llfl TALKS About Women's Nooks. A well known American portrait painter asserts that the necks of the women of this country are becoming longer and more slender, year by year, and he holds the highcollur Another man—also, an artist —recently made some comparisons between the lengths of women's necks painted ten years ago, Ave years ago and now, and claims that the average feminine neck has elongated almost to the extent of an inch during the past decade. Soino Fashions In Hntrdresslnc. Fashions in hairdresslug still remain extremely attractive. Large, loose waves are as much to the fore as ever. Combs are indispensable. Plain tor toise shell and those studded with Imi tation diamonds are most used. No headdress is complete without two side combs and a Spanish or empire at the back. Some classical-featured folks do well to wear the coiffure low, ai)d the beau ty of this is added to by a large black velvet bow. For evening wear there is still the pretty fashion of looping ribbons in and out of the colls of the hair, which gives height, and the Japanese style of wearing two large roses on each side of the center coil In among the waves. An Arivonturous Young Woman. Miss Vera Butler, a young English girl, recently drove an automobile from London to Paris and back again, and has won the distinction of being the first Englishwoman to accomplish the task. The journey from Paris to Havre occupied one day, and that be tween Southhampton and London tiie .same length of time. The certificate for driving an automobile, which is compulsory in France, was obtained by Miss Butler at Havre, after passing the required examination before the comptroller des mines. Among the recreations pursued with enthusiasm from time to time by this young worn- i an have been golfing, swimming, boat ing, cycling and mountaineering in the high Alps. She has climbed the Graud Millet twice, and has hunted wild pig at Biarritz. A Komarkuhle Woman Lnwyer, A truly unique woman lawyer passed away recently iu the death of Miss L. Blanch Fearing of Chicago. Although blind, she was a writer and a lawyer of merit. She was a native of western lowa. HIT first poem was published when she was eight years old. and four years lutrr her poems were appearing regularly in the Boston Transcript. They were of sufficient merit to call out friendly letters of commendation from Oliver Wendell Holmes, John rti*in<*)■'«. Braids, from about two to four inch- wide, woven of - II!, bullion and JfbM.il'o ci d, and braid in phi it lugs of chenille emit and strips of w I tilier, arc In tin* provision for the tlnlsh of handsome hciuiwi at Some of the Imported models httve 111, edge of till' cruwn, isp i ii«H> wh u ..r t hi| f„*h lon, bound with the uuti iwir of these braids, the wider will be employed as binding for the la tins of hat*, varying tile welt altd folds of velvet, and It may be t(>•'> will llud place as bows and knots (laid and silver laces are 111 tin. |i„ ( of ritllliiery garnishing wurn, hut t« jret tnejr ilo not i(!ve Indication uf being • Titenslvely employed. The latest millinery ornaments that have come out are of enameled metal, seemingly silver, studded with crystals. The designs are usually fanciful, in scrolls picked out with minute blos soms, and the coloring catching the pastel tints, these jewels are extremely beautiful. Nevertheless, there Is evi dence that preference this season will be given to ornaments of cut steel, with favor shown by the esthetic and artistic to those copied from old Egyp tian designs, a continuance of fancy for conceits of rhine-stones, and some revival of cut jet. Long buckles are a distinctive feature of the mode in mil linery jewelry, but the cabochon, to set in the heart of the great rosette, still a conceit of the fashion in trim , ming, is still seen with various other devices in brooches.—Millinery Trade Review. Water Cress Culture for Women. From a small experiment in water cress culture made on Long Island by a New York woman broken down by bookkeeping, says the New York Post, has grown an industry that congenial ly and profitably occupies no smaller number of the sex in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Virginia. It requires o nly a little capital, sup plemented by an abundance of time, patience and philosophy; it may be en fjiged in wherever suitable springs can be bought or contiguous to some centre of distribution, and is particu larly (o lie recommended to women en ervated by a sedentary occupation nud needing a change and yet who must rapport themselves. Of the increasing demand for the product there can be 110 doubt. Europeans living here regu larly use this relish, and Americans without a natural taste for it are fast acquiring one. Besides garnishing meats with it some cook it like spinach, to which vegetable they prefer it. Perhaps the leading woman water cress grower in the country lives on the Bonnie Springs Farm, near Ship pensburg, Penn. She made her e.t penses the first year, when she had only one series of springs on an option from an unlucky grower. Now she has cus tomers from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico and westward indefinitely. She deals with wholesalers in the cities, metropolitan and summer re sort hotels and transatlantic steamship companies. Site has standing orders for 50 to 500 bunches once, twice and thrice weekly, and one for the latter quantity every day, to be doubled 011 Saturdays. Sin 1 hires ten men all the year round and confines her own activity to acting 11s overseer. One of her self-imposed duties is to tramp over her 14S acres every day she is at Bonnie Springs. The bids there, from which all her winter supply comes give 50.000 bunch es to a cutting. She can get the cress es to Philadelphia in five hours, to New York in seven, in 24 to Chicago or to St. Louis, St. Augustine or Palm Beach. Shipments to Portland. Mo., or even to Portland, Ore., reach their destination fresh and crisp sand wiched in pounded ice. Watercress is a hardy perennial with antiscorbutic virtues, is propagated from seed or rooted divisions and can be grown only in spring water, pre ferably impregnated with lime, to which environment it is indigenous. IMrectoire muffs are worn with the large picture hats. Hengalines, corded silks and poplins are much in evidence, as are also liber ty satins. When ordering your winter boots have the toes rounded a trifle more than you did last season. The front panel may be said to bo the feature of the newest skirts. It is seen in lace, binding anil embroidery. l»esplte the rumor that boleros would not be so much in evidence, they are a part of many of the lafist models. Models of blue cloth are trimmed with black and gold, whitc.aud gold, and ot'ti u a combination of the three. Trench tailors are making bewitch ing little shoulder capes to take til" plflce of tile Scarlet golf coat, which is no longer considered modish since it became so popular. The time honored and popular blue serge suit will lie more in evidence than ever, and many shades of blue will be worn. Kcscdo green and dull russet will also be popular shades. ■ '! he litisslau blouse is in evidence. They blouse slightly at the back and front and are elaborately trluiuu I with fur. To complete them a handsome belt of It its-. .1 n enamel Is considered almost essential. Among short coats is one of beige colored cloth, With stitched levers of white taffeta. A turned back piece of silk gives ii hood like effect about the sluiuhlers. The buttons are of euuimd, mill the cuffs show again the silk tit 111< h the i oliar. Cold tinsel hatbands testify to |h* continuance of tie military spirit. I'er haps tile oddest Hew departure Is the application of the veil, whlelt. Instead ot covering the face, ifc now drawn up over the brim and garnitures, forming soft, transparent folds. Ittg black and white checks are to lie seen In hats which come tiiidi*r the term serviceable. Some ill somethlliK of a sailor sha|H- are mude entirely of the check or the cheek Will farm M giHtot ed bow as u trimming fur lb« front ot u long napped felt. g THE REALM OF FASHION. 1 New York City.—No woman ever yet had too many shirt waists. The com fortable garments grow In favor as the materials for making thein do In va- AN ATTRACTIVE SHIRT WAIST. rlety and beauty. At the moment striped and figured French flannels, Venetian waist cloth, embroidered Henrietta and cashmere are all shown, as well as the same materials in plain colors aud all the range of taffeta and soft silks. The May Manton design Il lustrated here includes all the latest features and is made from Henrietta in pastel blue, with the figures and vel vet of a darker shade. The deep, turn over collar is exceedingly smart, and the bishop sleeves are a feature of the aewest waists shown. The back Is seamless, and meets the full fronts, the lifting being entirely accomplished by shoulder and under arm seams. The fronts are full, gath ered at both neck and waist, and olouse very s'.igblly for a short space pacli side of the centre. The collar is :ut in two sections and attached to the neck. The sleeves are one-seamed and individually full. They are gathered at both the upper and lower edges, and ire attnehed to the cuffs at ti e wrists, where they lap over and close Invisibly. To cut this waist for n woman of medium size four yards of material twenty-one inches wide, three mid three-quarters yards twenty-seven Inches wide, two and three-quarter yards thirty-two Inches wide, or two yards forty-four inches wide, will be required. I.ndlet' Illou«e. The blouse that is slightly more formal than the shirt waist yet easy and comfortable, fills a place that no other does and is constantly growing In popularity. The smart May Mnuton blouse illustrated iu th-« large engrav ing belongs to just that class and can be worn during the morning with per fect propriety, while at the same time It will give no offense later In the day. The model Is made of Venetian tlauuel 1 in hunter's green, with vest and stock of white sat lu-faced broadcloth, ma-' clilne stitched, and revels of velvet iiiatc/ilug the llaiir.'.'l. l»owu each: front, below the levers, are small but 1 toiiholcx through which the gold chain links are sllp|MHl that hold the frouts j in place and (jive a peculiarly clile el ' feet. Countless combinations ami a vit tlety of materials can be substituted, however, and tiny silk cord and gold buttons call take the place of the Huts If ucslrcd, or these call be euiliv'y uiiiltteii and the fronts hooked luvUl bl.v into place. Henrietta, plain and embroidered cashmere, dnip d'ctc, l'rench tianuel and taffeta are all suit able anil, the color of both wulst ami vest can be chaiigt d to itiiy I hint; tin 1 wearer may prefer. The foundation for the blouse In titled lltilliK with sluglc ilarts, am! , which closes at the centre from, on i It are nrrauged the fronts, v»«nt and ! back, The fronts are smooth and Without fulness at the shoulders, liud are drawn In at the waist Hue, The I vest Is attached permanently to the right side of the lining and hooks over j onto the left beneath the left trout. ! < The stock collar Is joined to the test sud clusea Invisibly at lite centre back i The bishop sleet vs are not over (till. 1 1 mid are finished at the wrist;? wltb straight cuffs. To make this blouse for ft woman of medium size three and three-quarter yards of material twenty-one inches wide, tiiree yards twenty-seven inches wide/ or one and three-quarter yards forty-four inches wide, will be re quired, with five-eighth yard fifty inches wide, or three-quarter yard twenty-one inches wide, for vest and stock collar. Now Style of Rever*. They do uot turn over the new ro vers, nor are they worn tiaily laid cut on the chest, as formerly. In the pres ent case, the "revere" are ornamental, but only show when the jacket fronts are not closed. They are simply the long strip of facing to tiie jacket fronts and could not possibly be visible if the garment Mere worn closed. This Is a true "L'Alglon" fashion aud one which is extremely dressy. Sleeve TJnks of Crocheted Silk. A "cuffbutton" suggests a linn, hard knob of metal; a pair of sleeve links suggests send-precious stones or gold disks linked together by a golden chtrtn. The newest fastening for the cuffs of a shirt waist of line flannel or cashmere has the top, which Is all that Is visible, made of crocheted, heavy, twisted silken cord. The same thing does for sleeve links, but the single button is the better design. It IK Not Tight. Those who try on the row garments declare that the I/Aiglon collar is not so tight as to prove choking. It is high, but broad, and a welcome change from the strangling stock collars which have garroted us last summer. These last entirely earned the name of "cho ker." which was sometimes applied to them by the shop girls who sold them to customers. (■riM-Tlireiutrd Velln. The new veils are chiefly of a lace like pattern, a fact which Is to be de plored on the score of beeomiugness. Some are even traced with gold or sil ver thread or beads, while the old gauze veil in white, gray or neutral tints is resuscitated. For livening IVraps. Grecian satin, a new wool material for evening wraps and tea gowns, lias a tiny diagonal stripe oil the surface. A Sling Fitting Vntlerhcxly. Pretty tritles have their place, but the demand for the useful garment never falls. The smooth, snug tittlug uuderhody that covers the corset with out fulness aiul that, when desired, can lie made of materia' that means warmth, is a comfort that every wom an recognizes at a glance. The May Mautou model illustrated is fitted with the same care given to gowns, and, as Indicated, can be made in various shaped uccks, with any length sleeve preferred. For cold weal her, Canton flannel ami ot)tiug tianuel, as well as inl in, are much liked, as all these j materials provide protection agaiust i Jack Frost, but long cloth, cambric or j nainsook can be substituted by those v. ho piefer greater ilaluiiuess. ! The backs Include ,i centre seaiu and the broad uiidcrarm gores that mean a perfect lit and curved lines. The fronts :iie fitted with single darts aim clove at the centre with buttons and buttonholes. The sleeves are cut ill one place, the outer scam iMending to the elbow only, and tit smoothly from shoulder■> to wrists. To tut tills umlcrbod.v for a wouiau I'MIIKMUOUY. of Medium »Uf, two ami three eighth yard* oi nt» r lut tweuty seven inches wide, or ous and .'.;ree fourth yard thirty sU Inches wide, will b# reguirwd. Da TALMAGE'S SERMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE Br THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: Thn Gold on Calf of Modem Idol atry The Spirit of Greed Destroys Those Who Are in ltd Grasp • Money Got Wrongfully is n Curse* iCopyrißlit IWMI. | WASFX-VOTON. 1). C.— ln this discourse Dr. Talmnge shows how the spirit of greed destroys when it takes possession of a man and that money got in wrong ways is a curse; text, Exodus xxxii, 20, ''And lie took the calf which they had made and burnt it in the fire and ground it to powder and strewed it upon the water and made the children of Israel drink of it." People will have a god of some kind, and they prefer one of their own making. Here co > the Israelites, breaking off their golden earrings, the men as well as the women, for in those times there was masculine rs well as feminine decoration. Where u 1 they get these beautiful gold earrings, coming up. as they did, from the desert? Oh. they borrowed them of the Egyptians when they left Egypt. These earrings are piled up into a pyramid of glittering beauty. "Any more earrings to bring?" says Aaron. None. Fire is kindled, the earrings are melted and pour ed into a mold not of an eagle or a war charger, but of a silly calf; the gold cools down, the mold is taken away, and the idol is set up on its four legs. An altar is built in front of the shining calf. Then the people throw up their arms and gy rate and shriek and dance vigorously and worship Moses has been six weeks on Mount Sinai, and he comes back and hears the howling and sees the dancing of these golden calf fanatics, and he loses his pa tience, and he takes the two plates of stone on which were written the Ten Com mandments and flings them so hard against a rock that they split all to pieces, When a man gets angry, he is t-.pt to i break all the Ten Commandments. Moses rushes in, and he takes this calf god and throws it into a hot tire until it is melted all out of shape and then pulverizes it— not by the modern appliance of nitro mu j riatic acid, but by the ancient appliance of 1 niter or by the old fashioned file. lie stirs for the people a most nauseating draft. ; lie takes this pulverized golden calf and throws it in the only brook which is ac cessible. and the people are compelled to I drink of that brook or not drink at all. i IJut they did not drink all the glittering stuff thrown on the surface. Some of it flows on down the surface of the brook to ■ the river and then flows on down the river i to the sea, jind the sea takes it up and j bears it to tne mouth of all the rivers, and i when the tides set back the temains of i this golden calf are carried tip into the Potomac and the Hudson aud the Thames and the Clyde and the Tiber. And men go out and they skim the glittering sur face, and they bring it ashore and they make another golden calf, and California ; and Australia break off their golden ear- I rings to augment the pile, and in the fires j of financial excitement and struggle all these things are melted together, and while we stand looking and wondering i what will come of it, 10, we find that the golden calf of Israelitish worship has be ! come the golden calf of European and ' American worship. Pull aside this curtain, and you see the golden calf of modern idolatry. It is not, like other idols, made out of stocks or ! stone, but it has an car so sensitive that it can hear the whispers on Wall street and j Third street and State street, and the footfalls in the Hank of England arid the | flutter ot a Frenchman's heart on the j bourse. Jt has an eye so keen that it can i see the rust on the farm of Michigan ! wheat and the insect in the Maryland peach orchard and the trampled grain un der the hoof of the Russian war charger. It is so mighty that it swings any way it will the world's shipping. It has its foot on all the merchantmen and the steam ers. It started the American Civil War and under Cod stopped it.and it decided the Tuiko-Kussian contest. One broker in September, IMi!'. in New York, shouted. "'One hundred and sixty for a million?" and the whole continent shivered. The golden calf of the text has, as far as Amer ica is concerned, its right front foot in New York, its left front foot in Chicago, its right back foot in Charleston, its left back foot in New Orleans, and when it shakes itself it shakes the world. Oh. this is a mighty god—the gulden calf of the world's worship! Hut every god must have its temple, and this golden calf ot the text is no excep tion. Its temple is vaster than St. Paul's Cathedral in England, and St. Peter's in Italy, and the Alhambra of the Spaniards, and the Parthenon of the Creeks, and the Taj Mahal ot the Hindoos, anil all the cathedrals put together. Its pillars are grooved and fluted with gold, and its ribbed arches are hovering gold, and its chandeliers are descending gold, and its floors are tessellated gold, and its vaults are crowded heaps of gold and its spires and domes are soaring gold, and its organ pipes are resounding gold, and its pedals are tramping gold, and its stops pulled out are Hashing gold, while, standing at the head ot the temple, as the presiding diety. are the hoofs and shoulders and eyes and tin and noatrill ot the calf of gold. Further, every god must have not only its temple, but its altar of sacrifice, and this golden calf of the text is no exception. Its altar is not made out of stone as other altars, but out of counting room desks aud fireproof safes, and it is a broad, a long, a high altar. The victims sieriliced on it are the Swai touts and the Ketehams and the Finks and ten thousand other people who are slain before this golden calf. \\ hat docs this cod rare about the groans nad struggles of the victims before it? Willi i ild. metallic eve. it looks on and yet lets them suffer. What . n altar' \V hat a sacrifice oi mind, hotly and s<>ui! The physical In alth of a great multitude is flung mi to th'n sacrificial nltnr. Tlu*v cannot sleep, aml they take clilorul uinl morphine and intoxicants. Koine tit i lit hi struggle in a nightmare of storks, and at 1 o'clock in the morning suddenly ri*<- up shouting: "V thousand shaie* nf \ew York t'entral one hun dred and eight ami a half, l ike it!" until the whole family is affrighted, and the sin t, i line I liell iniinhi ■ If a man bv a wrong course is drterin ined lo go to perdition I suppose ion will have to lit him go. lint lie put* his Wile and • hildieii into ri|uip.tgc that is lilt* ama/cuo-iii of the uteilues, and the driver Ush* « the liorst * into two whirl winds, ami the spok** hash in the sun and the i| ildvii headgear uf toe harness itlt'Hitt* until black talauutv takes tile bits ul the horses ami stops them anil shoals to tie" luxuriant tHcupalits ot the equipage, "itel nut 1 " They get out. lliet get down. That husband and latin r flung li s family so hard Illr) 10-11 r got up There »*« the mark on I hem for life the mark ot s Split hoof I Its death dealing tnxd ot the golden calf. SOLOMON OFFERED in DM aarrirtee en niie •ctaamii 'MI won and IJOUUI shrt p Hut that was • Isms ssenncs «tMup«i«d witn the multitude ot men who ars MO rifieing themselves on this alfar of 1 lie golden calf nnd sacrificing their families with them. The soldiers of (Jeneral llave lock in India walked literally ankle deep in the blood of"the house of massacre," where 2f)o whi.te women and children liad been slain by Hie sepoys. But the blood about this altar of the golden calf flows up to the knee, flows up to the girdle, (lows to the shoulder. Hows to the lip. (Jrcat (tod of heaven and earth, have mercy on those who immolate themselves on tbia altar! The golden calf has none. Still the degrading worship goes on, and the devotees kneel and kiss the dust and count their golden beads and cross them selves with the blood of their own sacri fice. The music rolls on under the arches. It is made of clinking silver and clinking gold and the rattling specie of the banks and brokers' shons and the voices of all the exchanges. The soprano of the wor ship is earrie.l bv the timid voices of men who have juft begun to speculate, while the deep bass rolls) out from those who for ten years have been stcened in the seeth ing cauldron. Chorus of voices rejoicing over what they have made; chorus of voices wailing over what they have lost. This temple of which 1 speak stands open day and nicht. and there is the glittering god with his four feet on broken hearts, and there is the smoking altar of sacrifice, new victims every moment on it.and there are the kneeling devotees, and the doxology of the worship rolls on, while death stands with moldy and skeleton arm beating time for the chorus —"More, more, more!" Some people are very much surprised at the actions of people in the Stock KN change. New York. Indeed it is a scene sometimes that paralyzes description and is beyond the imagination of any one who has never looked in. What snapping of finper and thumb and wild gesticulation and raving like hyenas, and stamping like buffaloes, and swaying to and fro, and jostling and running one upon another, and deafening uproar, until the president of the exchange strikes with his mallet four or five times, crying, "Order, order!" and the astonished spectator goes out into the fresh air feeling that he has escaped from pandemonium. What does it all mean? I will tell yon what it means. The devotees of every heathen temple cut themselves to piec.s and yell and gyrate. This vociferation rnd gyration of the Stock Kxcbange is all appropriate. This is the worship of the golden calf. 15ut my text suggests that this worship has to be broken up, as the behavior of Moses on this occasion indicated. There are those who say that this golden calf spoken of in the text was hollow and metolv plated with gold. Otherwise Moses "ould not have carried it. I dc not know t. l!ut somehow, perhaps by the assistance of his friends, he takes up this golden calf, which is an infernal in suit to Clod and man, and throws it into the fire, and it is melted. And then it comes out and is cooled off, and by some chemical appliance or by an old-fashioned lile it is pulverized, and it is thrown into the brook, and as a punishment the people are compelled to drink the nauseating stuff. So you may depend upon it that ew York and London, with one cut of the red scythe of destruction. Mill go down. Twenty-five thousand miles of conflagration! The earth will wrap itself round and .'otind in shroud of flame and lie down to perish. What then will become of your golden calf? Who then so p-or as to worship it? Melted or between the upper and nether millstones of f.illiuj mountains ground to powder. ] I I J I down, Moloch down, Juggernaut down, golden calf down! The judgments of Cod. like M »sos in tlio text, will rush in and break up I liis worship, and 1 say let the work goon until every man shall learn to speak truth with hid neighbor, and those who make engagements shall fell themselves bound to keep them, and when a man who will not repent of his business iniquity, but goes on wishing to satiate his cannibal ap petite by devouring widows' houses. Khali, by the law of the land, be compelled to exchange the brownstone front for the penitentiary. Let the golden calf perish! Hut if we have made this world our god, when we come to die we shall sell our idol demolished, llow much of this world are you going to take with you into the next? Will you have two pockets—one in each side of your shroud? AY ill you cushion your casket with bonds and mort gages and certificates of stock ' Ah, no! The ferryboat that crosses this Jordan takes no baggage—nothing heavier than an immaterial spirit. Where are the men who tried War ren Hastings iu \\ .stminsier hall? Where are the pilgrim fathers who put oit for America? Where* are the veterans who on the Fourth of July, 1794. marched from New York park to the Jlattery and lired a salute and then marched back again? And the Society of the ( incinnati, who dined that afternoon .it '.routine r.iflee House, on Wall street, and (Srant Thor ium, who that afternoon waited fifteen miuutes at the foot of Maiden lane for the Jlrooklvn ferryboat, then got in and was rowed aerors by two men with oars, fhe tide so Mronvj that it > .is an hour ami ten iiiiti*i'is I' ion tiny landed? Where aiv tin veterans that fired the salute. nlt he nn . : |h«' ('in- unall *.» .i tv # . that aflertiooa dr..t \ t » the patriotic toast, and the <>.ir*men that rowed the 1 oat, and the pennle who were trans pi i'ed? (ionc! Oh, tins is a fleeting uorld. It is dying- world. A man wno had worshiped it all his days in his dy ing moment described hiiin»eli whin he said, Fool, fool, loot!" \\ lieu your have hrv.ttluil tlmlr !a*t uiul tlu> iilil, tvriiiklad ami trenililiini I i-iiU can n.i in*ii• ■ l»- I'Ut u| IOII your heml t ii ,i liU'n-iiiti, (!IKI will b# t.i >.III a father an I uiiiilit'i' both. giving v'lii ihi- ilefeii'ii oi tin- mil 1 ami tli«' I'oiufort nt tlu* other. I'm have >w i. HI I'.uil'a !„ ,«i| hnii. tint . ,li*. -. <1 i*-»t .'.ml rn»e again, "kteu »■ till ill .tin ■ « hieli *h'e|i 11, .It ,n> ahall <• •>> 1 hung uitli llim?" Ami when >our vliil illi'ii go away flow ymi, til* »ne»t <1 vl nig*. \.ui will not 1". thi'iii ami *.i* '. » ul* liv forever. lie mi Iv want* In tiolil th-ni ttr vim 4 lit tie while 111- Mill give theui bails In you again, aii.l Mr will have them all waiting lor Villi at tlie gate* ot • tenia! Wei. mil*. Oh, what a ll.nl Hi' i-! 11. uill allow you to i uue »o i i-*e that >oil i all |ittt \ - iir in* i nun.l Hi* uei k, while Ho I I i l'miiifin will put Hi* arm* aroutnl your link, ami all (Ik- window* oi lira ten wilt be bill • 111 to li t the rilleellu'll look out ami aee the »|»ei of a rejonnig Father •ul a returned | toligai lm ked in that aim mil i i iuhraii if ul u u »hi|iuig the itulileii rail, ami lot tin* tia» U ; .n< Hun 111 nil-i*e |ir« urine >»e ui t*l all ap|wa «In II the wor 14 ha* turned to aabe* \\ lien kill it (ling liki' • |.||l hnl ail.ill, rtu- tinning heaven* together roll, When .in.h i' y»| anil yet more liead Hwaita the high truiuji that uake* iU« 4M4.