Category Archives: 20. May 1945

May 14, 1945

This is one of the most thoughtful, honest and mature letters that Dot has written to date. Today’s mail brought Dart’s second letter in response to her comment about wanting to join the WAVEs. This was the particularly emphatic one he wrote to her after stewing over the idea for a couple of days. She writes, “Had I thought for one moment that my wanting to join the WAVEs would disturb you so much, I would have banished the idea completely. Oh, how I wish you’d get a letter saying I can’t join so I would stop getting letters from you telling me what would happen to me, and to us, if I could and did join. Dart, that first letter from you was enough to dissuade me, or anyone else, for that matter.”

She tells him that she is not going to be joining the WAVWs, even when she’s old enough, but she poses a good question. “What then, my dear boy, do you suggest I do? You gave me the same spiel about the Cadet Nurse Corps, and said I’d meet ‘the wrong kind of people’ in a defense plant. Darling, I have to know how the other 99% live sometime. Must I sit here and wait for you to come home and formally introduce me to ‘life’? There’s nothing I’d like better, nor one I’d rather learn things from than you, but unfortunately, I have to keep on living while you’re away.”

You tell ‘im, Dot! But, she makes another point or two. “You, apparently, have withheld nothing of your feelings toward women in the service. But in spite of all you say, I’ll bet there are thousands of boys who have thanked God, and thousands more who have yet to thank God, for the Army and Navy nurses. ”

She goes on to say that she was not really hurt by anything he said, although she thought some of his statements were rather harsh. She was terribly disappointed to learn she couldn’t join, but this just proves her belief that things have a tendency to work out as they’re supposed to. “If there was anything in your letter that hurt me, it was your suggestion that I might be joining for reasons other than doing what I thought best to end this God-awful war.”

And now, she illustrates her wisdom of knowing when to hold back from writing some things to Dart, and when the time is right to drop a little bomb. She tells him that she has learned some of the unsavory aspects of life all on her own, even without being in the service. She has refrained from telling him about such instances because “I thought you’d make more of it than it was, like you have with this WAVE business.” She then tells him the story of Jamey, a friend of Harriet and George, whom Dot abhors. Jamey knows her feelings and does everything in his power to make her say otherwise. The other night, Dot was at H & G’s house to sit with Toni Gale while they hosted a dinner party. At some point in the evening, Dot was called into the dining room and everyone left except Jamey. He took off her coat and told her to sit in the chair. She turned to go into the kitchen where the other people were, but he grabbed her arm and pushed her onto the chair. He knelt in front of her, loudly proclaimed his love for her and said he would not allow her to leave until she kissed him. She refused…adamantly. “Maybe you think this all sounds funny, as did the guests who had gathered at the doorway and were looking on, but it was not a bit funny to me!” She tells Dart that it would have been a lot easier, albeit unpleasant, to just kiss him and get it over with, but she refused. “Because on the night of November 9th, 1944, I made you a promise that I would never kiss nor let anyone kiss me, but you. That’s a promise I intend to keep, if I never kiss another soul. I sat there for about 10 minutes being laughed at, and it was the longest 10 minutes I’ve ever spent. ”

She wraps up this letter on a very sensible note when she says she wishes they had been able to talk before, instead of being so much in love they were tongue-tied on their few days together. But she likes his request to kiss and make up. “We’ve discussed this fairly sensibly now, and no one is hurt…Guess I’ll turn out the light and have a good cry. I miss you so much it’s nearly unbearable. Please stay as understanding as you are, and let’s have these talks often.”

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May 15, 1945

Here’s a short and newsy note from Dot. She blames Dart for the brevity of this one, because she took him up on his suggestion to read “The Robe,” and she’s finding it hard to put down.

The 7th War Bond Sale started at Franklin-Simon today. Every employee is encouraged to sell $500 worth by the end of the sale and Dot scored big with a $100 sale this morning. Now she’s inspired to make a real project of this and sell a lot. The store is ranking the employees by the amount they sell, with everyone starting as a lowly private. Dot is already a corporal, with her eye on 5-star general.

She wishes him sweet dreams in his new bed.

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May 16, 1945

Dart writes a short letter today. It’s been more than three weeks since he’s received any mail at all, making it very hard to keep his vow to not write disgruntled letters home. When that mail delivery finally gets there, it’ll be a whopper!

Rather surprisingly, he asks Dot an out-of-the-blue question: What would you think if I signed up for 6 years in the regular Navy? He’s heard of the many benefits, such as opportunity for advancement and higher pay, a chance to learn a trade, plenty of time off, if you’re in the US to collect your liberty, and education through travel. “What would you say? It would mean a lot.”

Then, the tone changes. “It would mean signing away every single thing I’m fighting for now, and every bit of happiness I’m looking forward to when this war’s over. Being the wife of a Navy man is no fun, I hear. And being a husband in the Navy is equally ‘no fun.’ But those recruiting promises sound awfully enticing!” (Was this his subtle way of saying “Beware the WAVEs,” without harping on her again?)

He enclosed a snapshot that someone took of him on deck after the previous set taken a few days ago didn’t turn out.

His P.S. says, in tiny letters “Don’t worry about my signing over. I won’t do it.”

This reminds me of a story Dad told occasionally – one of the few he told about his time in the service. As he was disembarking for the final time from his ship, leaving the Navy for the long-awaited return to civilian life, he was being processed out by one of the more senior crew members. The other guy read from a clipboard Dart’s name and rank, except it was a rank a couple of steps above where Dart really was. Dart told him that the name was correct, but the rank was wrong. The officer replied, “That rank is right, if you’ll sign up for the regular Navy.” Dart smiled, saluted, and scurried down the gangway, leaving the Navy forever behind him.

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This succinct note begins with “Well, I have yet to hear from your mother, and then the cycle will be complete. Today I received a letter from Fred saying -you know what.”

And the WAVE issue raises it’s head again. She says that Fred writes in a very similar style to Dart (“Four pages of the same sort of stuff.”) She’s not sure how to respond to him. She says that Dart is used to her incorrect spelling and poor grammar, but she fears she’ll shock Fred with it. She hopes his opinion of Dart will not be diminished by getting a letter from his B.G.F. Unlike the two guys, she claims she’s not able to make words sound like music. (Well, I think the music they’ve sent her has it’s share of sour notes.)

Too tired to stay awake, she closes with the hope that she’ll dream of Dart and with a prayer that God bless and protect him.

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May 17, 1945

Dot is happy to have received her third letter from Dart in just a few days.

She’s ashamed to admit that she forgot to write to his brother Burke to try and coordinate a silver anniversary gift for Helen and Dart, Sr. She’s at a loss as to what kind of gift would be good. Her mother suggested engraved silver napkin rings, but Dot knows the Chamberlains are the only family who still use such things. She’ll write to Burke tomorrow and see what he’s considering.

She’s about to send 10 packs of Pall Mall cigarettes to Dart, Sr. because she gets a kick out of finding things that are hard to find. Although she knows they’d  make a bad anniversary gift, she quips that Mr. Peterson is welcome to share the cigarettes with his wife (a non-smoker.)

How she wishes she could help plan their future house, but no ideas are coming to her. She thinks a 12 x 18 living room would be ample. “Remember, I’m going to have to keep it clean, so I don’t want an auditorium. And if there’s ever such a crowd in the room that they fill it, what would be wrong with some of the guests hanging from the beams? ”

El has decided to quite her job at the bank. Although she likes the work, she’s tired of the commute into the city. She’s been hired by a Greenwich department store, in the office, for the same salary as the bank, but she won’t have to pay for her lunch or the train.

Tomorrow Dot will have her eyes examined because they’ve been bothering her a great deal. She fears that her glasses are too weak and that by the time Dart returns, her lenses will be as thick as plate glass windows. How she hates wearing glasses! (It’s funny, she never wore glasses while I was a kid – not until she was in her 40s, I think.) Now, she writes that if she doesn’t get some sleep, her eyes will not even be able to see the big E at the top of the chart.

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May 18, 1945

Dart’s letter today is his best attempt to keep in touch, even though he has still not received any news from home. His job in the kitchen (galley) has begun to wear on him. He say’s it’s a great assignment for those who don’t object to petty theft (or grand larceny), but for him, it’s just plain hard and tedious work. It’s made more difficult by the “gold brick twins,” two men who are on permanent KP because no other division on the ship will have them. They are lazy and surly and Dart tries to keep his distance. He’s gone from scullery to steam table to bread table and is now “cox’n of the spuds,” peeling all manner of vegetables all day long. He still doesn’t know if this is a 6-week or a 3-month assignment, but either way, he’s looking forward to its end.

“As in everywhere else I’ve been, there’d be some changes made if I were in charge. I don’t intend to be, nor do I expect to be, so my changes will remain inside my head. They probably wouldn’t be much good anyway.”

He saw a movie last night that he remembers Dot writing about months ago. It’s called “The Navy Way” and it’s a kind of soft propaganda film about boot camp at Great Lakes. Dart enjoyed seeing all the familiar sights of his months there, but thought it was a fairly sanitized version of boot camp.

Some of the guys created a diving mask so they could explore water deeper than Dart wants to swim in. They used some rubber hose and an old gas mask – ingenious! Recently they brought up a piece of live coral. Rather than the brown, twiggy stuff Dart was expecting, it was a beautiful thing – dark glossy green at the base, bright red in the middle, and pale pink at the tips. He reports, however, that it really stinks as it’s dying and drying.

Now comes a clear example of how fouled up communication can become when mail is delayed by weeks. We see that he is still obsessing about the whole WAVE issue. “Dot, I’ve thought a great deal about your wanting to join…Perhaps I should never have said a thing. Regardless of the censure…I believe that all I said was true. But I also believe that it’s your decision to make as you see fit. So do as you please. I’ll be proud of you and my faith in you can’t be lowered by a mere thing like that. It’s my nature, though, to say ‘I told you so.’ There, you know what I thought when I first heard the news, and what I think a month later. I hope that when mail again gets to us, I’ll have the news that you changed your mind.”

The lack of mail is having an affect on the whole crew, especially when they see ships all around them getting regular mail deliveries.

“Goodnight, my Darling Dot. I look forward always to the far-future date when every evening can be like our last Thursday in Cleveland; and more than that.”

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Dot writes that today was E-Bond Day at Franklin Simons I’m not sure what ‘E-bonds” are, other than war bonds, but maybe Mom will remember and can enlighten me. Anyway, for one hour, starting at 11:00 AM, no merchandise could be sold at the store so that sales clerks could concentrate on selling the war bonds. Dot reports that some customers resented the idea, but others got into the spirit of it all. She sold a total of $150 worth to add to her $100 sale the other day, putting her at half her quota. She certainly hopes she can sell a lot more.

Tonight when she got home from work, she decided to mow the lawn. She was rewarded with several blisters and very sore hands, but the place looks much better. I wonder where her teenage brother Doug was when the lawn needed mowing? That reminded me of a story that became family lore when I was a kid. Doug, who spent most of his life living at home with his mother, was very concerned when her saw his old mom struggling to mow the lawn with an old push mower. He was so excited and proud when he gave her a power mower for her 75th birthday!

Dot got new glasses today – not much of a change from her old ones, but she hopes it helps with the headaches she’s been getting.

Betty B. is feeling poorly today, so Dot’s father brought some ice cream home to make her feel better. She’s sharing it with the whole family, but Dot is determined not to fall into temptation. She’s still trying very hard to trim down.

She’s sorry this letter is short and uninteresting, but she’s sure Dart could help if he’d just come by and change up the routine of her days a little. She also hopes that by now he’s received word that she is NOT joining the WAVEs! She reminds him to please write to her friend Nancy, or ask one of his buddies to do so.  With that, she signs off with all her love, forever.

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May 19, 1945

Dart writes a very short note tonight. He got a couple of booster shots today and his arm is swelling up and feeling stiff. He wishes his whole body could plump up as quickly as his arm has!

Still no mail delivery! He has a theory that if he would write to some people to whom he’s owed letters for a while, letters from those people might come the instant he dropped his in the letter box. It’s worth a try to jump start mail delivery again.

“Just between you and me and the rest of the world (if they’re not too busy to listen), I’m getting awfully anxious to see a familiar, neatly -lettered envelope again. Let’s have some more stuff about the WAVEs – where you may go to boot camp, etc. Better let me know first what the recruiting office said. I hope they had a heart, just this once.”

That’s all there is for today, and no letters are coming tomorrow. Both our young lovers are back on the 21st. See you then.

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May 21, 1945

Dart is jubilant! It’s a red letter, front page news, call-out-the-Marines kind of day. He got mail; two letters from the “most adorable girl God ever sent to a fellow,” and one from his parents. Ironically, neither letter from Dot was the one he yearns for. Neither was written on April 10. Neither gave him the answer to his nagging fear about the WAVEs. Still, he was overjoyed to get them.

He heartily supports any method Dot uses to get his parents to agree to a trip to Greenwich for their 25th anniversary celebration. He thinks it would be a great idea for them for many reasons.

In the final paragraph, Dart slips in a teeny zinger when he asks Dot about her upcoming vacation. “Is it a pre-induction leave, or just a plain vacation?”

I hope this poor boy gets some relief from the burning question soon.

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Dot’s letter was quite brief. She went into New Your City yesterday to attend her friend Nancy’s graduation. While there, she met Nancy’s English teacher, who “if he wasn’t married and hadn’t two children, and if I didn’t love you so much, and if he were about 10 years younger, I could really go for. He spoke almost as beautifully as Ronald Coleman and was almost as good looking as you.”

Because she got back to town so late, she’s really tired this morning. She’s hoping a letter waiting for her at home on her lunch break will wake her up a little.

That’s all, but both Dot and Dart will be back tomorrow.

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May 22, 1945

When the mail deliveries start, they come in a flood. Dart got five letters from Dot today, plus three more from other folks. Finally, the one bearing the news that she was too young to enlist brought the sheer relief Dart was hoping for. He admits to feeling like a heel because she is so disappointed and he is so very happy.

He loves the Easter photos she sent. One of the old married men in his group was very impressed with the picture of Dot and El in their Easter finery. When he said he’d like a date with either one of those gorgeous sisters, Dart let him know that Dot was spoken for (by him) and El was engaged to a young soldier.  Dart was especially fond of the photograph where Dot is wearing her “Ipana” smile and the corsage he sent.

He promises to learn to dance when he gets home for good. He likes to dance, and he wants to dance with her always. He looks forward to all the practice they’ll need to do together. (Anything to get his arms around her, I’d say!)

As he continues to answer that long-ago letter, he wonders what the story is behind her swimming in an outdoor pool in March with all her clothes on. He knows it would have required far more than a $5.00 bet for him to do something like that.

Yes, he tells her there was someone wearing that sequinned dress he took to a school dance. They had two dates, neither of which was much fun. Dot has seen her photo in his high school annual, and that’s all that needs to be said on the subject.

He explains that in a few days the ship is having an all-out inspection of the decks and below-deck spaces. Everyone is working full bore with paint brushes, soapy water and elbow grease. Because I know that the Haggard has been crippled and towed to dry dock, I’m curious why they would be undergoing such a heavy-duty inspection. Perhaps it’s to give the guys work to do while they await the fate of their ship. Must maintain that Navy discipline!

That’s all he has time for tonight, except to dream of their future together and wonder how long they’ll have to wait until their dreams come true.

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When Dot was walking home from work last night, her mailman passed her in his car and held two fingers out of his window. Since she’d already received a letter from Dart yesterday morning and since afternoon deliveries of his letters are rare, Dot thought the mailman was just teasing her. Surprise! There were two letters from Dart waiting for her when she got home! “And what swell letters they were! Filled with the kind of thing every girl loves to read. Gee, but I love you!”

She says that if he doesn’t get the letter she wrote on April 10 soon, they will all go nuts. She fully expects more letters to arrive any day telling her not to join the WAVEs.

Just between the two of them, Dot would rather see spring in Ohio than in Greenwich. Maybe it’ll work out by the time she’s an old woman, she jokes.

Mr. Miller must have been discouraged about Dart not getting back to the States soon enough because he sold his old bike which he’d offered to let Dart ride next time he was in town. Dot says he shouldn’t fret. By the time he gets out her way, maybe she’ll have bought the little Crosley car she’s always wanted. A girl can dream, can’t she?

She shares Dart’s wish that she could be in on the planning discussions for their little house. She knows absolutely nothing about planning and building houses, but Harriet and George built their own home by all by themselves, and Harriet is grateful for the skills and knowledge she acquired in the process. From what Dot can tell from the drawings, the bedrooms seem a a little small. Is he able to incorporate some of the hallway space into bedroom square footage? She’ll enclose some plans she found in McCall’s this month for a kitchen/laundry combo. Maybe he can garner some new ideas from there.

She’s also enclosing a small clipping of the actor Walter Abel. Both she and Dart think he bears a striking resemblance to Dart, Sr.

He will get no argument from Dot about what a nice name “Mrs. Dorothy Peterson” is.  She also likes “Mrs. D. G. Peterson, Jr.” She’s tickled that he, too, likes to spend his time writing that name over and over again.

She resumes the letter very late that same day, after enjoying an evening rain shower and a beautiful sunset. “it may be tomorrow where you are now, but if you don’t mind, I’d like to get some ‘shut-eye’ before tomorrow rolls around these parts.” She reminds him how much she loves him and then signs off.

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May 23, 1945

It’s an exuberant sailor who writes today. He received 18 letters in today’s delivery! He has so much to write now, but top on his list is how grateful he is that she’s not bitter over the letter he wrote about the WAVEs. He feared he’d overstepped, and she has put his heart at ease. Another bit of proof at how well suited these two are for each other.

He’s curious about that long letter she promised – something about a chat she wants to have over something that kept her awake so late one night. Where’s the letter? he asks. What’s the topic? I think that’s the one she wrote earlier this month asking him to think long and hard about why he loves her, as she considers herself so unworthy. I’m sure it’ll catch up with him soon.

Among all those letters were eight from his parents and one from Readers’ Digest telling him they have received word of his change of address and will send back issues immediately. Finally, his Christmas gift from Ruth Chamberlain will reach him.

The letters from his folks are full of praise for Dot. They seem to be aware of the pair’s plans for after the war, and they approve whole-heartedly. Again, Helen mentioned how nice it would be if the “kids” lived nearby and would stop in to see them frequently.

He needs to cut this letter short and write a long one to his parents because he’s been neglecting them lately. He fills in most of the rest of the page with the repeated stanza “I love you!” The he adds, “Endless, isn’t it? But I’m sure it’s true. Never mind about those big ‘ifs’ I wrote. I don’t feel as though they apply anymore, at least for now. Goodnight, my Darling. I miss you ever so much. Can I ever tell you how much?”

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Dot is planning on a movie tonight with Nancy, so she’s dashing off a letter today from work. It’s written in pencil on a cheap yellow tablet and has not weathered the intervening 70 years as well as good stationery and ink, Still, it’s a treasure.

Her big news today comes in the form of a story. Last August, Readers’ Digest announced a contest on how to run a small business. It was intended to help returning servicemen know exactly what was needed to begin a business of their own. Ruth encouraged Arthur to take a stab at the contest, so in 300 words, he told how much start-up capital was needed, how much physical space would be required and how many employees were needed to maintain the business, etc.

Not long after he sent his entry in, the magazine called him to ask that he write a more detailed piece, not needing to count his words. He put it off for a very long time because his business keeps him so busy. When he finally returned his story in January, the family was sure he was too late.

This morning he called home from his shop. “Don’t tell me there isn’t a Divine Providence who looks after fools and drunkards,” he said. “And I don’t drink. In this morning’s mail, there was a letter from Readers’ Digest telling me I had won first prize of $250.00 and a check for same was enclosed!” (Imagine what that was in 1945 dollars if a fur coat could be had at Franklin-Simon for $80!)

Dot says it made the whole family so happy that some of Arthur’s hard work was finally rewarded. The check came at an opportune time because there was some big bill due today that neither Arthur nor Ruth knew how they would pay. Dot’s father had been saying all along that the Lord would provide, and it certainly feels like he did.

Arthur P. Chamberlain was never much of a religious man in the traditional sense, but he has a stronger faith than any man Dot knows. She’s so proud of him, on so many levels.

Wondering what to write on the third page, she tells Dart that it’s quite warm in Greenwich today, but unless they want to pick up neckties all day, they dare not open the windows on her floor.

She resumes the letter later that day. Nancy told Dot about a dream she’d had last night. In the dream, she’d received a letter from Dart telling her he’d be home in a couple of weeks but she musn’t tell Dot. “Oh, if only it were not a dream! I might as well warn you now that when the time comes and you walk up to me and tap me on the shoulder, I’ll pass out on the spot. Oh my darling, may that day come sooner than any of us dare to hope.”

She continues, “Sometimes I have the feeling that the few days we had together were only a dream. And yet other times I know they were real and you seem so close to me I could reach out my hand and touch yours.”

Her final paragraph reveals that Readers’ Digest had 49,000 entries in their contest and only 10 were awarded first prize checks. She’s wondering if her parents are both so smart how she got left short on brains. That’s just the thing, Dot. You weren’t left short!

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May 24, 1945

Dart has an hour and a half until the lights go out for the night, and he still needs to write to his parents. He’s doing all he can to convince them to take a trip to New England this summer.

As he writes, he keeps looking at the Easter picture Dot sent. It sends him over the moon. In fact, he thinks it’s about the best picture he’s ever seen of her. “After almost two years of knowing you I’m still amazed that such a wonderful, pretty girl should be in love with a rawboned sailor like me. I don’t think there’s a thing to worry about, as far as our bright-eyed dreams’ coming true is concerned. With you and me together, we can have a share in each other’s fun and hardships for the rest of our days. There could be nothing better than sharing everything I have with you forever.”

He sounds a little like Dot in the next paragraph, trying to convince her that he’s unworthy of a girl like her. He calls himself a “dimwit,” (Hardly!) and a “hypochondriac.” (Well, maybe, but that’s not so bad…)

In her letter of April 10, Dot mentioned that by the time he read that letter, it would be time for April’s full moon. As it turns out, the letter didn’t arrive until nearly time for May’s full moon. He’ll run topside soon to check it out, and urges Dot to do the same so they can watch it together. Then he tells her that regardless of how romantic and dreamy full moons can be, they are not always so good for for military security.

He asks her if she’d read in Readers’ Digest that the military had reduced regulations to the bare minimum:

1) If it moves, salute it. 2) If it doesn’t move, pick it up. 3) If it’s too big to pick up, paint it. Funny!

Referring to some remark Dot made about him not hanging her picture up among all the “pin-up girls” lest she suffer by comparison, he says he wouldn’t dare display her photos in public “for these wolves to howl at.” He says most guys who are serious about their sweethearts keep their pictures private. Then he adds that perhaps by the time he’s been at sea for 15 months, he will have devolved into a “chip off the old fur-pile” himself, but he hopes not.

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Dot assumes it was Dart’s intention to scare her out of her wits with his suggestion that he was considering joining the regular Navy. She says she should just act nonchalant and agree that it’s a fine idea, but she’s afraid he might think she means that and do something drastic. She has no desire for him to make the Navy a career. She advises him to think back to the arguments he made against her joining the WAVEs and he’ll see that many of the same points would apply to him in this case. She strongly urges him to resist the idea. “I don’t want you coming home for good at an age when we should both be grandparents.”

Referring to a snapshot of himself that he enclosed in a resent letter, she disagrees that he looks “glum.” She rather likes that far-off look in his eyes, especially if his eyes are looking toward Greenwich. She can’t get enough of his pictures. When she shows them to everyone, their envy for her grows. She asks if he ever got the photos she sent from Easter. (Isn’t it interesting how their letters so often mention the same topics on the same day,?)

Her friend Nancy is coming to live at the Chamberlain house for about a week. He family has to move out of the house they’re in, but the new place won’t be ready for about a week, so everyone is scattering around Greenwich to stay with friends. Soon after that, Nancy will begin her training with the Cadet Nurse Corps at the University of Connecticut. Dot is sure she’ll make a great nurse because she’s such a sweet kid. She again asks Dart to write Nancy a letter to give her a thrill.

Dot was just recalling Dart’s July visit to Greenwich. They had each other convinced that his mother would be happy to allow him to stay an extra day in Connecticut so that he would  be well rested for his return trip to Cleveland. She remembers how happy she was when she heard that Helen had, indeed, given him her blessings to stay on a little longer. She was so happy that she ran up the stairs and gave him a huge hug. She still thinks of that moment every time she passes that section of the stairs. How she wishes she’d said more during his brief stay, but if he’ll come home soon, she’ll say everything she can think of to convince him just how much she loves him.

Dot enclosed a clipping of Arthur Chamberlain’s story about the Fix-It Shop published in the Readers’ Digest. Very interesting reading!

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