F. C. Putnam 
W. T. Putnam 
P. G. Putnam 
W. T. Putnam, jr. 
Mail Orders Taken for 
Dressed Poultry, Fresh Eggs 
and Other Farm Products 
Intermount JBarm 
W. T. PUTNAM & SONS 
“The Mail Order Farm” 
INTERMOUNT FARM BUTTER, 
CREAM, CHEESE, SAUSAGE 
AND FRESH PORK 
Hafee Cusjjman, ®la£f}). 
Nov. 26, 1 922 . 
My dear Mr. Deane 
You and I mudt think of each other^ quite fre¬ 
quently, for it has happened several tines that just as I have been 
writing you, you also have been sending a message to me. This radio 
is a great thing, is it not? 
What do you mean by going to town and getting upset? I 
hope you are not very seriously hurt. I am trying to improve, but 
find it a slow job. Got along pretty well and then had a setback 
two or three days ago and am now just beginning to get better. A 
thing like this leaves me very weak indeed and it takes a long time 
to get back to anything like normal. 
One of the boys has gone to Seattle and Tacoma to look 
over a lot of poultry plants before starting on his own buildings. 
The other is heretafcing care of his cows. 
We have a couple of neighbors, a pair of college girls, 
one a cripple who have a bee farm. They have been here for three 
years arid have had a lot of hard luck and no end of hard work. 
A couple of years when there was no honey flow and then last year 
the father of one of them was taken sick while on a visit east and 
was ill for a long time and finally died. It all coat them a lot 
of money and they must have been finally pretty near the end of 
their resources and one of them, the cripple, had to go out and 
teach to help omt. This year they had a good flow and a crop off 
four or five thousand pounds. Then things began to happen again. 
'They had some 80 swarms at a little lake 5 1/2 miles from the home 
