Letter from Alfred E. Stearns to Thomas Sun, Middlebury, Vermont, September 17, 1926
Dublin Core
Title
Letter from Alfred E. Stearns to Thomas Sun, Middlebury, Vermont, September 17, 1926
Subject
Letter from Alfred E. Stearns to Thomas Sun, Middlebury, Vermont, September 17, 1926
Transcription
Dear Tom:
I have your letter of September 15 and am greatly disturbed that you should have refused to heed my instructions and ask your tutors to send me their bills or to send them yourself. Since I do not hold them responsible for this failure, but you only, I am sending the check to cover the $84.00 due your tutors and the $55.00 due the hotel. Immediately on receipt of this check pay the bills in question and send me at once the individual receipts. I can't continue to make requests of this kind which you carelessly disregard, and I must insist that this matter be settled at once and in a business-like way and according to these instructions. I shall await your early reply.
Hereafter please realize that, when I ask you to do a thing in a certain way, I expect it to be done in that way without quibbling on your part. I haven't the time or the patience to invest extra labors that are wholly unnecessary and forced on me only because of your carelessness or negligence.
Sincerely yours,
Enc.
I have your letter of September 15 and am greatly disturbed that you should have refused to heed my instructions and ask your tutors to send me their bills or to send them yourself. Since I do not hold them responsible for this failure, but you only, I am sending the check to cover the $84.00 due your tutors and the $55.00 due the hotel. Immediately on receipt of this check pay the bills in question and send me at once the individual receipts. I can't continue to make requests of this kind which you carelessly disregard, and I must insist that this matter be settled at once and in a business-like way and according to these instructions. I shall await your early reply.
Hereafter please realize that, when I ask you to do a thing in a certain way, I expect it to be done in that way without quibbling on your part. I haven't the time or the patience to invest extra labors that are wholly unnecessary and forced on me only because of your carelessness or negligence.
Sincerely yours,
Enc.
Creator
Alfred E. Stearns
Publisher
Phillips Academy
Date
September 17, 1926
Rights
All Rights Reserved by Phillips Academy
Language
English
Type
Correspondence