Summer of 1919. Caption: "How do you like us?" It was a get-together of about 15 young folks. Marie is bottom-center. There is a sort of floating caption at the beginning of about a dozen pages of pictures which says "Out on the farm for a good time". So I suppose that is where they were all taken. Some kind of a retreat, I suppose.



"Ma and her girls." What do you think? Is that Albertine? Or was "Ma" just an affectionate moniker for somebody else? Comparing to other pictures I think it's likely Albertine. Marie is on the right end.

Left: "Our shelter" Right: "Eating breakfast". I wonder how they packed everybody in there. I suppose this is still 'the farm'.




I left the captions so you can try to read them. Above is either "Line" or "Five" of Eight leaving for home. Below, with pretty broken spelling, is "Looks like a funeral procession."

The page is entitled "Down the river Aug 16, 1919" Marie is third from the left in the first picture and third from the right in the second.

Left: "Perth Amboy" above, "Cousins" below. Right: "October 19, 1919" above, "Sisters" below. These are cousins in Perth Amboy New Jersey. The dark-haired cousin is Emma and my Mom says the blonde one is Anna. So on the left is Anna and Marie; on the right is Anna and Emma.




Same day. This is cousin Agnes.

Still October 19, 1919. Left: "Cousins in front of the Grammar School". Right: "October 19, 1919". So that's Marie and Emma on the right, and Anna on the left. I wonder what the significance of the grammar school is.

Left: "Cousins". Marie and Agnes. Agnes was a gangly little thing, wasn't she? Right: "All three of us". Umm, without Agnes...