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Conger Reynolds correspondence, April 1918
1918-04-06 Daphne Reynolds to Conger Reynolds Page 2
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their work, don't you? The "hanky" I left in the "Baron's" hand was a German war flag that I got in Berlin, and I didn't do that until I had searched his wraps while his was was turned, & found a bunch of papers under the lining in his hat. I had once seen something very similar to them; he had printed most of it and there were a couple of poems among the junk. In one place he spelled embrace "AMBRCE" - oh, lots of things that looked queer, so I bundled them up and sent them to the only big Officer I could remember in Washington - not he of the red-faced giggle, but the other. There may be nothing in there, and again - there may. He called me up yesterday P.M. and was very much excited. Insisted on seeing me, and all that sort of thing. I met him at six o'clock in the hotel
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their work, don't you? The "hanky" I left in the "Baron's" hand was a German war flag that I got in Berlin, and I didn't do that until I had searched his wraps while his was was turned, & found a bunch of papers under the lining in his hat. I had once seen something very similar to them; he had printed most of it and there were a couple of poems among the junk. In one place he spelled embrace "AMBRCE" - oh, lots of things that looked queer, so I bundled them up and sent them to the only big Officer I could remember in Washington - not he of the red-faced giggle, but the other. There may be nothing in there, and again - there may. He called me up yesterday P.M. and was very much excited. Insisted on seeing me, and all that sort of thing. I met him at six o'clock in the hotel
World War I Diaries and Letters
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