1920.02.24

My Dearest Fanny,

You two dandy letter to hand and sure was glad to here from you dear. Your letter of the 20 and 21th to hand today just think I got your last Friday letter today. Yesterday we had no mail service. I sure did enjoy your big letter of the 20th was some letter. Well dear I so glad to know that you are getting along so fine and that you can go out and that you are able to help your mother with the house work. We are haveing cold weather here and a person minds the cold today so much. I was going to lodge but I did not feel any to good and thought best to stay home where it is warm and take care of my selfe. i guess I have a little cold in my Bones. So I will go to bed and sweat it out. I will be alright in the am.

I had a letter from home last Saturday and my sister said that my mother is alright again. Yes dear that was my way all the time to have a quiet wedding but I did not want to say anything till I heard from you that what Jack wedding is going to be a quiet wedding and it is going to be at Mary bro home. Yes have got me six forks and six knives and they sure are pretty and today I gave them to Jack and he was so happy over it that he gave me a big kiss and he sure appreciate them and thank me over and over again. Thursday evening I going to take his truck and boxes from here out to his new flat where he will live after next Monday when they are married. They will stop at a hotel Saturday and Sunday and Monday they go to their own apartment. He is not going out of the city so he just plans on staying two days at a hotel.

Did I tell you in last night letter I had supper out at Findeisen’s last evening. Yes when I was over at Dave house Hellen said she can’t see what we two can find to write and I said that is easy we always can write something if we only have time to write. I know there are times when I am through writing your letter that I think of something I forgot to write about that I could start to write to write another letter.

Dear I told that love sick man what you wrote and he laugh and said he must write his girl that I am always coming in his room and he can’t write his letter so he wants to see what she has to say.

So dear you are peeved because I said Fanny B was one out of a million. Well dear she is to Ben and dear you are one out of a million to me and you could not get peeved at me because you love me to much.

Yes lover my bro is much heavier than I am he weigh 220lbs but I am a little taller than him only about 1 1/2 inch if cause he never work like I did and he likes his beer and I think a lot of that come from beer. He is four years older than I am so far I have not heard from him but if I do here from him I will let you know.

Yes dear my bro was married and I though I had told you they were married about three years and his wife sister and her husband and mother in law all come to live with my bro when he lived in Toledo and made thing unpleasant and they agreed to disagree and his wife got her degree and everything was fine the nicest parting(?) I ever seen. That was the best way. She was a gentile girl but a good girl and her sister was married to a ((()))) also.

Yes dear I was the first one to fall in love. Mrs White she was saying soon she will loose all her boys. So you can not sleep and you was thinking about everything since we first meet. Dear I want to thank you for all the nice thing you say about me and I glad you love so much because that is something money can’t buy. You tell mother Heymann that I will look for her letter and dear I could not make out what you had in German that mother said you should write and Dadd is glad writeing is not in style. I know when we are together it will be out of style, we will write to your folk and my folk and that all. Honey what did you understand I had in one of my letter to you if you thought it was $6000.00 that is wrong, sixty dollars only ($6). I can’t save 6000.00 of my earning in a month or were you kidding me and understood it was $60.00. Good night dear with love kisses and hugs
your only.

my love to all mother dady and bros.