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Then after she had a nap, she wanted to walk over to Mrs. Swearengens to see Miss Brown, who is bed fast, and who had said she wanted to see Mrs. Putney - Mrs. Weatherby gave her a nice pair of step ins and a hankie, and Mrs. Darcy, who works at the Public Utilities office, and lives next to Mrs. Weatherby, and brought her in and took her home, gave Mrs. Putney a lovely box of milk chocolates and a dollar. Miss Brown gave her a little jar of kumquat marmalade, and I paid her taxi fare. Also she was thrilled that D. day came on her birthday, and we got some reports from London by short wave. You may have had some expenses to meet connected with your father's death, so I'm sending you a cashier's check for fifty dollars. Use it in any way you see fit my darling. I'm sorry I didn't think to send it before, but I was too upset to think clearly about anything then. Mrs. Johnson came in yesterday afternoon and took me downtown. We went first to the library where she left a lot of magazines of the Post, Collier, Good Housekeeping type. Then