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cheap, twenty-five cents a year(ten numbers) that the poorest child can subscribe, and he is going to get the best contributors
he can secure for it. The first number is to come out in April 1915,so we are to set right to work to gather the material
for it. Mr. Burroughs is to write something for the first number, and if you will for the April, May or June number, we can
announce it ahead in the Prospectus. But if you can't promise that yet, will you consent to your name going down as one of
the Contributing editors? And will you let me know right away? You told me some mighty interesting anecdotes of your early
inventions, which I am sure would be of great interest to boys. But anything you would write, and on any topic, would be welcomed.
Your early or late adventures, any aspect of them likely to interest boys and girls .Do be good and say yes, for the sake
of the boys and girls all over the land whom you love, and who love you, and whom you want to help love the things that you
love. John of Birds has been much stirred up this summer over the terrible war; he has written but little, has read but little
else, and talked but little else. His feeling toward the Kaiser has been so strong that he has chopped his head off in every
block of wood he split for our kitchen stove all summer, and we burned a good deal of wood. I am so weary of reading of the
slaughter and suffering that I turn to this new venture for furnishing wholesome food for the mind of the child with eagerness.
Besides, it will furnish me with agreeable work,which I can carry on in my own little home, with my children(brother's children)about
me, and with them to teach me in more ways than one, things I need to know. I had three of them with me last winter, and shall
soon have two or three with me again. I also have one patient, but I hope to be able to send her home soon, so to be freer
for pleasanter duties. I find it harder to care for one mental invalid in my home than it was to care for several hundred
in a hospital, for here I am never free of them. Mrs. Ashley and the Doctor and their two beautiful daughters motored over
here one day last July before we left for the mountains. We always speak of you and wish we could show you the beauties of
our country hereabouts, as you showe us those of your great noble forests, and mountains. I don't write often to you, so
you must forgive me if I inflict a long letter when I do write. Sincerely and hopefully yours, illegible 05879