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Stoughton, Mass.
21 June 1934

Dear Sid:
Washington weather has landed here in Stoughton, although the nights do bid fair to be  cooler than there. I have been hunting for the cot bed, but am satisfied it is up in the little attic where we stowed so many of the old things last summer. But if it is very stuffy, I mean to get down the mattress and sleep on the floor of the porch. I hope you are not suffering.
The baby is bitten up with mosquito bites and scratching and fussy, but one can't keep her in the house all the time. She is doing her writing now, and is querulous over it. I have had her in the bath tub soaking and she has rested up some-what, but really she hasn't gotten over her trip.
The cat is in his elements, -he spends all his unwakeful moments upstairs in some bed, perfectly happy at the softness, occasionally disturbed by the baby.
My mother is satisfied with her batch of yarn. Mrs. O. says steal when he gets