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Letter and envelope from John M. Bunker, Logan Utah. to Mary Etta Syphus, Provo, Utah.

Information

Date

1894-03-07

Description

From the Syphus-Bunker Papers (MS-00169). The folder contains an original handwritten letter, an envelope, a typed transcription of the same letter, and a copy of original letter attached.

Digital ID

man000824
    Details

    Citation

    man000824. Syphus-Bunker Papers, 1891-1994. MS-00169. Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada. http://n2t.net/ark:/62930/d1sq8tw6r

    Rights

    This material is made available to facilitate private study, scholarship, or research. It may be protected by copyright, trademark, privacy, publicity rights, or other interests not owned by UNLV. Users are responsible for determining whether permissions are necessary from rights owners for any intended use and for obtaining all required permissions. Acknowledgement of the UNLV University Libraries is requested. For more information, please see the UNLV Special Collections policies on reproduction and use (https://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/research_and_services/reproductions) or contact us at special.collections@unlv.edu.

    Standardized Rights Statement

    Digital Provenance

    Digitized materials: physical originals can be viewed in Special Collections and Archives reading room

    Language

    English

    Publisher

    University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Libraries

    Format

    application/pdf
    image/tiff

    Letter and envelope (with stamp) from John M. Bunker, Logan, Utah, to Mary E. Syphus, Provo, Utah, dated March 7, 1894.
    Envelope addressed:
    Miss Mary E. Syphus.
    B.Y. Academy.
    Provo Utah.
    Postmarked Logan, March 8, 1894, 6 a.m.
    seven sheets of it, not sheets, pages
    Page
    1
    Logan City,
    line
    1
    March 7^, 1894.
    line
    2
    Miss. Mary'E. Syphus:
    line
    3
    Provo Utah.
    line
    4
    Dear Friend Mary;
    line
    5
    I trust you will not
    line
    6
    think that I have forgotten
    line
    7
    you or forgotten to write.
    line
    8
    My tardiness will of course
    line
    9
    show against me; but trusting
    line
    10
    you will excuse me this time
    line
    11
    I will try and be more prompt
    line
    12
    in the future.
    line
    13
    Sunday and Monday I
    line"
    14
    was tugging away at my
    line
    15
    composition, as if it was my
    line
    16
    last show. I will say I did
    line
    17
    not get it finished untill
    line
    18
    last night. There was almost
    line
    19
    line 20
    Page 2
    and they were large pages
    line 1
    After I got it completed,, it
    line 2
    looked like so many chicken
    line 3
    tracks in the mud and sou-
    line 4
    nded like the sweet melodious
    line 5
    voice of a long-eard!- mule.
    line 6
    I do not mean that the appe-
    line 7
    '-arance of it sounded, but the
    line 8
    sense of the critter would make
    line 9
    the heart strings of a lion grind
    line 10
    heavily to gether. I will not
    line 11
    tire you by rehearsing the quat-
    line 12
    ities of my composition. Suffice
    line 13
    it to say, I expect to get a good
    line 14
    raking tomorrow. If there
    line 15
    isn't a serious thought in
    line 16
    what I have said please let
    line 17
    me know and I will try
    line 18
    and acccomidate you
    line 19
    Last week weX had a few
    line 20
    real warm days, it melted
    line 21
    almost all the snow; but since
    line 22
    then it has been snowing
    line 23
    Page 3
    almost every day and night.
    line 1
    There is from six to eigh
    line 2
    Page
    3
    inches at present.
    line
    3
    Another term of school
    line
    4
    is drawing to a close. We will
    line
    5
    soon be having examinations,
    line
    6
    already, the teachers have begun
    line
    7
    to threaten us.
    line
    8
    I have been thinking
    line
    9
    that I would not stay untill
    line
    10
    school closes this year. As
    line
    11
    there will be but two studies
    line
    12
    and I think I can get an
    line
    13
    invite into them so I can
    line
    14
    Study during the summer
    line
    15
    and make up for leaving.
    line
    16
    There is nothing certain
    line
    17
    about it. I may change
    line
    18
    my mind before that time
    line
    19
    comes. I will have to con-
    line
    20
    -elude for this time as
    line
    21
    my algebra is waiting for
    line
    22
    me. I trust these few lines
    line
    23
    Page
    4
    will find you well and
    line
    1
    happy.
    line
    2
    Ohl Yes! I was going to mention
    line
    3
    something else. In my last
    line
    4
    Page 4
    letter from home, Mother said
    line
    5
    Harry had been up there, did
    line
    6
    not say what for; but said
    line
    7
    he was still freighting for a
    line
    8
    lively-hood. She also said,
    line
    9
    he read a letter that he had
    line
    10
    received from you, while at
    line
    11
    Ogden, or at least that
    line
    12
    is the understanding I got
    line
    13
    of it. I guess she will be
    line
    14
    partly acquainted with you
    line
    15
    if she has heard a letter that
    line
    16
    you wrote.
    line
    17
    Write soon and often,
    line
    18
    With love and best wishes,
    line
    19
    I remain as ever, Yours Truly,
    line
    20
    Written across fold line
    J.M.B
    line 1