CAMPBELL COUSINS CORRESPONDENCE
Westfield, Pa.,
October 8, 1923.
Dear
Cousins:
So
rapidly has the time elapsed since receiving your most interesting
letters in June that I can hardly realize I am to have the joy of
another letter in the near future; but I assure you, most
sincerely, I prize each one, and the mental picture of the writer
is before me in a way which brightens and lightens all along the
way.
I am glad to know that with the
progressive spirit of our worthy Cousin Secretary, we are to have a
new infusion of blood in our Clearing House Department [Secretary Will Self
refered to reminding Cousins the next letter was due, receiving,
typing, duplicating, binding the letters and mailing the books as a
"Clearing House"-wbt} and another and younger
generation are to be heard from. I shall gladly welcome them to our
ranks, and await with much interest their introduction.
The intervening months have been very
uneventful in our lives. I am happy to say, all are well. My eldest
grandson, Warren G. Horton (Frank's son) returned to the University
of Michigan at Ann Arbor in September where he will begin the study
of law; and Faith J. Kimball (Nellie's daughter) entered the
University of Oregon at Eugene, Oregon, for a four years' course
with journalism as her objective point. (Right here I wish to make
a correction in my former letter,‑ our daughter was christened
Helen Campbell Horton, and I gave her name Nellie from force of
habit as we have always called her by that name).
One of the recent enjoyable events to be
mentioned is the Cousin Gathering at the spacious and hospitable
home of Llewellyn and Mabel
Shaw, on September 26th. Every one Present seemed attuned to
enjoy to the highest degree the good fellowship which prevailed,
and the host and hostess were lavish in their most cordial welcome,
and Cousins, didn't we enjoy it? But the absent ones were not
forgotten and often were their names mentioned in a way to make
some of us who were present "green with envy”, and the good Scotch
blood in us came to the surface with a promise in our hearts to try
and do some thing big ourselves "sometime.”
- Report No. 2 -
Page 27 -
(William Campbell
Family)
COUSIN KATE C. HORTON
- Report No. 2 - Page 28 -
(William Campbell
Family)