Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
doc
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
289541922
label
Letter from Edgar Hinde to Harry S. Truman
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
Source extras
naId
289541922
levelOfDescription
item
productionDates
day
9
logicalDate
1937-11-09
month
11
year
1937
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
3d4f8e0516499243
ocrText
United States Post Office CLASS IN REPLYING Independence, Missouri MENTION INITIALS AND DATE November 9th., 1937 Senator Harry S. Truman, #240 Senate Office Bldg., Washington, D. C. Dear Harry:- Your letter in regard to Mike Tomashek received yesterday and I have spent the time since receiving it sleuthing around and trying to get some dope on the situation. I have interviewed several of his acquaintances as to their knowledge of Mike's service name but to date have found out nothing. The only information that I have gained is that he was in the navy. This morning I went out to his widow's house and had a talk with her. She is an old woman and has no information which is of any value. However, in an old account book we dug up there was pasted a return from an envelope as follows:- 3-2154 Department of the Interior Bureau of Pensions Washington, D. C. I figured that possibly the number which is typewritten above the return is his case number. I called the Veterans' Bureau in Kansas City Missouri this morning and asked them if they had any dope on this man and they advised that they did not. I also asked them about this number 3-2154 and they advised that it was probably the Case number, but an old one and these cases had been given a new number. I am sending this to you today and thought maybe this number might be the key to his file. In the meantime I will keep after addi- tional information. We have no records of Pension Checks which come thru the office, as they are handled as ordinary mail, with the exception than they are deliverable to the Addressee only and incase of death the date of death is endorsed on the envelope and returned to the Pensio Bureau. The carrier on this man's route had no recollection of ever delivering this man a pension check. If I can get any more information I will send it end immediate ly. I really believe from appearances this old lady needs whatever she can get in the way of a pension. Kindest regards. The "Harpies" had a Tea last night and Gabriel took the prize. He cut the gangevery way but loose. Won about $20.00. He claims the only reason he won, was that it was amtsturre week.