Dearest Mary Here are some time tables - of course the 4 P.M. is the ideal train that connects for dinner; likewise at Powelton Ave leaving New York at 4:30, or indeed the 6:30. Whatever train you can catch I will meet in Philadelphia. I should very much like you to come on sometime Saturday so that we might have a whole day Sunday. You see even if you could catch the 9 A.M. limited on Sunday morning, you would have to wait over in Philadelphia till 11:45 and it is half past twelve before you get here. If you miss that it is night before you get to Bryn Mawr. So try to take at least the 6 P.M. Remember how the whole of my Tuesday afternoon went in a Committee meeting and 2 hours of Wednesday in a business talk with you which had its alleviations but was still business. Bessie writes that she cannot come till Wednesday so of course I should be delighted if you could stay but Monday is not Sunday even then as I have 2 lectures. Mrs. FranklinGÇÖs letter I enclosed Julia in a Committee Letter. She may possibly come and with her Miss Scott and the great unknown GÇ£archangelGÇ¥ we can face the world. Will you not excuse great haste. Five students have punctuated even this short letter. Did I tell you BessieGÇÖs misunderstanding of something you had told her gave me a bad first half an hour with her - and my watch having stopped must have made you think me exceedingly careless, as I had told you I had an engagement at 12. I forgot to explain. Tuesday afternoon