Letters – 1942 to 1945 #5

Capt. T.G. Leske

 

71st Infantry

APO44

Fort Lewis, Wash.

 

 

11-12-41  (note: mis-dated in letter)  (postmarked Tacoma, Washington, Nov 13 1942)

 

Miss Jane Axtell

538 S. Normandie

Los Angeles, California

 

 

 

Hello Jane!

 

Forgive me for not writing sooner but I really haven’t wirten a word for the past couple of weeks.  Just the neglectful type you know.  I should have written sooner just to keep you in shape for reading my writing if nothing else, no?

 

Sorry – Interrupted by a major and a couple of captains to have a glass of beer.  Must go – will write again.

 

Please write.

 

Remember

Ted

 

Coming back to Salem soon.

 

 

 

Letters – 1942 to 1945 #4

Capt. T.G. Leske

 

71st Infantry

APO44

Fort Lewis, Wash.

 

 

10-13-42  (postmarked Everett, Washington)

 

Miss Jane Axtell

538 S. Normandie

Los Angeles, California

Apt #4

 

 

Hello Guss

 

Just thought I would show you that promptness in answering mail really is one of my virtues.

 

Good Night

 

Ted

 

Letters – 1942 to 1945 #3

Capt. T.G. Leske

71st Infantry

APO44

Fort Lewis, Wash.

 

September 28th ,1942 (postmarked Port Angeles, Washington)

 

Miss Jane Axtell

Coquille, Oregon

PO Box 515

 

marked "Please Forward"  (postmarked Coquille, Oregon Sep 30 5:30 PM 1942)

 

354 S. Normandie

Los Angeles, California

 

Saturday Nite

 

Hello Sweet!

 

Day after day, for three weeks now, I have been waiting for a letter from you and disappointment daily in the end result.  Now that I have stolen a march on you and taken the blame off my shoulders for the lapse of writing.  I should try to convince you that I really am sorry for not writing earlier but as you probably wouldn’t believe me anyway I’ll just give up now.

 

Really, though I have been moving around a bit to continue the (?) at all over different installations and haven’t even written a few words home. I’ve practically forgotten how to write.  I can imagine the fear you will have trying to make sense of all this inkwork.  It was quite a thrill to get two letters from you in succeeding mails.  At the time, I was working at a particularly remote place and your brief notes were sure welcome.  The nearest town was about an hours ride and it had no excitement anyway so I caught up on the sleep I had lost, if any.  I did go hunting bear and got three shots at one of which he is carrying two I think.  Another time I was trailing a bear, carrying a 45 pistol and it probably was very lucky I didn’t catch up with as I would probably still be running.  My fishing trip one evening was aas a perfect failure but it did give me a good chance to try out my caulk boots.

 

What a setting! The radio is playing "When day is done", the lieutenant brought me a drink, and I am back again at the same lodge with you standing on the balcony.

 

We shall move again tomorrow and be in new fields and I certainly hope that they shall be better than the last six weeks have provided.  Seattle shall be very close so that, no doubt, will be a great help.

 

Remember the leave I wrote you about?  Well, leaves have been canceled for our officers in the regiment and many a good plan has been wreaked including mine.  I did have high hopes of seeing you but that is of no account to the higher echelons.

 

It seems years since I saw you last and it makes me think of how much time will pass before I do actually see you again.  Your constant chatter certainly did liven up the times we were together.  I am anxious to see if that is still true.

 

Due to the tardiness of this letter  I expect to get an answer postmarked San Diego or someother such place.  You said in your letter that you expected to go south whereas you should have said north.   Of course, you being of an obstinate nature, the case is understandable but not appreciable.

 

A letter of this length deserves a early answer, don’t ya think?  If you are still home you have plenty of time on your hands and if your are working away from home it will give you a little relaxation to write a few words.

 

I’ll be waiting for an answer and don’t wait as long as I did, please.

 

Good night and good luck

 

Ted

 

Notes on letters #1 and #2

Barnes General Hospital is in Vancouver, Washington.  From the Veterans Administration web site:

"The Vancouver Campus was originally the U.S. Army Barnes General Hospital. It was constructed by the Army Corps of Engineers and activated in 1941. The Army closed it in 1946. In May 1946, President Truman authorized the transfer of the Vancouver property to the Veterans Administration. The Vancouver VA Hospital consolidated with the Portland VA Medical Center in 1980. The VA has disposed of several large pieces of the original deed over the years. Most notably a large number of Quarters were deeded to the City of Vancouver which is now called “Officers Row”. The other large piece was deeded to Clark Community College to the south of the campus."
 
Pysht is located north of the Olympic National Forest. Merrill & Ring Forest Products L.P. is the lumber company refered to. The Merrill & Ring families established the company in 1888 with the purchase of the Pysht Tree Farm, which is now the oldest tree farm in Washington State still operated by its original owners.
 


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Letters – 1942 to 1945 #2

Capt. T.G. Leske

71st Infantry

APO44

Fort Lewis, Wash.

 

August 25,1942  (postmarked Port Angeles, Washington, Aug 26 1942)

 

Miss Jane Axtell

Coquille, Oregon

PO Box 515

 

Hello Jane:

 

Your letter, actually four pages (large printing), was a very welcome surprise.

 

From your letter I don’t know whether this letter will reach at Coquille, California or Seattle. If the last, cheers – if the others, jeers.

 

After I left Barnes, I was at Fort Lewis for a few days and then came on to Port Angeles on the Olympic Peninsula. After working there for a week and doing nothing in the way of excitement I pushed on farther north to Pysht I am now spending a week. Pysht consists of a few homes and a sawmill.

 

The captain and I are quartered in a lodge which was used as a guest home by the lumber company. It is a rather large place having a central living room with a huge fireplace at one end.

 

Sitting here I feel like a tycoon. I am all alone with the radio playing. Lombardo music, a kerosene lamp on the table, and a crackling blaze in the fireplace. Outside the night is cool and quiet with a full moon shining and hounds barking. If your aren’t sorry, I certainly am, that you are n ot here with me. No setting could be more ideal for whispering sweet nothings – or getting stinko.

 

My regiment is finally giving leaves to the officers and when the time comes I sure would like to see you. Probably you will be gadding around in California. Any comments?

 

Next week I will be back in Port Angeles to stay for a few days and then off again for some other outlandish spot.

 

Gotta go to bed. As there is nothing to do here evenings. I knock myself out working during the day so that when night comes I’m glad to go to bed.

 

If you haven’t been able to read this letter, let me know, and next time I will print block letters.

 

Until we meet again,

 

Just Ted

 

 

Letters – 1942 to 1945 #1

In 1942, my mother (then 22) met and corresponded with a Army Captain.  In 1946 she married my father, recently discharged from the Navy.  When she died in 1995 I discovered that she had saved the letters she had received from the Army Captain.  I am reading and transcribing those letters.  This is the first.


 

Capt. T.G. Leske

71st Infantry

APO44

Fort Lewis, Wash.

 

Jul 28 1942  (postmarked Portland, Oregon)

 

Miss Jane Axtell

Coquille, Oregon

PO Box 515

 

Hello Jane!

 

Received your little note and felt very sorry that I wasn’t around for your call.

 

My brother did arrive, as well as Mother, and it sure was nice to have them. I felt very sorry that they couldn’t stay longer but time didn’t permit.

 

So you would rather be pursued than call men? I did my share but no response – why, I wouldn’t know. But let me try once more; if you should be in Portland this coming weekend won’t you leave a message here for me at Barnes General, Ward 5, Vancouver? I expect to be out next week and my outfit is moving out to Fort Lewis around the 5th so thereafter I guess it will depend on chance as to whether we we ever meet again or not.

 

If you have a few minutes to spare, let me hear from you, won’t you?

 

Sincerely,

Ted

upgrading my cell phone

All the joys of dealing with big companies and the fine print.  I’m old enough to remember when AT&T had a monopoly and you could get your phone any any color as long as it was black.  Anyway,  my cell phone contract has been complete for over a year so every so often I think, maybe I’ll renew the contract and see if I can get a better phone in the process.  You know, thinking that maybe the phone company would give me a little incentive to stay as their customer.

My sister’s contract is also up, so we went looking. 

The first thing you have to understand is that both of us use our phones as, gasp…. PHONES!  And not that much either.  We are on the minimum plan and neither of us come close to the monthly limit on minutes.  We don’t browse the web with our phones.  We don’t text with our phones.  We don’t play games on our phones.  We pretty much talk on our phones.  Call us dinosaurs.  In fact the only two things I wanted as part of upgrading was a bigger screen that was a touch screen, and a nicer camera in the phone.

So we went out looking.  We stopped at an AT&T store in a local mall.  The salesperson was very helpful.  We explained that we were pretty much happy with the phones we had.  That we did not text or need internet access, etc.  I told him the couple of features I wanted.  He beamed and said wait a minute.  He went into the back, and then emerged with a box containing a Samsung Eternity.  It was a refurbished phone that he could let us have for only $50.00 with a renewal of the contract.

Well it is a beatiful phone.  Tactile feedback, three megapixel camera, video, nice screen.  But he only had one.  I wanted two, one for myself and one for my sister.  Also being a refurbished phone, it only had a 30 day warrenty.  So we passed.

A couple of days later I was in another AT&T store.  I went through my spiel explaining what I wanted.  Just a  phone, no data, no TV, no texting.  I told the salesperson that I had seen the Samsung Eternity and had liked it.  The Eternity was a discontinued model so I had hopes that I could get two.  Well this salesman beamed and said he could get two from the other stores in the area.  But they would be new and cost $100.00 apiece with a $50 dollar rebate each.  Well as much as I hate mail in rebates I said sure go ahead and get them.  I also had a premonition, so I said I would pay for them when I picked them up.

So a couple of days later I go back to the store to get them.  My sister met me there. A different salesman is there (a store manager).  The phones are not there and he doesn’t know where they are.  I explain everything to him.  He calls the salesman.  He calls other stores trying to find two phones that he can get run over to the store asap.  He finds one near by and it is sent over.  But while he is doing this he mentions that, oh by the way, I knew that I would have to purchase a $20 a month data plan on each phone.

Ok, now remember that I have explained to each salesperson that I did not want data, text or anything else.  I wanted a phone!  So to make a long story just a few seconds shorter, I said thanks but no thanks and my sister and I left.

At this point I’m considering my options.  I liked the phone.  But I am not paying for a data plan.  And in this economy, $50.00 is more that we wanted to pay anyway.  We are happy with the phones we have.  I have both a car charger and a data cable on the phone I have.  So I’m ready to live with what I have.  But I decide to google the Samsung Eternity phone to see what customers think about it.

Whoa…. there is the phone at amazonwireless.com for $000.01.  Free shipping! Yes!  You read that right.  One cent.  Okay I think.  Whats the catch?  Do I need to pay for every conceivable plan (data, TV, texting) to qualify for buying it.  I can’t find any hidden "fine print".  No, no, that isn’t quite true.  I finally see that there is an $18.00 activation fee.  Wow! That is a good deal.  But I still think there has to be some catch.  Maybe when I try to activate the phone.  I ask myself do I want to deal with the hassle of it if when I activate the phone AT&T insists that I have to buy an add-on plan.  I finally decide to give it a go.  I press the "buy" button.

About a week later the phone arrives.  I carefully unpack it (expecting to have to return it).  I charge the phone and dial the number they tell me to dial in order to activate the phone.  It gets activated.  Nothing about having to buy other plans.  Great….  but wait.  I better wait a day or two and check my account on line to make certain that nothing was added "automatically".

I check a day later and surprise.  No other plans added.  I got a beautiful touch screen phone, with a three megapixel camera and video, that also can take a microSD memory card and plays music for under $19.00. 

I love the  phone.  It is easy to use.  Nice features.  Everything I wanted.  Of course, I still need to buy a data cable and car chargers.  And a protective "skin" would be nice.  So I go online looking for those.  I’m expecting to pay about $25.00 for a charger.  They soak you for the data cable so I’m thinking about $40.00 for that.  And a protective silicon cover would be at least $10.00.  I find a site will all  of that on sale. So with shipping it all costs $15.00. 

I love the internet.  But for those of you who know me, I still hate computers.

 

ps.  I went back online to see if I could get the same phone for my sister, but it was no longer up on the amazonwireless site.  Oh well