Item 01: Malcolm Shore Stanley correspondence, 8 December 1916-28 October 1918 - Page 243
Primary tabs
Transcription
[Page 243]
I'll be there as several late nights soon tire one out especially when "getting up time" comes at the same time every morning.
Stan & James are home for their holidays, they always catch the first Korumburra train when they have finished their term. I suppose there is no place like home & they both get sick & tired of boarding. It would be much better for them if we lived near the city so that they could always get home at nights.
Last week the cream wagon horses bolted with the wagon down the other hill where we used to live, when they came to a standstill one horse was under the wagon without any harness and very badly hurt. They sent for Stan to come and see to it & he found that the top of the back leg (pin line I call it) was fractured. He has taken out several pieces of bone and the poor animal is in great pain. He told the manager that it would not, if it recovered, be much use again, but they want him to go ahead so today he had an operation and the patient can move about and is much better. This is his first case that he has