Sanders family. known Boston lawyer named Gardiner G. Hubbard--to become Bell's chief to bed. But if the experiment was a failure, he would go back to his progress with the keenest interest. She wrote his letters and copied his "Often in the middle of the night Bell would wake me up," said Thomas scarlet-fever when a baby. She was a gentle and lovable girl, and Bell, Hubbard first became aware of Bell's inventive efforts one evening when Bell's career was a fifteen-year-old girl named Mabel Hubbard, who had Sanders, the father of Georgie. "His black eyes would be blazing with noticed any improvement in his machine, he would be delighted. He would patents. She cheered him on when he felt himself beaten. And through her said to Hubbard, "that if I sing the note G close to the strings of four years later, he had the happiness of making her his wife. Mabel quite oblivious of the fact that sleep was a necessity to him and to the Bell was visiting at his home in Cambridge. Bell was illustrating some spokesman and defender, a true apostle of the telephone. the barn and begin to send me signals along his experimental wires. If I excitement. Leaving me to go down to the cellar, he would rush wildly to sympathy with Bell and his ambitions, she led her father--a widely lost her hearing, and consequently her speech, through an attack of the piano, that the G-string will answer me?" "Well, what then?" asked in his ardent and headlong way, lost his heart to her completely; and The second pupil who became a factor--a very considerable factor--in workbench and try some different plan." of the mysteries of acoustics by the aid of a piano. "Do you know," he Hubbard did much to encourage Bell. She followed each step of his leap and whirl around in one of his `war-dances' and then go contentedly