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All the heart I have lies in my baby's grave." "You must give a little of it to mine, since Heaven has taken its own mother," he said, gently. "I am not going to try flu bribe you with money money does not buy the love and care of good women like you but I ask you, for the love you bore to your own child, to be kind to mine. Try to think, if you can, that it is your own child brought back to you."

The doctor advises me to go to a little milder climate. You see, I was gassed, and got the 'flu' afterward. But I know I'll be all right if I'm careful.... Well, I've always had a leaning toward agriculture, and I want to go to Kansas. Southern Kansas. I want to travel around till I find a place I like, and there I'll get a job. Not too hard a job at first that's why I'll need a little money.

Geltfin had hastily risen and moved nearer the outer door. "An awful thing that flu!" he declared. "Lobel, do you think maybe she could 'a' had the germs of it on her then?" "Don't be a coward, Geltfin!" rebuked his senior severely. "Look at me how I am not frightened, and yet it was me she seen last, not you!

Sibyl, who was in bed with the flu, had offered to lend her one of the new ones she had had the forethought to buy in New York before sailing, and was only a year old, but Olive had feared the critical eyes of French women who had not replenished their evening wardrobe since nineteen-fourteen. Alexina did not feel particularly consoled because others had looked no better than she.

"If this mysterious disease isn't checked it will be worse than the 'flu," said Bart. "What's the matter with our doctors anyway? Why don't they get on the job?" "You can't blame them," Frank defended. "There's no better medical staff in any army than the one we've got. They're working like mad to try to isolate the germ, or whatever it is, that's causing this mysterious trouble.

Mark's for dinner. Stooped, her elbows on the table, she heard with excitement that "Cy Bogart had the 'flu, but of course he was too gol-darn mean to die of it." "Will wrote me that Mr. Blausser has gone away. How did he get on?" "Fine! Fine! Great loss to the town. There was a real public-spirited fellow, all right!" She discovered that she now had no opinions whatever about Mr.

At first I 'Red Crossed' in Boston, then I went to Devens and spent a long time in the camp hospital there." "Pretty trying, wasn't it?" "Why yes, some of it was. When the 'flu' epidemic was raging and the poor fellows were having such a dreadful time it was bad enough. After that I was sent to Eastview.

I'm not allowed out yet, in this cold weather, after an attack of "flu"; but my husband will call this afternoon on the chance of finding you in, carrying a warm invitation to you both to "waive ceremony" and dine with us at Valley House en famille. Looking forward to meeting you, Yours most cordially, Constance Annesley-Seton. "Sweet of her, isn't it?"

"Oh, I've only had flu," said Peter; "I'm all right now." "You're ill," Lord Evelyn repeated. "Don't contradict me, sir. You're ill; you're in want; and you're bringing up a baby on insufficient diet. What?" "Not a bit," said Peter. "I am not in want, nor is Thomas. Thomas' diet is so sufficient that I'm often afraid he'll burst with it." Lord Evelyn said, "You're probably lying.

It was like a fox slipping alert among unsuspecting cattle. When he got back, he saw in the distance the lights of a taxi standing outside the building where he lived, and heard a thumping and hallooing. He hurried forward. It was a man called Herbertson. "Oh, why, there you are!" exclaimed Herbertson, as Lilly drew near. "Can I come up and have a chat?" "I've got that man who's had flu.