An order was sent to Portland for his arrest

To Bertha from Cora Hendricks –

(Date is approximate)

Miss Bertha Ballou
Elks, Nevada

You certainly could not do the things you do now. I simply cannot imagine you walking and climbing in such snow or going through all that mud and water and not being quite used up.

I can understand you’re enjoying such a trip if you can stand it. I think it was very nice to have a birthday party and rather odd that there were two of you to ______ together.

I thought you ought to be glad to see a pair of gloves. I have one pair of white gloves which I acquired so long ago. I have forgotten when or where, which are doing splendid service. I send them out with the laundry when they get dirty and they come back looking like new. I just got them home today. What a mess Elks must have been after the thaw! I wonder if such things happen after there. One would prefer more gradual thawing.

The Chaplain is to go to the school at Camp Grant in April. We will miss them very much.

Nothing has been heard of Major Brown since he left, and we do not know whether he has gone to his new station or deserted.

An order was sent to Portland for his arrest, but it was too late to catch him there. I rather hope he will not be heard from again.

A letter from Sally today, gave her mark in Algebra for the exam, 80, the quarter 100, and the course, 87. Geometry exam, 97, course, 97. History, 88. Pretty good! She did not knew her other marks as yet.

I shall be most glad to her that Senn has done as well. He should have finished exams on Thursday. Papa has finished a most remarkable workbench which he has been making and has it in the attic. He is now planning various things to be attached to it. Well, he enjoys the work and gets his exercise in a way which is interesting instead of tedious, so it is a good thing whether he ever makes any use of his workbench.

We have both been enjoying some of our own books which we had not read in a long time or not at all, for the last week or two, I believe, I shall, in time like Dickens, better than almost anybody.

The days are growing long very fast. We not go to dinner before it is quite dark, and can read until five, without needing lights. That will not be true today, for it is very dark and cloudy, and is quite dim now.

I had a letter from Aunt _____ yesterday, she has been ill ever since September, but is gaining. She is staying with a cousin. I do not think she has been confined to her bed much, perhaps not at all.

Well, I wonder what sort of a condition this will find Elks in. Probably cold again!

With lots of love,

Mamma

Pike’s Peak looked up, vast and white, and as clear and distant as the nearby hills

To Bertha from CC Ballou –

Denver

September 11, 1920

My dear Specksie,

Tours of the 7th received. Before now you know that the property has arrived. I think I wrote you, but I don’t know where to look for the “good-neck”’; so I will pack and mail you the bronze one that is on the glass porch table. It is just as good as the other one, I think and at any rate is the only one I can _____ my hands on right now. I am not opening any boxes, as I don’t know what is in there and any way I don’t want a lot of small articles laying around loose while I am in town. I have most of the furniture unpacked. The two big beds are set up, both OK. The lamp also. The tables are all right, also the bookcase and cabinet. In fact, everything as far as I have gone, I have unpacked only the Salvador and _____, both OK, though _____ glass was broken. I unpacked and put in place the rosewood bookcase this morning before I came to town. The shelves had been removed, of course, but the bottom pieces were not taken out. They are loose, just like the shelves, and had tumbled about but did not buck this glass doors. I put the shelves in the cabinet last evening after cleaning them. It is a marvel that thing with three glass sides and a mirror back wasn’t busted, but the packing seems to have been well done. _____ has been very careful in unpacking things. I have a cook in sight but will leave that for Mamma to arrange.

Yesterday was the finest day I ever saw in Denver. Pike’s Peak looked up, vast and white, and as clear and distant as the nearby hills. It is a pity you didn’t have some previous _____ regarding the library. Are the books carded? I will try to find out something about such matters and perhaps I can help you. I expect Mamma one week from this morning. She leaves on Wednesday or said she expected to, but of course can’t make the connection you made in Chicago. So, she will get the evening train out and spend two nights and one day instead of two days and one night on route from Chicago. Everyone wishes to be remembered. The _____ _____ and half the _____ _____ left day before yesterday.

Your loving dad.

Your banker at Elks can buy you a Liberty bond

To Bertha from CC Ballou –

War Department
Headquarters Recruit Depot

Fort Logan, Colorado
September 22, 1920

Dear Specks,

I resumed command this morning.

Yesterday evening, I rearranged some things in the house, putting the “new” bookcase in the southwest corner of the dining room for a China closet, moving the _____ to replace it under the _____ near the parlor, library door, the big thing with shelve sin it was moved from the dining room to the space between lounge and dining room door. The oak bookcase is between hall entrances to the dining room and parlor. I hung Mamma’s portrait (India ink) in southwest corner of the library, facing the _____. I put the “_____” over the parlor mantel. There will doubtless be other charges necessary, but it will all work out in time.

Mamma laughed at me last night because I was counting up the weeks to Christmas. Austin failed to get a commission. Mr. Austin’s candidate for _____ senate failed to get the nomination. Austin is looking for a job. The Herron’s go to Camp Benning, Georgia. Dr. Stone leaves this week for station at Omaha. The _____ gone to Arkansas. The ______ are gone to San Francisco. The Steves’ are not ordered away. Dr. Chase is discharged. The Schmidt’s are gone. Dr. _____ is here get but will possibly soon be discharged, having failed. O’Keefe and Kleitz failed but being retired scout officers, they will probably continue on duty. _____ is gone to For Wonder (Washington) with rookies. Will be back in a few days. General Wood asked in recent letter to be remembered to you.

You wrote about not recognizing one of those checks I gave you. If, at the time you draw your pay, you find you have not need it, you can _____ it up and let Mamma know, as she can note it in her checkbook. I dare say your banker at Elks can buy you a Liberty bond each month. You can get a hundred dollar bond for from $86.00 to $96.00 and get interest on $100.00. Better ask _____ about it.

Your loving old dad.

Watch out for colds.

I shall be interested to know if your troublesome boy continues to be good

To Bertha from Cora Hendricks –

Fort Logan, Colorado

September 29, 1920

Dear girlie,

I had a nice long letter for you Monday and Papa had one today, so that is two since I wrote you. I have enjoyed these so much, but I have felt quite anxious about you not having any warmer clothing when it turned so suddenly cold. We send you trunk by express and I trust you will very soon have it. Your raincoat and wool stockings you should have now, I think. I hope you get that stove very soon. I know how you feel the cold and it is enough in itself to make you blue.

Would you like to have your sleeping bag? I wish you were here, it is the most perfect weather and I do miss you very much.

I have a great time trying to get the house fixed up. I work every day a little longer than I intend to and accomplish a great deal less than I intend to. However, it is coming, and, I do enjoy it, for it is such a pleasure to Papa to see the place grow homelike.

Poor fellow! He has lived in an empty house so long and he likes all our pretty things as much as any of us do. I don’t know but even more. Today I worked on the hall a little while and really did make quite a change and he came in and seemed so pleased with the result that I wanted to do a lot more right away.

Did you get the reading lamp Papa said he sent you? He has just now been putting the gooseneck lamp together. I am going to send you other stockings as soon as I can, but I am not going very fast with them. I got four balls of yarn which looked as big s the other balls and I doubt if it going to be enough. I may have to make the toes of something else.

I suppose you have heard from Sally, for she said she was going to write to you as soon as she could, and certainly by Sunday. I am glad she is so pleased with her roommate and hope they continue to get on well together.

I am going to be very much interested in seeing the pictures you have taken. Also, I shall be interested to know if your troublesome boy continues to be good and what kind of people his family _____ to be. I am glad you have found someone to wash for you, it is too much for you to have to wash everything for yourself in addition to all your other work. You will have quite enough of it, if you only do what you cannot trust to someone else. I meant to have done a little pressing this afternoon, but decided to wait until another day, when I saw what time it was after I had gotten cleaned up. You would certainly laugh if you could see the stuff I have spread about in the unused rooms here. I have just spread everything as I came to it so that we could sort and see where to put things. Just now curtains I am most concerned with, how to make what I have work to the best advantage. I believe there are enough, such as they are.

Mrs. Caples’ mother leaves this evening. I think _____ _____ goes in a few days, but Mrs. H and the children are to wait here until their belongings reach the new station.

We are having a concert now. I do most thoroughly approve of this band. They play all the kind of music I like. I have a picture of Sally here for you and will mail it soon. By the way, I sent you the Army and Navy Journal, if you think of it when you are through reading it, send it to either Lenn or Sally.

Your loving mother.

Lenn’s address is 306 East Madison Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

I wore a brand-span-new yellow linen suit which cost me a great deal of money

To Bertha from Marie Schubert –

Dearest Bertha,

This letter may as well begin with an apology for the envelop for I’m quite convinced before I begin that it will be too fat for anything but a Post Office sort of envelope.

Not that I’ve been having such wild excitement as strikes or presidential candidates but just that I’m feeling somewhat “gabby.”

Our somewhat dwindled away bunch had a couple of perfectly delightful picnics at a camp (on Cedar Island) which Iris Beatly and Louise Herron build. Iris gave us a very hesitating invitation as it is a long, long way from Washington but we (Dorothy, Catherine, and I) promptly fell upon her neck and embraced the opportunity to picnify at her old camp. So the next Sunday we met, laden to the eyebrows with sketching materials, and took the Glen Echo car by storm. After the conductor had been around several times and had relieved us of all our “tokens,” we finally disembarked on a high bluff above the canal. Iris frisked down as gayly and nonchalantly as a mountain goat and from the bottom enjoyed the spectacle of our timorous decent cheering and encouraging us and trying not to burst into indecent hilarity at our sufferings. It was steep as the Flatiron Building. The surface was slimy clay (oozy from the autumn rains) with here and there stones and pebbles which dislodged and skidded under foot. There were also little gullies to catch one high heels.

To make a long story short, we made it somehow uttering little squeaks and feminine noises and bringing with us several ineffective little clumps of grass at which we had wildly clutched. None of us actually sat down and slid though how we escaped doing so is a profound mystery. We all were very much dressed up. I wore a brand-span-new yellow linen suit which cost me a great deal of money and why misfortune spared such a shining victim, I do not understand. However, we reached the bottom damaged only in our nervous systems and found that we must now cross the canal on a bridge consisting of a single teetering plank. There was a handrail on one side but it wasn’t robustly enough attached to afford me any great comfort. I felt that if I leaned upon that weakly rod, I’d plunge into the lock and pull the rod in with me.

Well, we, eventually, all of us, crossed the canal. Then after walking “to the north” miles and miles and miles, we turned toward the river and went puffing and ploughing thru a perfect jungle, across another teetering rickety bridge (with rail on one side only) and once more into the tangled wild wood. Then our troubles were rewarded. We came to the camp under huge wonderful black guarded tree trunks. In front was a wild welter of green and gold sunlit foliage and beyond the shining river, the Virginia shore a fairy-like black-blue vision. It looked as transparent and delicate as tissue paper and oh how deliciously perfumed and cool and fresh the air and a combination of birds, tree fronts, crickets, bumble bees and tickling water to soothe one’s ears.

We all began sketches but one night s well have tried to catch the changes in the hues of a soap bubble. The brilliant flood of gold and green took on a blue shadow then the sky flamed into a marvelous sunset, followed by the tints of the subdued fire one sees in the plumage of gray pigeons.

Meanwhile, Iris had been very busy making magic over a campfire which began to be very picturesque in the gathering purple gloom and presently on a table build under the trees we were served with a Spanish affair constructed as follows. In a deep fry pan were laid numerous strips of bacon. When they were crisp and brown, an egg omelet was fried in the bacon grease. This was served to us with a sauce poured over made of minced peppers and onion stewed in fresh ripe tomatoes. Hot red beans, olives, sandwiches, fruit, cheese and little cakes completed the menu. You cannot imagine how delicious it tasted with the faint smoky tang. It was just perfectly yum-yummy. When it was pitch black dark, we formed a line and stumbled back thru the jungle headed by Iris carrying a small smoky lantern. There were also little yellow glow worms but they didn’t help much. Later, walking back by the canal, a ragged yellow piece of a moon straggled in and out of the dense clouds overhead but it really didn’t help much, either. However, there were enough of us to be heard clear to Washington if anything had startled us shrieking. So, we weren’t nervous at all.

We had all had such a really delightful time that it was decided to do it again. The second picnic was very like the first but the menu was quite different. We built a huge fire and having made a big bed of coals, we roasted sweet potatoes and roasting ears of corns in it and, over it, toasted weenies which were put between thin slices of white bread and butter. You can’t imagine how different and toothsome it all was. We also had rye bread and Swiss cheese sandwiches, potato chips, peaches and cakes and this time we had a real moon bobbing in the canal among a million stars as we came home. I just loved every minute of it.

Later –
This is a continued in our next affair and second section begins at this point. Let me see… I haven’t told you about the matinee. I’ve seen several lately all quite singularly gloomsome. “Martinique” the story of a very charming girl who discovers that she is a half breed. Very dramatic and exceedingly picturesque settings and costumes. “Beyond the Horizon” a story of a little country girl who marries the wrong brother. However, as usual, he is conveniently removed by pleurisy (or something hollow and heartrending in his chest) and the right brother comes back, and, at the benevolent request of the dying wrong one promises to marry the widow as soon as she becomes one. But when I said the matinee, I meant a really wonderful play adapted from the Spanish by Mary Roberts Rinehart and Avery Hopwood. It was a truly great play. A melodrama. I suppose but what one might call a classic melodrama. The costumes were by somebody in Seville and authentic. The cast was mostly the original cast imported from Spain. It was quite distinctively foreign in ideals, situations scenery and personnel. As Dorothy said even their feet were foreign queer narrow long squared toed delicate-leather boots. Maria del Carmen the heroine impressed herself forever upon my memory by kneeling in the shadowed foreground at a candle lighted shrine. She wore a marvelous fuchsia red satin, a white blouse and white satin slippers with red heels. She had blue black glittering hair. The background was formed by a brilliant yellow-green sunlight, showered countryside with shimmering sapphire sky and big soft white cloud masses seen thru an arch in the neutral colored shadow wall. Oh if I were Ignacio Zuloaga… There were pictures like that all through the play. One’s first glimpse of Peucho (the hero) is when he suddenly stands a figure of tragedy, dusty and travel worn and hunted and betrayed in the midst of the dancers (who are whirling about like brilliant flowers in their fall skirts) celebrating the betrothal of his sweetheart to his rival. The scene is a wild riot of shifting swaying dazzlingly rich variety of color arrested by this somber figure. I loved it, I just loved it. Peucho has stabbed Xavier in a fair fight, Maria del Carmen to save Peucho nurses Xavier, who falls madly in love with her, Peucho hearing that Maria del Carmen is to marry Xavier risks arrest and returns from exile. By his mother, he places his life in jeopardy and she promises Xavier’s father to marry Xavier if they will not produce Peucho’s dagger (which is in their possession) at the trail. There was a wonderful night scene where Xavier standing in the purple gloom overhears the noted surgeon tell his father that he cannot live. The father and the surgeon look so warm and alive in the flow of orange light from a queer old lamp and poor Xavier looks so gray and cold and ghastly and ghost-like in the dim cold shadow. The father is in a passionate emotional protest by Xavier stands quiet overwhelmed and hopeless. You feel almost as if he were already dead. I can’t convey in the mere words how perfect the artistry was but every character was satisfying and convincing and color and psychology were made to harmonize throughout. Added to this, the plot was unusual. The costumes were real. The orchestra was mercifully concealed somewhere and while at crucial moments one was aware of barbaric brilliant strains of plaintive weird melodies one didn’t see an orchestra leader doing acrobatics or a prosaic Yankee rattling castanets with one eye upon a sheet of music under a green shaded electric light. I was so thrilled all the way there. I wept for poor dying Xavier. I wept with his desolate father. I wept for that splendid hunted deserted Peucho and oh I wept woops over that adorable abused tenderhearted ill-fated Maria del Carmen. I do declare there were times when it seemed as if I just couldn’t stand it to see that sweet child so put upon by fate. I felt that I must go right to her and join in the affair and do something about it. Poor Dorothy eventually became almost as concerned over me as she was over the heroine. She said, “It isn’t good for you to get so worked up and excited, Marie. I’m sure it isn’t good for you!” Afterward, she took me out and bleary eyed and pale and exalted (it was one of these blistering hot days) and bought me a sundae to cool me down a little. I was just having a lovely time though and the play will be a perfect storehouse of charming memories in my mind for years to come. Dorothy and I enthusiastically agreed that it was a really great play.

My thoughts are beginning to wander a trifle. You see the kittens have suddenly decided to climb my-er-stockings and I feel as if I were being attacked by a flock of frolicsome sandspurs. Excuse me a moment while I remove the little pests.

Iris is soon to be in New York. Dorothy and Catherine still plugging away at the navy department. They plan to enter (night class) the Corcoran again as soon as it opens. Dorothy said she intended writing you all about that when they got started and hear the gossip and get the sniffle of turpentine once more in their nostrils (words to that effect) n’everything. As for me, I am counting the weeks now, just seven more, and trying to realize that this wonderful thing is really going to happen. One doesn’t realize the miracle of it until it becomes part of one’s personal experience then it ceases to be a commonplace fact and everyday occurrence and becomes suddenly beautiful and almost unbelievable like a fairy tale magic.

Do write again soon. I loved your letter and I miss you so much.

As ever,
Marie