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PPF 9 PRESIDENT'S PERSONAL FILE Gifts B Dec. 1942 PPF900096 43-165-1 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON President Rus December 1, 1942 15.7. 9-B Dear Francis: Ever so many thanks for having sent to me that copy of "Goals For America" by Stuart Chase. I am delighted to have it to add to my collection and mm most appreciative of your thought of me. My best wishes to you. Always sincerely, Frankler D. Rosevant The Honorable, The Attorney General, x10 Washington, D. C. tmb December 1, 1942 Dear Francis: Ever SO many thanks for having sent to me that copy of "Goals For America" by Stuart Chase. I am delighted to have it to add to my collection and am most appreciative of your thought of me. My best wishes to you. Always sincerely, (Sgd) FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT The Honorable, The Attorney General, Washington, D. C. tmb 43-165-1 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON November 30, 1942 Add Dear Mr. Bonsal: qB Mr. Hopkins has shown the President your letter with the enclosed copy of letter, which the President sent to you on January eighteenth, 1916. The President feels that you should keep the original of this letter but he is delighted to have the photostatic copy for the Library. He sends his grateful thanks and every best wish to you. Very sincerely yours, GRACE G. TULLY Private Secretary Stephen Bonsal, Esq., 3142 P Street, Northwest, Washington, D. C. ggt/tmb 43-165-1 43-165-1 3142 P STREET, NORTHWEST WASHINGTON, D. C. THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON iton Post the enclosed clip- 5 on the Caribbean problem, Indian minded when XXXXX November 21, 1942 were ignored by the great ; of the letter which Mr. 1916 which confirms this MEMORANDUM FOR MISS TULLY: is own hand ,doubtless no WILL YOU SHOW THIS TO THE t with regret as the letter PRESIDENT? I should turn the original H.L.H. d in the interst of history I do not think I would that Mrs Hopkins' distin- The Caribhean wore of she of 43-165-1 Oct.28th,/42. 3142 P STREET, NORTHWEST WASHINGTON, D. C. My dear Mr Hopkins ; Reading in the Washinton Post the enclosed clip- ping ,setting forth the President's views on the Caribbean problem, reminded me of the fact that he was West Indian minded when XXXXX those beautiful but unfortinate Islands were ignored by the great men of that day and I enclose a photostat of the letter which Mr 0 Roosevelt was good enough to write me in I9I6 which confirms this statement As the letter is a personal one ,and in his own hand ,doubtless no copy was retained I have thought ( I admit with regret as the letter is one of my most cherished possessions ) I should turn the original over to you for the Hyde Park Library and in the interst of history I offer to make that personal sacrifice 0 I do not think I would venture this intrusion but for the fact that Mrs Hopkins' distin- this is The title of my book about the Caribhean wore of which had were in centy publiche of 43-165-1 2. 3142 P STREET, NORTHWEST WASHINGTON, D. C. guished grandfather ,General John Gill ,was my kindly guardian in my heyday and always treated me as a member of his charming family Sincerely yours Stephen Bonsal. this is The title of my book about the Caribhean wore of which had were re centy publiche of 43-165-1 ***X AVY. Roosevelt Considers Jan. 18th - 1916 a Aid to West Indies to see you again before II go to Improved Economic and Social Conditions I want to tell you that I have For Islanders Is Subject of Conference ve learned much that will be of use took eyes off the war President his Roosevelt yesterday long added that he hoped any enough to give attention to the al- most universal poverty that include improving conditions would plan also for npanions de voyage French islands. flourishes amid the unbelievable tropical beauty of West Indian islands He described conditions in felt for as pathetic, said he the e have simply got to control those island colonies of the United States and other nations. to be years that something had plained done for the isladers ought The President. whose Caribbean ds that while he believed and ex- the better The next step is to knowledge of living conditions in cruises have provided first-hand unly in he did not have self-gov- political hent, should have more the the islands, conferred on the prob- S mind for them. - I shall tell you all about it lem with Sir George Gater, perma- nent undersecretary of the British A the colonial office. and Charles Taussig, t back mission. Anglo-American Caribbean Com- United States chairman of the I Very sincerely yours the have been under way for a The purpose of studies which 0 и Franklin D. Roosevelt President told his press year, 7 ference, is to weld the islands con- into the benefit of the impoverished in- an economic and social team for habitants of all of them. This is The title of my hools about the Parihhean wore of which had here ice centy publiche of Education, Voting starter, Mr. Roosevelt said, be he extended to voteless inhabitants be As believed a the franchise might instituted. and Island social systems. very compulsory education might stated, need to undergo the marked he improvements with eco- islands as a whole put on an them self-sustaining, better's world that will enable con- economy Roosevelt conceded that is- economic lands probably could not Mr. improvement of the be achieved without some investment, would he said, that investment cer- but. be repaid, if not in dollars, tainly in higher living standards. As an example of what stated might that be done. while of exported there said, get dent their Some the decent because continued, is cattle food the islands, no of to refrigeration. meat supplies President may the other it the can't islands, be must on islands meat raised the from be buy islands, cannot kept. the You on economy. long because most Presi- some can't dis- be he of tances, which is not good Some Excepted The President excepted from his future economic team Cuba, Puerto Rico and Haiti which. he observed, have larger populations and dis- similar economic and social prob- lems. He listed the United States, Great Britain, the Netherlands, enezuela and Colombia as pos- ors of some of the islands. He THE ASSISTANT WASHINGTON SECRETARY OF THE sorry 43-165-1 The Rico a future SJA have similar lems. He THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY. WASHINGTON Jan. 18th - 1916 a Dear Mr Bonsal ; I am sorry not to see you again before 1I go to the American Mediterrenean * but I want to tell you that I have greatly enjoyed the book and have learned much that will be of use- I am taking it along for my companions de voyage . Incidentally we have simply got to control those islands as a whole -the sooner the better 0 The next step is to purchase the Dutch interests : - I shall tell you all about it when I get back . Very sincerely yours Franklin D. Roosevelt : this is The title of my hools about The Caribhean wore of which had here re centy publiche of the + December 3, 1942 R PPF-9-B THON, Dr. Henry Detroit, Mich. Ackd. Nov. 30, 1942. INSURANCE FOR ROSEMBER Sends inscribed booklet to the President; to study. of the entilled letter ilo SEE: PPF 9-T and book from Dr. Goodfruy Sourne, of London, and them to us? Grace G. Tally Private Secretary Dr. Denificy Bourne 47 Choco Active Street Devendish Sequare W. 1. (London) Dr. Bourne asks the President to accept this specially bound 007 of his small book "Return to Reason"; deals with what be believes to be OF the fundamental factors in operative democrecy. En Dec. 3, 1942 Mr. Susmer sent ISSUED to Miss Tully with which No returned the original Inc. and from In. Bourne. Mr. Sbon correspandence and book to Eyste Park Minute, Series B. the December 3, 1942 C 0 P Y November 17, 1942 PPF- MEMORANDUM FOR HONORABLE GEORGE T. SUMMERLIN: Will you not be good enough to have acknowledgment made of the enclosed letter and book from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, of London, and return them to us? Grace G. Tully Private Secretary dd Dr. Geoffrey Bourne 47 Queen Anne Street Cavendish Square W. I. (London) Dr. Bourne asks the President to accept this specially bound copy of his small book "Return to Reason"; deals with what he believes to be one of the fundamental factors in operative democracy. On Dec. 3, 1942 Mr. Summerlin sent memo to Miss Tully with which he returned the original let. and book from Dr. Bourne. Mrs. Eben sent original correspondence and book to Hyde Park Library, Series B. Fill the April December 3, 1942 R PPF 9-B WILLIAM MORROW AND COMPANY INC. New York, N.Y. December 3, 1942 - Ackd. Sent the President copy of book, THERE GO THE SHIRS. To the Study. SEE - PPF - 9 - W vsr File whet the + P December 3, 1942 R PP7 9-B THE SOUTHWORTH-ANTHOENSEN PRESS Portland, Maine December 2, 1942 - Ackd. Sent the President copy of the book THE CLUB OF ODD VOLUMES YEAR BOOK-1942. Sent to the Study. SEE - PPF - 9 - S vsr File whit the + P December 3, 1942 R PPF WINSLOW, Mrs. L. Lanier 9-B Sarasota, Florida November 16, 1942 Transmitted by Mr. Summerlin, State Department on 11/23/42, a letter en- closing volune entitled "The Spirit of '76" which was written by her Father. Acknowledged by the President on 12/1/42 saying he is grateful for the gift. Book sent to the Study. SEE - PPF - 9 - W VST the Braket. p.p.7. December 3, 1942 q-B My dear Mr. Bours: Permit me to acknowledge the re- ceipt of the copy of your booklet which you sent to the President. I can assure you that he is most appreciative of your kind thought of him. Very sincerely yours, M. H. McINTYRE Secretary to the President Reverend W. M. Bours, 1810 Sacramento Street, San Francisco, California. mtl Book: MOTHERHOOD. KN DONDS AND STAMPS -1279 ADDRESS OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS T THE SECRETARY OF STATE WASHINGTON, D.C. + Motherhood B In reply re PR By My de REV. WILLIAM M. BOURS Diocese of California 1895 1942 , 1942, tion , Londo book € L to con S thanks Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS Compliments of the author. -1279 Motherhood WITH ILLUSTRATIVE BIOGRAPHIC SKETCHES AND COMMENTS B By REV. WILLIAM M. BOURS Retired since May 1, 1933 Rector for eight years of the old-time St. Peter's Parish at North Beach, San Francisco, preceded by a three years' resi- dential charge of the Missions at Merced and Madera, now of the District of San Joaquin, and an eleven months' Assist- antship at the Cathedral Mission of the Good Samaritan. Bishop's Secretary and a Cathedral Staff Missionary for twelve years and for seven of those years also in a non-residential charge of the Holy Innocents Mission at Corte Madera in the Convocation of San Francisco. Chaplain to the public insti- tutions of San Francisco for twenty-two years, of which , years the last five also included a hospital pastorate of The San Francisco Church Federation. Chaplain Emeritus of the Relief Home for Aged and Infirm. Chaplain to the Bishop of California since November 5, 1919, and by successive annual Episcopal appointments to membership in The Di- ocesan Committee on The Church Pension Fund since the Christmas Eve of Anno Domini 1920. S Christmastide, A.D. 1942 San Francisco, California Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 1279 Motherhood B As a preface to these notes on motherhood the writer takes the liberty of offering a tribute of grateful mem- ory to parental benefaction as being among the earliest domestic impressions of his childhood that, by reason of an extreme smallness and delicacy of physical consti- tution at birth, he was not expected, now over eight decades ago, to survive even to the youngest stage of boyhood. It would be well during the morning of one's life to personalize as a votive impulse the following admoni- tion of Israel's Psalmist: The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom; a good understanding have all they that do thereafter; his praise endureth for ever. See, also, Psalm XCI. The late Archbishop Riordan of San Francisco said, "Give me a child until its thirteenth year, and I don't care who has it after that." My mother, Louisa Falkenberg Bours, born in Lima, Peru, South America, was not much more than a very young woman when I was born as the second child: the first did not survive. She could speak English, Spanish, French and German, was a pianist and could sing musically, and withal was a self-sacrificing religious devotee to the domestic arts that go to make a family home. Her father was a genius in mechanical construc- S tion and a great lover and conservator of good music. He had so synchronized by mechanical connections several music-boxes with the clocks in his family home Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 1279 4 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 5 that every hour different tunes were severally played mercial banking with an older brother under the firm by one in succession to the others. name of T. Robinson Bours and Company; later that My mother was constantly during her earliest years institution was incorporated as The San Joaquin Val- under the affectionate care and direction of a devoted ley Bank, of which my father was the cashier. In the B artistic mastership in her father and of a beloved home- course of that business he was in frequent correspon- dence with the renowned General William T. Sherman, maker in her mother. who was in those days engaged in the banking business My emergence into young manhood was likewise in Sacramento. As to official civic responsibility, my blessed by a recall of memory to the sacredness of my father had been the Mayor of Stockton. Incidentally mother's sense of domestic solidarity. "As a hen gather- it may be recorded that it was his custom in business eth her chickens under her wings" my mother, on matters never to write a leter under provocation and an occasion of great family sorrow, gathered her chil- to mail it on the day on which it was written. He would dren about her to read to them the soul-sustaining sleep on the matter overnight with the likelihood of messages in the Fourteenth Chapter of St. John's that letter being entirely amended next morning. Gospel. In earlier days with his older brother, my father The Apostle Paul recorded the churchmanship of helped a younger man, my uncle, the Rev. William womanhood in his Epistles to the Corinthians as well White Bours, named after the first Bishop of Penn- as of the family in Ephesians and Colossians and in his sylvania, to prepare for the Sacred Ministry. That uncle Epistles to Timothy specialized the family as the House- of mine was stricken at the bedside of one of his parish- hold of Faith. (See, also, Romans XVI:3; and 13-18.) ioners in Florida during an outbreak of a fatal epi- demic. The law of a cherished association of ideas In honor of the managerial functions of womanhood, impels the writer likewise to record the ensuant memo- as applicable to missionary legislation, the outstanding rial of regard for one of his former parochial officers, services of the Woman's Auxiliary in conjunction with Mr. Archibald C. Kains, who had joined with others the House of Churchwomen are notable in California in a financial assistance toward the completion of an History. (See Psalm LXVIII:9-11 P. B. V.) academic course of study in preparation for the Sacred My father, Benjamin Walker Bours, born in the Ministry of a greatly beloved fellow college student, State of New York, was considerably older than my who became that distinguished Missionary Statesman, mother when they were married in the pioneer days the late Bishop Charles Henry Brent. of California. He was a graduate of the Van Renseller My father became a Vestryman of his home parish, S Polytechnic Institute of his native state as a civil engi- St. John's Church in Stockton, then in the Diocese of neer, but did not long practice that profession. On California. When Bishop Kip was wont regularly to coming to California he was mostly engaged in com- visit Stockton in the order of his extensive list of Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 7 ntments, my father took me, then as a small boy, In view of the forthcoming responsibilities at the with him on that Bishop who had confirmed my legal age of maturity, the goal of every youth should and afterwards in due time confirmed the be, as a legalized voter, the upholding throughout the Bishop Kip's fine manhood and family lineage land of social righteousness. The following Collect B him an outstanding personality in those early for Independence Day, July 4th, contains a petition with a responsibility for the Episcopal Oversight that every citizen should employ: entire State of California. O Eternal God, through whose mighty power our Kip of Albany and Yale won my abiding fathers won their liberties of old; Grant, we beseech of him, as a man among men, for his thee, that we and all the people of this land may have accomplishments as a preacher and an author grace to maintain these liberties in righteousness and peace; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. were adorned by his administrative visions for Diocese of California-never canonically a Mis- The rewards of experience justify the following District as the State itself never was histori- postulates: a Territory-which, by the constructive ecclesi- Domestic training gives character to economic workmanship of his successors in Episcopal occupations. Administrative sufficiency is a solo inistration, have been materialized in the noble managerial accomplishment. The choice of capable and foundations of our Grace Cathedral in employees accords with one's own competency. The Francisco. Bishop Kip had localized his Episcopal keeping of good employees goes along with what one in the fine old-time Gothic Parish Grace is as a man or as a woman. The economic devices next door to the Diocesan Offices, then an- that characterize a normality of progress in civiliza- to April 18, 1906, on California Street at tion are vital to general social welfare. Money, as a Street, in the City of San Francisco. medium of exchange, in trade or investment for equitable profit, as an historic example, American ward the close of his Episcopate Bishop Kip, coin, which bears on its face a stamp of godliness: lost his full eyesight, yet as with a faithfulness "In God we trust," is one of the necessities for a self- death, at the ordination of his grandson and respecting, progressive and neighborly citizenship. someone had to place his Episcopal Hands Compare St. Matthew XIII:24-32; I Timothy VI. faithful son of the Church for the bestowal Every man should make his major well considered Ecclesiastical Gifts of Holy Orders that he responsibility the one for which he was selected to thereby become a vicar for his revered grand- undertake. An extensive diffusion of time and energy S There is a nobility in manhood that every leads to a superficiality of accomplishment. One of should be encouraged to honor. the most inimical of the microbes that make for social Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 9 may be characterized as political exbibi- clared, that one can always find a noise to torment Amen is a worshipful period to religious every nerve in the human body, it would be well in rather than a slogan in economic policy. early life to become inured to the wear and tear of LXXXIX; compare Romans XVI; I Corin- commonplace social experience. XIV.) The man for the times is one, who, in B strative capacity, is a providential factor at any To revert to the wholesome quietude of that primi- tive home, incident to location and to the traditions of long ago, that family haven was built of heavy My First Christmas Tree timber that had come around "The Horn," probably first Christmas tree has not faded in its mem- in a sailing vessel. That first Christmas tree ranks beauty after many years since the later days among the earliest definitely impressed incidents of a The old-time home of my childhood in congenital retentive and affectionate memory. The California, was a sturdy, roomy and com- landmarks of that Christmas Season were connected structure and aloof from the disturbances of with the very structure of that prioneer building, noise. The association of ideas as an ally which included wide encircling verandas and win- mory suggests a looking back to the days of dows to match architecturally for well lighting the before so many of the humanized functions two stories. The lower floor in front included what replaced by machinery. It was said of Glad- was then called the sitting-room, connected with the whose historic statesmanship was founded on a parlor by two large wooden doors on hinges. That legree of cultured mentality, that he could add parlor was well furnished for substantial comfort and four columns of figures as readily as any contained a piano, also that epochal Christmas tree. can attain the total of a single column by My father being a great reader of standard literature, process of addition up and down. The the sitting-room contained a fine bookcase of Angli- types of mechanized substitutes for per- can literature, and the walls were ornamented with itness in the practice of the business of life can pictures of which one was a steel engraving of a deprivation of the young of those environ- "Shakespeare and His Friends." opportunities in commerce or in art for a My mother was occupied in the sitting-room and of that morale which is characteristic of the I, as a diminutive specimen of humanity, was on the hat are becoming mere matters of pioneer floor beside her. My father had entered the parlor by The consequences of unemployment are not one of those veranda windows to light the candles on compared with the prejudicial consequences to the Christmas tree; he then rattled one of the win- S of the mechanizing of the domiciles of dows with his fingers in sound like a galloping deer, While it is true, as Charles Dickens de- whereupon my mother remarked, "Oh, there comes Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS -1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 11 Claus!" Startled, with one flying leap I landed As a prologue of appreciative consideration, which, mother's lap. The doors were opened, and of course, antedates even the possibility of a dawning with wide open mouth as well as delighted memory, my Aunt Julia, my mother's sister, of the gazed in silent wonder at the brilliant beauty Nathan K. Mastens of South Park [one of the finest B well laden with tokens of family bounty and of the earliest residential locations in San Francisco- and, by the way, Bishop Kip then lived on Rincon Annual Season of Glory to God in the Highest Hill in that general section of the city] baptized me earth peace and good-will toward men, evan- in a bucket of hot water when, being in convulsions, considered and regarded, brings to the fore I was seemingly in a dying condition. My father gave best in one's life. A recall to the motherhood me as my Christian name Willie Masten. That same blessed the days of one's youth with that of the aunt some years later, when my mother and I were anionship of one's home-making wife helps to on a visit to South Park, took me to town with her. that best in any man's life apt and meet for a We had walked to Third Street. The small car, pro- enship in both heaven and on earth. Compare pelled by horse power, stopped to take us on as pas- CXIII: sengers. Doubtless impelled by a delighted sense of Praise ye the Lord. Praise, O ye servants of the Lord, novelty, I immediately started to jump on that car, praise the name of the Lord. whereupon my aunt shouted, "Ladies first." Accord- 7, Blessed be the name of the Lord from this time forth ingly, I hopped off and to the present time I have and for evermore. been actuated by that admonition, "Ladies first." From the rising of the sun unto the going down of As to men generally, it is more than to memorialize the same the Lord's name is to be praised. The Lord is high above all nations, and his glory above merely casual notes of historic interest to record that, the heavens. like in the case of St. Augustine as evangelized by his Who is like unto the Lord our God, who dwelleth on mother, Monica, Alfred, King of England, owed his well deserved title to "Greatness" to having had "an Who humbleth himself to behold the things that are excellent mother." Regarding the native source of heaven, and in the earth! personal competency, see Psalms CXLIV-CL. More- He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, and lifteth over, there are realities in spiritual experience that he needy out of the dunghill; prove the nearness of this world to the borderland of That he may set bim with princes, even with the S rinces of his people. Heaven, compare II St. Peter I with St. Luke IX: He maketh the barren woman to keep house, and to 28-36; consider Psalm LXXXIX:15-21. See, also, a joyful mother of children. Praise ye the Lord. Psalm XXVII. Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS JAND STAMPS -1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 13 The Benicia School Days On a notable occasion during "Study Hour," the in a prolixity of detail the story of my headmaster caused me to sit by him on the platform would include an account of maladies and perilously near a "birch-rod" that he was wont beset the days of a not over physically to use otherwise than as a pointer in the elucidation B childhood. I well remember that when a of geometrical diagrams on the blackboard. specialist, to whom my mother had The Rector of the Benicia Parish during those days on examining my eyes, turned and said was the Rev. Dr. James Lloyd Breck, one of the Did you ever notice his eyes when he was Church's great company of pioneer missionaries. My abiding impression of him is that he was a singular for the benefit of a brief change of cli- man in the pulpit, tall and with a characteristic writer was entered as a pupil at St. Augus- physique of an able administrator and of a definitely School for Boys at Benicia, California. attractive personality. The influence of such a Chris- ckinson was the commandant of the school, tian pastor is immortal as a founder and builder of McCracken, the commander of the corps the Kingdom of God. It is the man that counts in The Reverend Mr. Cowen was the head- whatever position be may be called to occupy. In what high regard was held by my father the to the poignant griefs that are apt to Reverend Elias Birdsall of Nashotah House, one of 17, one's self-possession, there is nothing human Stockton's notable Rectors! In every sense he could exceed the pangs of homesickness. An older be called Father Birdsall without any suggestion of boy, Fletcher Nye, took charge of me that pretense; he was an interpretative reader and preacher, be-forgotten first night after my father had one whose character shone as an example for his good-bye most affectionately to a degree ne, people. He gave his son, Paul, to the Sacred Ministry. pain, to take the steamer back to Stock- In his personal affairs he had proven that common- S afterwards Fletcher was my friend and place simplicity is not incompatible with official dig- In due time I was assigned to sentinel nity, as when he was seen trudging on foot along a of the dormitories and given a musket Stockton street and leading his trusty horse as to a bayonet twice too large for a "soldier" blacksmith's shop to be reshod. to handle. The only deadly military ser- a The cosmopolitanism of such a school as Saint rendered was to parole the dormitory and Augustine's as a follow-up of home influence which down to destruction with that bayonet on enlivens a mutuality of social responsibility helps to t's march, the lamp chimneys. Perchance the bulwark the very framework of a nationality that of the Guard was amiable enough to gather upholds the elements in a state of law and order, of glass. which is germane to its federal physical existence. Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS -1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 15 did that embryo sentinel, upon a long-hoped-for McGowan." Bishop Rowe's unflagging Christian home, strut about in his school uniform and Soldiership, amid unrecorded hardships and perils, for buttons with a super-inflated chest that bid fair many crucial years to the very end, has exalted his off those buttons, when he paraded among his Episcopate as an example for all time to come of a Missionary Manhood. In this connection it is profit- B friends, also of tender age, at home! a brief touch of military discipline, as was able to review Psalms CXLIV-CXLVI in comparison justifies a high regard for a man in uniform as with Psalm XXXVI. ponent to the honor and security of the Amer- The writer has also an indelible impression that was Flag. One cannot endeavor too early to realize made on his memory when standing with his father import of what Israel's Psalmist was inspired on a down-town street in Stockton as a timely "No man bath quickened bis own soul." Memorial Funeral Cortege went by, in which was an is a matter of an honored record that General improvised hearse bearing a symbolic casket as a local MacArthur, when one of his staff remarked token of National Sorrow at the loss of our great Presi- the American Flag which was hoisted at the dent Abraham Lincoln. army headquarters might be a target in an Saint Jacob's Ladder attack, said in reply: "Men should take necessary precaution, but the Flag should be For an annual Sunday School Christmas Service flying." As an outward token of that unafraid and object lesson, toward a lifelong neighborship .7, which is betokened in the receipt and the gift of that has ever characterized American citizen- our flag-poles should not be bereft of The a substantiality of service, one of California's pioneer Colors. parishes, St. John's of Stockton, as a ritualistic drama of the vision recorded in Genesis XXVIII, instead of pressure of present-day interests and concerns the usual large and bountifully laden Christmas tree e, not be suffered to obliterate the lessons of the -before the construction of the modernized Parish Extending beyond a mere mention of their S even an inadequate portraiture of such men Guild building-a Jacob's Ladder was innovated. ther McGowan of San Joaquin and Bishop Rowe In the apex of the chancel was temporarily con- structed, for the occasion, a receptacle for the gifts would, with many others, adorn the annals clesiastical history. One incident alone in the to represent Heaven, whence all good gifts do come. Planted on the floor of the chancel was a ladder con- 7 career of the former among the Indians of Flats is sufficient to illustrate his beneficent necting with that receptacle. Unless his memory is at fault, the writer was one of the "angels" that S character as being an incorporation of bis scrambled up and down that ladder for a distribution Those Indians remarked, on the appearance of the Christmas gifts. Seasonable carols were, as usual, field of his successor, "Here comes another Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, enclosure. October 2, 1942, with FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 7-12-127 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 17 and a churchly Sunday School service sanctified turned into a pasture-land for hay and grain. The unique commentary on Biblical History, both for side gardens, including a grape arbor, were made pro- and the old, in a devotion of attendance ductive of fruits and vegetables even including pota- worship. The objectified elements in buman expe- toes for the family table. Windmills furnished the make particular impressions on the memory. motor power for pumps that supplied water for the practical faith of the Psalmist is exploited in residence, gardens and barn that adjoined a spacious 9-B XXVII: woodshed for the storage of fuel. Altogether our I should utterly have fainted, but that I believe verily family then consisted of five girls and two boys, with to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living. our parents, all seasoned, as it were, by a country liv- 0 tarry thou the Lord's leisure; be strong, and he ing with all the advantages of municipal environ- shall comfort thine heart; and put thou thy trust in the ments. Incident to my country-boy experience my Lord. fortunes of health dictated a withdrawal temporarily confirmation of personal service in good works, from the confinements of collegiate work as then a mmended in Hebrews X:21-25, leads to a quiet- member of the Class of 1882 at the University of confidence in the course of Divine Providence California. Those were the days when the marks of a social embodiment of spiritual unity. If men a dawning eminence in scholarship and administrative women would assemble themselves together to acumen had already distinguished such instructors as thanks, for which every one should praise God, Doctor Josiah Royce and Colonel Edwards. The aca- great congregations would characterize every demic fame of Doctors John and Joseph Le Conte was ber 17, unity! also a notable contribution to the University's historic ica- distinction. My Country Home Thus the early days of the writer's young manhood the purchase by my father from Mr. Simon W. comprised a providential calendar of preparatory Bourne, of twenty acres adjoining his fine property on opportunities: a clerkship in a business house that in- Street just outside of the then municipal limits volved personal relationships with city merchants and f his ckton, a new family residence was built within San Joaquin County farmers with a regularity also in orderland of San Joaquin County. Our family business dealings as a shipping clerk, with the com- esided, as it were, in the country within an easy mon carriers of merchandise, also office work for the distance into the City of Stockton. Well back daily mailing of invoices and shipping receipts. A sub- ested North Street our place of residence was located. sequent academic course of study and instruction pacious frontage was transformed, by my included accountancy and commercial law, which was ident's engineering skill, into a beautiful garden with coordinated with a fraternal lodge membership that elm and grapefruit trees. The back field was led by election to an occupancy of its several execu- Enclosures: Unief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October enclosure. 2, 1942, with FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 12-1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 19 culminating in a District Deputyship of than a half-century of social experience favors the by official appointment and an ensuant contention that men and women generally are delight- of parliamentary law that led to an adaptation fully amenable to friendly approaches. stories in Smith's Manual: "A Guide to the Toward the formation of ethical habits every youth of Meetings" as a parliamentary drill to be should be grounded in the cardinal principles of nder the head of "The Good of the Order" to accountancy and parliamentary order. an experience of the Chair for the benefit of Seemingly, there is a need, as being suitable to the coming occupants of that responsibility. In this times, for a republication of the fact that charity is a it is apropos to note that there is a great quality of personal character, rather than a mode of in an association with leading men of busi- commercialized institutionalism. Compare Psalm acquire an early impression that the prodi- LVIII. of a superficial exhibitionism in any sort of istrative adventure will break down the morale The Church School Trio good-will of domestic, civic, economic, or At another Christmastide in St. John's of Stockton, institutional undertakings. See Isaiah XXXII; the Sunday School's program of Biblical observance IV: 6 and I Thessalonians IV:9-12. (St. Matthew II:1-15) included a trio of boys who any sphere of responsibility one should be were the leaders in singing the old-time Hymn and but neither at the expense of substan- Chorus, of which the first line is "We three kings of r 17, nor aggressive to the extent of breaking down Orient are." Those pupils were Henry Stier, Austin hand what has been built up with the other. Sperry and the writer. My solo assignment was the ca- Psalm XLIX:20.) A child imbued with the stanza, "Myrrh-is mine its bitter perfume." Looking tional spirit of Psalm IX will not, throughout back to that event in my boyhood, it occasions a sense urne, of his age, be overwhelmed as to the future of forecast to my valued chaplaincy to the public insti- and the ultimate fortunes of country by pre- tutions and private hospitals as supplementary to his inordinate world events. "Bad deeds seldom occasional prison work and pastoral parochial visita- happily for mankind." (Consider Psalm tions, which involved a ministry to many whose aflic- 159, 160. See, also, Psalm CIV.) As to the tions, however "bitter," in the course of Divine Provi- basis of social quietness and peace, compare dence, could be offered as oblations heavenward to ted LXXXIV and LXXXV. The King of Kings, Who is the Shepherd of Love for mankind. a glorious evidence of the divinity of love as ent's My friend and next-door neighbor, in those days, in a normal sense of neighborship, in being was Austin Sperry, who besides Henry Stier, was one a spirit of good-will among men, that more of those juvenile soloists. Austin was the youngest of Enclosures: Unief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 21 of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Willard Sperry. As a personal tribute to the memory of the Second Sperry and a younger sister, Elizabeth, Bishop of California, the writer as his secretary for that family circle. Miss Ethel Sperry be- twelve years and during the last five of those years eneficent wife of Mr. William H. Crocker also his Chaplain, is impelled to certify that Bishop Nichols literally "died in the barness" at St. Luke's B ocker family in San Francisco, which was being among a pioneer group of financiers, Hospital. Every office day, Monday, Wednesday and and commonwealth builders and distin- Friday, even during the growing fatality of his ill- Californian history. Little did Austin ness that required radical surgical treatments, unless hildish voice for those who heard him when physical and doubtless painful discomfort, that, of what St. John's Parish would ulti- toward the last, rendered impossible in further work his desired faithfulness to the Diocese, he had his tribute in the course of Divine Providence official mail brought to him for a dictation of prompt nstructive ecclesiastical institutionalism of informative replies. On one such occasion he handed of California. Subsequent to the razing back a certain letter with the direction: "You answer residential properties by the fires of 1906, this one." That deputized responsibility required on family, by the magnificent munificence, the part of the writer three laborious attempts to consent, agreeable to the statesmanship comply with his request with a prompt, brief, cour- voted friend and chief pastor, Bishop Wil- teous and informative note that would not by direct Nichols, conveyed to the Diocese of Cali- expression or by implication commit the Bishop to corporation, the title to the spacious resi- a policy that he might not indorse. whereon now stand the monumental The text of one of the three written sermons re- of Grace Cathedral and the Gibbs Chap- quired of a candidate for Holy Orders, as prescribed likewise the Paige Memorial Diocesan by Bishop Nichols for the writer, has proved to have mmemorative of the historic Monteagle been a replica of his own life as a man and as a Bishop. It is further to note, as also being of his- (Galatians VI: 2 and 5.) that, among many magnificent me- ponsive to California's first Dean of Grace Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. Dr. Wilmer Gresham, toward making that For every man shall bear his own burden. aven a house of worship for all the people, of Grace completely furnished was a gift The devoted constructive Episcopate of the Second S as a memorial to Bishop Nichols, by Bishop of the Diocese of California was actively ex- H. Crocker. tended to his lamented decease on June 5, 1924. Enclosures: Chief of Protocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 7 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 23 extensive list of Grace Cathedral tributes in- in good voice, approach a business office to pioneer the a magnificent marble pulpit given in honor of equities of the Church Pension System. My parochial Edward Lambe Parsons and likewise conse- blessings also included an election as a Vestryman and with a memorial pew in memory of Mrs. to a later honor as a delegate to the Diocesan Conven- by Dr. Karl Morgan Block, the Fourth Bishop tion, which, however, I was unable to attend in person. Diocese of California. Among the cherished opportunities incident to my Influence in Example Favorable to residence at home, supplementary to my high-school Forthcoming Occupations course, as a graduate member of the Class of 1876, was a two years' tutorship in Latin and Greek by my father's high regard for his Rector, the afore- scholarly uncle, Mr. Hugh Taylor, whose father had Reverend Elias Birdsall, guaranteed his faithful been an instructor in the old-time Geneva College, lance on the Sunday evening services at St. New York. Those home studies also included instru- Church, Stockton. Anything like a generality mental music lessons on the piano and the flute and services is, however, becoming somewhat a voice culture under capable masters, one of whom of youthful memory. Amid her sacrificial was the late artist, Mr. Hugh Talbot. Upon his de- duties my mother by example and precept also cease the writer was called upon to commit his mortal to become a budding ecclesiastic, progressively remains for burial in our old-time Laurel Hill Cem- year, in a growing and enlarging layman's etery, San Francisco. hmanship; a Sunday School scholar and youth- Accordant with Bishop Nichols' advice my New acher; a Church School Assistant; a member of England scholastic privileges, as an additional school- Choir and later of a Quartet Choir and of an ing and experience, included a five years' eastern aca- Chorus Choir under the leadership of a demic atmosphering for a continued western residence ficent dramatic opera tenor, who had taken and clerical ministry. The Bishop was wont to say: with that world-famous soprano, Adelina "I believe my whole ministry has been to lay founda- Mr. Hugh Talbot, whose stage name was "Ugo tions on which others were to build." He would on occasion sing, at St. John's My office as a Vestryman of St. John's Parish was sacred arias with the glorious beauty in tone coincident, as my memory suggests, with the build- master's flute or clarionet. A man may talk ing of the Parish Guild building and the present tageously to himself in his study, but upon any St. John's Church edifice, which are now of the Mis- he should talk so as to be "understanded of sionary District of San Joaquin. As a lay reader it eople." Voice culture is essential to prophetic was also my coveted privilege to conduct a Sunday elization. Compare the implications in Romans afternoon service as Superintendent of a Parochial Bishop Lawrence would not, unless be was Mission Chapel in Stockton. 01 rrotocol Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS MOTHERHOOD 25 MOTHERHOOD in regard to one's early responsibility as a legal ideas, provocative of a memory of a missionary tech- my father accompanied me to the polls to exer- nique that tempers the direction and force through- an independent personal judgment in the casting out the future of one's ecclesiastical experience. a ballot long before the installation of voting The earliest official prelude in California to a con- chines. On but one such occasion, my father ex- tinuous ministry then as a Deacon the writer served the wish that I would not vote favorably to a for six weeks as a Sunday assistant to the Rev. William issue and in honor of his more mature judg- Hall Moreland at the old-time wooden St. Luke's I voted accordingly in that particular. A voter Church, San Francisco, then constructed, according approach public issues with the same sense of to the understanding of the writer, somewhat like ponsibility that one would ordinarily exercise in unto the Symphony Music Hall in Boston. Now as a management of one's own private affairs. resigned Bishop of Sacramento, Rector Moreland had One's domestic training and subsequent scholastic made it his rule prior to going into the Sanctuary to perience as governing in a chosen course of life- celebrate the early morning Eucharist, to recite the are SO welded together in one's career that any Veni Creator Spiritus. That devout usage made on the of the same entails a seemingly disjointed enum- writer's mind the permanency of a recurrent memory of pivotal events. for personal benefit in a daily use of that sacred The reversion to type is a leading trait of human Hymn for an abiding consciousness in life and work The tendencies in the advancing years of of God's Creative Immanence. (See Genesis I:1, 2 7, age are characteristically atavistic. Solmon said: et sec. V:21-24; also Psalm XVI; compare Philippians rain up a child in the way he should go; and when II:12, 13.) Incident to the fateful terrors of April 18, is old he will not depart from it." See, also, 1906, the writer and his wife saw the front walls of Timothy III:14-17. St. Luke's new church in a cloud of dust fall into Van The bomes of the land qualify the character of the Ness Avenue. The present reconstructed St. Luke's weal. The modernizing of antiquity is Church is a beautiful tribute to the loyalty and gener- rmulated in the following worshipful declaration of osity of St. Luke's parishioners. The nomination Psalmist which encases the fundamental motive St. Luke's to California's Diocesan hospital including a a vital churchmanship: beautiful Chapel and a standardized training school for nurses is likewise, in reconstructed facility, a magnifi- Lord, I have loved the habitation of thy house, and cent memorial to devoted laymanships in the City of the place where thine honour dwelleth. San Francisco. 1 S The impressions of clerical responsibility acquired At the writer's advancement to the priesthood, at the probational days of one's ministry leave St. Matthew's pioneer Church, in San Mateo, Cali- ental marks that are, through the association of fornia, then Bishop Nichols' home parish, the Rector, ENCLOSURES: Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, enclosure. October 2, 1942, with FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED STATES The White House. SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS -1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 27 Reverend Mr. De Wolfe Cowie, preached the ordi- that every youth should be encouraged to regard at sermon. The Bishop had been ill and his physi- home and abroad. (See, also, Psalm XVI.) As a gave his consent simply to the Bishop taking the Doxology in praise of an ultimate Divine Healing of of Ordination. He had appointed the faculty of the Nations, Psalms LXV, LXVI and LXVII consti- B Middletown Berkeley Divinity School as the tute a Triad of Nationalized Hopefulness. nonical Examiners in my case for the Diocese of lifornia; the Bishop's own pro forma required exam- Motherbood of the writer, prior to ordination, was limited Motherhood is the very soul of domestic unity and, the question and seemingly satisfactory answer to the in an extension of family influence, the beneficent "What is Apollinarianism?" The preacher at earnest of a social integrity that makes for the morale service, in his admonition to the Ordinand, as a and good-will of commonplace financial business clusion to his fine sermon, is the only item in that economy as well as of constructive specialized profes- course that the writer can recall, possibly because sional occupations. Not to mention the unpublished entirely congenial to the writer's training and work of The Sisters of Saint Saviour, betimes a man, erience as an ever timely endorsement: "Pay your clerical or lay, is, as it were, called upon to be both promptly." The service being a week-day Special father and mother to the homeless boys in character the congregation consisted practically of the building by a specialized fitness, who has been given 7, mother and wife, and included also the Prin- jurisdiction, as for example, in Saint Andrew's Inn Poniatowski, whose maiden name was Miss Eliza- for Boys in San Francisco. Sperry, in whose father's business, as proprietor "There should be no disparity in marriage," said an the pioneer Sperry's Flour Mills at Stockton, Cali- Anglican writer. Home life as a bulwark to current e, the writer had been a clerk. Human experi- civilization is the moral main-stay of government, involves a prismatic association of ideas. Mr. both public and private, toward the generation of S orders to his office men in relation to credit manly men and of womanly women. in honor of his numerous patrons were given While in a very real sense the eyes are the windows phatically: "Put the amount received down even if of the human soul it does not, however, follow that mill is on fire." (In this general connection it is those whose expressional gestures are purely ocular L interest to compare: Genesis IX:8-17.) are the most trustworthy. The choice of a life com- Every one in constitution is a little world. A family panion should involve a deliberate and mature con- ! S constellation of such worlds. A parish is, or should sideration and appraisal of personal character as to a constellation of such constellations. In the prac- what one has been, now is and likely to become. of the functions of one's religious nature Psalms One of the writer's diocesan associates, in long- and LXXII constitute a Charter of Spirituality standing business relationships, whose wife had lost ENCLOSURES: Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 1279 29 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD with a family friend in a fearful automobile steered. He affirmed to the writer's wife during her upon hearing of the decease of the writer's girlhood: "You will see the day when ships traverse sent him an affectionate brief note of sympathy the sky." In such a sacred companionship, the writer recalls B the comment that such a severing of the physical of personal devotion is a calamity. a conversation of his own wife with Bishop Nichols. he solemnization of Holy Matrimony involves, as She had consulted him in regard to the relationship of sacred office does, the future destinies of a single a clergyman's wife to her husband's official responsi- and a single woman as busband and wife rather bilities. The Bishop replied, "Take care of your hus- as a commonplace natural experience in the band and you will be doing your full duty as a world as mates. There is, however, a peril to Churchwoman," and then, in a practical illustration, equity in being mismated. (See St. John IV: also said: "I say to Mrs. Nichols I am the head of the The civil contract of marriage, even though Diocese and you are the head of me." His never fail- by the sacred bonds of ecclesiastical spiritual ing dignity was ever mollified by his affectionate home makes for the domestic felicity or the break- life. As to the competency of her Churchmanship as a down of the future careers of God's children, each progressive and constructive social service worker, whom should grow more and more unto an indis- the writer's wife was a graduate of the art depart- social necessity for the completedness of the ment of Mount Allison University, Nova Scotia, and 7, character of the other. by domestic training in an "old-fashioned family home" was a home-maker as well as an adept in the an example to his students for the sacred minis- use of domestic and embroidery needles as well as a Bishop Nichols characterized his wife as the one at his side, and his "ideal help-meet for the teacher in piano lessons and also an instructor in draw- e, ing, oil and water-color painting. She could read her Goethe and Schiller in the original, and as to English S Nichols confirmed the writer's wife and her literature, she was a reader by libraries. She bad an the widow of the late Mr. Frederick William unusual sense of perspective. At the close of the so- kman of Nova Scotia, at the Cathedral Mission of called first World War she was decorated, on behalf Good Samaritan. Mr. Beckman's family claimed of President Woodrow Wilson, with a special American 1 relationship with that noted German scholar Red Cross medal for having been the executive head of author, Johann Beckmann. one of the largest Red Cross Woman's Auxiliaries in S an incident in the course of inventive experi- San Francisco at that time and had taught its mem- the writer's father-in-law, Mr. F. W. Beck- bership to knit sweaters, scarfs and socks for the in association with Count Zeppelin, contrived soldiers of the United States Army. Single-handed, in airship which would rise but could not be one of the most difficult sections of San Francisco, she Enclosures: Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS -1279 MOTHERHOOD 31 MOTHERHOOD to friendship some who, from lack of informa- had been hostile to the Red Cross ideals and comment. Little did that Christian Soldier Bishop ality. The writer is impelled to add the following collected membership funds for the benefi- realize what an ever-abiding impression his discover- humane functions of the historic Red Cross able affectionate personality had made on his Secre- tary. a token of our joint appreciation of the great The Bishop was fond of an open stove where he of the social and the religious service rendered could see the fire as in an open fireside at home. After he Reverend Dr. and Mrs. J. O. Lincoln in their a busy day he would turn in his office chair and gaze and maintenance of Saint Dorothy's Rest at the fire, then turn toward his Secretary and look of the benefits that accrued to both the writer at him with those tired eyes-the Bishop was aging- his wife in an "outing" at that Diocesan Benefi- and converse with him as with a chum. the writer's wife designed, made and donated Frontal that has ever since adorned the Altar Asked by one of his former fellow students that Dorothy's Rest Chapel. "Billy," who was then on the "diamond" "behind the bat" as the catcher for his college baseball team, wife had gone to the business office that sold and fondly known on the Trinity College campus as rvations in the Civic Auditorium in San Francisco "Billy Nic," "Billy, what are you going to be?" His 17, certain symphony concert. She said to the clerk on reply was, "Oh, I don't know what I am going to be; "I would like to reserve two front seats in the gal- but one thing I do know is that I am not going to be a- for that performance." He disclosed a diagram of a minister." By the politic affectionate leadings of his house and suggested two seats on the side near the mother, seconded by his old-time parish rector, that She said, "I do not want those seats. I want two rne, same "Billy" became the Second Bishop of California. be middle directly facing the orchestra; one can the music better there than in any other place As a memorial to the memory of a highly cultured his be Auditorium." There was a man standing near- man of classical letters, the late Professor Henry Rush- when she made that remark, who immediately ton Fairclough of Stanford University in response to around and gave her a long-remembered inter- an impelling sense of duty for European service as look; that man was the Conductor, Alfred a social service military official, during the last World ted War, indited a monumental volume entitled "Warm- a blessed tincture to episcopal responsibility, ing Both Hands," that should be commended for its ent's Nichols had a keen sense of humor, which encyclopedic constructive technique for both the exceeded the bounds of ministerial propriety. young and the old, in its inspirational cosmopolitan- was neighborly to a degree of a missionary spiritu- ism toward the promotion of world neighborships. In community life generally it is a fact of experience Enclosures: Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 47-12-1279 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 33 usiness houses, like homes, take on the character she knows because, developed more conspicuously B who occupy them. than in most men, she has that mental faculty whereby not exclusively for the legal conservation of she is, as a matter of defense to her womanhood, nunity interests" that business men betimes enabled providentially to judge of the right or of the the signature of a man's wife to a document wrong, the feasibility or the futility of propositions the security, productivity and marketability that may be offered for one's consideration and ac- proposed monetary investment, but as for an onal guarantee of a woman's judgment regard- ceptance. A woman's domesticated common sense is exalted advisability of such a business transaction. in the generality of a query that has been made sub- ubtedly not a few men would have been able to stantially as follows: Is it not a mistake to take one for their families a more abundant estate had who has constructively occupied a position, with an istened with a practical attention to their better outstanding acceptability to all concerned, from that wise counsel. location to occupy another post where the economic environments of office are not obviously adaptable to in an entirely different connection it is a wise 17, a similarity of personal success? According to the of prudence to observe that no married judgment of another good woman much of the dis- has any justification to occupy, though unwit- a- order of the times is due to "Speed." a social relationship with anyone that, in the In respect to strategy local traditions should be course of human regard of one for another, duly honored. General expansion should not be cur- rne, tend to undermine her loyalty to her own hus- tailed by inordinate centralization. I Corinthians XII Perchance there are few who really know what his involves a parable on spiritual statesmanship. of a woman's "because." She knows simply It appears to be a matter of common consent that she does know without any apparent reason. women are better judges of men than men are of man, within the writer's knowledge, in what women. As a creative beatitude certain living crea- long since beyond his specific recall of mem- tures take on for their protection the appearances of ted ho defined "common sense," was the late Arch- the very vegetation they inhabit. The Psalmist of Richard Whately of Dublin, an eminent man Israel betokened for mankind the same protective and ent's a logician and theologian. He defined com- sustaining elements in the spiritual world when he as that mental faculty which enables one was inspired to declare the providences of Jehovah as at judgments unaided by art or by any recorded in Psalm XVI. of rules. That perceptive faculty is the foun- In this connection the writer has a persistive recol- of a woman's "Because." She sees because she lection of an incident to a vacation trip with his wife to see; she hears because she has ears to hear; on the way north to Vancouver, Canada. We were on Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 47-12-1279 34 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 35 the upper deck of the eventually ill-fated steamer "The Governor." Seated nearby was seemingly a As a well deserved tribute to a devoted woman's young woman and a male representative of the genus missionary home-making beneficence the following bomo. It was after dark. That man in a close conver- incident in the writer's ministry is recorded. Accom- sation was endeavoring to indoctrinate that girl with panied by his wife on the way West, the writer visited the idea that "The greatest sin that one could commit an institution that was signally supported by a woman of untold wealth for the sole purpose of keeping is the sin of being found out." The aftermath of that mother and child together. In that haven of refuge sinister endeavor is, of course, unknown, but it is alone for the unfortunate, during one year, were two hoped that that young woman's discernment of right bundred such refugees from social malediction. On and wrong and sustained toward a conservation of that visit it was the writer's privilege to baptize a her womanhood by that abiding love of Mother, newly-born infant and to give it a Christian name for which is a mainstay of social integrity, saved her from an honorable membership in society. That blessed what could have been for her a life-long cause of a womanly philanthropist well appreciated the fact that loss of health and of self-respect. In re humanized any such mother will eventually be stricken by the benefaction see Psalm LXXXI. pangs of uncertainty, if she gives ber child away, as Marriage honors a life-long mutuality of responsi- to what has become of her baby, which is a type of bility. Betimes there redounds, by the dire force of homesickness, to undermine her peace of mind unto circumstances, to the credit of both husband and a lingering breakdown of physical health, not to men- wife, a reversal of companionable occupations. In the tion the heart-searching questions that may darken course of a missionary canvass, subsequent to April her later days in the event of a future offer of mar- 18, 1906, of that section of San Francisco known as riage, unless ber love as essentially a good woman, the Embarcadero and extending from North Beach proven by a clean revelation of such a mishap in her to Islais Creek, one incident beyond everything else life, would quicken into a more enduring affection connected with that house-to-house survey, stands in the heart of the man who could appreciate such a out in the writer's memory. A knock at the front sacrifice on the part of a chosen fiancee. door of a homelike cottage summoned in response a An old-time prodding country doctor was wont fine, well-built man of an amiable disposition as to say, "There are no illegitimate children, but there evinced by his kindly attitude. He was wearing a are illegitimate parents." A fine maternity specialist, kitchen apron. He had been an able-bodied mechanic, himself a religious family man, advised the writer that, but had suffered a serious injury to his head that per- according to medical records, in one country alone, manently incapacitated him from doing a man's hard during a single year, five bundred thousand infants day's work. His faithful wife was "in town" earning were born without the sanctions of wedlock. The their daily bread. woman bears the brunt of such lapses from social in- Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 47-12-1279 36 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 37 tegrity, while her copartner in malediction too often, While the dissection of a cadaver, in itself consid- SO far as earthly records and temporal judgments are ered, does not disclose the immortal part of human unknown. concerned, disappears into the obscurities of the great nature, it does reveal the marvelous providences of the Divine Mind, as manifested in the creation, that Mothers are needed as vital factors toward the mak- lead to the discernment that God is love. (See Gene- ing of growing youth loyal in adult life to their Home sis II:7 and Ecclesiastes XII; Psalm CXXXIX:1-17.) Country as a Fatherland, wherein prospers the re- The following pastoral experience of the writer is wards of righteousness and peace. singular in his entire ministry. A call was being made There is too much prudery concerning judicious at the home of a seriously ill man, who was laying on information governing wholesome social relationships a couch in the corner of a large front room. When and the sanctity of marital obligations. In regard to the writer entered that room the patient was alive; bis matters pertaining to private personal health, every eyes were wide open and intelligent; suddenly, quicker boy needs a manly father and every girl needs a than it takes to think about it, that intelligence dis- womanly mother. Normal nobility is an outcome of appeared, which marked the instant when he had personal religion. (See Psalm LXXXVII.) passed away: his spirit, with lightning speed, had left his body. It was like seeing a human face looking at One of the writer's highly regarded acquaintances, one through a window and on turning aside for a a stalwart, soldierly man with the credit of three dec- moment, then looking back to find that face gone. ades of service in the United States Navy, related the (See Psalm XLIX; St. James II:26. Compare I Thes- following notes of family experience: "I had a nine- salonians V:23.) year-old daughter, who gave mentally great promise of becoming a teacher of youth. She had been given In his later ministry the writer had two cases that a beautiful doll which she cherished [evidently as an are for him an enduring memory. In both of those matters the correspondents were manly enough to outward sign of an inborn sense of motherhood]. She resort to a coverage in marriage. In one of those cases, slept with that doll." Her father said, "I loved that however, the "stork" anticipated their painful retribu- little girl." In the inscrutable providences of the tive hopes. A marriage was subsequently followed Heavenly Father she died. Her father said "At ber with the baptism of their child. In the other case, SO burial that doll went with ber." far as known, the infant was given over to the chari- One of the shortest comments (St. John XI:35), table care of an institutionalized nursery. withal one of the most expressive, that adorns the The modernizing of any age consists in the trans- evangelical records in Holy Writ, is the notation in portation into the times of the spirit of those who the account of the death of Lazarus: "Jesus wept." personalize in their days what Charles Dickens char- Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 47-12-1279 OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO 38 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD 39 acterized as "The power of a perfect mastery of their ous to the human system; it is easier to change one's character." "sky" than to alter one's disposition. According to the courtesies of The Associated Press In proportion to inordinate gratifications, ensues a the following news item is quoted in toto: coordinate atrophy of the buman will that tends toward a wreckage of personal character. St. Paul's 257 DIVORCES IN 4 HOURS IRK JUDGE prescription to the Ephesians (Chap. II) is timely and AUGUSTA (Ga.), Sept. (AP) Granting 257 specific: "By grace ye are saved through faith; and divorces in a four hour session, Judge A. L. Franklin that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God." (See, declared that "if this is a sample of civilization, we also, II Corinthians III:1-6.) Psalm CXLI is a spir- are in a dickens of a fix. itual prophylactic. Psalms I-V constitute worshipful "Our churches, schools and other educational insti- resumé of righteousness. tutions have got to teach people more about the sanc- Contrasted with the fatality regarding the outcome tity of marriage," the veteran jurist said. of social disasters, the undying fidelity of a womanly motherbood, even in the face of vice or of dire pov- The fineness of a religiously cultured womanhood erty, one need but read Dickens' story of "The in a joint support of a sterling manhood is the sure Drunkard's Death," or view Hogarth's picture of foundation of that congenial companionship which "The Dying Clown." makes motherhood the very soul of a home, and, of Even the flickering sparks of manhood or of manhood its support and protection as a one woman's womanhood can be rekindled into the "fire of love" man. Psalm XXXVIII discloses the limits of a per- as mercifully revealed in the parables of the lost sheep, sonal responsibility for the moral sequences of an the lost coin and the inordinate boy as well as in the undisciplined will. Compare the creative honors of redemptive love in Divine Providence as revealed in manhood and of womanhood in Psalms VIII and the Evangelical Story of the Magdalene. Those divine XIX. Jehovah has never left His Creation to run revelations that God is Love are likewise forecasts of wild, unhelped by proffers of Divine Grace, to the the Recreative Mercy (St. Matthew V:7) as revealed excesses of an uncontrolled human will. Vigorous in the pronouncement to that penitent malefactor also health is itself productive of normal appetites, for an dying on Calvary: "Today shalt thou be with me in employment germane to a normality of buman Paradise" in response to his agonizing petition: "Lord, spirituality. Excess in any condition of physiological remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom." normality leads to a habituation of misuse that can Israel's Psalmist, in a spirit of contrite supplication eventually become pathological mentally as well as to the eternal Lover of Mankind, immortalized the physically. (See St. Matthew XI:28-30; compare vitality of hope in his filial worshipful approach to St. James I:27.) A slavery to habit can become peril- Jehovah: "Turn thee again, O Lord, at the last, and Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS JAND STAMPS 47-12-1279 40 41 MOTHERHOOD MOTHERHOOD be gracious unto thy servants." Psalm XC:13 (P.B.V.). The motherly impulses in womanhood, besides mak- See, also, Psalm CVII:17-22. ing women home builders, "born nurses" and betimes B Spiritual Hygiene savants in the learned professions, transcend every The cure of human waywardness harks back to an other calling, open to women in common with men, eradication of any sort of agnosticism. (See Psalms as being inevitably accordant with a woman's created LIII and LVIII; Philippians I-III; compare Ephesians nature, eventually as an asset for a preeminence in IV.) The Psalter itself contains the fundamentals in social expression beyond the attractive claims of both a state of spiritual sanity. (I Thessalonians II and V.) science and art. The Apostle Paul was inspired to The consummation of universalized civilization will signalize in his First Epistle to the Corinthians the be attained when such a social blessedness is accordant immortality of love as did also Drummond when he with the Divine Providences therein involved. Con- declared: "The greatest thing in the world is love." sider I Thessalonians V:23 in re Philippians II:13. The following story reaffirms the spiritual verity re- The vitality of social welfare is resident in the con- garding the preeminence of love as being transcen- ditions of Spiritual Hygiene. "Blessed are the pure in dental to every other human controlling influence, heart: for they shall see God." (St. Matthew V:8; whether commercial, scientific or artistic. 7, compare Psalm XV.) Devotional usages of the "Con- Many years ago it was the writer's privilege as a stant Collect" and of the one for Monday in Whitsun student lay reader to visit a New England "old- Week, with The Lord's Prayer, also furnish the spir- fashioned" family home center which had been also itual Daily Bread for those "which do hunger and in earlier days a business center, but in the shifts of e, thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled." circumstances, had become more extensively a com- (St. Matthew V:6.) munity of homes. In one of those characteristic fine S Connecticut homes resided at that time a prospective Almighty God, unto whom all hearts are open, all desires known, and from whom no secrets are hid; Metropolitan Grand Opera artist, who, on Sundays in Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of the Parish Church, constituted the entire choir in her thy Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love thee, and leadership of congregational singing: a young woman 1 worthily magnify thy holy Name; through Christ our of attractive personality and a fine physique, which Lord. Amen. could win for her an outstanding stage presence, also t's Send, we beseech thee, Almighty God, thy Holy a support of a magnificent soprano voice. Spirit into our hearts, that he may direct and rule us Just before that April 18, 1906, a pivotal date in according to thy will, comfort us in all our afflictions, the municipal life of San Francisco, that friend of the defend us from all error, and lead us into all truth; writer was scheduled to take part as a dramatic through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with thee and the same Holy Spirit liveth and reigneth one God, world soprano in one of the great Wagnerian operas at the without end. Amen. then Mission Street Opera House. Learning of her Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 47-12-1279 ADDRESS OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO THE SECRETARY OF STATE 42 MOTHERHOOD 9-B presence in San Francisco, the writer sent up his card to her apartment. She cordially responded as of yore, and gave complimentary tickets for the writer and his wife to attend the performance of the opera in which she was to take an imposing part. Asked whether she had any prospective "boy friend," she replied: "Ob, no; I am wedded to my art." The fires of 1906 abruptly canceled that opera season and SO we were not privileged to bear further testimony to her mag- nificent voice and artistry. It was said, however, that in the ultimate course of events, she had become wedded otherwise than professionally to grand opera art. er 17, It would tax an inspired pen to anticipate the provi- dential glories of Motherhood. The Holy Scriptures .ca- reveal, in historic commemorations, the beauty of a devotional womanhood, for the beatification of so- urne, ciety. Hannah, the mother of Samuel; Ruth and Naomi; Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist; his the prophetess Anna, not to exclude the resanctified Magdalene, are outstanding among the innumerable company of immortals. The redemptive holiness that is a replica of a faithfulness unto death of a Mother- sted hood that glorifies a universal womanhood is had in the committal by The Lamb of God of His Mother -the Blessed Virgin Mary-to the care of the Be- dent's loved Disciple, John the Evangelist: Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus therefore saw his mother, and the disciple standing by, whom he loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son! Then saith he to the disciple, Behold thy mother! And from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home. October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS 47-12-1279 ADDRESS OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO THE SECRETARY OF STATE WASHINGTON, D.C. DEPARTMENT OF STATE PPF WASHINGTON 9-B In reply refer to PR December 3. 1942 My dear Miss Tully: In compliance with your memorandum of November 17, 1942, I am returning herewith the original communica- tion addressed to the President by Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, London, England, transmitting an inscribed copy of his book entitled Return to Reason. The American Embassy at London has been requested to convey to Dr. Bourne an expression of the President's thanks for the volume. Sincerely yours, Chief of Protocol Enclosures: Original letter from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, October 2, 1942, with enclosure. FORDEFENSE Miss Grace G. Tully, BUY UNITED The White House. STATES SAVINGS BONDS AND STAMPS S 12 2-10-42 Dear Mr President In reply refer to PR ask you to arcept a specially bound copy of any small book It is offered as a token of personal admiration My dear Miss Tully: In compliance with your memorandum of November 17, 1942, I an returning herewith the original communica- tion addressed to the President by Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, London, England, transmitting an inscribed copy of his told book me entitled that Return to Reason. whould put it The American Embassy at London has been requested in to convey to Dr. Bourne an expression of the President's thanks The for the volume. period, 8 the onset of Sincerely yours, was the final stimu GEORGE fup T. SUMMERLIN It deals with what Chief of 9 Protocol believe to be Enclosures: one 0 the chindamental Original letter from factors October enclosure. 2, 1942, with se democracy Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, & I therefore Kenture * hope Miss Grace 0. Tully, The White House. NS FROM DR GEOFFREY BOURNE. 12 TELEPHONSECK 1035. 2-10-42 47, QUEEN ANNE STREET, Dear Mr President CAVENDISH SQUARE, W.1. I ask you to accept a specially bound copy of my small book. It is offered as a token of personal admiration of gratitude to you. I spoke of its theme years ago [ [ ? 1935] to General Imuts Who told me that I should put it in writing. The pre - war period, of the onset of hostilities, was the tal final stimulus. It deals with what I believe to be one of the fun damen tal factors in operative democracy, of I therefore Venture to hope 2767 'LT November that ynom you to read it, it will prove of some interest. of events forlid this I have trust Even should the pressure that the fact that I fent it may serve to that add one small link to understanding between our two nations or which the future depends. I am proud to be American is by adoption Orbans. - my wife from New I have the honour to be yours, with fir sent aments of respect o esteem Gestray Bourne GesHrey ed? pent it may link to our that of that Even events the forlid fact this that serve I to have add you of some interest should - the 9 pressure ast 12 November 17, 1942 MEMORANDUM FOR HONORABLE GEORGE T. SUMMERLIN: Will you not be good enough to have acknowledgment made of the enclosed letter x20 and book from Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, of London, and return them to us? Grace G. Tully Private Secretary dd Dr. Geoffrey Bourne, 47 Queen Anne Street, Cavendish Square, W. I. (London) Dr. Bourne asks the President to accept this specially bound copy of his small book "Return to Reason"; deals with what he believes to be one of the fundamental factors in operative democracy. 12 n n1. PP1 ALFRED A. KNOPF New York, N.Y. December 3, 1942 - Ackd. 9-B Sent the President a copy of the now book GOVERNMENT BY ASSA SINATIONS by Mr. Hugh Byas. Book sent to the Study. Ackd. 12/3/42. SEE - PPF - 9 - K ver 12 an n1. C PPF-9-B RICHARDSON, Sullivan C. Chicago, Ill. Ackd. Dec. 3, 1942. Sends copy of book "Adventure South" which was inscribed by above, Mr. Arnold Whitaker and Mr. Kenneth C. Van Hee. To study. ilo SEE: PPF 9-R 12 11 n1. < 12/5/42 Miss Rosenberg, PP7. P P7- A book " God's Bible was received this date vi'a parcel post and sent to 9-B 9- B U.S.S.S. A letter associated with this is postmarked Dec. 1, 1942. Signed God's Son, King of Love. Geoshor / 2 12 December 7.. 1942 1 n7. Ministerio de Justicia e Instruccion PP7-9 Publica de la Nacion, Comision Revisora de Textos de Historia y Geografia, Edificio del Carildo, "B" Bolivar 65, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Sends President two books by Gilberto Freyre "Casa-Grande y Senzala" Volunes I & II. No covering letter received. Referred to State Department, 12/7/42. mcb/ See 366a 12 2148 1 n7. December 7.. 1942 Diretor-Geral do Departamento Estadual de Estátistica, Rua Tenete Silveira, Esquina Trajano, AP7-9 Florianopolis, Santa Catarina. "B" Send President copy of book by Oswaldo R. Cabral "Medicina, Nedicos e Charlataes do Passado. Order blank X enclosed - no covering letter received. Referred to Department of State, 12/7/42. mcb/ the Other Copy filed BPF- 9 "C" 12 1 n7. December 7.. 1942 PPF-9-B SIGSTEDT, Sigrid 0. Bryn Athyn, Pa. Ackd. Dec. 4, 1942. Life". To study. Sends book entitled "Strait is the Gate: A Romance of the Other SEE: PPF 9-S ilo 12 n7. December 7.. 1922 PPF WATSON, Thomas J. 9-B New York, N.Y. November 18, 1942 Letter to the President, sending copy of book which he presented to President Prado of Peru, covering his recent visit to the U. S. Ackd. 12/5/42, advising book has not been received. SEE - PPF 2489 vsr 12 December 7.. 1942 p7. PP1 SIMON AND SCHUSTER 9-B New York, N.Y. December 7, 1948 - Ackd. Sent the President a copy of Ambassador Grew's book REPORT FROM TOKYO. Sent to the Study. Ackd. 18/7/48. SEE - PPF - 9 - S vsr 12 n n7. December 7.0 1922 PP7 9-B WIENER, Paul Lester New York, N.Y. November 17, 1942 Letter to Miss Lehand, sending copy of book CAN OUR CITIES SURVIVE. To the Study. Ackd. 12/4/42. SEE - PPF - 9 - W vsr 12 n n7. December 7.. 1922 PP7 LOWINGER, Armand 9-B Chicago, Illinois December 7, 1942 - Ackd. To the Study. Ackd. 12/7/42. Sent the President, copy of book, "The Methodology of Pierre Duhem. SEE - PPF - 9 - L vsr 12 December 7.. 1942 n n7. PPF 9-B WOODS, Dr. & Mrs. Henry M. THE WORLD-WIDE REVIVAL PRAYER MOVEMENT Atlantic City, N.J. December 3, 1942 Letter to the President, sending booklet. Sent to the Study with magazines. Ackd. 12/4/42. SEE - PPF - 9 - W vsr 12 December 7,, 1942 n r7: Charles Joseph PPF-9-B MAGNER, Rev. James Aloysius CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA, The Washington, D. C. Ackd. De.c 7, 1942. Christmas Book Shan. Sent inscribed book entitled "Men of Nexico". SEE: PPF 9-C ilo 12 December 7,, 1942 n p7. PPF 9-B LYNCH, William Charles Joseph Central City, Kentucky December 7, 1942 - Ackd. Sent the President Christmas Greetings and copy of the Catholic Guide. Book to Mrs. Eben. Ackd. 12/7/42. SEE - PPF - 9 - L vsr 12 December 7.. 1942 / n7. PPF 9-B THE JOURNAL OF LIVING New York, N.Y. December 7, 1942 - Ackd. Sent the President a book, entitled HOW TO WIN AND KEEP HEALTH WITH FOODS. Book to the Study. Ackd. 12/7/42. SEE - PPF - 9 - J vsr 12 December 7,, 1942 n.7 PPF-9-B MACMILLAN COMPANY, The New York, N.Y. Dec. 9, 1942. (File date) them for the book entitled "American Opinion & The War" which they sent to On Dec. 7, 1942 Miss Tully wrote to the above company thanking the President as a gift from the author, Hon. Archibald Macleish. Let. of thanks to Hon. MacLeish on Dec. 7, 1942. SEE: PPF 6295 ilo 12 December 7, 1942 r.p.7. q-B My dear Miss Belnap: Permit me to thank you for your kind- ness in sending the inscribed copy of the book which was received recently. I can assure you that your friendly thought is appreciated. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary - X Miss Flora Belnap, 2149 Madison Avenue, Ogden, Utah. dd BOOK: TEMPLES OF THE MOST HIGH (Latter Day Saints) May I say that many of the defense workers are also O sluffing on their jobs. One boy 18 told me he was making about $300 per month at the air craft mechanical work. I asked him what he did all night, or all day, when he worked. "Oh, nothing much, very easy. 11 I surely dont envy you or Mr. Byrnes on the job. And enratt 12 study ask 2149 Madison Ave. 12/7/27 Ogden, Utah, Nov. 5, 1942 d.d. President Franklin D. Roosevelt; Washington D. C. Dear President: It appears that you and Great Britain are fulfilling the prophecies herewith inclosed as I thot the news came over the radio theo other that American and British troops had landed in Pales Sea. tine and Assyria, and this A. M. I heard that they were near the Red Some of the prophecies are contained in "Temples of the Most High" copied ver batim. This book I bought last Friday, while enroute to the temple, to mail to you, but wanted to mark some of the high lights, but have failed, but you may expect it. I am so disgusted with these ignorant labor unions, argu- ing with me last Sunday, "United we stand, together we fall" yes in unrighteousness and hindrance of defense. They told me then they were planning a grand walk out at the American Packing and Provision Company for the 8th of November. They say they receive Q over $100 per month for regular time and $1.80 per hour for overtime, a and their own words, make more money on their over time and sluff on the job," too. I cant get one, who is a sheet metal mechanic, but left the sheet metal works, because of the high union fee and is making saugage, at the American Packing & P rov. Co. to cut a flue in my old house, to make room for people in defense work(it snowed here yesterday morning) and many are in tents--I cant get him to do this, I repeat because he is associating with another ignorant tenant, a 20 year employee and striker for the same company. And when I get a carpenter, he cant work because he belongs to the union, and everything is frozen SO I cannot get supplies either. The twenty year employee has been paying me $12.50 per month for 3 rooms, the placing of his children's bed in another, practically 4 and I have had the roof to shingle, etc. etc. They buy overstuffed living room suits, walnut dining room sets, electric refrigerators, $50 bycicles, take bankruptcy to avoid their debts, etc. etc. and I cannot afford any of the luxuries named, so that I can get by. Rents in Ogden have been frozen for many years until it has been impossible to make enuf to pay taxes, much less anything else. Now, I know these things cannot be adjusted in a minute, and I am not complaining, am still trying to work things out and keep within the law with prices of food ano clothes, twice as high in a couple of months. It seems to me that those prices could revert back to March 1, as the rents, but how you are going to get enuf acccountant to look into all these things immediately, is surely a problem. May I say that many of the defense workers are also O sluffing on their jobs. One boy 18 told me he was making about $300 per month at the air craft mechanical work. I asked him what he did all night, or all day, when he worked. "Oh, nothing much, very easy. 11 I surely dont envy you or Mr. Byrnes on the job. ФФН MO GHARD HHOOED БНЯ AAP 2484 PTOTA SHrinto 00H A Some of the older people who are accustomed to working on their farms, just work fast and hard as they are used to doing for themselves. It gets on their nerves to see the others idling. One rather elderly lady told of a man painting a door, he moved the brush SO slowly, she said "There goes another Million Dollars of Uncle Sam's money." This negro element coming in here from the south are lazy, immoral, even getting many of the white girls in bad. One is not safe on the electric train between here and Salt Lake. They are better in the South picking cotton for soldiers' apparel. I dont believe in making slaves of people, and I also believe in everyone having a fair chance. AGAIN, WHAT A JOB YOU HAVE! I am wondering if observance of the Sabbath in all plants, unless it is an emergency, or a morning and afternoon 10 minute recess, help. which always brings better and more work for anyone would I am sure the statesman, that you have appointed are more equal to the situation than L. I do wish there was some way of educating this undertoe, striking labor union people, to a higher level of thinking. They rank underneath, slowly crawling their way to a war between capital and labor, as Hitler (Satan) did. Ever praying for the Lord to guide you, especially in the big accomplishments of the Master's plans, foretold bby prohets, of which a smattering is herewith inclosed. Has not that little speck of a Britain been sustained-and she has been working for the Jews for a century --and longer, I guess. And what about our preservation-San Francisco saved, when they could have flown even to Utah with their Jap planes, had they known we were SO weak. I have often thot we needed a weekly fireside chat from the White House over the radio, using God and his purposes as a base with an attractive gold or red, white and blue flag, streaming above to attract this undertoe. Hurriedly and sincerely yours, Flora used the moved he 1013 others to to Temple of Most Hight pp 218-222 JO "The vision continued open about six hours, that I did not close my eyes in sleep. In this time many things were shown to me which I ha have never written; neither shall I write them until they are fulfilled in Jerusalem, said the Jewish apostle, Orson Hyde of this dispensation. Further (March 1840) i "The cities of London, Amsterdam, Constan- tinople and Jerusalem all appeared in succession before me, and the Spirit said unto me, 'Here are many of the children of Abraham whom I will gather to the land I gave to their fathers, and here also is the field of your labors. ff "Blow ye the trumpet at in theland; cry, gather together; and say, assemble yourselves, and let us go into the defenced cities. Let the standard be reared toward Zion. Retire! stay not; for I will bring evil from the north and a great destruction. The lion is come up from his thicket, and the destroyer of the Gentiles is on his way, he is gone forth from his place to make thy land desolate, and thy cities shall be laid waste without inhabitant. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her that her warfare is accompliahed--th her iniquity is pardoned, for she has received from the Lord double for all her sins." etc. From Orson Hyde's prayer on the Mount of Dlives, Fall of 1842, as I recall: "Let the large ships of the nations bring them from the distant isles; and let kings become their nursing fathers, and queens with motherly fondness wipe the tear of sorrow from their eyes." "Let that nationor that people whol shall take an active part in behalf of Abraham's children, andin the raising up of Jerusalem, find favor in thy sight, Let not their enemies prevail against them, neither let pestilence or famine overtake them; while the nation or kingdom that will not serve thee i n this glorious work must perish, according to thy word-- "Yea those nations shall be utterly wasted." PROBABLY THOSE WERE SOME OF THE THINGS ORSON HYDE SAW. F.B. Nov. 6, 1942 Ogden, Utah Excerpt from Discourse of Orson Pratt, Apostle of the Church of Jesus Christ in this dispensation, at Logan, Utah, Nov. 1, 1879. Journal Discourses Vol 21, p. 149., which is also part of the sermon, published in Temples of the Most High," p 206. Note by Flora Belnap. Pres. Lorenzo Snow, who after this date, See Temples of the Most High, page 144, By Le Roi C. Snow, (to whom I talked and he verified his account told him by his father, Lorenzo Snow and also told me by his grandaughter, Allie Young Pond) met the Savior face to face in the Salt Lake Temple, Sept. 2, 1898) From the sermon it appears that Pres. Snow spoke of the building of the New Jerusalem on this continent, reference to which has been made in theBible, Doctrine and Covenants and Book of Mormon. "We do not expect to go to the Sandwich Islands, neither to the Society Islands, neither to any of the islands bf the oceans, nor to South America, mor Central America to carry the order of things, which we expect to enter into, in all its fulness, but we expect, just as we expect the sun to rise, when it arises on a clear morning, that the Lord will and take us back to the land referred to by Brother Snow this forenoon". And he continues at length regarding the young men of the Church returning to Eastern Kansas and Western Missourri and taking up lands, eventually for an everlasting inheritance. "Today $50,000 worth or property is the most that can be held by a religious organization, but in that day property, amounting to a very much larger sum will be held in trust, and for whom? For the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints, and for all this great company, that will be gathered together, and there will be such a change in governmental affairs, that the trustee, whomever he may be, will only act as long as he is faithful, and if he is unfaithful, it will be tranferred to another." And he continues explaining the law of stewardship, information of which you received in 1941. "The people will be all equally poor or all equally rich" etc. Other prophecies of Apostle Orson Pratt have been fulfilled. He was a most brilliant philosopher, his books now text books at Oxford and in U. S. as well he excelled even men of today in mathematics, literature, More etc. etc. explanation of mail prophesia Door in the book 2 hope received it then if you it have to one who not will already Nov. appreciate Ogden, 6, 1942 Utah. P.P.73 B December 2, 1942 PPF-9-B JAFFIN, George New York, N.Y. Ackd. Dec. 3, 1942. Sends inscribed copy of his book. r SEE: PPF 9-J ilo P.P.73 9-B December 2, 1942 My dear Miss Buck: The President was delighted to receive those delicious grapes. He asks me to thank you ever so much for your friendly thought in sending them to him and to convey his hearty good wishes to you. r Very sincerely yours, xo!7 X q.g Grace G. Tully Private Secretary Miss Pearl I. Buck, Exeter, California. dd B Wagnet- 12/2/21 dd, Do P.P.7 12 h thank for Grape sent to the President ompson's book, "LISTEN HANS". by Pearl I Buck br Exeter, Caly- ) (distributed) 9.9.T American Plastex Co. P.P.7 P. HOUGHTON MIFFLIN CO., Cambridge, Mass. 12-8-42 (ack.) (study) Sends President copy of Part One of Dorothy Thompson's book, "LISTEN HANS". See P.P.F.9-H PP7 br 9-B p.p.7 December 9, 1942 9-B My dear Mr. Baker: It was kind of you to send the President the ash tray to which you refer in your letter KPP7 P p of November twenty-eighth. I want to thank you, 9-A in his behalf, for your courtesy and to tell you how grateful he is for your friendly good wishes. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary Earl L. Baker, Esq., American Plastex Company, Traverse City, dd Michigan. TTY. GAN 13172 WYOMING: DETROIT MICHIGAN ack American Plastex Co. action & November 28, 1942 Mr. Franklin D. Roosevelt 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Washington, D. C. My dear Mr. Roosevelt: The accompanying "Victory" ash tray was designed especially for you, and I want you to have the first one. I hope you like it as much as 1 do. My very best wishes to you. Sincerely, Earl L. Baker Juan Antonio Solari, Camara de Diputados de la Nacion, PP7-9 Comision Especial Investigadora de las "B" Actividades AntiArgentinas, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Sends President two of his books: En el Frente Democratico & America Presa Codiciada - planes de dominacion Nazi. Referred to Department of State, 12/10/42. mcb/ SEE - PPF-9 "S" P-P7 December 9, 1942 q-B My dear Dr. Blanchard: It vas indeed kind of you to send the President copies of your publications. Permit me to thank you, in his behalf, for your courtesy. Very sincerely yours, X ppt q-B Grace G. Tully Private Secretary X Dr. C. E. Blanchard, 36 North Phelps Street, Youngstown, Ohio. (Books titled "The Romance of Proctology" and booklet "Letters to My Great Grandchildren - by Dr. C. E. Blanchard) cd vsr RARIAN OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON ed. copy of book "MY FIRST BABY and other PP7 7 9-B dy. Ackd. 12/8/42 lied in vials containing 1 prophylactic dose, 15,000 (mouse-protective) units. From To Medical The President, achyd 12/9/l Literature to physicians on request Success Press E.R. SQUIBB & SONS The White House, 745 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N.Y. and The et Bulletin of Washington, D.C. Charles E. Blanchard, M. D., 36 N. Phelps Street, ffice Practice Fourth-Class Mail Youngstown, Ohio PRINTED MATTER E. BLANCHARD nd Publisher Postmaster: This parcel may be opened for Phelps St. postal inspection if necessary. U. S. A. Return Postage Guaranteed vsr BRARIAN OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON bed copy of book "MY FIRST BABY and other PP7 9-B udy. Ackd. 12/8/42 lied in vials containing 1 prophylactic dose, If ambulant proctology were employed 15,000 (mouse-protective) units. where it soldiers and sailors are stationed confining operations. would save much time lost from bed- Literature to physicians on request SQUIBB & SONS tors fully competed to do the work. Dr. Blanchard could supply a list of doe 745 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N.Y. Charles E. Blanchard, M. D., act Princh 36 N. Phelps Street, Youngstown, Ohio 49:157, 1942. J. vsr BRARIAN OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON 7 bed. copy of book "MY FIRST BABY and other PP7 9-B udy. Ackd. 12/8/42 Supplied in vials containing 1 prophylactic dose, 15,000 (mouse-protective) units. ANTIPERTUSSIS SERUM Literature to physicians on request E.R: SQUIBB & SONS 745 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N.Y. A in children highly whooping concentrated and protection, In of this age therefore, age who group is most importates. Charles E. Blanchard, M. D., 36 N. Phelps Street, to Youngstown, Ohio are highest 49:157, 1942. J. Pediat. 20:9, 1942. RY#OF# THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS SCONGRE WASHINGTON HIRRSSA her In PP7 9-B FAY, Dr. Temple TEMPLE UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL December 8, 1 942 - ackd. Sent the President inscribed copy of book "MY FIRST BABY and other AMBULANCE anecdotes". Sent to the Study. Ackd. 12/8/42 SEE - PPF - 9-F - vsr RY#OF# THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS #CONGRE WASHINGTON H thuss In PPF 9-B WILLIAMS, Major William B. New York, N.Y. November 17, 1942 Letter to the President, sending copy of book CHUMAN BULLETS. To the Study. Ackd. 12/8/42. SEE - PPF - 9 - W vsr RY#OF# THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS #CONGRE WASHINGTON The H thiss PP7 9-B MEMORANDUM December 10, 1942 Memo for the President, dated 12/7/42, "In response to your memorandum of Dec. 1, 1942 (not in file) there are attached herewith a suggested letter to the Greek Prime Minister, together with a note asking Ambassador A. J. D. Biddle to transmit the letter to Mr. Tsouderos. Enclosure: 1. Letter to Greek Prime Minister for President's signature. 2. Note to Ambassador Biddle for President's signature." ------- The President signed both letters. Book entitled "Salute to Greece" to the President from Mr. Tsouderos. Original copies of letters and book sent to - Hyde Park Library, Series B. SEE - PPF - 9 - T vsr Y # O F THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS #CONGRES WASHINGTON 3 her In KAPLAN, Rabbi N., New York, N.Y. 12-7-42. (ack. 12-9-42) Sends President inscribed copy of book, THE ARK OF NOAH. See P.P.F.9-K P.P.7 br 9-B Y # O F THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS #CONGRE WASHINGTON 1 The 4 PPF HAMMOND, Dr. John W. 9-B Riverdale, New York, N.Y. Dec. 2, 1942 Letter to the President, sending under separate cover book "Book of Common Worship" with marked page calling attention to General Washington's prayer. Ackd. 12/8/42 returning book. SEE - PPF - 9 - H - vsr Y#OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS R WASHINGTON H 10055 h in PPF-9-B LIEBER, Dr. Richard Indianapolis, Ind. Nov. 25, 1942. Ackd. Dec. 8, 1942. Harper and Brothers, at the direction of the above, sent his book entitled "America's Natural Wealth". - Presidential ackd. on Dec. 8, 1942. Pierre F. Goodrich sent another copy of above at the direction of his father, the late James P. Goodrich. SEE: PPF 9-L ilo RY#OF# THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS SCONGRE WASHINGTON THIRASSA PP7 9-B ADAMS, Dr. Randolph G. - Director WILLIAM L. CLEMENTS LIBRARY Ann Arbor, Michigan December 8, 1942 Sent the President copy of publication] LEXINGTON TO FALLEN timbers,1775-1794 Booklet sent to Series B. The President acknowledged on 12/8/42. SEE - PPF 6365 vsr Y * O , THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON H 14455 December 3, 1942 qB Dear Grace: I am sending along a book by Richard Barry which he has inscribed to the President. I don't know Mr. Barry, but the book is about a subject which will interest the President intensely - - namely, the writing of the Powers of the President clause in the Constitution. A glance at pages 340 to 342, and the notes on pages 388 to 389, will give some sense of what the book con- tains. I am sending it along at the request of Mr. Barry's publishers. I have not as yet had an opportunity to read it myself, but I think it might be of interest. My best to you. Faithfully yours, Enclosure and Archibald MacLeish X160 Miss Grace Tully Secretary to the President The White House Form LH 7-FLF-IM-11-42 412 December 9, 1942 Dear Archie: Evero so many thanks for sending me the copy of the book "Mr. Rutledge of South Carolina" by Richard Barry. Will you be good enough to thank Mr. Barry and tell him how much I appreciate having the book, with the inscription, and that I look forward to reading it? My best wishes to you. As ever, Honorable Archibald MacLeish, The Librarian of Congress, Washington, D. C. gt/tmb Form LH 7-FLF-1M-11-42 412 THOMPKINS, Dr. William J. OPF-9-B Recorder of Deeds Washington, 0. C. Dec. 2, 1942. Ackd. 12/3/42. Let. to the President, saying he is sending under separate cover a brochure in re his trip to California to attend the launching of the "Booker T. Washington"; also, records made by the Dept. of Inter-American Affairs in celebration of Columbus Day and Cuban Independence Day. - To Hyde Park Library, Series B. ilo SEE: 51-C Form LH 7-FLF-1M-11-42 412 FRONT FIGHTERS FUND December 11, 1942 pp.7. Workers Onler 3 q-B My dear Mr. Bedacht: I want to acknowledge the receipt of the copy of THIS IS YOUR enemy, inscribed by the author, Mr. Alvah Bessie, which you were good enough to send to the President. You may be assured that he much appreciates your courtesy. Very sincerely yours, Grase G. Tully Private Secretary B X Max Bedacht, Esq., 80 Fifth Avenue, cap New York, N. Y. Max Bedadly uopwa-16 Form LH 7-FLF-IM-11-42 412 ack the ST ackd 42 leap FRONT LINE FIGHTERS FUND MAX BEDACHT of the International Workers Order National Chairman 80 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N. Y. ALgonquin 4-7733 My dear Mr. President: We are privileged to send you as a gift the special bound edition of This Is Your Enemy / a brochure dealing with the subject of Nazi atrocities in the Soviet Union. The material in the book -- text and pictures -- is based upon Foreign Minister Molotov's official documents and memoranda on Nazi atrocities. The text of the book was written by Alvah Bessie noted American author and veteran of the Spanish Loyalist campaigns against the Hitler-Mussolini invaders who helped Franco to destroy the Spanish Republic. The gift edition is autographed by Mr. Bessie. All net proceeds derived from the distribution of This Is Your Enemy are contributed to United Nations war relief through our Front Line Fighters Fund, the war relief fund instituted by the International Workers Order, Inc., a labor fraternity and supported by the efforts and contributions of our members and their friends. To date the Front Line Fighters Fund has contributed over a half million dollars to the USO, the American Red Cross, the agencies caring for anti-Fascist refugees and to other accepted war relief agencies. Our fund also sends thousands of gifts directly to American soldiers. Twenty-five thousand copies of This Is Your Enemy were published in the first edition. Other editions will appear in other languages. The popular edition has been published with paper cover to bring the cost down in order to make the distribution as wide as possible. The copy you receive is one of a limited edition and has been issued for the purpose of en- abling interested officials of the United Nations, heads of war relief agencies, labor and political organizations, libraries, newspapers, magazines and others to have on hand a per- manent copy for reference and other uses. We are considering a nationwide distribution of this volume and others like it. Your comment on, or approval of, this work would be appreciated. We believe this enterprise will be a worthwhile contribution to the victory of our country and its allies over the Fascist Axis. Respectfully yours, Max Bedadls uopwa-16 Form LH 7-FLF-IM-11-42 412 ppt q-B December 10, 1942 My dear Mr. Bonynge: Thank you in the President's behalf for your kindness in sending him the personal notebook. He is most appreciative of your friendly thought of him and wants me to convey his best wishes to you for the Christmas Season. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary X Clarence Bonynge, Esq., 120 Broadway, B New York, N. Y, P.P.t q-B December 10, 1942 My dear Mrs. Burleson: The President was especially pleased to receive the little donkey. He thanks you ever 80 much for your friendly thought in sending it to him and has asked me to convey his cordial good wishes to you. Very sincerely yours, XPP.7 X qd Grace G. Tully Private Secretary B X Mrs. Ella C. Burleson, 406 Elizabeth Road, San Antonio, ed Texas. December 11, 1942 p.r.7. q-B My dear Mr. Bullock: I want to thank you, in the Presi- dent's behalf, for your kindness in sending him those cigarette holders to which you refer in your Letter of recent date. He deeply appreci- ates your friendly thought in wanting him to have this product of your own handiwork. Your friendly good wishes are indeed appreciated by the President. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary Joseph C. Bullock, Esq., 129 West Parrish Street, Durham, North Carolina. cd most devotedly to the cause of Democracy as exemplified by your example. Joseph C. Bullock. Joseph C.Bullock. ack November 10, 1942, T, A.B.B. 129 West Parrish St; Durham, N.C. ackid 12/1/22 His Excellency The President, Franklin D.Roosevelt, White House, Washington, D.C. My Dear Mr. President: Herewith, You are mailed two cigarette holders Which I have made from the ordinary Fig Tree Limbs. I make them only as a. hobby, and I sincerely hope you will find them enjoyable in your use of them. I have made many of them and my friends like them very much, My genuine and sincere good wishes to you for your continued good health, and happiness, and assure you of my deep gratitude and appreciation for your outstanding leadership in the worlds gravest hour. I am supremely confident, with so great and able leadership, who believes in the GREAT GOD of the Universe, as you do, we will come out more than victorious in this great struggle. Again Wishing you enjoyment, in the use of these cigarette holders, and your continued good health, I remain, most devotedly to the cause of Democracy as exemplified by your example. Joseph C. Bullock Joseph C.Bullock. PPF KING, Robert N. 9-13 New York, N.Y. December 7, 1942 Letter to the President, sending beautifully bound copy of book AMERICA'S PRAYER". Sent to Series B. Ackd. &2/10/42. SEE - PPF - 9 - K vsr will spare him a cong lime w guive Victory. Weremain, Iny Dear President. yours Very Truly Inst Inrs Arthur Burt (over) ppt q-B 7 December 10, Stouroom My dear Mr. and Mrs. Burt: Thank you ever so much, in the Pres- ident's behalf, for the kind thought which prompted the presentation of that beautiful XPPF piece of crocheted work referred to in your 9-c letter of November twenty-fourth. He is deep- ly grateful for your friendly expression and your prayerful wishes and I have pleasure in conveying his very best wishes to you for your welfare and happiness. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Burt, 231 0. Callaghan Way, South Boston, Massachusetts. dd will spare him a long time to guide us on to Victory. We remain, Iny Dear President. yours Very Truly Inst Inrs Arthur Burt (over) 12 nklin D. Roosevelt November 94th White House 1942 my Dear Waokington President. D.C. 12/10/4 who it. - Seeing you have selected the 23ᵗʰ Psalm; as our prayer for Thanks-giving under another cover that Psalm. and New year. I am sending you It is in the shape of a piece of crochet work made by my wife. hoperng you will like it. It can be used as a chair back or could be framed on a dark back ground. B my Wife and I are on the O.A.A. we can; but we only get $32-58 a month: We are buying as many war stamps as so wish we could do more for our country. We the people of Boston think a great deal of our beloved President; and hope that God will spare him a long time to guide us on to Victory. Weremain, InyDear President. yours Very Truly Inst Inrs Arthur Burt (over) 231. O. Callaghan Way S. Boston Inass. PP1 9-B 7 December 9, 1942 Stowson My dear Mrs. Badgley: The President has noted with a great deal of interest what is said in the communication accom- panying the beautifully crocheted piece you presented PPF to him as a Thanksgiving remembrance. He deeply ap- preciates your friendly thought in sending him this 9-P product of your own handiwork and has asked me to convey his most cordial good wishes to you for your OPF health and happiness. 9-c It is deeply gratifying to the President to know that he is remembered in your prayers during these critical days. Very sincerely yours, Grace 0. Tully B Private Secretary Mrs. Gustave C. Badgley, 114 E. B. Drive, Olympia, mtl Washington. oliginpio wash 12 nov 9.1942 Dear Mr. Roosevelt. 12. ack 9-42 mtl This Crochet Rowel was made by a lady past 13 years and with out the ade of glasses. and was made for you for your thankingiven. please occept it with her best wishes. Starroom The statuary of Liberty andourflag our This mother had sou's in the lost are what you stand so strongly for XPPF 9-P War andallso this one. Every bit of work did on this paul was mixed with preyer's and good wishes that our president would keep his helth and strenght and take us thrughto Victor andwith thede ade of we know he will cd for right will Win greeting to your house frome her house ms. gustave b. Badgley 114 E.B. Drive she is objumpio a army mother writen by another mothe the 7 BP7 q-B, 10 December 19, 1942 My dear Mr. Burton: In the President's behalf, I wish to thank you for your courtesy in sending him those patriotic posters. You may be assured that he XPPF 9-P appreciates your friendly thought. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary X J. H. Burton, Esq., Burton Bros, & Co., Inc., 267 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. cd THE GOSPEL VOLUNTEERS OF THE WORLD, Park-of-the Palms, Keystone Heights, Fla. 12-8842 Sends copy of the book to the President "Thus Saith the Lord". See P.P.F.9-G br P.P.7 9-B SATTERFIELD, Mrs. J. R. BPF-9-B Spencer, N.C. Nov. 12, 1942. Ackd. 12/9/42. Let. to the President, enclosing scrapbook made by her son, Pvt. John R. Satterfield, who is in the armed forces; made book when he was 11 yrs. old. To Hyde Park Library, Series "B". SEE: PPF 9-S ilo PPI TOBIN, Mrs. Edward 9-B Burlington, Vt. December 14, 1942 - filed Letter to the President, saying she is going to send a box of Butter Nuts. Never received. SEE - PPF - 9 - T vsr PP7-9-B WIL IAMS, Ben Ames Chestnut Hill, Mass. Dec. 1, 1942. Ackd. 12/12/42. Sends copy of his book to the President; to study. SEE: PPF 9-W ilo PP7-9-B STEWART, Lionel G. Newport, R. I. Nov. 18, 1942. Ackd. 12/10/42. Prosident, Sends book of stamps to the President; to study. SEE: PPF 37-S ilo PPF-9-B B PENA, Maurice R. Rye, N.Y. Nov. 27, 1942. Ackd. 12/11/42. Let. to the President, enclosing inscribed booklet. To study. SEE: PPF 9-P ilo WELF PP7 9-B December 14, 1942 My dear Joan: Thank you, in the President's behalf, eggs for your friendly letter of November thirtieth. X PP7 Your thought in sending the package to him 1s 9-E indeed appreciated and I have pleasure in convey- ing his very best vishes to you. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary B X Joan Becht, 711 Fairview Avenue, Ridgewood, cd New York. s ack for 3 painted hard boiled eggs Hitler, Mussoline and Telephone Plaza 5-6335 Hiso Hito 1942 p.p.7. q-B / Lisa Now Time - required 10 the ronorea ser, l am fourteen to Hyde Park Manage, you Stephen years of age, I reside in he Case m across l am in the third term Ridgedwood New York and u sending have. ou could at Grover Cleveland .ier Club, we were Highschool l took the liberty m, of writing this letter -y yours, and sending the ac- Bland because l hold a high 5941 companying package acNeill Bland regard for you. iok letter is giving me quite Hyde Park Library. writing this 1 G.T. achid 12/112 Telephone Plaza 5-6335 Fairview aven 1942 p.p.7. President Roosevelt November, 30,1942 Los Now q-B The Honored Sir, ferred l am fourteen to Hyde Park Missing, you Stephen years of age, I reside in he Case nr across Ridgewood New York and u sending have. l am in the third term ou could at Grover Cleveland .ier Club, we were Highschool of writing this letter l took the liberty am, -y yours, and sending the ac- Bland because l hold a high 5941 companying package acNeill Bland regard for you. iok letter is giving me quite Hyde Park Library. writing this 3 hard- boiled eggs gone soft", a thrill. In what the world other taken his advice as you Can see, l have country in could an ordinary the eggs have over the freely with his leader One advantage that citizen correspond so when you get tired of seem the package "real thing is that Strange as it may looking at them, you contains three can lat them. hard boiled eggs. They the eggs regardless l hope you like represent powers. the afis which their faces Come, give a beture in the school, of the source from l I was asked to miss Joan Becht art of painting faces Yours sincerely and spoke on fine on eggs. showing a many. He said eggs that to One day l was l should send the egg to you and tell you that they were three COPY BLAND gallery INC. Cable address 45 East 57th Street Blandart New York New York Telephone Harry MacNeill Bland Plaza 5-6335 December 16, 1942 35, SUAR p.P.7. The Honorable Franklin D. Roosevelt The White House Washington, D. Optain York q-B Dear Mr. Roosevelt: Some time ago, I sent you Stephen Series MAN. A. Douglas' copy of "The* Proceedings of the Case the General Armstrong". Since then, I ran across another interesting pamphlet, which I am sending you also to go with the painting which you have. We were hoping that you could be with us the other evening, at the Grolier Club, when the Naval Exhibition was opened, but we were pleased to hear Mr. Olds read your letter. With best wishes, I am, Sincerely yours, (Sgd) Harry MacNeill Bland Harry MacNeill Bland HMB:GB + 5941 iok Orig. corres. and pamphlet (book) sent to Hyde Park Library. RPF-9-B MEMORANDUM Dec. 15, 1942 On Nov. 29, 1942 Captain Antoine de Saint-Exupery wrote to the President in French enclosing press clipping from the New York Times and a French copy of his book "Flight to Arras". Let. referred to the State Dept. for translation and returned. I Presidential ackd. on 12/14/42. Original correspondence, ackd. and book to Hyde Park Library, Series "A". ilo + BARRETT, Tom PPJ-9-B Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Ackd. Dec. 15, 1942. President's Study. Sent calendar of the Dutchess County scenes; hanging in the SEE: PPF 905 ilo December 5, 1942 P.P.7. q-B. My dear Mrs. Boyden: This little note conveys the Pres- ident's thanks to you for your courtesy in sending on to him the novelty shells, a gift from Mr. Dennis (Neylan of Kenya Colony, British East Africa. He deeply appreciates Mr. Neylan's friendly thought in wanting him to have this gift. xpp7 9-5 The President sends his very best wishes to you for your health and happiness. Very sincerely yours, Grace G. Tully Private Secretary X Mrs. Amanda Mayo Boyden, 621 Pembroke Road, Bryn Mawr, mtl Pennsylvania. They Mr thank 9.9.1. done The petum please pr.7'3 9-B Be V VO TOT when sue was traveling in Arrica some time ago by xon79-5 Mr. Dennis Neylan Westacres, Nakuru Kenya Colony British East Africa, who asked Mrs. Boyden to try to have it reach the President. Mr. Doyle 7/2/14/42 16.111 H STuded BAUOH .IN Ra ueum 088 her 07 the Peso New Tea tome USATE Tous Mrs Wagner: Eleve: Mrs. Amandyl Amanda gift Vania Mayo she for was the a fri trave Pre N abile Mrs. Boyden 07 ene Boyder 23-41-tt THE HOUSE WHIL 6 12- 12 a 12 ack 12-5-42 THE WHITE HOUSE mtl pr7 WASHINGTON 9-B Mrs. Eben: 11-17-42 Mr. Wagner: Mrs. Amanda Mayo Boyden, 621 Pembroke Rd. , Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, a friend, gave me the enclosed small gift for the President, which was given to her when she was traveling in Africa some time ago by xpn79-S + Mr. Dennis Neylan Westacres, Nakuru Kenya Colony British East Africa, who asked Mrs. Boyden to try to have it reach the President. 71414/42 Mr. Doyle this Boyden Buyn Than Pu pr.7 9-B painted shells from But East africa - Series B xpn79-S pr.7'3 9-B XPN79-S PPF-I-B PASMANTIER, David New York, N.Y. Nov. 24, 1942. Ackd. 12/12/42. Sends three coffee brewers to the President; penciled note: "The "p" said he would try these sometime." SEE: PPF 9-P ilo de SAINT-EXUPERY, Capt. Antoine, New York, N.Y. 11-29-42 (ackb 12-14-42) Letter to the President, enclosing clipping entitled "An Open Letter to Frenchmen Everywhere" by Mr de Saint-Exppery, as it appeared in The New York Times Magazine 11-29-42. Also sent a copy of book "Pilote de Guerre" by Antoine de Saint Exupery. - Above transmitted through Justice Felix Frankfurter 11-30-42 Referred to State Dept for preparation of reply for President's signature 12-3-42 Presidential reply sent to Capt. de Saint-Exupery 12-14-42. See P.P.F.9-S P.P.7 9-B br PPF-9-B EVANS, W. B. Moorestown, N.J. Ackd. Nov. 30, 1942. Sends booklet to the President. To study. ilo SEE: PPF 9-E PPF 9-B CRAVIS, William B. New York, N.Y. December 11, 1942 Letter to Miss Tully, sending book "The Bankruptcy of Liberalism" for the President. Book sent to the Study. Ackd. 12/15/42. SEE - - PPF - 9 - c vsr desuply WEEHICK, Commander Ben PPJ- 9-13 ST. LOUIS POST 110. 127 delivery JENISH WAR VETERANS OF THE U.S.A. St. Louis, Mo. Ackd. Dec. 17, 1942. Sends book to the President; to study. SEE: PPF 9-S ilo P.P.F. ISHILL, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph, 9-B Berkeley Heights, N.J., December 31, 1942 - ackd. Sends the President a little book, conveying the Season's Greetings. fmf See P.P.F. 9-I 9-B STATE Department, Dec. 3, 1942. The President, by memo., referred for draft of reply for his signature a letter from Maurice Loon, NYC., 11/25/42, to the President, suggesting that our Government enable M. Henri de Kerillis to go to Africa as a Frenchman whose standing as America's friend is well known and appreciated in this country and who wishes to bring about 6 measure of understanding between all French leaders so that they may achieve cooperation for the one supremely important end of freeing French territory from the enemy, leaving other questions to be settled later. Attaches biographical sketch of Mr. de Kerillis, and photostat of letter which Mr. Leon recieved from "Jusserand" dated 12/8/23. Also attached is copy of "Franonis, Voici la Verite! ..." by Honri de Kerillis, and copy of newspaper "pour Is Victoire - Journal Francais D'Amerique", dated 11/28/42 printed in French.----The lion. George T. Summerlin, Dec. 16th, wrote to Miss Tully transmitting the draft of reply as requested.--The President, Dec. 16th, wrote to Mr. Leon thank- ing him for the copy of Francais, Voici la Verite! and the newspaper Four La Victoire, and said he greatly appreciated his thoughtfulness in sending them to him. SEE P.P.F. 8072 P.P.F. AS 9-B BAILLIE, Mr. Hugh, President, P.P.F, UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATIONS, New York, N.Y., 9-B December 17, 1942 - ackd. Sends two books to the President, entitled, "This is the Enemy" by Frederick Oechaner and "Balcony Empire" by Reynolds and Eleanor Packard, both written by United Press correspondents. Books sent to Study. See P.P.F. 9-U fmf HOSPODAR, Blaise PP7-9-B Washington, D. C. Dec. 11, 1942. Ackd. 12/15/42. Sends brochure "An Early Traveler in Prague"; asks for the President's autograph. --- Presidential ackd. on 12/15/42. ------- Original correspondence and brochure to Hyde Park Library, Series B. Copies of orig. let. and ackd. retained for files. SEE: PPF 9-H ilo P.P.F. DIEMAND, John A., President, ALLIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OF 9-B PHILADELPHIA, Philadelphia, Pa., December 10, 1942, (ackd. 12/15/42). Sends the President a copy of the "Biography of a Business 1792 - 1942," inscribed by Mr. and Mrs. Marquis James, Acknowledgments to Mr. Die- mand and Mr. James were signed by the President, on above date. Book sent to Study. See P.P.F. 9-A fmf