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terrible cal than the

wildest outpourings of grief would, have been

"And this seizure, Mrs Moore Tellto turn the current of her thoughts even for a one out in the early afternoon, without

saying where she was going, and how she had returned to the house about

five o'clock, looking so pale and ill, that Hannah, an old faed her to sit

dohile she went to fetch her a cup of tea Thea paper, and the next thing was the

terrible cry that brought the on the floor

unconscious with the crumpled newspaper in her hand

"See, here is the paper now, doctor," and he stooped to pick up the

cruirl had read her death warrant

Together they went over it in the hope that it ht furnish some clue

Mrs Moore's eyes were the first to fall on the fatal paragraph She

read it through, then showed it to the doctor

"That is undoubtedly the cause of the seizure," said the doctor

"Oh, ," moaned the mother, and the first tears

fell