Addressed to…
Mrs. Mary L. Buswell, R.F.D. #1, Sioux Falls, SD
Toppenish, Wash. • Oct. 16 – 08
Dear Mother,
I received your letter of the 11th this evening. I have been working all the week except Monday a.m. but will finish the job tomorrow.
We are getting along very well at housekeeping. I get breakfast and warm something up for dinner [lunch time] and Mr. L. gets supper, as he gets home before I do. This noon I began to pick up my tools and put them away at 12 o’clock. By 12:15 I had walked home, built a fire, warmed some stew, and sat down to a hot dinner.
This evening I am trying a rice pudding. I put rice and some raisins in a pail and poured a little sugar and some milk over it and put it in the oven. Was that right? I am going to try some baked beans soon.
I got my films back from the photographer. Most of them are good. One or two did not have good light. I got two on one film and the running horses look like a time exposure. I got a very good one of the interior of the Nursery Co.’s stock house where I told you I worked. When I get the things from Montgomery, I will print some off and send them to you.
The house where I live is not plastered. It was just intended for a barn and the man was using it for a house until he could afford to build. The windows are just one sash. There is one on each side except where the door is, and that has a large glass, so we have light enough. I expect to build one for myself as soon as I decide whether I will build a house for rent.
I received the papers you sent. I have been trying the breathing exercises for several years and like them first rate. It rained all night Tuesday and some Wed. night so the dust is all gone now. It has been quite cold at night since. We can see the snow on the mountains now as it snowed there when it rained here.
It’s Sunday now. I found that my rice pudding did not get cooked enough with the quantity of milk I used. So I put in some water and stirred it up and put it in the oven until morning, and then stirred it up again and put in more water and put it back until noon, when it was fairly good.
I forgot to tell you that I saw some apples at the Fair at N.Y. which had been kept by the Cold Storage Co. since 1906 and 1907. The y looked good, but the people who have eaten them tell me that they get dry and mealy, but I suppose that is only intended to show that they can be kept the year around.
I am sending you a couple of papers. I received those ad’s of the magazine and am glad you sent them, as I can save 2 or 3 dollars on it. I am sending for the Review, McClure’s & American, all for $3.00, regular price $5.50.
Your loving son,
W.J. Buswell
Did I answer Eva’s last letter? [his sister]
Today’s offering is Will Buswell’s earliest letter that I have, written to his mother from Brookings, SD, in 1903 (March 5). [That’s where one of the South Dakota’s universities is located.] I’m not sure what kind of a training course he enrolled in, but he did eventually become an architect and skilled builder, so I know he paid attention.