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WACO [[underline]] Interval [[underline]] Page [[underline]] 5 [[underline]] Page 133

Mother Junkin and Mom Weaver as always wrote me encouraging loving letters. Mother Junkin wrote from her Minneapolis home saying that Dad Junkin's letters were never answered except speciously by the Corp. attorney. Mom Weaver never came from Chgo to visit with us. She was a graduate of Northwestern University, Chgo, Ill. as a young woman. Quickly she knew there had to be a great deal of money for such clumsy [[underline]] dishonestly. I told her of the frightening incidents every time we naturally went to the field to see the distributors fly their WACO away; that Buddie was forbidden by ordered employees visiting the factory. The Waco Cootie had been put outside the factory and was being pelted with stones by employees. Our two male High School friends brought it to our Count St. house where Buddie played pilot with baby Janet his "cadet."
The Advance Aircraft Co. making Wacos with directions from his death bed by Elwood J. "Sam" Junkin concerned him about the recorded history. Aug. 3. 1926 this was acoomplished. 
Enclosure: Page 6..Patent. 
I sent for my brother Charles Meyers who designed the WACO Ten and won the National Cross County Race with the Waco. He gave the ribbon to Buddie saying "it's yours, had your Dad "Buck" lived he would have won it."
After a policeman came with a fixed up story that Prince had to be taken because he was killing too many chickens, and since his sons worked at the factory, he warned me to get out of town.. Prince aware of a new kind of protection stayed within arms reach of the baby and me.. his generations of training, home and women./