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Stoughton June 30th 1929

Dear Doris

Well this is a beautiful cool morning I have been out in the yard all the morning watering & weeding out the flower beds. It seems cool to come in to write the letter. Poor Jack is howling over the meeting bell. They have tied him up, after running all night. He is a good dog & watches our premises as much as he does his own. Night before last there was a car parked at the lower end of our grove at midnight, & Jack barked furiously. But the most comical time was when he made Jack Wayland dance the horn pipe, when he came after reubarb [[rhubarb]] one Saturday morning, you would have to laugh. He was guarding his three bones, spread out on the lawn, over in our backyard. I was scart [[scared]] for fear of Jacks doing him harm, but finally manage to get the dog & his bones into the house before Johnnie struck him with the hammer. 

Will Stanley & Mr McKay moved out the goods into the garage & now I suppose the tenement will rent.  But there are a lot of empty ones around town already. I went up to see Tina she has been down East they motered [[motored]] down in their car over the road. never gone a week 

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