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b NOVEMBER 6, 1872. " , 1 forward. There was & hollow of sticky clay; | rions crusaders secking refuge sfter a goodly | Nivelle, and Nive, and investment of Bayonne:'| the losd, no profits to the dealer, and noneed of | increase that has talke lace of late years ig but s0on & thin streak of water burstup, and | fight in a hallowed temple. The walls Wargas?nlg campaiien of 1815 présent. a5 Gusiro Bras and e o o a5 oooasion for credit. The | most Earopesn countties 1o the inemaytion of "THE CHICAGO. DAILY. TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY. went on picking up tBir wood. But Berna- dette d do nothing. She stood in dee] LA DAME DE MASSABIELLE.. thought, passing the vision over in her mind | with one voice the whole people cried, covered, and after & short thanksgiving. the | Waterloo.” Of Licutenent General Law, Colo- | coal is not to be hanled on cold days during the | articles of foodand drink whichour grand- m‘q looking up. “* A FOUNTAIN O UT OF THE RBOCK !” gothering broke up, 'To the surprise gf all, the | nel of the 718t Foot, the official biog n.ph’y says: | winter, or when tho roads are bad, and then it | fathers regarded as luxuries. In Pruseis tha h C 1;11 “Whut did you see 7" asked the girls again. It was 8o, The next daythe stresk had be- [ road back was already illuminatod, and bonfires | “ Sir John Moore, at the action of Lago, and at | is paid for, and the £9.00 saved will purchase | vearly consumption of meat per head had ad- The Great Frenc atn- Well, some one in white,” replied Bernadette. | come as thick s a man’s vrist. The child relat- | were burning on the mountain summits. the battle of Corunna; expedition to Walcheren ; | many comforts for the family. What is irue of | vanced from 33 pounds in 1805 to 40 pounds in = 2 - i Mins and Jeannie ware afraid. 3 - | ed that the *dame” had desired her to wash _THE ILLUMINATION. served in the Peninsula from 1810 to 1814 af | coul is true of many other things on Wwhich & | 1849, brandy had grown from 3 quarts to 8, and olic Pflgnma,ge to Dear me, T hope it won't Lurt us,” Wo will | and drink in the fountain ; that she hnd gono to | In the evening, the pilgrims sgain assembled | at Tortres Vedras, Badnjoz (wounded), battle of | like saving mey be made. wine from ¢ quart to 2 quarts. The increase in not come to the tto again,” was all theyssid | the river, knowing of no fountain in the rock, | for the procession by torchlight to_the Grotto. | Nive, Pyrenees, &c., &c. Served in the cam- 'PURCHASE OF LIGHTNING-RODS. sugar, again, was from ci}{ ounds to 7 pounds, Lo‘]rdes_ and thought of the vision; but when they got | and that she had been called back. and told that | Thousands of wax tapers were sold and cut in | paign of 1815, inciuding the battle of Waterloo Just at that time, Peter Smith drove up With 8 | and in coffee from 2-3 poundpto4ponnds. These she was to drink of the epring, not the G:we‘; small pieces for those who had not wherewith to | (severely wounded); served three years in | load. Peter is an old schoolmate; we used o | fiyures do mot bring us to the latest She bad obeyed, and the *‘source merveilleuse™ | buy a whole one, As many as 30,000 pilgrims, | the Army of Occupation in France” Not | sit on the same old puncheon geat in the oldJog | times, but the incrense bas beem even , was the conseqlience. The rest of Bernadette's | eech bearing a light, moved in and out of the | the least curious feature of theso statements is | school-house, and take our weekly whippings | in o grester ratio during the years story is more that of a saint than_of & human | intricacies of the mountain paths, singing psalms | the number of wounds these veteran heroes | together; for, in-those days, schools were run | gince 184J. Thus, Kolb estimates the total con- being. The authorities intervened-to stop what | a3 they elowly advanced. It was Like an immense | have survived to so great an age. The Colonel | on the whipping plan. *Why, Peter, you haul- | sumption of sugar per head of the population in they considered a great superstition, until the | galaxy of moving light, and, seen from the val- | Commandant of the ifle Brigade, General Sir | ing corn, when you ought to be home husking ®” | the area of the Zollverein for the year 1860 st Emperor Napoleon I1L. telegraphed to M. Massy | ley, produced an’ indescribable effect. At mid- | Charles Yorke, was wounded at Nivello; -he was | “oll, old fellow, the fact is, one of thoso con- | 7,87 b., sud in the year 1864 it had advanced to to leave this coercive measure alone and the | night the illumination was over, and eachsought | severely wounded at Orthes; at Badajoz he was | founded lightning-rod men came it over me s | 9.23 Ib. Tho annual consumption of the popnla- easantry to their fountain. For several years | rest. Ido not say all did; for there were volun- | again wounded, The, Lgmgms of Tweeddsle, | year ago, and ho holds my note for $£2.20 for a | tion of London is given, on the suthority of the M. Jacomet and Massy were the declared ene- | tary watchers in the Grotto. “I myself threaded | Colonel of the Second Life uards, was wound- | rod. You know I put up a mew kitchen last | Economist, as follows : In the year 1843, sugar, mies of the Lourdaia. Bernadette’s fountain is | through the crypt under the new temple, in the | ed at Vittoris, at Busaco, and in the American | year, and just as f had it ready for use, Mr. | 16.54 Ib.; tea, 1.47 Ih.; cocoa, 0.09 Ib.; wine, g’;i at present said to be a strong stream, and the | dead of night,. to find it full of pilgrims in | war. The Colonel of the Sixteenth Foot, Lieu- | Lightning-Man came along, and just talked me | gallon ; 'spirita, 0.87 gallon.” Tn the vear '1865, numerous - prayer. When sleep threatened toconquer good | tenant General Macdonald, after having served | into the idea that my old, rusty iron rods were | gugar, 1A71b. tes, 1?.26 1b.; cocoa. 1.141b.; wine, CUBES AND MIRACLES | will, thioy joined in dozons and walked up and | in Hanover in 1805, in Sicily in 1806-10, n Spain | not safe, and that I had better put up good cop- | 0.40 galion; spirits, 0.8 gallon. The sugarcons here performed fill all the papers. A church is | down. Two processions, of 100 pilgrimsinesch, | in 1812, and in Canads in 1814, found himself in | per rods, that wonld never rust out, and which | sumption of France perhoad is7.4 ‘ilogammes, being built on the grotto that has already cost | left the crypt to walk around the Grotto, singing | the Waterloo campaign, At the great battle he [ would always be relisble. The fellow enid that | that of Prussia, 8.75; Austriz, 2.46; Russia, hqms they told the tale to their mother. “ Nongense,” said Mme. Soubirous, shrugging her ghoulders. * You fancy; you did not see, my child.” Bernadette maintained she had, and related the whole scene, with the description of her vision, in the same worde as to her sister and friend. “Well, I will not let you go to the grotto any more,” was Mme. Soubirous’ conclusion, Berna- dette returned no answer. The next day was Fridey, and the child talked of nothing but her ‘“dame.” On Saturday some one asked her who she was liko. She said she fancied she had seen such faces at church. As she talked on of the Fifty Thousamd Pilgrims en the Spot. History of the Virgin Visions of Ber- nadette Soubirous, : )3 #ame vision inceseantly the mother was prevailed A Appearance of the Woman in White-=- | on%o allow herto go to the grotte on i follow- | 2,500,000 froncs;, convents are_to cover the | might prayers. s7as wounded no fewer than times— in the leg, | these hollow copper rods would carry more light- | 1.2 ; Holland, 7.03 ; Belgium, 406 ; whil Engs Bursiing Forth of the Mirac- ing Sunday, and the only Testriction Madame ‘mountains around ; the Orleans Railroad Com- 'he following morning saw the multitndes | in the neck, and throngh the body, wounding the | ning, pound to pound, than any other Jand stands at 19.88 Kilogrammes. 1t is the same Soubirous made was that Bernadetto shonld not | pany have added a branch in order to render ac- | again gathered ronnd the rocks of Massabielle, | lungs ™ metal; pnd then my old woman® wanted | with tes. England also uses ebove half as much ulous spring_ be left alone, but that the two girls, Marie and | cess easier. Bernadette ie af this present mo- | though a fearful deluge of rain had ushered in = —_— the ‘mew rod, for she is _terribly | silk as the whole of the rest of Europe. Jeanne, should stop on each side of her all the | ment a Sister of Charity in the Hospitalof | the day. RDEN. afraid of lightning. Two hundred and thirty- time. Bernadette walked very fast, and when | Nevers. Her father and mother have died, but A MIHAGTE—THE DUNB SPEAR: THE FARM AND GAl . two bushels of rorn will just pay that note, with GENERAL NEWS ITEMS she came to Massabielle she knelt. Her two | her sister Mario and her brother live at Lourdes. ‘While I was standing among the others I was e the interest at 10 per cent.” “Well, Peter, what Nearly all the medical staff and urses of the Very large offers of money have been made | eye-witnesstoone of the most extraordinary | The Farmer Looking Around and | do you think of the prospectahead ? Are we to D Fork. Bas thetn, buball have boen rojected. Tho place of | evonts it bas been my duty torocord. Masswas | Takingan Active Pas: in the Worldos | have better timas ? ° Not just yof, for wemust | 1 ords Leland Insano Asylom, at Now York, £ave Angot s fall of Bormudette, and the above facts | going on and discased peoplo wero baing carried | - Movements—The CreditSystoin-—Pur- pit al fizss Wnatut figa0na o pome seeonnt. Tig T e ‘long droaght st LaSalle, TIL, came to are related all over the place. 0 the pool form: hi C xplain i o8 = ippose any pedler can get my mnote now T - e Bl D ed, as I have y explained, | chase of Lightning Rods—The Pros: That thing i played out, and, after this | 22 end on Mondsy, sud considerable rain fell. companions did likewise, watching her face all the time and divided between wonder and fear. “‘THERE SHE1S!” cried Bernadette. *‘There! there !" The Procession to the Grotto. 0, Bir, i ot irl Jeanne and Mlarie looked; they could see ‘The journey hither was insugurated by s full | by the rush of the miraculous spring from the w N % A Miracle--A Dumb Girl Cured | Jesnne snd Mo Jookels, thoy, coml 52 | sorvios at Notro Dama dos Viciorics, ia Paris, | Grotto, Two girls i pessant costuime pushed | D°CF ARead-The Gusiook. timo, T shall pay tash, or do without the | e wagon manafactory of Bassott & Co, ab in the Presence of detto the child was transformed, bor face was | Where forward o got near tho wator, One was almost From Our Agricultural Correspondent, goods and morchandiss, But T will tell | Raoxvile Tl was bumed, with its entiro etock, Thousands. radiant, her lips parted. She was listening at- ALY, THE PARIS PILGRIMS ASSENBLED. idiot-looking; she was leaning on the armof the 2 Crateatay, Til, Nov. 2, 1672. | you, 0ld echoolmate, that there are some worse | i Joos jo 57600, with no 4 oo cau‘”o g onse. 2 tentively with clasped hands. TIn each car were ten, and out of the ten there | other, who with difficulty t.riag to cleara passage | There is evidently an uprising of the farmers, | things than these pedlers; itis the transporta- —T?f: ‘4:”5 by ‘6’; he ‘;:fl““‘“ aville (Tad) « Bernadettel " exclaimed both, “we are frightened of you. Getup! come!” But Bernadette did not hear, neither did she rige until they saw her features assume their usual expression. They went home to repeat the story they had already told; and it was heard with the same disbelief. This occurred geveral times, until at lengtk ALL THE PEASANTRY HEARD AND TALEED OF IT. Among others. who disbelieved were a Mme. Dillet and a Mile. Antoinette Peyret; but_they thought thoy wonld cross-question Bernadette, after taking her to the grotto themselves and were on an average four priests who had never | for her afflicted companion, A gentlemanbymy | —s firm determination to right some of the tion lines, the great rings of trade, and the Tofh fhote vilnges and mado straight 0 Paria | side, perceiving it weo her intontion £0Tmaks 19 | wasngs that have beon, and tha are yet, inficted | trodes-unions s:theso are “what aro playing the Steamn Cooper Sliope, biimed 061 Rundiy, oy for the purpose of joining in the great “mani- | the pool, spoke to her and asked what was the “th Whil th' 1 is th ’h Aot mischief. Last year, two of my boys wanted to | \yi'oline: the Home, of Cnlumbus, and’ the Testation of faith and hopa.” The prayers read | nature of the diseasethat horfriend or sisteriweg | 2POR them- o the farmer is the hardesi- | learn trades, bu they could get no sitnation, | xour s 0 i/ d and chanted all along the rosd from Paris to | suffering from. *She is deaf and dumb,” replied | worked and tho closest-economizer in regard to | though theyare stont, industrions boys ; and to- | SOTA TSNS L a0 6 s e Agen were litanies, one of the priests giving the | the girl, “ and we have come all tha way from | his own porson, yet Le is so fleaced by other day they are working out a8 farm-hands at 820 | go oo™V re o T R e Bl Lioy-note and the other joining in with tho re- | Blois to see if sho can't bo cured by Notzo Dame | classes that be makes but slow progross in ac- | & montD, while George Blum, & neighbor's bog, | neqr there, B oo wiile fochis sponses. This occurrod in_each car, and noth- | do Lourdes, forsho is an orphan.” The inqui= | cin oty and, now that 8o meny now | 1 Je¥ing brick st threo times the Weges, | on from tho ontside, fell into 4 disused wel ing but prayers went on until night time, when | rer, touched with the speaker's simplicity, Lavns ¥ & and ~ work . no harder. Next epring, | qyo watchman of the circus, who ran to the silence enstied and the pricsts slept; but with | volunteered to clear s way for them, telling | conditions are prosented to him, he must | they infend fo tend masoms for two or | & TCIRAR Of P GRS T s the first stresk of daylight tho litanies and | the leader to follow him. I stood some distance | arouse himself from the old torpor that allowed | three months, and get & general insight into the L s s e e o B oo peeims recommenced. Tho people at the sta- | from the pool, and tho pressure of people was 50 | the world to pass him by unheeded, and take his | business, and after that will fry their hands on e Subsequently an_employe of the i 2 tions were not amicably disposed, a8 a goneral | great that I got divided from the Blois travellors, | piacein the moving panorams of the world's gflfi:fi‘:fl&?fi:&?}fflifigfig‘fjfig thus | ion descended and brought up the woman, who Correspondenca of the New York Herald. AGEN (Lot ET GARONNE), France, Oct, 5, 1872, The religious manifestation I am about to de- scribe is one of the most extraordinary that has been recorded in the history of this century, and can only be compared to the antique celebra~ tions of pastages. Itis a gigantic exodus of voluntary pilgrims and geveral thousand priests gathering from every part of France round the femed grottoes of Massabielle, in the village of watching her. On this occasion, instesd of | rule, and did not see the deaf and dumb orphsn im~ e : 3 ly nos . 3 o Lourdes (Hantes Pyrencce), {or tho urpose of | \ulking quietly ot her usual slow face, she ook | ' ockEmy, snouss, axp carzs Taersod, bat. somo.ton minuics after the bove | ProgFese. Hois beginalng fo ead the dally Pa- | gnd, then an cpportabity to leam f; in | pii sxpired. Tho rescuer himself is af tho L avion, 45 ¢z o | Bshorteut down a precipitous rock, and the la- | being heard occasionally. = .| dinloguo bad been exchanged in my hearing s | Pers, and has learnod that there is o telegraph, | short, they are shut ont. We must have a | POBOT O8RS . L o o T REGENERATION, CONVERSION, AND PEACE OF | 38Ot TR O B owing her, When | At Agen notico was posted forbidding cries | Joud shout of joy arose in the crowded mass of | and that railroads havo something todo with the | change in theso things, for now the skilled | e O A rdered Dok 31 ot s rd ERANCE. they were in front of the grotto they witnessed | or demonstrations of every description that | beholders, and if was followed by & * Vize Nore | profits of his toil, and the product of his broad mechanic obtains three times &8 much for his | 7 SHES Mot 0% T BUACREE 2008 £ The present pilgrimage consists of 50,000 tray- | fhey were 1n front.o ot oo - o o e Iebor as the skilled f We th [ x - PL 0 ary change come over the | might originate & notion that the pilgrims were | Dame de Lourdes!” that ran like wildfire through abor as the skilled farmer. We are nowtha | io-°° o i i & e fifl.l’ o o fhar wasts belong. | boly fesr. They wore s0 impressed that Mme, | sion. A service in the Cathedral, vespers and a | the mountains around. I used all my strength | st weok, a Gonvention of Sarmers, or ¥a other industries, and we should not rest satisfied | oo 700 (00 & ‘“:Hfh ;i P! sf}m*;h 031 bl ebe e high mflng whispered : sermon inaugurated their arrival, and aband | toreach the pool and stood by the girl from | delegates from Farmers’ Clubs and Granges of | until labor on the farm is of the same value as At Memphis, Tenn., Mondsy evening, E&" T e D ten. “—lih“em"‘;‘“ Henisto | “Woshould not bo hore.” struck up, in which all joined, Blois, whose deaf and dumb chargo was no long- | Husbandry, was held at Kewsunee, in Henry | labor in the shop. Imust hire onk three of my | (iR R il and . B, Robeson. 1eos As. ou i = B iustant | “Yon are to stop!” cried Bernadette, as if ‘/SAUVEZ LA FRANCE.” erby her side. Sho was ns palo 8s death. | Gounty. Tho numbers wero not large, but they | full-grown boyato offset the wages of a carpen- | gigtant Superintendent of the Mem his & Tittle zeach the spot by to-morrow, the Gth instant, | ;o }5q peen told to spoak. ZLoxpow, Oct. 9, 1872, | «VWhere is your friend ?” I asked. “They have o : ter, & mason, or other skilled workmen ; and my | FoRafEoT ] % i when five Bishops are to officiste at mass and s * % % Thuriod away in tho direction of | conied b 1n “the. grotto. to the Dihopa | Weromon of intelligence, and thoso who aro 10t | hoss aro siilled farmers,—that is, they can d0 | Gilnuce: which pecauia inzdlven (% polliica, Jospernst e different altars erected aMORK | esired Mme. Millet, *or tako this paper, with THE OROTTOES OF MASSABIELLE, by She ia cued™ “Oured?” A pre- | tobo put aside from thoir purpose. Theyhed | all'the menual work of the farm 'in the most o T g dfi;g’;;’g;{;lswm' tho mounteins, and whero as many of thopriests | 5 pencil, and roquest her to put down what she | the centro to which all were bound. . Ty et pib wa-ap to oar knot of exger | no intention to interfere with othor industrial | workmanlike manner. I do mot think that I | Sfiller surrendored himselt and was admitted to who are erowding ‘thither ara 2100 40 BAY IOW. | yygnge. . By dint of patience and genoral good will T at | qucetioners, My child, toll mo what you have | pursuits, but met for the purpose of investigat- | &m unreasonable; but I again repest that theso | 1) mase, ono after tho other, st the numerons | WHHST .y bocs 003 o witnesses distinetly | longth waded through tho thoussnds round the | Soen hoasked kindly. {Monseignour,” roplied | by i i ive in | thiogs are beginning to work their own cure.” ] i " chiirki side chapels for miles tnd miles e y ) o f seen,” hea ly. gnur, | Tep: ing the causes that are, at this time, 8o active in —Forty-eight cases of gmall-pox are officially ien Rl 2 heard her say: altar, st which mass was being sung in front of | the poor girl, governing hor emotion, *we came | 136 *¢ 1 duet THE OUTLOOE. 9 reported in Eaflngtan, Ey. around. ) ‘Dame,” if you have anything to tell me, | the grotto. I did not venture to look wpat it | from Blols yesterday to ask Notre Dame de absorbing the profits of farm products. 1 drove home slowly, for I was musing over | "2 4 gr af Tiion, N. Y., “have undertaken the Lourdes is a small and picturesque village in the French Pyrenees. Whether the traveller be en route for Barreges, Saint-Sauveur, Cauterets, or Bagueres-de-Bigorre, or whether tho_tourist be leaving_Cauterets or Pau for Luchon, he must pess by Lourdes. This little spot is a cen- re whence all the roads to the thermal stations radiate ; and yet Do one knows any more about jt than if it had not & fortress on the top of & rock,and had not been besieged by Charlemsgne, and were not the key of the Pyrenees. Up to the year 1858, this village was to every was to every one nothing but what I have just said of it, a thoroughfare to the winter stations. until I found a_proper position, which was 2t | Tonrdes so care my friend, and when we got to | _This Convention was presided over by Senator | this condition of things. The better edueation 1 length afforded by & plaak of wood that aceiden= | 1o t00) T halped ner. put her head under a8 | Whiting, a fermer of Buresu County, and one | ¥88 bringing new wauts, and making broader Tann{eciie of 5 olommy Sirestoar, aul 000 19 tally lay across two largo stones on the banks of mufli waterss I could pour over it, and made | <ho has done much to change the Iawe in regard | demands for tho gratification of those wants. |~ i(\yhgtahall be done with the 3fill Creek the Gnve& exactly opposite. To this I steered, | hor drink a glassful. She seemedto *hear all at o rural affaira. The subjects discuased were : The old income, the old wages, and the old-time Valley 2" is the question that agitates Cincinnati and found I was exactly facing the grotto. once, and & good gentleman, who noticed ehe | % Fow can farmers, through their clubs and | prices for farm products, are inadequate to mest | 4 prgant. 5 1T WAS A VERY STUPENDOUS BIGRT. Tookéd confused st some noige, understood she | other organizations, sccomplish & aaving to their | thesenew demands. Shall we sell our farms, go | ** 24™Ch, will, when the new county Thero are threo oxcavations bored by Nature | \oc'votfing sounds in her ears, and, taking hold | memberg in purchasing, selling, aud in trans- | into mechanical trades, purchase railroad stock; | yyyingy ”Bmmnpic Mg g i through the old rocke of Massabicllo that stand | of'Cr " enid she was to sy after him the words | portation 7 And what other benofits are sttain- | 1080 our ° monoy af 2 per centa month, get & | gyren County bar a o e etk $10,000, on kind of island formed by the watersof tho | f “gld: and he said, * Vive Notro Dame de | Splo through Farmers' Clubs and kindred or- | fituation a8 railioad conductor, mail agont, ox- | ™5 yrra. Jones, st i Rk Gavo and a canal. The latter have beon turned | Toyrdos!” and my friend repested, “Vive Notre | gynizations 2" presaman, or clerk it in_some office, O §0Int0 | ¢ocing herlittle son sitting af the top of the off in order now to rendor sccess to the grotto | [ame de Lourdes,’ when presently all tho peo- | 5 Go-operation in the selling and the buying ap- | Politics and fake oor chances in the general Shgisg of & newly-bult windmill, to which more easy. The best simile wherewith to con- | 115 gtanding round us shouted out the same [ peared to be the most practicable. In T foryo | soramble? All of these things came into re- SSasts peich habad climbadmu, voy a clear iden of the sppearance of the Per- | Lords, and Iy friend was {rightened, but tho | secomplish this, one member of each clubcould | Tl and then we thought of s quict homo on | 48R e Te Fnglich murder is an- gorations is that of & huge sponge. gentleman carried hor in his arms away from me | attond to these duties, at & comparatively small | tho farm, and bow we would dignify Iabor by 8 | ;ounced. An Idlington mother sharpened & will yor be good enough to say what you are, an what you desire ?” The witncsses heard no reply, but_they saw the child advance with paper and pencil, keeping her gaze on the excavation, then ehe stopped and listened for somo time. Her features were angelic. Itlasted for fully three minutes, after the expiration of which Barnadette walked back, and on beirig questioned, related that the lady bad said she saw no necessity for writing, a8 ehe knew Bernadette would obey; but what she wanted was to see her every day at the grotto f%r fifteen days, promising her that if she did so she Bince then it has become famed for The lower grotto is on a level with the ground, ili i i Dbetty tem of 3 i % SHOULD BE FAPPY IN A BETTER WORLD. i und, | {5 the railings of the grotto, which the priests t. tter system of farming. i % the ool a the & the 2oth A A CTLOTS e relato here, | Thi8 is but the prelimlnary of the wholestory. fndilooksiikeh coen; g‘uk oven of semi-cireu” | ingido oponed, sud sho s inside nov.” SR lrond transportation_was more difficuls | Al business must havo its ups end downs its fihrmonfo}{gg:fiala o iy pfi"f:} sud thes catthe and other mir: hes o0 ous o relato here. | During the fifteon Asys whish followsa Doru- lacfemy 14 [s sbout, four motres b y fif- | 41 is & miracle,” said the prelate. Knot to unravel ; bt the Railroad Commission= cxgmmnq sod contractions, the pulling down | ' g;y Eflwhmgg‘flpfimé« nghe& tige What adds to the wonderment of all who know | QEENELLS JrSn. 08 "ot by one, two or | teen wide (thirteen fect Ly £fty). =Above this | mhqnows had now epread all over tho place. | arg were urged to have the Courts ssttle the law | 2nd the building up, and farming i8 no exception | o) Font * and the ¢ Lion sad the Lamb,” s anything about Lourdes is this: Every person connegted with the stories related 18 alive ; their names, their dwellings are known; they have ‘been quesioned and cross-questioned ; they have ‘been brought up befors the suthorities and of- ficials: have bewn examined and found—perfect- 1y sincere. The Oiher remarkable fact is thatthe c{atgy and Bishops vere opposed to the propaga=~ tion of the grest event which marked the origin of the religious celebrity of Lourdes. The following are the fants related by thons- wnds and devisu: On the 1lth of February, '858, the day being clear and mild, i THREE LITTLE GIBLS 2 A0 ware sent out to pick up sticks in the direction of the Grotto of Massabielle, Two were sisters, snd Bernadette Soubirous, the other girl's twelve people, but by hundreds. - All the inhabi- tants of Lourdes followed her to witness her in~ terviews with the vision, and the same trana- formations took plsce during her trances, The Perfect of the Commune, Mr. Massy, and the Commissaire do Police, Mr. Jasonet, took alarm at the epread of the agitation, the former came to Lourdes from Tarbea to 1ook into the matter and desired Mr. Jacomet to_arrest the child a8 an impostor, if, after questioning her alone, ho discovered sho_had been influenced to act her part. Afeanwhile the fifteen days were far ad- Vanced, and the populstion of the village, as well 88 of the villages around, gathered to look at the child. _She passed through them with perfect impassiveness, neither reddening nor turning o, ever thinking and walking on in her coarse there are two other excavations. Theonetotho | p t sl . is tight st icht is 1 5 i eople came running down all the paths to have &t we mi ow | to the rule. Themoney market is tight simply right'da lke. s docp iche i chiueh, e langs Do A T Ao ine Nome Damg do | negard to this matter, 8o that e ey o | from overdrawing our incomes, and we must T A The' Srst-named oxal window, for throagh it tho light 14 £iven t0 | Yourdes ! wasthe universel shout. Others'| ronds; nd that such logislation may bo had as | DOIFoN to meok o deficiency. ‘It welive too | VOIS IONGRIERCC 0 of Meadville, Pa, toe1Eor tey, brathmaod, and & wild mizture of | kaelé insilence, will clearly defino tho rights of both parties. fost_this yeur, we must live slow the next. If | g:.i's rovolver at amark and hit herself. Shisw e g mood and a wild mixturo of | * 1 pushed on to the railings, and suw that the THE TARIFF the vessel-owner is getting rich out of this crop, | iy ovidanliy not a succoss in pistol practice, L bramble, briar, and hedgorow, vegotation, 1ub | scared cbild was surrounded by fathers and | on ealt, iron, Tnmber, etc., was also discnssed, | ¢ompetition will bring down hie prices the next: [ 13 0 G e a8 & Poomarangist Wi e O O o aadatts bohold how vision. | Priests. One of them said eho could not under- | and its obrosious ‘features shown up, The | 1f the railroad monopoly grinds too fine, we must | Coryliztlo instruction. ; O i, o oy & yailiag im | 8tand tho senso of what was spoken to her; but | remods for these was, of courso, at tho ballot- meet it in s legitimate manner, for all these | *myo Boodirn Fmrive including Poland and o lowor srotto ls now cut off by & xailingy.n | sho conld bring out tho words told her, a5 & par- | bos,—u placo where men high in oflice are some- great publio fnsitztions ‘must bo made to work | piond Boo S B g b ants, Ore b e O D L fian vailings | IOt ould.. This, of courso is a natural effect of | times taught useful lessons. ata fair price. If individuals cannotafford to | 3 p Pl icl “oonie s young girl named s gl e ove milings | doataess, o aver that tho girl could talk would | Tho Jast session of our Legiclaturo hd dono mest them in, the Courts, tho Stato must do 30, | Trma Gras, o very handsomo bruneits, assassl- a gross imposition, a8, never having hear ings, buf Vere many mol ere musf & reform, for the world’s trade e ed to by her & xmz cxrouss op xmoss wao cox umum LA | (i Eiman volee, he could B0 moro undsrstund | fhat Eodet siesiion; 4nd, whon farmers etod | Must bo open koo the producer sad to the e T e £ and go away with tho e of Lo lome. eseR3y | it than & mew-Dorn bubo; but tho mirscls of | i concort, for themselves, and allowed of no | consumer and, solong 85 we have the press | BTN 0 L8 Bt O ted her. Ex- pit, constructod with desl plank, is erocted to | poaring and of uttering sounds had taken place | distation by professed political shysters, thoy | 20d the rostrum, wo may Hope to combat €ITOr | 4enuating circumstances. il t] 13 Bish v i : 2 = thoright of tho grotto for tho Dishiops, vho | forall faat. Tolking will bo acquired by habit. | ‘rould accomplich el that is due them, and hold monopolics at bay. s | o assare of the Austrian Govern=" name ia Jeanne Abadi ighbor. They were | P . q i b e | L will refrain from mentioning anything I did | " jt was proposed by some that the offices ——e = mment with certain American journals, it is said e e A o e that iho snickg | clothes as f sho had too mucli on her mind to D et T oot T heve inat bogin- | not sce. Other miraclen wero roported %5 o5e- | shouaa bo Biad ram the ranks of business mon, COD FISHERIES. T2 Vieano, will probably lerd to the imposition. fhoy wero oo being home wora. the. fael waited | care for people, ot for what was going on about | TUE 5 i corad by Mer. the,Bishop of Tarbes. | Finesies th;icgyba‘:etg: rfi??»’ :tmwtfi notmen- | and not, as now, mainly from the law and_ other i of five cents on_every issue of political pspers. ; Fran t . fons. Theso make trading politicisns, : jshed in the United States. L has axbmolpally to o renronrer | a8 told sbove i a8 truo ss that I am rolating it, DO o oord fon thets o poskeathan | e Supply. fu Canadlan sxdNews pablished In. ‘proposes to have more public li- Aot et B fhal L Al ahowg 0o | and as that those who have fallen on this column | for the good of the people. It was more than foundland Waters. braries, snd to this end a echeme is before the e oL taatiar of LrA o concott. and to the | &ro at this moment reading it. hinted that these farmers’ organizations might From the Toronto Leader. + | Legislature which recommends the sppropria- T s Il ataeation. With: 3. view, BERNADETTE AND MER FAMILY. tobe political mbtters in fheir own hands, | Eears are sometimos expressed that- Oanada'a | o7 of 310,000 for this purpose. Tho fund is o o P avirits of hia heaters after this | L bed got through the best part of myletter | jn tho. course of the next yar, or o | 8ud Newfoundland's great staple, the cod fish- | 4 % 5ctribnted among e Towns according to O ives ot Thels phitT g when Bister Elizabeth walked in, and after 50mo | heon as s more gencral organization can be ef- | @Fics: Will,in time, become exhausted, and tho | yy,cir populations, each town to provide 2 emita- great exposure of their past folly, ho told them | ypology for interrupti d ish 1= | enormous fish colonies around the shores will 0Pt 1 b there was pology for In ption, expressed a wish to | fected; as that appears to be the true wayin | p Bohing. Decome so reduced in mumbers | ble building, an all to be subject to the Trus- o 28 % To pESPAm op THE ruromp; | BAestalk With mo. Iwas noless desirous, | which 'to resch some of the causes operating | pF OYerENNR® PSR B0 TINCAY B, S0 | tees of the Biate Librars, the whale schome to i i H d put down my pen. Aft irai : : . r he did not think there wasany nation on the ;‘;ro%‘;cfi‘;n, AT BE fi;g"‘::blj’;gf“}’“gg against this most useful of all the induatries. | 200 8 B8 0% B SR RELE B CT'hy some, | De oted on by the towns st the annual March -eacri 0 A State Committes was_sppointed; and we T Is saser me, | 7eetings. 'T:.;Zfi.‘ifi ‘fl{;d oy ::Pfi:nilbl:ng !::1::&?} cantiously neared, that of Bernadette Souberous, | may look for some more efl&cim action in this | O%F fi““§g g;fi““g e “l{;‘:g O;I Exgrogucuv& o o of our American cities have Mercantile £ aance as Frande, but that there were causcs | 803 I gathered vliat follows : connection, B “mg cog e abals ire de:;g:;i;“ Library Associations, with an aggregate Liem- which rendered these victnes of no sccount, Ho | , Afer Bor vitione sho bosame &0 grost an ob- | ‘hat the lawsers, a9 s class huve mado them. e \inoe .. ousntion, i fuct, Tor | bership of upwards of 20000, and sn ownership i i trymi il = 3 0 solves obnoxious to the farmers as politicians, is Fcs ] 2 o volumes. e Philade] ercan- SRR T R D | Sihneror s Cohencl ol | el o smedSonluIGlod st yoln | oty (eta N s o ol | e i S mem e e rendered inert by indifference a5 to the public | pelor "o b Gh I o0e o ber | man can be more useful than & good, honest | § o sed by the hands of Men e o ok | end an anaual incoms of $39,000. New Yor R poor miller ho had always | lwyer as a legislator, but too many of the shy- | 12 PEOROFUION 1O : has an associstion numbering 10,413 members good. He eaw no help if tho devout didnot | heor'2nd died & poor miller. Lonise Souber- | pres. (54 b 'y of the BhY- | giroyed by their natural enemies, that the ab- o ailar gl B fomas bolgly wikt exsmpit sad word of | beeD, ind died, a poor miller. Louiso Souber- | siet class have, by hook or by crook, twisted | 3i1a3lion Zould make itle or no mpression on | 224 oFming 187,200 volumes. 8 associa- : i iteatati trust, and theseplaces | PEEACLO" : 02 | Hions in Brooklyn own 41,000 volumes ; in Cin- speech ; he thought this great manifestationwas | 3gi¥ of Decomber, 1866. = Bernadette her- themselves mtgplwefl of trust, and thesePlaces | the immense shoals in tho ocean. The fecundity | 5009 & g Yo T T » desire on the part of the pilgrims to walkin | \i/f 1,3 been adopted bv the sisters of they have used for personal ends. Thesodis- | co% FEICOD W0 0t 5% Ok e compenes. | cinnati, 33,0005 in Pittsburgh, 10,970; in i 3 e - of | cussions will, no doubt, prove useful’in giving | - : 4 o Lot 34,708; in_Boston, 84,798; in 8an Fran- o ath of courago sad stzength i the faturo ;| i hoapico ndromatned ight yosrsunderihst | S fummor o morocorrbtiden of thosatsga et | 501 L% 0 [oments 70010t 00 0080 B8 | cico s d00c’in Balimofe Bosth. o shese B oo ‘homaes monhd oo ogp away | foot; Bhe was tho gentlest sod most amisble | mako of mar bis fortuno. | That tho fermer | F3 5" wofid of waters it would geem 925 | may b added the Boston Public Library, which from their perish chureh on Sundays, but attend | pyc questionod, was fond of battlodoro and | apraront e e regard to the crops, Tho | Ehoals of one spocics of fish had mo other ;zg;%’gfl%g:d““ of thecity, and containg divine service, instead of shattlecock. When the villagers or strangers | H object in life than to chase another with i axrrres | 55 3 L armer of to-dsy must know what crops will pay A g & 2 Mrs. Charles Wallace, the wife of & mer- L2AVING ALL 'TEE RELIGION OF THEDL F) e to see hor she would take eithor S | the bast tsiing His. sol, clmate, diatance. to | &VIEY. {0 eat them, bu fn proportion to the do- | cyon af Richmond, Virgicis, bas becomo sdifor ; Pro- | Grthe O1d Deminion Magazine, which professes 3 To THE: WIVES, ;1| Elizaboth's arm or Sister Gilbert's and walk w ftigna1 ideration; ction . thus as if it wore only it for tho wesk, instead of be- | = FHON BT B0 L o Fotin to her some | Badsorohe ofl’;:ffii?é‘?:fi?f&fi;fi ‘et | duction with which they sre endowed. Perhaps | 118 Ztc I T BECIdine ' of giving ing in reality tho blood and ‘sinews of » nation. | & 2 4 : O T N ilione of coduabate tibon it £ 5 155 basonghy them to stand shoulder to shouldor ; | {26 O Blay. Whet calol in Bie Berloe to speak | But ano of the great stumbling blocks of the S O o ity b the' follers of the sea | employment fo old gentlomen snd old ladies who to root ont their love of pleasure ; to be earnest | tp BNV B 5 (s SRR B b farmer is Sround the shores of New Foundland. Butwhat | 8 nOw starving because they have o8 emp}:{& TEE COEDID STSTES) {3 "the quantity.when. we consider that the cod | ment for their pens, which could alone i citizens, snd, stretching his hands out towards | yion precisely to the point, without addin ; i them, =nd asked, ‘Wil you here promiso to P A it £ & | that entices him into debt, and compels him to | vields t Tailli d s half ach | them a support, aud of opening & way of inde- toevs andove yoir country s T mean 7 - Oui 1+ | Wordnot ssked for, only, it wny one Present | eeil abs time whon his fam-work is prossing Ficlds three T one e ent iy Lava | Pendence to the gifted yonth of ‘our lind, wha repliod , the thousands, and this afirmation | SORSTHPERE A ARORE O RO e morg | Upon bim. Yesterday, Iwas at one of our depot. been f0and in the o6 of & singlocod! Other | Otherwise must become ‘‘ hewars of wood and Sohoed from mount to valley. Will you esy, | Lad saidor if anyiono colored her narrative MOt | ruarkets, and saw many loads of new com Bold | fin, though not equalling the cod, are also | draWers o water. Vive la France ! ag children should who have | BIOWIBE, Su8 WOUC cOrrect, tho Bpedier bY | gt 20 cents per bushel of 75 pounds, and, in Sondertally reproductive.. A herring six | —drs. Emma Oller, of Gamett, Ean, was boen fod on, the bountiful bosom of a dear | PeFRE 7 L CHIAEC O, 45 I told JOU | trcq mot preity dry, 80 pounds was expected. | or. peven . ouncos . in weight s pro- | washing shirts the other day in her back porch, . ‘mother 2" B b the yeil a6 tha Hospl ho Sisters | KnOWing that the husking was pressing hard for | vided with bout 30,000 ovaria. After making when she received a letter from her uncle, say- “9IVE 1A FRANCE!” Sho took the vell at the Hospico of tho Sisters | more labor, I mado the inquiry why 80 much | a1l reasonsblo allowances for the destraction of | € ehe wss ono of several heirs to 83,000,000 in ehonted tho people like ono man. Then tho | Of TOVER,RAT 18 KAG, thero under Ui nathe | corn came tomarket at 50 unseasonablo period. | eggg and of theyoung, it has been calculated Scotland. Washing dsy waa pastpon Bishop, sftet & pauso, during which nothing but | Of Marie Dernard. Siiois now 25, Sheis 10t | ono man had o eowing machine note due, that | flist in threo yenrs o single pair of hemings | o —Tholatest Eastern burglary invoived the tho rush of the. Gayé and the rustling of ash | peintiful in feature, but in expressign. Hor | yonld swallow up 875 bushole, and which would | wonld produce 154,000,000, - Buffon said that if | deportation of 8 church-organ, which had all the trecs wore heard, raised his clear yoice still high- | (00 (86 G O, e A3 | coupy seven and a half days in tho moving, 8t | o pair of herrings were lefs to broed snd multi- Tequisite stops except * stop thief. er, and turning £0 the rock behind him, cried, | Sreet sufferer, acd ie tried by oruel paing inher | i1, vory pressing time for lsbor. The manap- | ply undistarbed fora period of twenty years | , =& duel that was to have come off near “VIVE THE CHUNCE, THE ROOK OF AGES." Shest, which sho bears very pationtly, saying the | poared io bo satisfied, though it wasats great | they would yieldafish bulk equal to tho wholo of | ABgusta, Ga., lost Wednesday, between T. W. It was as if the place shovk with the clamoring | 7B 16 o8 TG SO d b happy'in heaven, | Zioriges, Ho was waiting his turn for nnloeding, | fho globe on which we live, The cod far surpess | Richter and B, H. Lamplin, of Atlants, wea re- selioof nature respondiog o tho voice of man; | {05 Uch, trouble bero below, Bhe sppesrs U | und T asi to hm, This s litle ongly 00 will | o Bering i fecumiity. othing can comparo | £eT81 2110 ) OBt O FHATS 5y T en all join *Vive the Holy Father, vive s h - dui carry your husking into the cold wenthers “I | ith the prolific power of fish in any other ugusta paper says: 8 Bosard re Pius IX.” The Bishop descended and thé pil- | POrd and tends the sick with sseiduity when | y,0557100 acres that will turn pt least 6,000 tho pralle ro y other | 4 house near the dueling ground, and, after grims rushed to the pool which is filled by tho | 2O%kent by personsl sifforing in het ol "sha D ias And e ot thabmtor i, ooib 16 Hoh 8|, Eofas of snimals, exceply B, iy hew | £omo timo_spent % consultagion, arangsd. the miracalous fountain that started out of tho rock | 18 12, ignorance of everything going on f | gmall matter.” ‘Suppose you had done without | migute, and goes on S o T oo of wo | basis of o settlement honorable to both, parties. undor Bornudstte's touch Whon sho &id 88 the “‘;“g‘gg;fm"y‘t;i;g!{“fingfin;‘;‘g;:*g;‘::;‘ tho maching the peatyeary and Lired your seying P e O eamin Borestfo bu This was submitted to the seconds, who, after vigion described. i = | done, would it not have been chesper ? “Yes, p o5 po <udice is- so strongly | OB on with their principals, sccepteditin TIN CAXNS, BOTTLES, AND PATLS. bor for her portrait, but never cares t0 100k 8 | ;q'it hag turned out ; but you see that, when the ;gg;‘:fj,,‘ggflg:g‘:gg D o dsetive “Sowors, Can | thelr bebalf. for by which to cook the family dinner. Marie Boubirons was bealthy and strong; but Berna- dette, her elderby a few years, was troubled with asthma, end though only 14, Was_go deli- cate that she did not look more than 10. This Bernadette hadnot been brought up at home, ‘but by & rriend ot her mother, living at Bartres, snd who, for the small sum of five france & month, provided he: with lodging and food It had been arranged that she ghould lend what a8~ eistance she conld, butas she was too dalicate o work at the farm or fiald, she kept the sheep, #nd eat whole days doing mthing but fondling the lambs. 9 From year to year it was settled this ehonld be fl'x]e llnfit S’hher st;lfy lht B&rl!i‘e;l ; but the good eople loved her s if sho was their o an ghmxv.u'- aho was told that next antuma fr%’ula!?é ner iast, when the next autunn came Bernadetia was kept, and had only been » fortnight home when the memorable day of picring up fagots marked & fise:ttferiod in the fol‘ynes of the illage of Lourdes. As I have gaiG, the two Boubirous sisters and their neighbor's danghter Jeanne, went out together. They cruased s ‘bridge over the Gave, went past the mill of M. de Lafitte, the wealthy man of Lourdes, PICKING UP BITS OF DEAD WOOD 28 they walked along, and thus came to & Iarge meadow, the two robust girls much ahead of the ‘mare delicate Bernadette, who stopped to cough each time she Atooped. Sho wores black stuff frock and the white coarse woollea capulet of the jillagers in those parts, a pair of wooden shoes, and the only thing which dis tinguished her from ‘the other poor children was & pair of stockings. ‘These been given her by her mother in con- sideration of her weak Iungs, On the three girls ‘went until they came in front of the Maseabielle grotto, where they were certain to find plenty of sticke, for the rocks in_which the excavation i8 bared by nature are overhung by short brush- wood that the wind wrenches out of the scanty earth in which it grows. There was unfortu- nately a narrow stream to cross; but the girls found it mnearly dry. Jeanne and Mary soon took off their wooden shoes end waded over, bopping from stone to stone, and lsughing at their big leaps upon stones which were far spart. £ ‘“HOW COLD THE WATER IS,’ £aid one of them, when they &eb on dryland and st down to put on their dryshoes. Bernadette, on hearing this, was afraid to put her small feet in the stream. 7 . «“Do throw some big stones quite close,” ‘she er. The cure of the place did not encourage the peassntry to believe in hervisiona; he was even Yery sharp with Bernadette. His nameis Pey- ramale, and he ia still alive; none of the peas- antry, on the other hand, doubted; in their opinion Bernadette was an instrument in the hands of God, and they believed thatthe Blessed Virgin appeared to her. On the 21st February Barnadette came a8 usnal to the grotto, and as simply as possible knelt in her accustomed place, whers, in the presence of a dense multi- tude, after she had her usual vision and was rising to move, A POLICE OFFICER PUT HIS HAND ON HER BHOUL~ DER and arrested her in the name of the law. She wasled to M. Jacomet, who with threats and Eemuiou endeavored to make her prevaricate, ut after a long eitting gave his efforts up, say- ‘ng he had never seen or heard such a case. He forbade her father at the peril of his liberty to allow her to return to the grotto, and ‘Wipking he would. have to adop £Ome €OUwg, after having written for advice t0AL. Roalatq, who was then Minister of Publio Instruction, helet her go to her parents’ home. The attraction ¢f the grotto proved Eo strong that her ffltherl slter a day or two, preferred get~ ting into irouble with M. 1o Prefect rather than cause his child to pire and grieve, as_she visibly did, besides which, the peasantry of Lourdes ara not to be trifled with. "They took the partof Bernadette against Prefect, Cure, father, and Commissaire, and to the grotto Bernsdette re- turned, all making way for hor whepever she a; peared. It was thon thomght M. Peyramele Conld ehake the child's fancy and detect any equivocation, if there existed any. As he was known to be averse to her visions and to be very little acquainted with her on account of her long stay awsy from the village, it wes supposed he would show mo partialty to her, and the time was looked forward to when he would call her to the presbytery. .He, however, was disinclinedto_do &0; but Bernadette, to his great wonder, one day walked through his garden into his house. % Are you not the deughtor of Miller Soubir- ous ? " he asked. “Yes, Monsieur le Cure.” “Well, then, Bernadette, what do you want 2" * Monsier le Cure, the * 0’ who appears at the Grotto of Massabielle"— “Yes, yes, I know,” eaid the cure. ‘You pretend yon have visions, and you have got all the country in excitement with your tales. What begged, shnddering on the opposite; 1 should | do you_ mésn by telling me thedo things? What | wore filled, the infirm were led down, all ap- | ‘b when the sittings aro over. agent came along, corn was worth 40 cents, and | f is gai gran in T EERSORAL: Wi o keep my fock oz "{isthis? Nothing but things you cannot | proached unmolested ; the syes of tho blind were T 0 boain | {3 s o besome W grakEraime o2 8 fa FERSONAL: oodh _ But the two healthy girls wero too busy pick- | prove. . g athed with hankerehiefs steeped in the piscina Living Veterans. have paid the debt, or just one-half of the pres- | 1o Honsofly, which produces twonty millions of | . Stephen Pearl Andrews, of the Woodhull- ing np plentiful sticks fo attend o the request | Bernadetts was in no way astonished. She | the deaf immersed thoir hieads, and tho paralytic From the London Daily Nets. ontrate ; and then I conld have it & year With- | taoq ta s sesson, O fho litdle uphides of tho | Claflin concorn, is out on £2,500 bail of Bornadotte. cloarly relatod il that had oepurrad, all sho Lad | st on tho 6dge, waiting, a8 of old to bo helped. | _The publio fs probably mct avers. shab of the | out interest, and Mary wes 0. plossed mith tha | CESsan %o o which produces a. hundsed thou- | , —PereHyacinthoand witoaze sbout to take up ) eir permanent residence in Monich. seen and heard, and when she had done the cure asked, “ And what isthe name of your ‘dame?™ #1 don't know.”, “ Those who bslieve say it is the Virgin; but, child, know, thab if it is not, if you lie, you will never see her :n heaven.” = ». I donot know if sheis the Virgin,” replied Bornadette, ¢ but I see her a8 I see you, and she :gel.kfl tome, and I have come to tell you that e has told me to tell you she wants A CHURCH TO BE BUILT ON THE MASSABIELLE 2 ROCE, that's all.” M. Peyramare looked closely at the child. She stood the gaze with innocent assur- ance; he made her repeat her message; she did g0; after which he replied : #You tell me, Bernadette, that the lady hasa branch of briar under her feet in the grotto. This is February ; go and tell her that if she wants a new church on the rock she must first ma.ke, that branch bring forth roses in this sea- gon.” ; Thereupon Bernadette was dismissed. . %“The briar will bring forth buds,” said the people in the village; but the rock has brought forth something else. ‘When the child next saw her vision she gave the cure's message, which the “desme” did not heed; but told her to go on her Lnees from the #Yon must get into doing as we do,” at Iast cried Jeanne; *take leaps and come over.” Poor Bernadette nad to make up her mind to the dreaded water, leaned her back on & frag- wment of and began to pull her stockings off. She already thrown one down, when ehe heard 2 sudden swell of the river and & whirling in the air ag if & terrible storm was thering; but when she looked up ehe found @ poplars perfectly straight and none of the Jeaves shaken by the wind. “I thought I Deard the leaves Tustle,” she s1id, looking abont, and then went on pollin; %hex other stocking off. The noises increased. ernadette looked up, and suddenly her figure fell together, while her face remained uplifted ; like a crushed flower down she bent and remained on her knees. She £aw a vision. Bhe saw A RADTANT VIRGIN IN PURE WHITE, withont jews® or coronet; nothing like what she had favoies vas the Blessed Lady; a real figure, such shs conld have imagined was that of & Prin- cess or Gueen, had ehe ever thonght of any one somuch above her station. Thisapparition held & long chaplet on her arm. Bernadette was not. afrai She fixed her eyeson the beautifal’ vision, then geeing it smile and make the sign of the cross, she did. likewise, and then the vision vanished. Bernadette was still spell-bound to Diseased pilgrims had been carried thither in | present Colonels in Her Majesty's regimonts at | idea of haying the machine; but, after all, it S hlions of youn, bedan chairs. Some drank, some washed. Foast sightoon wore at Waterlon? Puitie histe. | s s vas baiaces, The aeunt said that they | 20 ons o 3o our cod that yiclds three | , = ) d In dollectin h w Thie 4 _‘I)fvn&u. Oct. 11, mz.ch 1y of the service of many of them does not begin | could not be purchased at less than that for | millions and s half of eggs ina seagon, of course terizle for a history of the sissippi V: Byr}m is impossible to say how much | here. We are nccustomed to look back upon | cash.” Do you suppose that the agent told the | vastnumbers never come to_ lifo at all, either —The Prince de Joinville suggests to cro more I should have heard if the procession of | Qutro Bras and Waterloo sa the sceno of fho | truth? Mo, hodid not; for James Marsden | Teom the want of tho fructifying power, or from | the new Vendome Columnwith & simple status banners had not ?&-‘:flanced o emerge from the | exploits of our oldest voteranu; and the interest | bought the same kind for '$65, with s discount | heing devoured by enemies. Then of the ezgs of a French soldier, ? A urish cliusch of Lourdos, and tho immense con- | occasioned by the discovory of snothor “ Water- | of 23 per cent for cash, which mads it S48.75, | that ripen, jt has been caléulsted that 90 per —it is said that Rosbuck will sgain i mlauras ompgq o 7 zgah 086, W] owflegrm © | loo bero” in some little village testifies | with 31.90 for freight, or just 950.25. Ho sent | cent of the young fish perish before theyare 6 candidate for Parliament at Shgfi“;u! M. plaza to the sides of O Spos around to the regard which the country has for | to s friend in the ity who did the business for | months old. Were it not for this destruction of [ ~—The ¥ tings which adorn il o The procession wound its way down the road | those who fought for it in the old time. When him, aud who wrote him that they ought to be | Jife, fish would so multiply that it would be im- of Mr. Justice Strong's houss in et n to the Grotto, It was just & milo long, and the | wo look st this somi-biographical lista of | eold for 830 at the culside; but that don't help Hecaibio Tora boatto movo In tho sea. Fish | ro the work of the fair handt of his four fair first banners eq:%reh o pm{lfle BfoaeLflm last Coloneh;) however, we must begin with an earlier | me now, for I have the note_to pay ; but I shull | prey extensively upon each other, indeed the danghters. 1 1y had left the parish church. ;aca mh orraine | date. We got back to the stirring scenes of | giveno moro such notes.” What do you think | vory element in which they move, 18, in a sense, —Harvey, son of Mr. Yomg, formerly rg— B e e prams fommact he 1o | Bk Siibnrt, pa Hiie oinded, Bodcigo, We | of the Farmens' Gluts selling thalrown prodssts: | » grouk mass of Iving matton, sndh asubbiss sistor of ‘e Alon Dewepiper in New Lotk A d 3 ) 3 ene zgerald, ha i i oal, i anih - recently - -inflicted. Rased to Liss the tassals that hung from it. | their first commissions in 1793, Tane after the | nd im:flmfiim et sedncen r::.;;: aving ;5“;35;;’{ 3;‘;5;;. minute animals, & wonder- | ™= goone) Blanton Duncan does not go to the e magnificont embroidery, painting, andwork | first coslition against France had ‘been declared. | cash at the time of purchase? *‘ Don’t t ink it <5 Sunny South to spend the winter, butwill remain inTelief on these 285 banners cannot be sur- | If the battles of the Nile, of Copenhagen, and of | can be done, Y v, and i in “ Old Kentuck,” and publisa » Sunday paper. H t , for we don’t have the money, o New Spirit. Wt drrericty = pssed, Thoy wero grean, violst, white, and | Trafalgar, could, by any moana hnvo been | we must go to tho dealers for theso things, 30d | _An enterpristogmbimber of the French clergy, R hanis, omn s, %flggi%sfii‘m& lue. The Lille banner, though very handsome, | adlled to these lisis of battles on land, it." Leb You | ; i ashin, " s , | get short credit.” Leb us see how that ig. You clled, no doubt; by the success which has e i Vi ‘wea Guishono by the bibner from Neates, renc | wo _ should 'havo, indee o | e e e tom tons of conl. | e e, m0 Ao b e e ransisting, | t0 Copitol building b Yasiluglon: e 1 peredso heavy by gold end embroidery that | ble xecord of ono period of our nationsl carcar; | You pay, you say, S4.30 per ton to the desler | Glartreuse, and other monasterial lignenrs, ha Spricetts thesalrpap Ab Se o six strong men coul trzcm g ik Sasdls, | b even 1s they stand, the exploits of our army | Now, coal at the mines is worth SL.60a ton 8¢ | jciiled himself of the publicity .which recent Chamber. @ t the ill-fated Bordesuz, Mans, "Gestros, Rbeims, Clasitres | gro us mumerous as they sro vatied in_scone, Wholesalo, snd tho froight, by the car-load of | LU0 CHineaTava iven to the grotto at Lourdes |, —Coptain M. B. Green, o commanded & Paris, were in the second order of v a Taks, for I;axnmple, the case of the Colonel of | ten tons,is $2 per ton; total, $3.60, Or &887- | {5 advertize a new spirit, which, taken internal- ‘steamor DMissouri, ab ‘"“"bum" A New York cost.” bo imagined, under & dazzling | oSt Dragoon Guards, Genoral Sir Jomos | ing of 90'cents a ton, or & eaving of 20 per cont, | 1y, will be s’ benelicial to tha patient ss the steamer running between Albany anc XN 205 The sight can be imagined, under a dezzling | Jackson, who recaived hig first commission in | or one ton in five. You say ther sre o0 fami” | waters of the grotto when applied externally. When the Uricd Blates Nl femhsd L de eliy and stresming sun. Down camo the long | 1806, Hoservedin tho Peninsular War from | lies in your. neighborhood who uge the $3M8 | Ip o prospectus hesded “A Notre Damo 3o | mas instituted, e was elected to commats T3 line of waving banners, followed by people of 1809 to 1814, and was prosent at the battles of | amount of cosl; the saving would be to each | Toyraeq ™ this liqueur, which he has baptized H»"Z‘m%aw’:fsmmmz n‘::u‘y?‘;““g;,‘;d o the vice. —John B. Dillon is engnfl in ¢ollecting ms- the spot long after the ‘‘ dame” had disappear- | place she was on to the dry rock, and 88 | classes, singing the hymns of the day. Bueaco, Fuentes d'Onor, Badsjoz, Ciudad | 9. We will now suppose that you ten sgree to | i &8 6a, "Alier a fimo £ho looked azound hor. Tho | far s she could, until she could go no Zurther. O ¥ TreosTG CEREMONY. o | Bodsigo, ~ Sulamancs, ittore * pyoanens | maake oo pardhase oo von sar-logds, wineh you | .o mortelle,” is announced to be mado from | gtoamor Eagle, of the New York and Hayan Gave, close by, w(;a rfixtmm d:a as uenal, but’ il,‘::e people szlonc were lionllln?&:i on %w}:e; do ‘gflp, mThtlaiblméc:;se c‘t!llaczerdal:d :tzi:!etpfil:'fli dm‘!“g ::llfl !ilxnzellr:‘.’. Mt N{;flt Ihe was dwounfl’; cando at dealers’ rates. You have noh“fli?y des, with an admixture of plants snd fruits Ifinfiér::m was wrecked ina storm Of Pt everything seemed nj; an kness. eTe Were resent 0ldin eir breath in o altar ai arthe 1 2 luring 3 . Was af aterloo, an it] h, d you can husk a . 4 al . 5 e 5 5 Fronder’ : O for whach. o oight Dishops bleseod | the Oconpation Army i Beance. . Thoa | land of cosm ol teniy-iva buckio, and talioit | £19m the splendid valleys of Tuchon Buns: |~ —Curloits, ex-Empress of Moxico, wil et euspense snd wonder. When she came to her- gelf she wzs still repeating ¢ REPENT!”. ©REPENT!" The time afier this, instead of 300 spectators, there were all the people from the villages round, far and near. Several daily assert they ‘were pregent in all the departments. Be that as it may, when Bernadette had her vision she sud- denly rose to her feet and welked. to- the River Gave ; then, as if called. went back fo the grot- to, wheré she kneaded with her twc hands a por- fion of earth on the rock; she carried it to her IN THE HOLLOW OF THE GEOTTO, ¥ .}9: l&!uflfa before fiugd with & lominons yisi ere was nothing but s branch of wild" Troar that he had often e before. She could not make ont what had happened, but, deeply moved, she hurried over the stream, finding: (gn both Jeaunie and Marie were looking at her. Her surprise was immenso on noticing smy ‘were' not surprised. 5 “ Have you seen nothing?” ehe asked. #What " they asked. : #Nothing # No one?” repeated Bernadette. 3 res: 5 & 000 pilgrs arm " . e 3 Bonnes, Cauterets, &c. * It possesses, in ad- ted by her them, and, at & given signal, the 50, grims | we find him serving in India, then in Arabis, | to the depot, and return with a ton of conl the | giion ¢ ap exquisite Poctums qualitics whish ;xfim? L 35,0:%150&1{; b, iahissce T by hee fell on their knees to receive the final benedic- | and finally appearing as Commander of the | same day. . At this rate, you | - 2 2 e tion of the prelates, all the prelates strotcaing | Forces at the Sng; o 1554 10 LA The Col. | oan” Lusk ‘agd " market 250 . bushels fender 16 ayery valnable bypionic, Taken be; | Flandory, This sho inherited from her father, their hands out over the multitade. After this | onel of the Coldstranm Guards, Sir W, Gomm, | of co, and _ haul ten tons of | 1 30 it GRS o BRRO PO B s ab- | Loopold T of Belgium. the celebrated coremony tho bannors fell again intb procession- | who was an eusign in 179%,—just seventy-cight | coal in ton'dags, and yon will have ssved $0.00 | (e § spons u 5 e o tho. onl, | p—iumor hasivthat Courbol, the celebatst sl order, and were carried up to the new temple. ieum g0,—and who is now to become Conste- | in the purchase, or equal to an advance of | mui® 1 OPCR 53, D o cfumes. the mouth, ac- French. artist, who—as s meml ax-co1 s, & It possible, this was tho most imposing sight of | bloof the Tower, in succossion to Sir George | nearly 5 conts a bushel on your corn. You seo | oo, L o; emon!’l‘nfd‘mfl“m % fooling of | Commrne—ordered the Vendome Thlama e @ 5 21, a8 the ascending paths wind in and out along | Pollock, furnishes the following scrap of bmgm— that it is the purchasing power of corn that | oo SFGR Bhe CRBESEION, SN T8 CR S from tho | 0 down, has become 8 confirm¢ et thé acclivity, There was s moment when the | phy: ‘Served on the expedition to the Helder, | gives it value, Lt is not probable that corn will | oo e tho most delicions Chartrenze, drinc, andhas entered the famous Conyent o rairie lay izi & blaze of gold, reflected from the | in 1799, including two actions; in France and | adsanco much, if any, during the winter, while Tho mest stabborn palate, the most ruined of the Traiopists. i A 5 ;0 anners by the gradually sinking sun, andnotun- | Spain, in 1800; in Hanoyer, 1505, and Siego of | coal i vory liable to go up a dollar or two. Wo | 5,y ohe cannot but derive immediate benefit m: pn,\_'n}t; lie‘t:lx; h({:l; i:éul 5;3: 'flefd sin.csamhis R : “iHis o «'What have you eeen ?” asked the little girls, | lips, aud did as if sho washed herself with it ; | til the magnificent orbhaddippedbehmdthexy- Copenhagen in 1807; Peninsular Campaigns, vill se that you ten farmers have the o . » = “Or roplied Bernadette, with & Toeling of | thun sho knolt and dug " holo in tho ground | ronean peais, ia tholast banaar onter thebasilic. | 1603.9 Brasent ot the battlos of oleia Vimiora | coal opderedon oar 5 day Then oach one takes | (oM this incomparable liqueur- B I e s, and hota 1 ¢imid plessure, not unmixed with fear. “If | and by degrees drop after drop of muddy, thick | Here another blaze of wax taperslighted the edi- | and Corunna; expedition to Walcheren, and | aload of coal from this coal to-day for 4, taking e T good spairits, but overrates, it seems to me, the you have seen nothing I cannol water appeared on the surface. Bhe went on un- | fice. One by one were the banners lowered, and | siege of Flushingin 1809, Peninsula, 1810, in- | a load of corn to_the depot, and the next day Food—Price and Consumption. Penefit| he has received from mere rest,—rates it withont any grest effort of imagination, it was | cluding battles of Busaco and Fuentes d'Onor, { each take a load to B; and s0 on, until the ten An srticle in a German nowspaper makes | Imean,,as being more thorough and likely - b say.” . The two girls looked at her, snrf though they 0 0 an wap ore, » Sasy o qumpare them to $hoe of Victo- | Bedeioz Salamopse, Vittoris fan Sebastian, | havo esch 6 oax losd, Thoro is B0 dividing of | known by carefuly selegied statistics, tho great | bo mose, lasting than ib1a oR can be." - til she had enough to fill her hands; she drank fondered why she wes 80 Dalo and stranzp, they it and then wept avey. The crowds Rppeged