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Preston Letters
Hello - this auction was
featured on one of my newsletters. Perhaps you could
post it so that the family could retrieve these?
Sasha Stanley
Indiana Hoosier in Ohio
stanlekv@erinet.com
1906-1921 PRESTON Family Letters, cards, photo
Item # 2159384685; Seller: pretzeldough
Auction ends: Feb-19-03 15:00:03 PST
Letters, greeting cards, and photographs from the PRESTON family
from 1906 to 1921. There is a 1906 letter to Mrs. Agnes PRESTON,
Kendallville, Indiana, from the Michigan Soldiers' Home about
articles belonging to Mr. PRESTON; letter to Mrs. R. E. PRESTON
in Kendallville, Indiana from mother to her children dated 1907,
and another from 1909; 1909 letter to Mr. R. E. PRESTON, Butler,
Indiana, addressed to "My Dear One" and signed "your
true wife, Agnes"; letter to Thomas PRESTON 1918 "Dear
Cousin" and signed Jeanette OLMSTEAD; 1918 letter "My
Dear Mr. PRESTON" signed "I remain as ever Irene EDDINGER";
a poem handwritten titled "The Blind Orphant"; Christmas
cards to Thomas PRESTON, Kendallville, Indiana; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl PRESTON, Butler, Indiana; Mr. and Mrs. R. E. PRESTON, Kendallville,
Indiana; and a 1916 postcard to Mrs. PRESTON from a church. Also,
there are: an old photo of a man in a rocking chair on a porch
marked on back "H. Thomas SMITH"; an invitation for
1921 commencement at Crawfordsville High School; four 1919 letters
from Germany that have the censor mark and are from Private H.
C. PRESTON to T. W. PRESTON, 122 E. Wayne Street, Kendallville,
Indiana (from son to father); Mayen, Germany 1919 letter to "My
dear Sister and all" signed "I remain as ever your
loving brother"; business envelope with 1919 letter from
Pifer's Elec. Supply to Mr. R. E. PRESTON, Kendallville, Indiana,
about matters of account; old newspaper clipping announcing "a
number of loyal Americans assembled at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
R. E. PRESTON in Harris Street Tuesday evening and gave them
a farewell surprise. They came with well filled baskets and a
royal good time was had. Mr. and Mrs. PRESTON were presented
with a silver meat fork as a token of esteem and friendship.
They will be greatly missed by their many friends who wish them
success in their new business at Butler"; a picture postcard
of a castle in Mayen and written on it is "Castle in town
of Mayen where we are billeted."
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