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taste it best you would ever drink.

Most all the leaves are gone off the trees. A good many have been blown down street. Theres enough left though.

I am afraid from your letters that Helens husband will never be any better too bad. Amy has had a hard lot but has done fine, since her loss. The last time she came here I thought she held her young looks well. Guess it must have been her jovial disposition not to borough trouble.

I was reading in the Obituaries in my paper of the death of Alice Kimbal of North Stoughton one of my school mates 95 years old. She & Annie Page used to walk over from North Stought to high school the same as I did from hotel neighborhood. Now they have buses take them.

Most of the people have gone to church over to the Goward house the daughter who has  the little boy has gone & her husband is taking care of their little one. He & his father have just walked along front of the way & gone into their house. They are Catholics someone told me when their grand mother died.

I hope you are having mild days till you get your furnace fixed. Too bad you have to live in such a cold house. I guess going to the beach makes you feel even much better if it is too cold.

Mrs Barry is going to evening meetings so she won't be home be home till around ten or eleven o'clock. Some one to preach, whome [[whom]] they all like, she would hate to miss hearing him. Mr. Benoir came over to borrow a ladder to clear out the leaves from his gutters, so Mrs. Barry told him that ours needed cleaning out also & he said he would do them also, so after wards he did ours too. They were burning leaves over to Mr Colders, it looked dangerous though they are spread too much around the yard. Hope you are warmer also. Ma