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Exeter Advocate, 1905-12-07, Page 2FARROWING TIME 1s as critical a time al any in hog raising. The litter eating of many sows is largely due to bad feedire, c:lusine a constipated and irritable condition. The sows direstiveorga►:schould be kept free and open to this fevered and Jitter eating cenditicn by feeding Clydesdale Stock Feed • Besides nlakine a Letter flow cfrnlk owing to the better bleed circulation. This means more aril better pigs, as a healthy apple tree given more and better fruit than adiseased tree. For young pigs it snakes more bene and muscle on which to put flesh, and nothing better for starting and keeping Runts grow ine. Its ingredients are absolutely harmle:,s and pure, and if you are not satisfied with results yuur money cheerfully refunded by the dealer. CAROOLUNE ANTISEPTIC MARES THE PiGS AND PENS GLEAN. TRY HERCULCS POULTRY FOOD. CLYDYBDAt.a STOCK FDOD COYpLYY, r,ta uTYD, Toronto, Oa tYY YYTi TY YYYYYY Yf Vexcellent results. My cows huve al- ♦ T 4 ways been in perfect health. DIY 4- calves thrive on silage better duan . on clover hay. I have some cows in rold, th� a� + ge. Theirat havegeneral yea!� OUI flu ranU1 ♦ health is good and their teeth aro in tmost excellent condition. 1 do not ♦ think it wise to feed silage before milking and always guard against this. +++++++♦+++++ ♦ ++44++ EXPERIENCES Wl'1'II TIIE SIL I have three silos holding, wh full, about. 300 tons, writes Mr. 1 Van Alystyne. It is seldom that get in this amount, as they usual settle front 2 to 6 feet, depending c the rapidity with which they are f ed. Two of these silos are construe ed so that we cart fill either with° moving the cutter. Frequently w aro able to get these tilled quite so idly. 'Phis fall, we havo put up 23 tons. 'This amount will feed •15 t 50 cows about seven months. I have no fixed date to begin foodi silage. This depends somewhat a how much silage we have as cor. pared with other feeds and the cot dition of the late pasture. If Gt. supply of silage is insufficient to las until the pasture is ready in ti spring, wo aim to supply a sufficion ly succulent food of some other sor Sometimes wo havo pumpkins an feed them until well into Novembe' In my experience tho most ditllcul time to make milk is the latter pi' of October and early November wile the grass begins to suffer front frets and the cold wines chili the cows Silage line this gap adz/drably. I pasture is short, we sometimes tee right along from tho time we li! the silos. This year we began feed ing October 15. Wo had been foedlu pumpkins to the cows when the came in at night. When these Iver gone, we substituted a feed of ea:1 tut hay. Tho shrinkage in the mil flow was very /narked, being near; a quart per animal. This happens Oven with good pasture at our cora hand. Our first severe frost did nu come until October 25. We the► opened the silo and began feeding hall bushel or about 15 silage Its per cow. In 98 hours the flow o tnilk was again increased to normal 0. en .0 ly n it- t- ut 0 (1 u 'e ug n t - t tt, ti t •t tt t LIVE STOCK NOTES. It will not hurt the brooding sow to squonl for her breakfast once in awhile, Better that than to have her too fat to got up and oat. When you go to buy a new horse collar. take your horse along and fit him. You would not think of getting a new suit of clothes for yourself un- less you could bo there to try it on. Don't depend on 'string out a strati here and another one there to mase it set well. The term "feeding," correctly in terpreted. °.cans supplying the work horse with that amount and quality of food which will maintain its body in perfect order for labor. Fed thus, the horse should not become fat should not lose or increase material- ly in weight, should havo life. snu,t, vigor and stamina, a healthy ap- pearing coat, and tuusclea well devel- oped and free from surplus ndiporo tissue. These ends cannot be attain- ed by simply stuffing the horse upon good food of various kinds. It is ns easy to overfeed as to underfeed, and either extreme is equally detrimen- t tal. l In tho average case the farm horse ! is overfed, hence lessened in vete° for labor and maintained at unit .'- cessary expense. This is surely tno caso when his manger is kept stu1Tt-i with hay trout one end of the year to the other on the "self -feeder" prin- ciple. The hay -stuffed manger means a hay -stuffed horse, and in that con- dition ho is unfit to do a maxi►n(1r3 amount of work easily and without appreciable loss of strength and vi- tality. So, too, the corn -stuffed horse is well fed, but rendered par- tially unfit for his best effort in work harness. Yet hay and corn, being the most plentiful foods upon the average form, aro as a rule too liberally supplied by tho fartnor wh . wishes to treat bis horses kindly and liberally. y a V t t SILAGE FED AFTER MILKiNt7. The amount of silage to be given a cow, depends largely upon the ani- mal. When silage is abundant. toil the cows aro in the stable, I fin I my Guernseys will average, in the two herds, about :35 to 40 pounds silageper day % c ith an additionaa grain ration of about six poun'!s which in supplemented with a small feed of five or six pounds of hay at noon. It is our custom to feed the grain Just before milking. The silae e is also given the caws after tho milk- ing Is done, while the hay is given them at noon. This is largely a matter of convenience. Cows will do Just as well after they get accustom- ed to it without the noon feed, if they have all the roughage they want at night and morning. 'line period is no longer than frocn six o'clock at night to live o'clock in the morning. I have never known of any- one getting up at midnight to f.•.- l cows, nor that the cows suffered '.•,r lack of it. 'Theoretically 1 believe it is better' to feed the grain on the silage, i.ee practically 1 have never been able t detect any difference. The important factor is to be regular and have tau right ,ort of feed at the right time. I have no set rules las to the amount of feed necessary to balance the sil age When 1 use early cut hay, I get alone with one pound less gri per cow each day than when I feel hay that has been allowed to fel'.': mature. In my experience I also 1inat that there is about a pound of gr ti t difference bet%eecn clover and ti•• othy. Oats and pea hay call for from one to two pounds less gr t: n dally than clover. I have all 1'i. carbohydrates I need in the site.••, but for protein, I depend nn tho pt.r- chaseti grain. 1 usually buy grai•, that will give me the most digestib:e protein FOR THE LEAST MONEY. When the prices are right, I havo+ never found anything better than _S p c. protein and 17 p.c. protein ship. :nixed half and half by weight. I.s•t year these two materials were toe high and i used malt sprouts. (trite) breer.,' brain and cottonseed Ineal Sometimes 1 substitute and use I n - seed meal, if tho price is right. Hhen there 1s sumicient corn in the valley, pay about 50 bushels of ears to ear h ten tons of feed. I itnd ab, tit six pounds grain daily is ab.eit as much as can usually be feed with pro- fit. More grain will usually produce more milk, but quite often not enough to pay the Increased cost e,f production. This will depend on t'1• cow, the price of feed and the amour,% ohteined for the product tfilk at 3; cents per quart will arimit of more extensive feeding than when it 1, worth only 2; cents. I hs. -.a Icd **itis• fur nearly 18 years with most Consumption Q There is no specific for consumption. Fresh air, ex- ercise, nourishing food and Scott's Emulsion will come pretty near curing it, if there as anything to build on. Mil- lions of people throughout the world are living and in good health on one lung. q F-rorn time immemorial the doctors prescribed cod liver oil for consumption. Of course the patient could not tale it in its old form, hence it lid very little good. 'flley can take SCOTT'S EMULSION and tolerate it for a long time. There is no oil, not excepting butter, so easily digested and absorbed by the system as cod liver oil in the form of Scott's Emulsion, and that is the rcas-tn it is so helpful in consurr,i.li<,n where its use rnust be continuous. Q We will send you a sample free. iv re n:re that tt.:i pscture ;n the f ern .1 1 label :1 on the wrap- per of every bo(t'e of Lmuis.o•1 you .. r. SCOtt & BOw11C Chemists Toronto, Ont. pi tee je;el. erect .•d } + t+o+o+?t+r+v04O+0+0+vxri'+0+G+Gist-+04tivti+!CE+Q+0• •Tilt'. STEWARD'S SON iNE NEIL if 8NIIUGll 0 4. • • > +G+ =_+3 4ti4Q:tt44:i•ClittOtti +*4.0.♦G*G44+04tEete+'x7.0+0* CHAPTER XXVI. Guildford Berton would havo given something to have been able to fol- low the earl and Norah on the second day, but he had to remain to nntt'h for the letter ehich be knew would arrive for Norah front Cyril Ilurne. The postmistress raised no objec- tions %then ho requested that the Santleigh letters should be sent to him, although such a course wits against the rules; it appeared quite reasonable to her, seeing that Mr. Guildford liertin had virtually man- aged the estate for some time past. and accordingly the postman left the letters at the cottage as directed. Guildford Berton might have taken up his abode at Santleigh had he so chosen, but ho did not care to leave tho cottage. Indeed, he dared not. In that cheerful poem, " Eugere Aram," it is related, in beautif+tl verse, that the murderer is compelled to haunt the spot where the body of his victim lies; and in liko manner Guildford Berton felt drawn to the heap of leaves beneath which rostra Recce South, by a horrible fascina- tion against which ho fought in vain. No sooner was ho dressed in the morning than he felt bound to go into the garden, and, pacing up and down, eyed tho mound riideways m(d with a shuddering intentness. Several times during the day ho wandered to- ward it, and under tho pretense of examining the trees or plucking at the weeds, hovered about tate fateful spot; and the last thing at night, be it wet or fine, he stole out and stood looking at the place where his awf 11 secret lay hidden. When ho went to bed, after walking up and down, trying to grow tire! and sleepy, it was to commit the crime over and over again in his (creams. with all the details carefully thought of little else, or, if ho man - worked out. During the day ho aged to divert his thoughts, it was only tor a short time; back they came to the one supreme subject like a troop of crows to roost. As a matter of course Ito found it necessary to pay frequent visits to tho brandy decanter in the cellaret, and equally as a matter of course ho was still more depressed after the evanescence of each nip of the soul- destroying spirit. There might have been a more wretched, crime -stained, fear-haunlo.l being in the world than Guildford Berton, but it would havo been diffi- cult to find him. And yet. at times, ho was not sorrj for what ho had done. It was not remorse, but actual fear of the dead girl, and the horrible dread of (Re- covery, that mado his days it tor- ture and his nights hideous beyond I- Ile slept better that night than he' words. Tine after time ho told hin self that if it had to be clone ovo again he would do it. 1f tweet fleece Souths stood between hint an his ambition and his passion Norah, ho would sweep thein fro' his path. There came letters each day, lie they were business mitts for the ear and general invitations for Noran The former he opened and laid aside the latter—they all bore the toot. postmark—he forwarded to Norah. Fortunately' (or him, there happen ed to be a great deal to be done. o the estate at that particular time and he busied himself about it wit! an ardor which surprised then ten ants. His only chance of dodgin madness was to exhaust himself phy simile, and mentally, and ho rod hard and fast and long each day, tut tit he knocked his own horse up and had to fall back upon the lies hunter in the Court stables, tnuch t• the disgust of tho head groom, whc expressed his opinion that Mr. Her ton had no more pity for a hors. than if it ens a steam heugine. Ono morning on the 11fth after the earl's departure, ho saw a copy of the Morning 1'ost at the reading room of the club in tho market tote, and, turning the fierier about Iistlessl,v, carte with a start upon Norah's name. It was an account of a reception at the house of ono of the cabinet min- isters, and the newspaper man went into high-flown laudation of "the new beauty," Lady Norah Arrowdab According to hien, 1.a(1y Norah was not only the acknowledged beauty of this, the o1T season, but would as- suredly hold her own and bear away the palet in the coating and regular season next year. ile gave an sec - count of the reception pretty fully, but it all seemed to turn upon Lady Norah Arrowdale as upon a pivot, and he spoke of her as being sur - minded by an eager and admiring hrong of courtiers, each trying to putvio each other in attentions t he "lovely and charming daughter f the popular earl." Guildford Berton gnashed his teeth, nd the paper shook in his hands so hat the waiter stared at hint, think - ng that he was going to have it fit. It was what he might have expect- ed, he told himself. She was stir - minded by all these men, some of hent most of them, no doubt, of the ante rank as herself. One of thein -mild be sure to propose to her. and perhaps be accepted. And hero wan o tied to `]nniteigh, and leaving hem all a clear field! Ile she'll! oleo her, after all! He left the club and role home a' furious gallop along the hard roads which would have driven the bend ronin wild if ho could have known and he almost resolved that he ould set nut for Landon the next orning, whether the letter he war, siting for came or not. Rut when he reached home a salad cap of letters ly oa the table, and as ,•� hastily turned theta over his face flushed. 'Mere was ono bearing the Brittany postmark. Ile gli;nctd at the address as i1 1t we t.° e ill • writer c r iter ulsteud of the writ- ing. and thea carefully opened it. 'filo letter was front Cyril, and wes not a very long one, consider- ing. "Dear Nurnh," it ran in a /lane which was at the best of times not too legible, but which born in the present instance evident traces of the writer's agitation. Dear Norah: -1 cannot understand your silence. Aro you offended with mei 11 so, toll ate in whet lie's my offense, and I will endeavor to ex- plain it. way or atone for it. But it may be that you regret the bond that. exists—or perhaps 1 had better say istori—bttween U. rt h, it cannot, cannot be that surely, dearest! 1 cannot believe that anything, even your father's opposition, can have brought you to desert Inc. to toren t the truth you have plighted, tat. promises you have sworn; and yet 1 'dread the day and most part of the night in this beastly place tort11rirg myself with the suspicion. Norah, if you love ate, fear nothing. 1 hate the means of overcoming even you. father's objection to our engugement Only wait and have trust in me for a little while longer. I would tell you something about the work which keeps me here, but I reserve it all until I see you. Indeed. I can write only of the pain which your silence causes tae. It is siznplo torture! Writo, write! I will give you—see. how patient I nal!—four (lays more If you have not written—a word wi;l suffice, Just 'I love you still, Cyril; be satisfied!'—sty that time, 1 most conclude that you havo discoverer] that you do not really love tae, an•I that you wish me to follow your es - ample and remain—silent. Yours, dearest, till death, Cyril. Ile read it again and again until ho had got it by heart; and rt every loving phrase ho bit his Hos and ground his teeth. It only Cyril llurno lay under tho heap of leavei instead of, or beside, Mecca South' Then he carefully, and slowly, and with something like enjoyment, first tore it into small fragments and then burned it bit by bit. As ho did so it occurred to him that Norah, when ahe returned to Santleigh, might ask the postmis- tress if there had been any letter for her on a certain date and ho sat clown and laboriously manufacture(' an envelope, so that it might bear tho nppearanco of having been through the post, and, inclosing u charity appeal, laid it with the other ,fie,/: weeey Yaa4asTew-tsy es letters. UNRIVALLED FLAVOR Naturrl Green Ceylon Toa Packet only in sealed lead pazkets, the same as d©iicro �s S. Lada 31ack Tea. 41c, CO:. and 30c per Ib. AT ALL Q'2OCERS. I Li.c y 3acnb1F.�ti .,c .Z�A7Lr� -e Gra: •.,, 1°.:310:3 has Piittco:1 It on too. IrlAGNIFICENT Blue FoxFkff NO MONEY REQUIRED 'Mink or It.. b•a,+tll1 rag of r1u. Yoe. tie 'noel A.►ktaablo lot worn, `leen ebeeiutely bee. Blab u• cnet we. n..cy 41..1, before. 1144 only rra.on we ,.n paver to do 1t Is trot r. arsenal for theo, Laws., n:.. 1'.. rod -r u$ : h.4,+11 a,n1 n u: fur s„mmer 4,4 got 16.0:, ue�rl a est. The Watt 1, 41 $.baa bony nre,ly 4 e.c� wide. to de et n., ha'J•otnat Moe }• a 1u,, eeryr.,h, watt, frog,. left ua,.4r..Ja-d, the rem- etad..of sat u n•.4 er.ante ted wait lour b -,.g tells of blue Vox&La Bob. Leo ds.,• a r.:r Ems sn.r I•. 're bee. go en away an.1341 e n V. 111 en easy. d•�.% • .:. I Iry Nee i r rare awl add: au, platy. y, :LJ lt. 4110 c,..e l 3v s 2O res ut Picture Post -Cards to eel at 10 . art (4 art, la• seta They are bra,.tlp.11y u 4onol .11 the mgt..red eel lite Let c.4ea. Bu.h an wt. no 107 wa „ev. red,,.q before to the wo,. en loot R:ruofCanada You.uul14'(h 7 au.C:Ieu to tie Y..r hL,nr. 36.1 . ou4 Loh ;Watt lxr, he mete b n.n.tbe or rr ,re aql .h. and r.n:rtnl.•r, a went o..( leu. 1,0 rent. Write. 4..say W taut 7. u a.,•1 -.1.4 11.e I'M?. t. P,.•. sni. 1, at; ell. Colonial Art Co , (.r e. t'. Toronto 4(0,1 rf , • " a a r ..�', e• -ere .,i 3 -tt`-r.• .•3 - KENTUJKY'S GREATEST THOROUGHBRED SALE '.VILI. Be: THC Fasig.Tipton Co's Sixth Annual Sale TO RE HELD AT WILSON'S HOR3E4EN'S HEADQUARTERS LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, DECEMBER 12 - 16, 1905. Entire disposol sale of Maj. B. C. 'Phomas & Thos. R. Gardner, Lixiana Stud, Col. W. L. Simmons; Ashgrove Stud, Estate of E. W. Lee. R. S. Payne. ALI. TIIE PROMINENT BREEDERS have made entries, compris- ing Stallions, Brood Mares, Yearlings and horses to race Commencing Monday Morning, December 4 FASI(LTIPTON & CO. will sell at VANTASSELL and KEARNEY'S, New York City, the entire Rancho def Paso Stud, of California ' Comprising Stallions and ilrocd Mares of extrme quality. POR CATALOGUE OF LEXINGTON SAL AnDRESS Thee, F. Kalty, Lox!ngton, Ky. FOR CATALOGUE OF RANCHO DEL PASO SALE AD3RKSS Iaslg-Tipton Co. Madlaon square Cardeat, tl. Y. *..') '{ k•tt-Myst �• Y"'"..rY.�;.• f,7. -k a7:�v-•1..l.A+31' r had dons since the one of the aur- hand for a moment with a self -pi s - der, and woke the next morning II: "'scion morn marked oven than u( y ofd.d proportionately better spirits. nr After all, he told himself as "I'nt glad you have come up, n packed his portmanteau, things diel Guildford," said the earl. "1 ant nut wear so black a look. In a few convinced that you needed a change' t hours ho would bo with Norah, in and he looked at the pate face, from 1 , the sante house with her. Ile had an which Guildford Berton was trying . immense belief in himself, and sonnet- with a snide to smooth its haggard - how he felt that he could %tin her. As ness. "I'nt afraid you let tho estate 1 to his secret, there was no reason worry you more than you should. why it should not remain his until Fe But you must take a holiday. 'There - died, and afterward. Even if a sus- seem to be a great many people in n r t t n a r t s h a it rn w h picfon arose that ik'cca had met town. Fashion changes a great deal, with foul play, there was absolutely I find. In my day there was a regu- nothing to direct suspicion toward lar season, and when it was ov_r, him. No ono knew of his intimacy everybody left London. But it Is not with the girl—of that he was assur so now, and a great ninny families and no ono would suspect (het remain; w•hy, 1 do not know—Parlia- ment, the eminently respectable Guild- I suppose. At any rate, some ford Berton, would have anything to friends have found us out," he con- do with her disappearance. tinned, with a self-satisflnd emit•, Cyril llurno would most certainly; deux Norah has been spending quite: 1 turn up again; bel not until l.e, a gay time. To -night sho is going Guildford Berton, had won Norah for lit a dance at Gore house, aro you his wife, and oven when Cyril ap•! not. Norah?" pearod upon the scene, little hare: • Norah, who was reclining listlessly could ensue. After all, there were, on a long settee, half started, and Os- good grounds for supposing that smiled. Cyril had run away with Deceit. l "If you are not too tired, you had Ilo continued laying this flattering better go too." resutned the earl. unction to his soul until ho grew 1 "I should Ivo very glad," Reid Iter - quite cheerful and confident. ! ton. Then, as the earl rose to leave "Keep all letters that come," he the room, Berton said: "Hero are signed in the deaf and dumb ]an- your letters. 'Fhey are nil answered. gauge to the old ttOUMti, his house- "Thanks," said the earl. "Will you keeper, "tthother they aro fur me or put them on tho davenport, please 1 the Court. Bind that. And don't will look at them tomorrow," and let any ono come into the house; no ho event out. one," be motioned twice over. "I At the word "letter," Norah look - hate people prying about the place ed ftp, and her heart leaped. She did while 1 ant natty. Isere aro the keys not expect a letter from Cyril; why ho addend. "All except the back gar-. should she? And yet— den gnte. I've lost that or locked It '•1 have a letter for you, Lacy up in my portmanteau; but you won't Norah." want to go in there till I cone back, Norah took it and glanced at it, you never do, you know." and her color, which had risen, Rud } The old hag shook her head. No. deftly faded. she said, and no ono should curve "It is only a hospital circular," sh' through the door in the wall till he said, coldly. canto back. Altogether Guildford Merton stfirt- ed for London in fairly good spirits. Harman need bo anxious no longer and"—he spoke slowly and (Witter ateIy—"and as things have turne. out, I think it would be well tt write 'Finis' at the end of this chap ler in Miss South's career. Wo nor.% say no more, trouble no more aline, her—or her husband," he add( -I smoothly, but with a sharp giant under his lids at her face. A shiver of pain ran througl Norah, but she managed to inclin her head with un appearance of sat isfaction. "I-1 am glad it has ended so,' she said in low voice. "I will tot Harman. She will be --she is—von grateful to you. Mr. Jkerton, for al the trouble you have taken." "It is nothing," ho said, quietly but earnestly. "She is a dcpendef4 of yours, Lardy Norah, and thercfori las a claim upon mc." There was not tnurh to find feu!! with in the speech. 11 was rexspect ful, even to the point of reverential, and yet It Jarred upon Norah. "I hope you left all web at Haub lelgh," she said, for the sake of bay ing something. ('I'u he Continued.) f•'AIt3t N�'O'Tt'It, The genuine, tilt -blood, thorough bred scrub farmer never likes high- class stock, line varieties of fruit*ee a pretty home, or improved !eremite es. '1'r/ hint any old thing is good enough. There should he no communicatingbetween the stable and the carriage house, and the manure heap should be located its far away from the lib ter as possible. Ammonia ((nines crack and destroy varni..h and holt the colors both of painting and lin ing W.hen found has been founto con. tain impurities, or sours mere quick. ly than it ought to. the faint is fail at the door of the rnilkinan, the dealer, the milk station, the fanner or the cow; but in many instances it does not occur to the pers•,n who finds the fault to lay it just whee it belongs, but where it is settle.'brought home, and that is to the housekeeper. The chief fertiiining element is poultry manure is nitrogen in the form of ammoniumcompounds. II wood ashes or limo or any alkaline compound IS ;nixed with the poultry manure, the nitrogen passes off into the form of ammolua. Uhemicalle stated, the transformation is sorn.s thing like this: The ammonium nye trate of the mennro uniting with the Caustic po:.h of the nq•Nl ashes If resolved into potassium nitrate. we. ter and free ammonia. Now soil --1 gypsum with the hen manure hat )fast the opposite effect, because ih•_er materials mechanically absorb aril eorir"rt a the volatile an(mvnivat coal l'o..nds. ( 7 • "I sent you all that cine before thine" "'Thank you," rhe said, an(I Rhe . Ile was going to be with Norah. Ile leaned back eind unfolded her fan. the had intercepted Cyril's letter, and ns diamonds glittering on her arm with Norah would certainly not write to every movement. hi:» in the prescribed four days, "I have some news 1 should like to Cyril llurno would. like a wise plan. give you, Lady Norah." conclude that she had jilted hint. and Norah looked up, and as her %;lance he. Guildford Berton, would be left a met his, her face paled. She qu;isod elem. Heid. of what nature his news must be %thin he arrived ret Park Lane the "I have beard from my agent Inc."r earl and Norah had just finished dict- ho said, speaking in a low, confclen- ner, and Guildford Berton dressed tial tone "Ile has traced" --he moia- hastily hut carefully, and joined tented his lips—"Recca South. There them in the drawing -room. was a marriage, there Is no doubt Even as he shook hands ttith the about that. and they have left I:ng- earl, he glanced sideways toward lend," Norah, and he noticed that though Norah tried to speak, to say !clime she looked better, she was still pale, indifferent word, but her lips refuted. and that there was a sad and absent "You will be very glad to tell NI-, expression In her eyes. Harman that," he went on. "front She wore a leveitiful evening drevl all my nen ran gather. the girl of a more elaborate style than he seemed very happy." had ever seen her in hete,re, and it Nornh's face grew even paler. and sermed to him that she wan changed her long Witte" swept her cheeks as In other ways than that of her a'- she kept her eyes fixed on the car- pet "Vs'7 ha01y,'t he went aro. "Yrs. tire She looked more of a womia of the world, and she gave ►los her