Tag Archives: photos

August 28, 1924

Thursday 11am.

My Dear Ina,

The frame wasn’t ready as promised due to the illness of his frame making man, and it will probably be a few days before I can send it to you. Thought I’d write so you would know.

August 28, 1924

August 28, 1924

Am expecting Mr. Bishopp this PM and I’ll be mighty glad to see him. The work has developed with nothing unusual to upset previous findings and I am anxious to go over it with him. About 4 PhDs went over some material I shipped to Washington and concluded that the organism I shipped could hardly be the cause of the malady. They didn’t identify it or even give me the group to which it belonged. I know I am correct in it and while the organism I shipped may not under normal conditions cause creeping eruption, I believe that in the course of its development here it obtains some toxic property which causes the lesions we see. I believe that lots of them burrowing into the skin do not show any lesions or ill effects, but that ones spending part of the life cycle in a mole cricket possess this toxin which results in the disease.

When Bishopp comes I believe I can show him and then I want to wire for Dr. Ransom to come so that I can show him. The work seems to fall under Dr. Ransom’s division but I don’t care about that if I can show him what the cause is.

Hope to hear from you soon. I always look forward to your letters and you don’t know how much I enjoy them.

Always-
Walter

August 23, 1924

Jacksonville Fla
Sat. Night.

My Dear Ina,

This is a short letter to answer your nice long one with but I have just gotten the Kodak enlargements and I want to send them tonight. I am having one of the sitting pose framed for yourself and it will follow about the middle of next week. This will make one of each for yourself and one of each for your mother. I am returning the photo she so kindly loaned, though I doubt if she expected me to return it. It was mighty nice of her and I appreciate it very much. The Kodak pictures are so much like yourself, as you are now, that they are just right, and I really don’t care so much for a regular pose picture. I think these are real natural and they are just what I wanted. Sometime when you have a house dress on and can have a Kodak picture made, I would like one. Let it be natural, and I don’t care if it is made on the back steps with a kitchen broom. Have Claudelle make one of you wearing a bungalow apron and before you eat breakfast. If it is made during your vacation I am sure that it will be bright enough outside at that time. (Don’t throw anything at me) I wouldn’t get up early either if I were you.

August 23, 1924

August 23, 1924

I note with interest about the squirrel hunt, and since I became pretty well acquainted with the Regan Wells squirrels while there I can understand why you didn’t get any. They don’t get up very early. “The early bird gets the worm” but there isn’t any advantage in getting up before the worm does. I had always shot squirrels early in the morning and in the evening, but at Regan Wells the best time is about noon, unless you have a dog. Even then a person won’t have much luck at still hunting. As you drive along the road at noon they cross ahead of you frequently, and at this time I have shot from 3 to 5 in driving only two or three miles. I did this most every day at Regans, and kept the Brundretts pretty well supplied. However, I rather envy someone the opportunity of going hunting with you, and I can readily understand why he couldn’t see a squirrel. Under the same circumstances I probably would not have seen any squirrels either. (This is intended as a compliment).

I am expecting Dr. K-S to return tonight and I’ll probably take up all of his time tomorrow on account of the developments since he left. He wrote to his office nurse that a spirochaete was a pretty small thing for me to find and that had I been in Tennessee and used a little of their “home brew” I probably would have found a much larger thing. But even that would not equal his nightmare at about the time the clinic closed. He chased what we call a “Larva Migrans” under his bed and down the stairway. He said it was about 2-1/2 feet long. (The thing is really microscopic and we’ve called it “larva migrans” because no one knew what it was).

Had a letter from Bishopp today saying that he didn’t recognize the organisms shipped by myself. I couldn’t expect him to for it isn’t what an entomologist would be familiar with. I doubt if the thing has even been described or known to anyone in a scientific way. He had just returned from New York City, where I presume he took the boys. I know the daughter had been there, but it was new to the younger children.

It is now 12 o’clock and it will be Sunday before I start to the hotel.

Sweet dreams,

Always
Walter.