[no envelope]
[handwritten on cream stationary]
Saturday, 9 AM
Dearest sweetheart:
I'm full of love for you. If I were home with you we'd get into bed and stay all day, resting quietly of course, wearing three pairs of pajamas. ...
Yesterday morning Joe Morris met me at the train, with Edwin. I talked to Taylor, & to Eyring, & had lunch with Taylor, E., Smyth (whom you met at Buffalo) & [blank space]. Then I talked to Smyth, went to see Zener, and gave a well-attended (80 about) lecture at 4
45
. Then we went on a picnic to Washington's Crossing on the Delaware - men only, Taylor, Eyring, Condon, Albert Sherman, Edwin, Morris, & a couple of others. It was fun. They insisted (Condon especially) on returning by a way so that I could see where the Lindbergh Baby was found. I think the Chem. dept. here is pretty good. Albert is their best graduate student. He will get $1400 next year, $700 of which is for his board & room at the graduate college.
Then I went to Bob & Angy's, staying till 12 (from 10). Their little Duncan, 4 yrs old, seems nice, at least when he's asleep. I had a good talk with them. They were very friendly & seemed to want us to come & see them. They are quite well pleased with Princeton now, though they weren't at first. Bob said he'd prefer to be in Pasadena, though. He doesn't like Michal. He said he quarrelled with Bell when in Europe.
I didn't sleep very well, the bed being very hard. ...
I must lecture now
Your own
Linus