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Marked Indianapolis letters 1364 Franklin St., Oakland, Aug. 15, '92. Dear Mr. Muir: Your letter and express package
reached me on Saturday and I thank you for both - but I did not want you to send so much as to make me to such an extent your
debtor. Tell the children I had hoped to spend next Sat. with them, that I am homesick to see them, but that this evening
comes a letter from some N. Y. cousins. Col. and Mrs. Hough, who have asked me to go to Menlo Park with them next Saturday,
and as it is my only opportunity for a visit with them, I must go. Tell Helen that peaches are very tempting, but the two
little girls who have found a place in my heart are much more. I hope whenever you are in Oakland you will not pass by the
McChesney mansion. The Alexanders are just back from their summering on Lake Tahoe, brown as nuts. Their home is a dear place
for me. A stack of papers awaits correction, so I must bid you goodnight, with gratitude. With love to the family, I am,
Yours sincerely, Katharine Graydon August 15th, '92. Some pleasant remembrances have come from Miss Felton bearing on
Grecian interests, just enough to fire my repressed Hellenic affection. I am taking private instruction from a native, in
the modern tongue, and first thing you know I will be conversing with you in the language of Plato