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  Brooklyn 10 Oct 1866 My dear Walter

i got you letter to day wensday with the money all safe and was glad to hear from you it seemed like an age since i had seen you i am glad you are better situated than you was i am about the same of my lameness but yesterday and to day i feel better and not so weak and exausted like i did feel i have my bed out in the room and sleep better and my appetite is better sis has been quite sick so marthe had A doctor   she was quite bad for two or three days she was as yellow as gold the white of her eyes was very yellow she was in here the most of the time the doctor said it was her liver he gave her something that has helped her very much O walt dont you think you left two shirts and hankercheif i went to the bureau to get something and there lay the shirts and handkercheif i did   feel real bad your new ones too how shall i get them to you i dont know if you will come christmas i will keep them then you needent bring any well walt here we are yet the old folks is moving out and the son and wife is going to live in one room and bedroom and the other to be rented to another set rather too much of the good thing rather too many over head but winter aint so bad as summer george says if you will buy   smiths half of that lot he will fix the shop for me he says he can put a cellar under it and turn it around for about 1200d twelve hundred dollars i would not mind its setting back from the street he says there is about 70 dollar worth of lumber there he wont take less than 900 doller georg says property is high this fall write walt if you think well of it take care of yourself the carpenters shop acrost the street burned down last night