Union Falls June 1st <br/>Rev. H. Lyman <br/>Forest Grove, Oregon<br/><br/>My Precious Husband, <br/><br/>Since writing to you last, I rec'd a letter from you, written at Cheney, W.T. It was most welcome & it seemed pleasant to have something come as directly from you as that. It reached me 2 weeks from the day it was written. I rec'd by the same mail, a letter from Willie, which was written the same day as yours but mailed 2 days later. Since then, I have rec'd a letter from Sarah with which Horace sent a brief one. These have all been very acceptable Sarah doesn't seem as well pleased with the situation as Mary does, but I suppose she isn't as well able to endure the climbing mountains etc. <br/><br/>Mother has improved somewhat in strength I think since you left. She goes out in the garden a little about every pleasant day. Still she doesn’t seem to think she shall be able to go to Oregon & I suppose it is not best for us to urge the matter. It seems strange that you had rec'd nothing later from me when you wrote last, than a letter written about 1st of April. There must be lots of my letters on the way to you if they haven't been destroyed. <br/><br/>You seemed just as dear to me as ever. I can't tell you how often I press my lips to your dear likeness: & not only to that but also to the place where your head used to rest. If I have time, I will slip in a little lunch of wild violets of which there are enough blue ones to show that my love for you is true. <br/><br/>Are the pills you left in the bureau drawer of the same kind as those you gave Mrs. Gill when she was sick last winter? <br/>If so may I give those to her she was saying yesterday, that she wished she could get some, of the same kind: though she doesn’t need them at present. So I thought I would ask you about them. I must close, <br/><br/>Most Lovingly, <br/>Your Margaret
Part of Letter from Margaret Lyman on correspondence, her mother's health, and missing her husband