscoe’s mother’s brother. Silvester’s wife Jesse was from Michigan so it seems logical that they went there to vacation in the summers. Search the archives or tags to find more posts regarding Silvester.
  2. Silvester served in Company I, 1st Illinois Infantry in the Spanish American War in 1898. He was a musician. I recently found him in the U.S., Spanish American War volunteers, 1898 database on Ancestry. I knew he had served in the war but not that he was a musician! This letter provides the “smoking gun” evidence to corroborate the oral history that has been passed down.

Amanuensis Monday – July 12, 1942

There is definitely a routine to my grandfather’s letters at this point. Many of his letters open with how many letters received and which ones. This is a fairly typical interchange between my grandparents: I received this one, etc but nothing from such and such a date or I haven’t received anything for so many days. As the war progress, this will become the opening routine of most of their letters. Work for my grandfather seemed quite monotonous. More sailors arrived every day for the doctors to examine and inoculate. More jg’s were also expected. After a break of about 11 days, another doctor finally received orders to be transferred to another post. My grandfather also seemed very anxious to get a leave home. He did not exactly say why specifically but I’m sure we can all sympathize with his desire to go home, at least for a little while. At this point, he received some resistance from his commanding officer and the leave was not granted. Roscoe sent in his application for Flight school. He informed Gladys of his decision but waited for her response. I’m not sure that he liked what she wrote back. He began to second guess his decision to apply. By July 11th, he had not heard anything about the application and did not know if it was accepted.

I learned a few things this week that I hadn’t known before. My grandfather liked to read detective stories. He was taking a correspondence course and another weekly class on Navy regulations. He didn’t know if his sons knew about their mother being pregnant yet. I don’t know what the custom was in those days for telling the family about a new arrival. These days, families seem to wait until the first trimester has passed before passing along the good news. In July 1942, my grandmother was certainly past the 3 month mark in her pregnancy. I know my grandmother was a trim woman and as the pictures from June attest, she certainly was not showing her pregnancy (at least to the uninformed eye). I can tell somewhat because she looks a little rounder in the face compared to other pictures I have of her (before & after 1942).

This next week will certainly bring some changes and break the monotony.

__________________________________________

Letter translation:

Dear Mother,

I’m writing this at the base as you will note from the stationary. There really isn’t much to write about but there is just a little lull right now so. Sun Duty is a thing that everyone doesn’t like because it makes 7 days in the week instead of six and it gets pretty monotonous sitting here with not much to do, only accident and the minor run sicknesses.

We had special order (?) passed around that th to be on the alert for saboteurs and the like but so far there has been nothing unusual happened.

Had a good dinner – Ham, cabbage, mashed pot[atoes]

(page 2) Ice tea, Ice cream + coke. With soup to start things off with.

I’m going in the first thing in the A.M. to see about the leave- Maybe I can get it for sometime during the week. I hope.

Well, will write more later

Love Daddy

Sunday’s Obituary – Clara Etta (Steiner) Yegerlehner (1901-1966)

Last week I posted the obituary of my grandfather’s brother Clarence. I am still waiting to receive an obituary I ordered from the Vigo County Library before New Year’s. I had been hoping to post the obituary for my grandfather’s last brother today. So change of plans….this week I will write about Clarence’s first wife, Clara.

Terre Haute Tribune; Monday, January 24, 1966, p. 2

Terre Haute Tribune; Monday, January 24, 1966, p. 2

Clara Etta Steiner was the daughter of George and Rosina (Willen) Steiner. Clara was the fourth of five children. After her mother died, George remarried. His second wife Grace had four children. George and Grace’s youngest son, Earl, was good friends with my grandfather’s youngest brother Floyd. George Steiner and his family lived in Owen County, Indiana. The Steiners were another family of immigrants from Berne, Switzerland. They, too, followed the same immigration trail through Holmes County, Ohio and thence to Owen County, Indiana. The Steiners were members of St. Peter’s Church as well as the Yegerlehners.  The church is located on the Owen and Clay county line. In fact, I believe the church is technically in Clay County while the graveyard is in Owen County. The Steiners and the Yegerlehners were two families that knew each other well and have trees that have intertwined over the years.

Clara and Clarence had certainly known each other since they were very small children. They were married May 22, 1920 in Coal City, Indiana, by the Rev. William Krieble, Clarence’s great uncle. If you would like to read more about Clarence and Clara, see the images posted with Clarence’s obituary.

The Yegerlehner Women - c1930s

________________________________________________________

Letter translation:

Sat. Eve

Dear Mother,

Again Sat. and no delivery and no letter. Got a card from Boone. I’ve had the P.M. off and just now feel like the cat that licked the cream because I’ve spent the whole afternoon reading a ten cent detective story. I picked it up this AM and started it and there was nothing doing this PM. So we go off and I brought it home to finish all one story about 250 long.

Lentz went out to play golf and I’m waiting to get a message for him if it comes. He may take another week end off if he gets the right message. I think his girl friend is in Wilmington Delaware. That’s just a surmise and since I’ve been reading detective stories I try to figure those things out.

I go on duty tomorrow at 9:00 AM and get off at 4:30 Mon PM quite some stretch, but I guess I can stand it. Maybe I can find some time to write during the day.

Jim called me the other night he had come in to legde lodge but I was working on my correspondence course so I didn’t go downtown. He told me he was thinking of taking some sort

(page 2) of school work himself.

I’m running very low on clothes again. Haven’t gotten any laundry back since June 30 and socks are getting to be a problem again. And also underware. I’ve got some but not enough to last for one month. Its been 10 days since I took the laundry in and it took several days to get that much dirty clothes so that takes the most of the months supply.

Very very warm here today, only a faint sprinkle of rain last night again. It did help things to cool off however

Well, I’ll write again tomorrow

Love Daddy

Family treasures

Normally, since today is Saturday, I would have written about another of my paternal family surnames. That had originally been my plan but on Thursday night I began searching through my boxes of family documents for my grandfather’s naval documents. I knew I had them. I had previously seen them, but I had forgotten where I stashed them. I finally found them again along with another family treasure, the bible belonging to my great Uncle Jim Foster.

My grandfather’s naval packet is about 2 inches thick. It contains pretty much every order he received including his initial enlistment papers. How I wish I knew where they were at Thanksgiving when I started my blog! I really could have started the story from the beginning, even before the letters started.  It looks like I have another organizing project because of course none of the papers are in order! I’ve already started pulling the documents that apply to July and August 1942.

First part of Uncle Jim's diary

First part of Uncle Jim’s diary

The other treasure is the bible. It was presented to Jim by his wife Thelma in 1931 when he became a Freemason. Over the years I have accumulated several bibles. I have one belonging to Christian Yegerlehner which is in German. I have my great grandmother Emma Foster’s as well. Neither one of them has any great genealogical information stashed away inside. They are more sentimental keepsakes. Uncle Jim’s bible on the other hand is a genealogical treasure trove. He apparently took it with him when he enlisted in 1942. The front pages are a combination autograph and address book in addition to being a diary of Jim’s years in the Navy.  The first page of the diary begins, “This page for my naval history second enlistment, enlisted 5 March 1942 in Indianapolis, Ind. As SK2C, called to active duty 5 May 1942, reported to Naval recruiting station in Indianapolis and from there to Great Lakes Naval Training Station, North Chicago, Ill. Served from 5 to 25 May in “boot” camp. Got one 24 hour leave on Friday 22. Went Home. Drove Back the next day with Thelma and George Garrigus. Left Great Lakes on 25 May for Norfolk, VA. Arrived in Camp Allen 26 May, remained there for four days and was transferred to Ship’s Company at Camp Bradford, reported at Bradford to Lt. Paul M. Ander, 30 May”. Since Uncle Jim wrote his second enlistment, I wonder when his first enlistment was.

In addition to these wonderful gems of family research, I also realized that I have at least a hundred letters that my grandmother wrote my dad from 1960 through the 1980s. My grandmother was a stenographer by training and usually handled most of the family’s correspondence including business correspondence related to my grandfather’s medical practice.   At least I know that when I eventually finish with the World War II letters, I’ll still have a lot to share about the family!

_______________________________________

Letter transcription:

Fri Eve

Dear Mother,

First-Send the $1,000 back back and write them to discontinue that phase of the thing. We don’t want to be mailing those things back every year.

Got two letters today and by the way when you address the letter put the (jg) right after the Lt. looks like you forgot something.

Had a pretty hard morning this morning but 5 of us had to examine 10 men this P.M. The rest of the time we sat. We have a lecture course at the base which meets twice each week. It’s all about navy rules + regulations. I know what that court-martial means now, will explain that when I come home. D

Still haven’t heard anything from my application and don’t suppose I will for some time yet. It just makes a fellow between the devil and the deep blue sea but I can’t see that I’m any better or worse off than others who didn’t apply.

This might be the last letter you’ll get before I get home but I’ll keep writing because

(page 2) I might not get off next week. I’m going to try about Tue, Wed. or Thur. Pay day is Wed and that might have something to do with it, because funds are a little short for fare etc. I’d have enough for here but to get a round trip would cramp me somewhat.

Its been sprinkling here a little but still no rain. It get cool here each night but hot as the dickens in day time.

Well, Hope to see you next week if this gets there before I do-

Love Daddy

Sam Snead

Sam Snead playing at the PGA championship in 1942 at Seaview, New Jersey

Sam Snead playing at the PGA championship in 1942 at Seaview, New Jersey

I never quite know where my grandfather’s letters will take me. Today, I’m learning a bit about Sam “Slammin’ Sammy” Snead, the professional golfer. I am rather of my grandfather’s opinion on the whole subject. I don’t really like sports and I don’t spend my time following them.  I love his attitude towards golf. I’m sure we have all had the stereotypical picture in our mind of our doctor, playing golf on his day off. I guess my grandfather broke the mold on that one. My only exception for watching sports is during the Olympics. I will watch sports for 2 weeks every two years and then I’m done. This case is no different.  I’m sure if I knew who Sam Snead was and if I was an avid sports fan, watching him play would be quite the treat. Dr. Lentz was most likely of that opinion. But how cool is it that my grandfather got to watch this golf legend play (even though he didn’t appreciate it).

___________________________________________

Letter transcription:

Thur Eve

Dear Mother,

Didn’t get a letter today- I suppose it got mixed up in the mail at least I hope there is nothing wrong that you couldn’t write.

We are having some pretty hot weather down here at present. So far it has been very cool at nights but the days are really hot + sticky.

We went out and watched Sammy Snead¹, a professional golfer play a little this Eve. He was giving lessons. He is now in the navy and of course must give the lessons free. Somehow I don’t care anything for golf anymore-seems to me that it’s a waste of time and energy. Just as well walk and give up the hitting of the ball ever so often. Dr. Lentz seems to get a big kick out of it, was talking about buying a new set of clubs for $30², but then he doesn’t have any dependants to speak of etc.

Mrs. E. finally told me last night that she found the boxᶟ you left. She almost threw it away thinking it was an empty box. She got a letter from Dorothy. She said

(page 2) she was going to answer both your letters before long.

Today is the first day in eleven days that anyone got orders. He had been here about the same length of time that I have been. He was sent to the Panama Canal Zone.

Well, it’s time to go eat.

Love Daddy

Notes:

  1. Samuel Jackson Snead was a professional golfer who served in the Navy from 1942-1945. He was known as “Slammin’ Sammy” for his perfect swing. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Snead
  2. $30 for a set of clubs! Amazing, but my grandfather was correct, Dr. Lentz didn’t have any children so he probably had a little more disposable income.
  3. When my grandmother and Dorothy Krull left Norfolk, they left a present for Mrs. Evans. At this point, it has been over two weeks since they left. I wonder what was in the box?

I forgot to say anything about the leg cramps

Today’s letter reminded me of when I was pregnant with my children. Hearing bits about my grandmother’s pregnancy experiences is rather fascinating. It was certainly something that we never talked about when she was alive. My grandmother did meet my future husband about six months before we were married but talk of babies was still in the very distant future. She eventually died a few years later before I had my firstborn.  In the last years of her life, she suffered from Alzheimer’s disease or some other form of dementia. I don’t think she was officially diagnosed with Alzheimer’s but it was certainly suspected.  I doubt she even knew who I was the last time we met.

When she was pregnant with my father, Gladys was 36, going on 37. My father was born about 6 weeks before the 37th birthday. I was a couple years older than that when I gave birth to my youngest.  Thirty six was fairly old in those days for having children, but not unheard of, especially with women who had larger families. My father-in-law who is slightly younger than my father was born when his mother was 42.  I did not enjoy being pregnant, either time, but I think the second time was harder due in part to my age. Both my children were very active in vitro which made me very uncomfortable most of the time. My youngest also liked to sit on a nerve that affected my left leg. I also remember waking up in the night with leg cramps. Boy, I don’t miss those.

____________________________________________

Letter transcription:

Wed.

Dear Mother,

Just read your two letters and also Ed’s. His was rather it interesting but not much about himself except that about the Yoll stove. I don’t know what happened to him at Chicago. I wanted him to go to the Arnett Crocket Clinic in the first place.

Yes it may or may not have been wrong to sign up for that flight school but there was a fellow transferred from here the other day who had been here about 10-11 months + too Dr. Rude the one that was coming here-was married and had a child 5 yrs. old and he was sent to sea. So there you are. You can’t figure anything out in the navy. In the first place why was I sent down here-

If I were you-instead of taking too much laxative I’d use small enema at least for the time being. I forgot to say anything about the leg cramps. That will happen in spite of everything, but you should take some vitamins. Say one unicap each day. Of course Dr. C[ole] may prescribe something different but you can’t beat those and they don’t have any taste to upset you.

No one has gotten any orders now

(page 2) for ten days. So maybe I did make a mistake by trying to get out of here.

I told Mr. Ferneau about the letter Dorothy sent. He just laughed, guess I told you that before but its so long before the letters get back that I forget what I have and have not written.

Seems as if that was all the new-all we did today was examine + shoot. Had 2084 men to shoot today. So the day wasn’t wasted I guess

Love Daddy