Dear Fellow Genealogist: I am a subscriber to the West Virginia Magazine and I have found an article that may be of some interest to someone. In December 1943, LIFE magazine published a story on a letter that was sent to Martha Jean Kuhn from a Capt. Dick Davisson during the World War [I or II?]. He was stationed in England at the time of this letter. West Virginia magazine republished the letter in it's October 2000 edition. The magazine asked around Grafton to see if anyone knew what happened to this couple and they could find nothing. If they do know what happened to this couple, they will publish a follow up story. The article states that Capt. Davisson spoke of a Sud and Doggie [names of friends], about not marrying Ms. Kuhn before the war, about drives w/ Ms. Kuhn to Monongalia County, wanting/missing hot baths [LOL], the Wonder Bar [where they would go to listen to the jukebox], missing Ernie's burgers, missing his Mom's baked ham dinner, having a chocolate malted at Malone's Drug store [where he worked as a soda jerk and mentions if a Ray Shaw still worked there], going to the Grafton Cemetery to hear speeches and decorate graves on Memorial Day, mentions a Bob [his brother, I assume, as he speaks of "Bob and I" when we were kids], and wonders about the WV Betas. Does anyone know of this Capt. Dick Davisson and what became of him and Ms. Kuhn? If so, please email me privately and I will give you the address to West Virginia Magazine so that they can find out how this story ended. They also have a web site at www.wonderfulwv.com. I don't know if you can reach them through their web site or not. Sincerely, Tina McKie Buckhannon, WV