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spell or hasn't she recovered from the one she had when I was out there? I, with Doris, hope that Myrtie will keep away. 

  Did you have it very bad Saturday?  Daisy went to Bridgewater on the T-35 train intending to spend the day with her mother but when it began to grow so bad she hustled back in town.  She said what frightened her most was that when she telephoned to the Br. station, they told her it was worst around Boston and Braintree.  I had gone out in the morning at about 8-15 to meet Miss Blanchard in town to be a witness on her naturalization papers.  It was sleeting then and when I came out of the P.O. at about 10, it was snowing and blowing hard:  at Eleven it was worse, but at 12 when I attempted to get home from college I nearly lost my breath.  I never saw it more I think.  I ran across 4 of our girls who were waiting for cars which didn't run until some 2 hours later so I don't know what Became of them but as I went on a little farther over the bridge on Huntington Avenue just outside of Huntington Avenue Station, I had to turn about for breath.  My face was covered with sleet and it drove so I couldn't open my eyes and the drifts were such that I couldn't make my way through them with breath and sight both gone so after several attempts I ran into a doorway of one of the little places built up on stilts above the R.R. tracks and there was a man and a little girl likewise