• Transcribe
  • Translate

Conger Reynolds correspondence, April-December 1919

1919-12-25 Conger Reynolds to John and Emily Reynolds Page 6

More information
  • digital collection
  • archival collection guide
  • transcription tips
 
Saving...
six-thirty. We had made arrangements to go to midnight mass at the Madeleine, but when the time came, home and bed were more attractive to our tired heads. Except for these holiday festivities things are moving along about as usual. Daphne is, of course, having her trials now. She suffers from nausea a good bit - mother will understand how and why. And she gets wild desires for strawberry shortcake, dill pickles, and other things we can't get. The other day it was cream, and she burst out saying she'd like to go straight to Dexter - she knew she could get there all the cream she'd want. These desires, fortunately, do not persist. Sometimes when they are for things we can get they are gone by the time we get the things. But she's a Trojan about taking the dis-
 
World War I Diaries and Letters