Show Z A 0 I 1 M M r L zt 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 i CROWING IT at it alwy always camm as a serph to i 41 1 I think trill leovie t there hero is 18 something radically n 9 with nae me doctor tor sala sad a middle aed aged comanto wo manto her physician and she began to describe her symptoms re blates blates the new york tribune also madam 1 announced toe the r man aien of f W A ence 1411 I fear ear yours is a complaint from bom which many of us suffer and which is unfortunately incurable it is a case 4 bof of armo anno domini a disease which is I 1 always epidemic age comes to all of us as a surprise it seems odd when our feelings are as young as ever that on our bd bodies are no longer as supple that we can no longer sit down on the rug in our old favorite attitude b before the fire that in going upstairs w we e must take lt it slowly that without rs feeling eeling appreciably preci ably different in any way or recognizing any change the elasticity and spring has gone out of our bodies we W say my olour contemporaries so and so has grown much older and of another iother how she has ahn changed but in ourselves we see no such alte alteration ratton IWO we fall fail to I 1 recognize the ravages of time our muscles are somewhat stiffer than of yore and our figures are stouter perhaps but we feel no peculiar difference A slight case of anno domini undoubtedly but not nearly as aa pronounced as with others of our age ag e it is always tunny funny to hear unmarried ed sisters of ripe middle age talk of each other the lapse of time means nothing to them in their relations one to another they are still gr girls le together and outsiders cannot fall to be amused at their unconsciousness of change 1 I wish delta delia would marry said a sister of 70 in speake speaking mg of the youngest of the trio a troublesome maiden of I 1 60 1 I am sure she would be much happier this said in all simplicity by the gentle and dignified lady with no sense of incongruity or of the way it might strike her auditor |