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THE OMAHA DAILY BEFs SUNDAY JULY 8, 1389k great Iniquity.l ) work defore it ever was finished. Never | more lamentable and tragic. He took a | store where he was ongaged, and o _He meant AbW Ifiyramale and his church | to have oxisted and yet to crumble thus | feroclous grandeur, lying thore in that rich | tot of a girl wax Contampiating With & Yeep when ho spok *®hey crossed the Place | already under the sky! To be made mo- | marble tomb, in the midat of the rubbish of | tired and weary look the Journey of twelve d: Porche “and'l fufned into the Rue St. | tionless in a growing, glgantic splendor, only | those crumbling ruins of his own church. [ blocks to her home in the rain after the Plerre, and 1t!%my! took them a few mo- | to form the flold whers general rubbish [ He was the solo guardian of it all, the | sfore closed, about 10:20 p. m ments, But ‘ithe Jconversation had gone | was piled! dreamer thus d watched over those vast Our preachers may cry all they want back to the fifherd of the grotto and the | “They re-entered tho nave, and were In- | spaces, open o all the birds of tho air. H about the nonchurch going habits of the | Follow me. ~ We will now visit the other ! strings tighten to seo such desteucticn of a | broken pancs, this dead man appoared even | boys sound aslesp on ho stairway of the terrible warfard;’ piércfless, between Father | vaded by the awful sadness of this whe was the dumb protestation, obstinate, eler- | present gencration, but until something 1s Sempe and the anclent curate of Lourdes. | sale assassination of a monument. Inside | nal, and he was also ting there. Lying | done to shorten the Saturday hours of this The latter, vanguighed, was dead, In fear- | the vast vague spot was obstructed on all [ in his bior, having all cternity to contain | class of our citizens it is next to impossible ful bitterncss, ‘Kod" after killing him with | sides with bits of scaffoldings that had boen | his patience, he was thera awaiting thoso | for them (o roach church on Sunday morn- care, they had ‘also destroyed his church, | thrown down, half decayed, lest their ac kmen who perhaps woul e back on | In It these “shives™ take the oppor- wretched lodging, the chance resting pla that he had fdft Wnfinished, with no roof, | cidental fall might resuit in some mishap, e bright April morning. 1 y walted [ tunity of resting up on Sunday or enjoying open alike to Widd and rafn. This moni- | and everywhere might bo found in the long years he would be thero; If they waited | @ 1ittle pure, fresh air to the neglect of / = = where all fresh religions of suffering and [ °Pen alike ig‘u/ |~ Pty find thelr birth Indeed, I sometimes | mental church;’ With what glorious dreams | grasses portlasses, putlogs, center Dbiis. & CENLN - e Wenla atilt Be: thers, tho church, who can blame them? ! ask myself If it is not better thus to have | had it filled tn¢ fatter years of his life! | mixed up with picces of old rope that the 0 seo those rotten scaffold u fgit hero it might be put forward that = /7 this chamber remain in this Indigent and | After he had bech dispossessed of the grotto, | dampness had destroyed, There was als r W lying in (b s of the nave, | the best way of dealing with this matte @ abandoned state. [t seems to me that | fent away from’hg work of Our Lady of | the bare frame of a indlaes, TIaing up UK | mren. taore, The thy doud” themaeives, rosur. | Would "be to appronch' the propHistors: of ° Bernadette has nothing to lose by it, for 1 | Lourdes that Wbk of which he was, with | gome unseon power. Shovel handics, brok Wt some prodicy, o whola length | the different stores on the subject, but, let > love her all the more when I come here to | Bernadette, “the first artisan, his church { bits of wheelbarrows were still thrown down [ ¢ the waited to see tho steam [ me say ATroRAY. BESH done; &M +OPYRIGHT BY JAMES GORDON BENNETTe 1894+ pass an hour at a time.” bocame his roveige, nis protestation, it | among forgotten bulliing materinls, & heap | pow. 1 muddenly lighted. up, puiihg out 1tk | while son ot MSROnKNtS, aP Th PNVEE He stopped for a moment, then made a . 0 himself, the hcuse of God in | of mouldy brick, moss grown, covered wi e breath agaln, to:convey the tools and | Of early el ¢ Saturdays, others are not 2 " TS o it Mo s Aiiioncs | fresh gentire Py which he should triumph In his sacred | jiche: Tndetrie coarse clothes ‘ LA L ; « | and deflantly refuse to do 0. Somes RESUM OF LOURDES. Pleasure, 1 hope It does ot Inconven cah mesture of disgust: 5] R e hleh he” ahould lead forch | ure s, Undornesth, the donrse clothes materials to the workmen on the roof. His | lantly refite to dp do. Some thrss Rrlot Synopais of the Portion of 7 "Xot at all, not at all, Come as often as | gratitude makes mo beside myseit. I told | INterminable processions to realize the formal | seen here and there the rails of the hand | crymbi ngon ' s “haad, and. with hands closed at 6 o'clock Saturdays, and P A you wish, and fetch anybody you want to.” | you that I thought Bernadette went willingly | YOW made to the Holy Virglo made (o carry in the workmen ol and losed he Kept watch over | continued dolng so for over two years, but oA AUBLUS L LR, He langhed with an engaging air and | to clolster herself at Nevers. But It no one | The = man of authority and = dcm- vhile a small car was overturned in Lot bl Al el gt vas compolled to open again by the opposl= bowed to Plerre, who, surprised by his care- | did make her disappear what a comfort to | Ifatlon that existed in his bein. the lender corner. The most melancholy object TUAL O ol il G e le tn a | ton of its greedy, grasping, mercenar: less manner, asked him: them that. she felt lonely and ‘sad herat | Of GrOWds, the conairuotor of tembles, lonked | was the steam engine that still stoad undee | 0"V fenimg ow after perscenting thio | NN R 2 o dny's 1o of Apr "Bt surely all the people who come must | They are the same men of today, so anxious | With an Impatlent joy to hasten the workmen | the cart shed that used to protect it. DU Py A AR 18 WOPK tomb had [ 7O th LR W R LD, They are the same men of today, 40 anxious | fut'ylup with the (mprudenice of a man OVer- | ficean” years. 1t by semained. hers, coid | AUbe Peyramalo and his work, the tomb WUl | cypfytian Tamperane union be. It ssid. that from Parts : The vicar appeared surprised in turn. Ineana Lo, anfiterate hor memory, i my | ome by one idea, and who did not trouble | and lifclos, The shed hud fallen down on | USViae ot persceuied TRt WL TEURE | those ladies Havo pledged themselves that T, It Sindeed. o people do not come. You | dear child, it I might tell you all himeelf about the money, allowing himself | |t large holes permitted the rain to soak it | CFLY Deen & bust of the curate bn the Wb | i1 “tneie shopping shall be done befora 6 y her fat Know . (his pot s but lttle known here. [ Little by little he told It, and felt comfort | (> be robbed by the contractors, 8o long A8 | at every shower. One end of the rope bofore which devated hands hut Fen on | P m. Saturdays,and they aro religlousl SCHAPTE e Wit he | Every one stays over yonder at the grotto. | In the telling. The dead Bernadette was thers was always o lot of workmen on the | that formerly worked the windlass hung T a0k OhLIhY .lx‘r"",.,.'.'|'“’:.‘,\"‘,”‘L.“""',"',,J"'{’,..',f:: koeping their pledge, as ladies always do, a ol 2 I leaye the door open that I may not be | even more feared by the fathers of the | oCif N“','m; :u':v‘l I:Lk‘:;mi.:“m-:!( .f"}.‘,‘.m.l.? | down and looked like some link to the past it ‘of . the1defunct. man, and..lhe And now to the workingmen of Omaha F : e d | o gigantié cobweb. All the iron pleccs and O e emurred. Wire | pReal -~ AS believers in the agitation fov eriasting credit of the Women's self in a long prayer, Pierre, who could time to come. When he closed his eyes he A > W constructing the e s himselt into the work of constructing the | nop pray, stood beside him. A feeling of to lend its pungent es- Little Maris ve played to- | robbed, but whole days go by without my otto, who apparently exploited her work, X A 1 gether, and love with eacli other & joaring even the no'se of a mouse.” than the living Bernadette had been. 8o |}, sl i :I““'l‘lz";“‘“’““"""“'“'» new and | sieel parts were rusted and decayed, covered, cles to bo produced here also? Invalids | 41 cight-hour day, we ask your assistance . too, by lichens and all sorts of vegcta P Lt . to break up this worse than Ity i ralysis. As ' v f iy J ” o pass whole days on ti an cruelty to ar v mea | more accustomed to the darknes:, and he [ she might return to Lourdes to divide the Ah! that was the vision it always invoked, | tion, whose yellow patches made of them“a | pSiOidc ', r“vt G L :\'.‘4. e knelt | Animals. Arrange to do all your shopping and that gave him courage to struggle on | very ancient looking machinery, that wintor | b AChes i front 6F (06 FORER o DFRTS PO ] by 6 p. m. Saturdays, and so Tift this stain CHAPTER T1L—The suffcring In the train 18 | ghjacts that filled the corners were old bar- | humility, for she was not at all dominatin - Lk o aria e th dnitense when it stops at Polrtiers haif an fo reis, bits of chicken coops, broken tools and | having chosen herself the shadow of secl that he felt enveloped him. His church, | inactive engine, that cold machinery with [ {0 ) R CUre L 1 LHO RVLED liAd bring to time these rapacious, greedy soule looking over the vast square, W finally | its extinct fires, the silont boiler, were like [ pies BeCREE W EES CUFE e s one. | Tess corporations by forsaking their places teau gets In. Hie tells the story of the eure | jnto cellars, Hanging from the rafters he | But then they trembled even still more at & L L 5 accorded o fer disensed foot by simply QipPIng | o Trovicione “a basket full of eggs and | the idea that some other power besides | Wished the Roman style, very grand, very | work, were all valnly awaiting the return ] o ¥ only who can do it HUMANITY. I vs, Tho bishop of Tarbes was Inform ANITY o e, wators at Loun 1o aii ik simple, about ninety yards long, 140 high. | of the great charitable heart whose coming | Miron® ABULLL AL L it - & v 4 of Tie e, and describes “But from what I see,” he continued, | relics of the seeress. A A SSBTANIRE i Cook's Imperial. World's Fair “‘highe: Bing e ity o e e | o adder, “you have been able | The very day after her death a plan was | finally the last scaffold was taken down, all | wake that church of the sleeping woods trom | p¥ARSC T CHMTRR. L CE DAL G LOS B I P e i et L EEOLLS Lotirdes s Tonched in the enrly morn. | w1t o BRI 8o e suggested by the common council of the | fresh In its newness, large blocks of stofie | jts dull slumber and ruin. THOHIE (LHELE, Rl D I o [ 4 B i B W e not? ‘what can I | and a subscription was spokon of. Instantly | around it,” enchanted by its bareness, its | “Aht™ he said. “When one thinks that [ 4k® Bernadette, his momory Web RS W 15 HesAwat RIDW over tHiofe cheated cxtaptn 1 SFCOND DAY, | iven of the | Uo7 The Tiouse is small and [ have so lit- | the sisters of Nevers refused to give up [ CHULY of & vITES i S B P2 i 2 & b tbuas i) cnl) G ER A vivid picture is given Of thS 0 tlo room. Then you cannot imagine how | the body; that, they sald, belonged to them o carving, not one ornament that | aster. With 50,000 francs thin, cht have g t g hon e invalids o ded a o] ¥ ca 8| LI B A v V. ' Q s AINES, MIHC ha ains o I3 A S0 o athers onli q o y ughtel confuuslon when (e " nyatis are danded”and | G0 Fo0hR - TRER YOU, SO impossible | Behind the sisters every one felt the power | MIEMt weigh It unnecessarily. The roof | beon tided over, interest paid, and this im- | W U St ara bt R R L CHAPTER 1. -The hospital 18 greatly ov to live in it. So, my God, little by little, | of the fathers, who were very uneasy and Yo s y S crowded. At § m. the procession to i things accumulate, without knowing just (‘lxlmfiell. opposing with all their might any E.“n'fi.d’.fie““‘.h’;‘l"‘“ heIK:H. un‘la]lllnlnf n\:- .ql'- and there was plenty of time to wait. But | /o “UA 0 (hey alone, even to this day, im the. 0 7 was decorated by simple oy wishe suppre! 3 dR7the; omb, Anc y alone, eve {Helhy Sinarugton o prayTor 3 gioay miticie e | o1 bringing forth of those venerated ashes, in ¥ ple | they wished to suppress the work as they | [P | AN whey wiome Evei fo R G 0 Sweets iy of the man who dfed in the train s to b ; Panerned in "tha wont in mopes. that ife will bs | “Oh, indeed, no! An unoccupled room, | rival to the grotto itself. Imagine such a | the lower walls and of the nave had no | He designated by a motion, over yonder. | jiije” tjeir rich harvest of dunations Festored, : s ot fetend, | On MY word, it you hold to it, is a place for | menacing condition of things! A monumen- | Sther decorations than moulded archivaults, | the fathers of the grotto, whom he avoided | fqitite FRCIT = EE SEERERT - (GG TR the pools. The dend man is brought in and The priest's embarrassment augmented, | It in processions, the invalids kissing the i L o ekl WL G el L LA . fmmersed No miracle occurs, On a5 out | mised with some shame. Dr. Chassaigne | marble with their feverish lips, and mira- | Fos¢ windows shown above, went round, | 800,000 fran They prefer to send presents 5 bi passing behind the round ' apsis, against | to Rome in order to maintain powerful friend- | CoUStruction should crumble on tho bl For my lady’s dressi O TSk 1v. e Chassatgne accompunies | o smiled and was evidently enchanted by [ faintly fervor! Tt would be a certain rival, | {ch (U2 ORISIE, ot Sterily flovs HermpeHEth eRLAAVE 0T L 6 e rmy lady's dressing- e to the Bureau of Certifical Fliza | the revolt of hié companion against human | a disastrous one, the displacement of devo- Aul 4 bt L In spite of himself he flew off at a tangent D 0 P ~har H i et U RS G Ty 3 i . {5 ! Abbe Peyramale walked round, untiring in | at tho. thought. of the adversaries of the | (0 I D L LT table, to charge with Tupun, declnres (he sore s steadil CallE Bk AT GRIV Fdvan B it ayN frttihy his gape, at this royal building, those | Abbe Peyramale. The whole story haunted | WHO knew him, so courageous, so g declares (he stead ng up; selt, cc : 2 ys remained—that of | I Abbe Peyramale. The whole story haunte e S G 0 Jae Rt o g had' b AL “Really, vicar, forglve me it T Insist. | having to divide, to sec the money go else- [ Srand lines that stood ~—out = against | him with a holy sense of justice. Opposite | {HiIC (YO0 ‘I“ji..,,'}’.’rl'h..'.;‘-~" R odor of sweet flowers In the evening the abbe visita | detie; without her Lourdes would still be | instructed should ever wish to build a tomb. cnormous mass whose solidity should defy all | facts, how the enthusiastic curate had thrown Hhe i much depressed and is Josing one of the least known towns in France. It even ve to the fathers a project of ¥ of Bertndet w persecutions fol- in his proud imaginations; below, the i 1 Jowed upon the firs tude of the parish should have trans- [ to keep the body of Bernadette to them- his proud imaginations; below, the triple | (o be robbed, while Father Sempe, spying v A i Us 3 sence or de 7 i . cheers them up. . forred this . micerable chamber . Into. a | selves, that the Sisters of Nevers should sim. | Porch the two porches to the right and left, | about, made use of each fact to bring him | those heavy drops of v stenitallingaon o sence to her dainty linen; THIRD DAY, . towers, rising from the central ch . i oF —Die discovers that Mme. Vol )h! a chapel!” interrupted the vicar. | peace of their chapel. But they waited DALY central porch | by witholding the donations and stopping . g s sy ¥ ¥ y waited to | girojened in the middle, like a powerful | the work, Then, after the death of the van- | Clernity in the midst of - that profound {o the water of her batht meet her lover. o s GusraR it church could not give her a separate re- [ of the pilgrims commenced to fall off, What | 4\ S 9 ) HH U silence. He thought of the eternal misery d C (& I y to_and M. e G ligion.” Would be the use at prosent of the solemn | thelr pedestals, supported only archivaults | luwsuits, fifteen years of litigation, that ga ok in ¢ S Jiaymonde 1s engaged. | “Well, do not say a chapel; let us merely | rites, for the crowds came in just as great | St Were bordered by mouldings on a point | plenty of chance to the elements to destroy o e L and in a thousand ways say there should be lights here, flowers | numbers ver: where: B o | ot a pinnacle, a statue of Our Lady of | the buildings. And mow it was all In such e two great. workers o .. Lad P cOnSts s o it npiil L her numbers as ever; whereas, some day, the | T, deq was to be seen under a canopy, be- | a pitable state, the debt was so enor- Ilmnr!m» ]L)]nlw"l\u.} and .\||.‘, Pey ; to add a constant charm nther>and. Picrre hes the magniticent | § 5 ived again before him as piteons victims, Grehtiaht process by the piety of the inhabitants and pil- | must decline, like everything els . torehlight pr L like cverything else in this Then came oné’story more, where the sound- | The slow decay of the stones was achicved | {7 PR LRI L #tto to remain throughout the night. Baron [ tenderness, cture g ng board that{decorated the arch should be o1 e 2 she 2§ ARinEidehthl HSEVOR Checatali yauiars s . ¢ D otre (h10"the BRoto| a1 rbwatall: o e e S owon Tna | A awakening of faltiimight be preduced by under the tumbled down shed, the steam |/l [ofein (hat he might have had, for send her a box of : emony that would hear SCHAPTIR V.—Dr. Chassaigne telis delicate way 'the place that she must oc- | of everywhere, when Christendom might | Eround at the four angles, growing less and | eaten by rust. STrOn L sister, ovel @bout his mmterview with Hernadette, and cupy in all hearts. It is monstrous, this | viaw the relics of the elect, replaced in the less at each story, with great lightness up “I am well aware they triumph; therc is [ 10nE searc | v Hu[l‘mn .I... ‘I 4»\}r— ’ s ct, to the spiré, @ strong stone spire, | no one besides them. It is just what they | Comie by ev AOrL Lo isreaton urray a"inan s next them wor. i hin family ved an injury | R’ eyes were becoming more and | Icng as she lived their great dread was lest now percelved that the vague, mysterious | 8polls; and they were reassured only by her i in the midst of the sullen death warrants | and summer alike had devastated, and the | 16 KEGEEFRE IHATEE etk v, 1t | from our civillzation. Tt s you who can \s the train starts Sophie Cou- | all the rubbish that is gathered and thrown | sion, from which she would soon disappear. raised in its colossal majes e had | very 8o s od th ot busines ) s colossal majesty. He had | the very soul that had itself fspired the | D! W Chis GEE s S0P B U SIS (0] of business at 6 p.m. It s you and you It i the waters at Lourdes. ¢ strings of big, red onfons. their own might be able to bring out the 1 d worked up to pronouncing the mandate giving the listory of Bernadeite, T It was resplendent in the sunlight, when | through the briars and brambles was to | AN worked up to pronoueing the i ! he carly morn- : & o the tomb of the anclent curate o rdes, | cence, agreeable boguet, delicio or." ing. As the train rolls into the station an un L AL B L R R A ot e Ttowr wished to erect & tomn | 0 regularly laid. In his thoughts he walked ABAISALE DR O ANshlgHS, apoxks to the tomb of the ancient curats of Lourd i icious flavor. E chastity of a virgin child, gigantically candid | 50,000 francs, would have prevented this dis- | /{1 C4e™ AW Just ws they had been | of a cool million! She—How could he? He: conveyed to the hospltal of the base of the transept and the a i . mense undertaking might have been saved, | goqq map. They pursued him even to his grotto starts. “nther M als awks b as' the i ; ash br “'A place for rubbish,” concluded Plerre. | which they instantly could forsee a possible | MOuldings. In the same way the bases of | had killed the man. tinually created fresh obstacles, refusing to o at the great windows in the transept, whose “And &Y. vedaive! 1 And to think that they receive annually | JRoUIe Batsh (e AT BE GO TR ftie the abbe Nnds that Marle has been bathed With- | romained silent and did not intervene, but | cles being worked in the midst of the i which the building of the sacristy showed | ships." ! ho should be crushed and swallowed up Rouguet, whose face was made 1 Uy a | ingratitude. The latter, unable to control | tion and of the wonder. So their great fon, comes rushing in, shouting, I am e Bhove) . ¢ . gk But think of what you all owe to Berna- | where, it the town that was now so well | \he blue sky, those roofs so high above, the | the ruined bufldings he began,to tell the | Ui TG FEEER SRR B o oioiad nim the air of her boudoir: e knelt down painfully and quicted - 4 ) 5 He reads N ations: nd, i truth, It seems (o me that the gratl- | most astute depths. They had a secrot idea | MOSt clearly saw the front, the bell towers, | church, running into debt, allowing himself | Mot Pra¥, stond heside MG A& SCOUTE 0 chapel, ply be allowed to keep it for them In the | Whose roofs should join, while the bell | into discredit before the bishop, and, ended [ Ohe Of TER Joted %, & NOW MECTRTE, MIC to impart its fragrance y c omed to tell of the seconds o ¢ S agr: “mnt, e dedout piierim, has come to Lourdes to | “This merely concerns one person, and the | bring it forth on the day that the wealth i water jet. There, too, the columns on | quished man, came all those interminable of this world, of the election to suffering " Mile, Raymonde and M. wccompatiied by her | apd bunches of roses, constantly received c , co extraordinary success of Our Lady of Lourdes 4 y ‘his | Leen thie two hight grches of the first story. | mous, that it appeared to be about useless, | Hvee niatf Bere it AS PHERIR FC s and sweetness to her life CHAPTER 1V akes Marle to the | grims. Indeed, I should wish for a little | world, and then it was easy to imagine what tortured during their lives, exiled afier d S SS A Ahows him the miraculous spring L nuenEnget RCiel mbWee ayasuidliing Insplotes irfinedihy the Bernadette he had found after all’ his porlbes “the oot of the Abbe Peyma obliv donme! ietliod 51 : e e blivion, this abandonment, the filth Into | yoly earth where she had once produced brotherly tenderness, same, Build & chureh at Lourdes S RICHUthIKEroormtH ARk Tallar with four ' ‘bell turrets, likewise | wanted, 1l 1l the eyt - LLBLMLLE 50 many marvels. Thus miracles would be e t o antedigtogicey jallipbwer/als thsamonoveso arge tears rolled slowly dow DAY, At once the vicar—poor, Innccent, un- [ co WERY ANEE e marble tomb, in | ornamented with ‘pinacles that stood out | themsclves. I tell you their fear of rivalry large tears rolled slowly down hi CHAPTER 1.-Marie is still confident of being | thinking man—took his view of the matter. = . | against the pure sky. It seemed to this | pushed them so far as to send out of ks y : cured,” The or " Mme. Vetu 1 vividly | “[n the end you are right, a thousand | [Nt Of the grotto, or in the choir of the | fervent priest's heart that he himself was | Lourdes all the religious bodies that tried to (To be continued next Sunday.) FLORIDA WATER. portrayed. times Bt TEhave Vors Basilica. thus developing, that’he wi ing wi a i i CHAPTER TIL—The crowd and the religlous : no power! The day they | . o us developing, that'he was rising with that | come here. Jesuits, Dominicans. Benedic- SLEA FOR S TER HO = =5 T oy rine ™ Jieie "2 | come and ask for this room to arrange it as | ,,‘You may look.” continued Dr. Chassalgne, | spire to testify his faith throughout all ages, | tines, Capuchins and Camelites have alike ATLE RO R O comignt of beinig” e Ae stands be- | you wish I will give it willingly and take | \‘You may look, but you will not find in all | up above, near to his God. made requests, but the fathers of the grotto | = oyrapra July 5—To the r of The eer ar an Oaklan Bide her cart he remembors that one of the | oyt my barrels, although I really do not | Lourdes an authorized portrait or image of At other times ‘the vision enchanted him [ have always succeeded in having them |, SN iu‘f‘,y. W great deal of talk the & three physiclans who we alled consulta i Dhysi ¥ in con: b ) 0 B Only, 1 Bernadette. Her picture is sold, but it | gy He fanéled he saw the interior | evicted. They only tolerate female com ; e y for the - w where eclse to put them. y, 1 re: more, Fhedls y B! On the Crest o A 1168, AllGS! Sy tion on her case sald that she could be ecured T Berfectly natital Wiy by some gieat ex. | peat it, all this does not depend on me. I | amounts to nothing mn any of the sanctuaries. | of the church on the day when the first mass | munities, for they wish to lead thefr flocks. | {2y Bindeed it Is the intention of tho cltement cveral pilgrims ssert that they | can do nothing—nothing at all.” It is a systematic forgetfulness, the same | gnoyld be celebrated there. . The stained [ And the city belongs to them; they have Mo v : 6 A qee cured, and sudgendy Sarle, o o ot | 207 ander the pretext that he was obliged | dull disquictude that has left "this poor | glass windows shoné forth with the colors | shops there and sell the Almighiy God, both Amerieai Tafivay unlon to call u onter: (MAIN LINE B, & O. R. R.) ih ek ity (e, s el Iife seema 10 | to g0 out, he hastened to bid them goodby, ;mr:d;;"'::;;!"fi;v ;;:m::es';;gy-?g::"!;r:g o precious stones, all the twelve chapels of | wholesale and retail!” on bight-hour day” In’ @¥ery: defiartment: ot = _come to ho This much nereases the ex- | saying again to Dr. Chassaigne: - fi the stations burned bright with candles. They had returned with slow steps to the | o p A Fa Rl S kebp Ve R Lo glifment. | Shie walke o th burtun of certh | Sltumain, do remain as long as you wish. | possible religion over her tombi they are | and he himsell stood at the high altar of et st tHe o velh AN Al ktne Yentiias s abory and ey, (IR ISR RGeS Season opens June 23d, 1894 “put_on 1 You never disturb me."” afraid lest the masses.come here: to pray, | marble and of‘geld,#while the fourteen col- | brances with a sweeping gesture he showed | o4 hallot until victory is achi "With Fefar P - CARbLN When he was left alone with Plerre the | Whenever two roses may be placed upon-that | ymns that supported the nave, cut from | the devastation that surrounded them. and: baliot untll, viglory taactloved,, Wik tos! I"\':TZI:I":'-”I #90 a_month, nccording.t _peession 1 : docton etmea s acids and "poured forth a | chimney plece, or two candles lighted. And [ single blocks of Pyrencan marble, magnifi- | Lok at this sadness, this fearful misery. [ fhint (U3 ere s no doubt that an el Radrosd O ey happy effusion: if a paralytic screams out that she is cured, | cent gifts from the four quarters of Christen- | Over yonder the rosary and the basilica hav | jour day may be regarded as an fmportant 40 Deor Park, Ghrrott Gounty, Md, has. Jost I the right t v % AN, my dead child, what pleasure you | What a scandal, what a concern in the souls | qom, reared themselves, bearing up the | cost them more than 3,000,000 franc: e L O e n wite, He | 4 have given me! How well you said just what | of those good merchants in the grotto, who | yauited ceiling that resounded with the or- nd just as he had done when in Bern R S e aEnsstEtor " halt hour alo; he underground B lias been boiling up in my mind for so long. | Would thus see their monopoly seriously com- | gan peals and songs of praise. A faithful mx{\.,m-.’ room Plerre again saw the Ba- .m'.fr”;'.‘f; Rt i A e e Moufltaln Lake P FOURTH DAY. I'had that very idea of bringing roses hero | promised. They are the masters; they in- | congregation knelt there on the pavement, | silica in his mind's eye—radiant in its tri- | jjove (hat “eight hours is plenty to work 0 every morning. I should simply have had | tend to remain masters, and they will never | opposite the choir, that was surrounded by | umphs. It was not here in this spot [ {n' a day,” then why not act consistently e the room cleaned out and been content to | &lve up any of the magnificent property they | 4 jight grating as delicate as lace, held up | that the Abbe Peyramale's dreams had been | yith their belicfs and demands? At pre BETWELN DEER PARK AND OAKLAND CHAPTER V. place two large bunches of roses on the ',s"le conq‘fir:.g,;nfnel;mtr:):l{le“n:g:x"l',?:; hyl some want:rol;? v}'wden carvings. -~ The | realized and that he had officiated. blessed | ot they enjoy a uine or ten hour day with As they walked down the mantelpiece, for you know I feel an infinite | But neverth , yes, pulpit, a royal gift from some grand lady, | the kneeling crowds, while the organ pealed | 4 Jei-up of two or three hours Saturdays, | Se: g ,c,m,‘m,mx. A ,m"m;lu:l_'l‘y m"":p"r::"?:j tenderness for Bernadette, and it seems | tremble at the memory of those workers lr: was a marvel of art, cut out of solid oak. | forth hymns of praise. ~ Over there the | pyq |nl their less fortunate brethren, our ason opgns if‘f_e Ist, 1894 P b i | as though roses should specially bloom here; | the first hour, when they think about that | The baptismal fonts had been carved in hard | basilica called up all this, with its ringing | giore clerks, they deny shorter hou at | MOUNTAIN LAKE O Yo have Just witnessed the triumph. T | tholr hrieht erfamo. 18 1ike & memory of her | little girl who is so great now that she is | gtone by an artist of great talent. Pictures | chimes, clamoring with superhuman Joy <ver | lonst wo fur ‘as Saturday night i concerned. A AKE CAMP MEETING, “ will now show you two great injustices.” | —only—only—" dead, whose enormous heritage burns them | by the masters ornamented the walls, the | the miracle, all brilliant with candles and | jjjq jt ever occur to workingmen that. b MOUNTAIN LAKE OHAUTAUQUA, He conducted him to the Rue des Petits- He made a despairing gesture. to keep Intact to that degree, that after | crosses, the pattens, the precious mon- | banners and lamps, the gold and silver [ fyeir Jate shopp nd “snap hunting (W. L. DAVIDSON, D. D., Sup't of Instruction.) sending her to Nevers to live, they do not | strances, the sacred vestments, like unto so | hearts, the clergy, clad in gold, and the | sqiurday evenings they are the cause of | INTERSI'ATE W, C. I\ U, CONVENTION, Y S CHGL “My courage always gave out. Yes, I say § -,‘u‘;:si:‘d ':h::';rf""'""";,"' Pochndstie ALty e eauise s ome hs ot ‘openly | dare to fatch back her body that is left in | many suns, were heaped up within the cup- | monstrance lke unto a golden star. She | unold misery Io a great many me e L B W seure room from which she went | giojared against the fathers of the grotto. | prison under the paving stouss of a convent | boards of the sacristy. ~And what a dream | shone forth in the setting sun, touching nen and children whose bread and L. A. RUDISILY., Stpor S0t on the day when the Holy Virgin ap- | One hesitates and draws back from any re- | yard." to be the high priest of such a temple! to | heayen with her spire, with the murmurs | (op s made at o stores? Erom earl Mouttuln peared to her. The Rue des Petits-Fosses | ligious scandal. Think of the deplorable | ~Ah! What a fate for that poor creature, | relgn there after having bullt it unaided, | of millions of prayers shaking her VEry | morning on Maturdays till 10 o'clock “16°part of the old Rue des Bols, today called | uarrel It would create; and those who feel | cut off from all living, to have her corpse | to blesa the crowds that should come hither | walls. - Here was a church, dead before | night, and sometimes later, thewe poor Bhe Rue do Ia Grotto, and outs aoress the | indignant;.as I do, are obliged to be still, | likewise left in exile!’ Plerre also pitied | fram ali over the world, whilat the chiming ( It was born, forbidden by the mandates of | clerks siand behind the counter, the major t h s across the who seemed | bells should peal out to the grotto and to the | the bishops, falling into powder bencath the | jty of (iem with suluries scarcely able oferring to abide i n silence.” t creature of misery, Ruo de Tribunel. 10 is a winding street, | PRI (2,808 0 RGN Bt suffer both in her life and in | basilica that they had here in ancient Lour- | elements. ' Bach storm carrled away some | to keep Lody and scul togethier, and fn many very sad and gloomy, that goos up a slight | It is o great sorrow, my dear child, to | her death! Even It one admitted that any | des a rival, a Viclorious sister, where God | of the stones, great flies buzzed In the net- | cases Irregularly patd. = Tired, wearied i BLA bt il hill. Passers by are rare, and it is lined by | see the ingratitude and rapacity of man. | single persistent will had not caused her to [ likewise triumphed! tles that had overgrown the nave, and there | worried to death, they are expected always Prc[““ll”!‘:::» -“f)m".';.’ul;'-u‘;{{ La x‘n"'[)!r " the'high walls of miscrable houses, with | FBach time I come here, to this base misery, | disappear, nor even kept her apart until her | After they had waled for a few moments were no other worshippers than the neigh- [ to be civil, obliging and courtecus, with L L g vhe - T oS ad ‘at heart that I cannot restrain | death, what a strange circumstance had [ down the Rue Saint Plerro Dr. Chassalgne | boring women, who came In to pick up | swoet smile and a kindly answer for every auk o 1cored more cases thin mournful _outlooks, where never an open 3 thoir linen that had been spread out to dry | - RhE i o living Physician ; Dis success is natonishing. We “ my tears.” made it seem as though some one, still dis- | and his companion turned into the Rue de | their linen that ha v o dry ank who cares to mnleit them. Iiing Diysiclan liaaiicceasinatioialirasy ‘window may be seen. A single tree fna | ypor he ceased speaking neither the one | quieted by the immense power she might yet | Langelle. on the grass. In the midst of the mour sit the men are not allowed, the . gir Bavelienrd ufoasea of 80 yests) tanding cove LU AHE “eourt yard i the only gay thing visible. nor the other said a word, poth Invaded by a | be, had always jealously forced her to re- | ““Hore we are,’ said the doctor. But [ ful silence a dull volce scemed to sob out, | ( must,” here Is no clase of workers | I ssamaloabieworkon s diicasawiiciia Tere we are,” said the doctor. Just at | pojgnant melancholy that was instigated by | main separated from every one! To Pierre's | pierre could not see any church. He only | hethans tom CHe TETLE, 0 E [ in the cily more deserving of sympathy, any eufferer who may send their .0, and Expressade this spot the street scemed more narrow, | (he dreary aspect of the room. The darkness | eyes she was a martyr, one of the elect, and | perceived wretched buildings, a poor quarter down their useless luxury under their plank | help and encouragement than the hale Ay Sillorcewtio oKy asnd HLGleT O an B Eayg BRERE shnnen. ana thic house was opposils | e e O N minoss. sava them colt | ayon A7 he conld ever belleve, thé ‘story.of | of the.town,. gbatpustad by dlapidated cons [ SOvers: = At times llitle-blids ekimmed | clerks in our stores. . With that ' con- Prof. W, 11, PELKE, 11, D4 Codar St.o New Yorle a gray wall, the bare side of a granary. | ghudders, in the midst of those mouldy walls, | this unhappy girl would have been sufficient | structions. Finally, at the end of an alley- across llu:‘ deserted apses, uttering faint | sciousness of independen: which L e New .They both lifted their Leads to look at the | with the heaps of dusty and anclent rags | to destroy all belief in him, for she not only | way, he saw a part of the old wall, half cries; enormous nests of rats, hidden under | through the veins of eve / . T Silkitte death-like looking abode, with its nars | piled there. R uia fraternal enses, but ahe ve- | rotten, that still: enciosed the vast square | the fallen pleces of scaffolding. nibbling | can, they face the world to ] 5 B i 1s. cammmon haigh. conthal [Nt et e o et thiat twithout | vos oaCtobhim e naw! raliglon.thel ontyfonel| g rouna luatWaen; the: fourtatraats ot Balnt:| -\uroushs them, rantjout from thelr holes; | livelilivod;fand mot only/tor themacives. il walls of o purplish tint, with its hideous out- | seenadatia thoso prodigies that had made | that filled his heart, the religlon of life and | Piorre, de Baguerio, de Langelle and des [ [B 8 rush of terror, It was the culminat- | in many instances for others younger or 100k of poverty. Below the pathway was x,uur}hx; the most unique city in the world | of human suffering. Jardins. ] ing anguish of this voluntary ruin, to be [ helpless’ and dependent upon them; but, y black as night,.a frail old gate was closed, | would never have come to pass. Her voice Just as they were leaving the room Dr. You must tarn to' the left,” continued the | thus compared to her triumphant rival, the | alas for the treztment some of these poor b % tand there was only one step to go up, and | had caused the miraculous spring to flow, | cpassaigne said doctor, who had gone down a-narrow passage | Paicitica, all shining in her golden splendor. | giris are subjected to. m (LOBE i‘:"‘“z‘“'“f covered by the stream swollen now | that had opened the grotto with all its flam O satane M alieve here, dear child, Look | amid the oncumbrances, “Here we are:’ Again 'Dr. Chas igne simply said Now, tise iat ¢ lours on Satarday_even, y 2 . e late storms. candle ens dings had been e 5 e resplen- | *'A Frs SR - “Come e, gy are hard enough o men and Riile dootor apcke agatn: “Go. tn my || i .,",A"ulIf:‘cht:‘r‘:‘l'.'.-g‘tcluul;llflll.}.“'.fn e aaeth [1a¢ this ShAS "nil|':‘uhlrll|xl’lr[::l‘:l||ll‘lnllmli‘lhr,:: Bt A egn LRI A ared In the | ey left the church, going along the | women in our siores, bt how about the boys BUILDING, friend, go in. Just push open the gate. Eoayy pewishUrsheRifosm o Ko S r dsatileratiayhhe Mo IELATMBNE AL IR, [EIOaL o€ tha hdsei i en R0 IVEREISE LAY |pletsiagior itho foundationsyand Kepme k0 i anatelsia:ongagddiin hin bislress? i e SAnE D W o : rier il 4 o | whole town that has been bi X partially concealed it. a door rudely made out of some nailed If ever ther 4 disgrace In ovr nine- | 8. YW, Cor, 16th and Dodge 5t The' way was pitch dark and Plerre felt | an entire new town had been built like some | piet'® sroated; all the crowds that flock | The entire frame of the nave and corner | boards. when. after going down a wooden | teenth. ecntury efvilization I think it is io | . Cor. hand Doidge 5is, ulnpx‘m« ‘l""."f \:\ull, lmrmu'lu m;fl\t' a | fairy tale, with its gardens, its w,:.lkm”us hither If Bernadette were but a mad | wals, the transept and the apsis were still | gioiicase that was half rotten and whose r'n:f “‘”_W’: AR :‘mm‘“_“ A hy < blosa 4 4 He el 3 nlsatop.. Ho seemed to be going into a very | quays, bridges, shops”and_ {ts hotels. "The | Vonn, with hallucinations, would not. the | Sianding. The walls all round were as high | giops ‘oreaked under thelr feet, Uhey found | yil gk e e e | s snt. interest paid on savings soaked with water. Finally, ‘at the end. | money fell so abundantly that the young inexplicable? oW (;fi‘“ RO CreRn ot 1% (18 to a real v:luu Hpxan wl{‘ walk about, | place with vaults dug out in exact reproduc- | three “R' stundard of education (reading, 4 per cent. on time certificates -3 Upon froah Instructions from the dactor, he | town appeared to grow indefinitely, to fili | MAd WOmRL have; stfliced shake whole | easily recogaizing accustomed portions of a | tion of the choir. The squatty pillirs, left | “riting and ‘rithwctio) ey know litle or %08 oatha shins e doctor, ; o . Hatlons? No, no; a divine breath has passed | o1 edifice, But when the eyes were raised | iy thelr rough conditicn, were also await- | nothing. These boys and givs ought to | g o g Y o turned to the right. the whole valley, from mountain to mountain. here: that alone can explain the prod- | (jiey met the sky; the roof was lacking, the | jng Sougllsonlian. e A AL B 13 ; BE i per cent. on time cortificates “Bend your head, for you might knock it; | If Bernadette were suppressed, nothing of all | o g m"f' Tame In. ihe winds howled there at I:":wlr'['l:'h "\:‘:fi """ l:‘h;:l:l l‘[‘;lr \vm‘-‘l;’\mtfl :v’ {:"_. chok ul.l' u.:.:r o ’l r:‘_h 1 LR “‘1“:‘"‘* months and over, mix‘l‘x:m:xulfi :ny ‘llut;‘l;l\r ‘n\ltl!".‘::‘y‘::.n:\:i n“r“{; 3 :I:.’[i|‘\”\‘.:‘Ié‘“:fnm&nx.:ll‘llxfi:?:«:llmr:‘;:“zn|m::\":\1“;‘; Plerre answered quickly. \Elm‘ it ;’l"! thelr will. It was nearly fifteen years since | was rotting on the sunken ground, the en- [ [t is only a few Saturday ! You are invited to come in and_open_ an ag AR too 'wida' open anco to the | must bocome anninilated, the cld fowh of f true, a breath had passed over thom. The | (no work'hiad been stopped, and things had | tire great room was white with plaster, | since the writer found one hese a2y aro inviteito somo and apaB NN R n Piox Ay A e L e detto was | S0bs of sorrow, the inextingulshable desire | poon left in the very samo state as when | iike bulldings left half finished. At the e daily. Opon Satusdiy nights to recelve do e “m: D A '"1 R 0k\\‘n‘| |numlhe “ereator, and this | foF the infinity of hope. If the vision of & | {yo Jast workmen had quitted. The most | end three windows that formerly had glasses, Dosits only, 6 to 8 b M R i oo, iealiatiog, forbis oxea |ithe. Rolp WorkROmAR: T2, SGVOR, Ry Gne [isuftering child had suMoad {o'galbier hore all | striking things-wete the ten pliare jn the:|but were now withaut 4 singlo pene, lighted NATURAL 11 0. DEVIIES, ¥ B r e pright Mt oltalde, | ko Virain, this, very cradle as it were | nations, to caute mitiona of gold to rain and | yave “the four pillars of the choir, those | the naked de:olation of the walls with a CADET TAYLOR, Vico-Dros ffi"‘e“,,:""“'f’["'l‘fh abaolutely nothing; it was | Bt N ole of that marvelous future good, | Creste a new town on the face of the earth, | yagiificent marble pillars cut from a single | cold, sullen shade. AS NATURE W. B, TAYLOR, Cashic ReNIA0 0 08 Lhe nigh A sensation | of t Qisdained, left a prey to vermin, | Was it not because that dream satisfied | yooi of Pyrenean stone, that had been cov- And there, in the center, slept the body : 4 M 1. A HANSEN, Asst. Cnshie of foy dampness, like that of wet linen, [ was now disdained, : | somewhat the hunger of poor humanity, [ greq over by boards to protect them from | af the Cure Peyramale. Plous friends had [ And somerimen nsieed Gl B, Y S P © PARRDTS, e R T S bt i 410 N. 16th, Omaha, struck his shouldérs. f%nly. for a rubbish room, where onions | Somewhat the hunger, of peor FHRER: over piptosproteatiithomatron otdihesCyta Bevraiale, o Rious EHlnIR; hay m o JBut lttle by Mittlo Nis eyes became nc. { and empty barrels were kept. ::‘LV“!;N:"‘{;! "“““l‘"“‘" Shte had opened tho '&'Lyre".'fi‘n“'.'fi';: n.‘lw'r‘:n.u:unmg the xc\!llximrx. Tus ‘mtnm crypt (II("Klli:hI;lllfll'l.nllui .»:urln!;“ ttoue dyey, bk FROlT Y Hinson R SALE OF customed to the dim light, * Two windows | The sense of ‘c"mn;xxm":‘nnll" tfc”llr;u‘l,n heart | Wnknown, undoubtedly at a favorable social | Xuy' (hese isolated tolumns thus clad in [ The tomb was all in marble, up one large IMPERIAL g TOUNG OpANRaNR of an unequal size looked out on a narrow in- | ose. to such intensity that ho ket MW | UGN Grical thme, and crowds had precipl- | \ogen boardsigave mn alr of great sadness | step. The inscriptions, in letters of gold, ( SRR T terlor courtyard that was faintly lighted by | that triumph at whSh SE R0 BCE0 PRGEEC | tated themselves Into the mystery. ~Oh!10 | 1 "the place. [(Thimoteeling of melancholy | told the thoughts of the subscribers, the HAIR REGENERATOR: i favared purrots are but a greenish reficction like the bottom of a | that exaliation at uhe besitiels SRR SO | (ke refuge fn the unknown, when reallty 18 | yaq jnoreased byrtheograss that was allowed | cry of truth and reparation that cime forth Jeant o wieks cvery yent in pit, and one must needs have had a candle | drageing her cart, walked up belint the, RV | KL Py petieve in a miracle when cruel [ 0 grow™over “the meglected grounds, the | from the monument. ~On the top might 1t i ale toplo i SoloReS (AL 39 LR LT toread at midday in this dark room. = Tho | sucrament In the midst of the crics of, the | B BRI DU\ Mo hut one fong injustice! | 10 &3 and o thy nave, a dry grass tike | be read, *The plous” contributions trom il | il wiil (it oni Xhsolutely’ fme } 2 tor Toua (i chamber was four by three and a half yards, [ Popula 4 ul| "1! ove kel ‘“""‘n"m it cave | The unknown might be well organized, re- | yyov™i " cometorivs, agross which the women | over the world have erected this tomb to f possible to detect e, Baths will et e and e paved with cobble stonos, while the main | frth 1n his mind; no longer the anciont Save | TRC MG kntan and made tnto-revealed | (8%, IR onlanduhad made footpaths by | tio blessed memory of the noble servant | it send for free | ; . o B aar T Dpaiae insk ax oot formerly knelt on the edge of the mountain | religlons; there always remained at the bot- | going across the square. They came here (0 of Qur Lady of Lourdosl On the right IMPERIAL CHEMICAL MYG, €O, y ltten eglect. Opposite the door was ) 4B ha AL ! Gall from suffering ones, the cry L ies to dry. Thus the | were the brief words of Pius IX., “Thou 4 ) ; < il o the chimuey, a poor plaster chimney, with an [ torrent, but the chupel i fnowistood, aia fitam SACEIMLE SR oTU o tratermalihipe [ ARSCAD U V:,.:,:\‘m s, their coarse sheets, | has consecrated thyself wholiy to”erect a 292 Fifth Avenue, N. Y. GEISLER'S BIRD STORE O ;mouldy board for a mantle sholf. . A - o0 tn 1. All the noise, the | piness, even it it only came in another world g of oo B, e, “Wan allowed | temple to the Mother of God.” On the | Solu by Shevman & McConnell, 1513 Dodgo " sink stood_ between the chimney and ane of [ 41} nations passeld tn Foe LGN SN L0 | BEEAA ot exst fn this earth. © What TR R ere i LA dying rays of the sun | left were the words of the gospel, “Blessed | § Neb. the windows, The eld whitewashed walls | SEBUEERL PR G0 (Dlonqors” of @ continual | way the use of believing in dogmas? — Was [ 4,4 syone in ‘hfbugh the large, empty mul- | are them that suffer for righteousniess sake. were peoling off In scales, spotted with damp- | Sl % 0ry at the cradle of its birth, in | it not enough to love and to weep? Tona p Was it not alla truthful complaint, the : ~ SUMMER RESORTS. ness, covered with cracks that were jot | Sletory Here 86 e SO0 ©F B8 IO | 1 Bt Plerro did not discuss. He held back [ "SR, wiingifl seaking, Plerre ana Dr. | lekitimate hope of the wanquished, who L)E 22k L black, lke the celling, = There was mo | o8 (& St or % ‘fower. No one ever | the answers that came to his lips, convinced | qyasaigne walk pund the interior. The had fought so long with but the single de- poe Y EL e longer ‘any furniture. ~The room appeared | BOF & BYIG FEE, S SU0CE “Some of the | that at any rate the eternal need for the | o tiior chapg, fhned a rort of compart. | sire of strictly carrying out the order of abandoned. — Ouly confused and uncanny | [EN® VRS GG Thearts were touched | supernatural would always cause eternal | yonig filled with Fubbish and picces ot | the Virgin transmitied to him by Berng. . things were seen there, unrecoguizable in the | Fare MSEOTS SCGRE QRO GETong the | faith In the heart of & sad and mournful [ 00" “pne filir /@) the choir had been | detter ©A emall statue of Our Lady of i R deep-aliadows that Alled every corner. After [ SO BSREE CICD) SR Jutel shelf | mankind. Any miracle that could not be | {iified, doublesy’ to protect the erypt | Lourdes was there, placed above the tuncral 000 the dootor apoke. Smply as @ souvenir. The clergy Ignored | denied must. be like necessary bread to de- | pojow from ary’ it Moot e "ume | inscription gainsi ‘the great naked wall, | fagywismrtoske: Hinml Yos, thirin tho room; it all begun hero. | {ily' piserable spot, where the processions | spairing bumanity. | Then bad he not | fortunately the celling must have sunken hat was decorated only by wome crowni st \ Nothing has been changed, only the furniture | i) MOSRRYE QO S0 LGN (0 @ station | wworn himself that by charity he would [ jn"'for there’ was' a depression that the [ made of beads hanglug on nalls n»“:u::-':';', it it mniamcrl g Is mo longer here. I have tried 10| o¢ giory and praise. Here it was that the [ nevor pain any one by his own doubts? the previous night had filled with . imagine whero it went. The - beds | o K10, M PR IR L " Sleeping be- | ““What o marvel it alb 1" insisted ‘the | waror e e lake " Tha parts that | like those in front of the grotto, for those | poem theestherate/neafli | Miust surely have been mgainst (IS | {yoen her two sisters, taken In the erisis of | doctor. T ainly 1t in” he fnished by | 1T BKe & least from the ravages of ne- | falthful souls who might wish to'sit Sub loention, : A1} . = Cwall, ‘opposite the windows; at least | her pain, while the whole family slept heav- | waying. ““The whole buman dama was | gloct were the transept and the apsls. Not | B o fresh gesture of touching pity Dr. | scanery best of f A v ey el 3 o three beds, for there were seven Sou- | ly; from here she went forth, carrying in | played, ail unknown forces were agitated | 4 sione had moyed, the great center win Chasssigne_had silently shown to Plerre an - Narthern Butiding. B PAUL, MINNESOTA, until Juns ‘afvor that et otel *birous—the father, mother, two boys and | pay mind that unconsclous vision that was | fn this poor abode, so black and so damp.” | dows up near the triforium looked as though | €normous damp spot that was green on the - ! three girls. Just thiuk of that; three beds | 5 ho seen again in broad daylight, that was 'Phey remained silent for several mo- | awaiting the glazier, while the jolsts, for- | celling above the end wall. Plerre remem- Miling this room add seven persons Wvivg | to flower so perfectly In the legendary tale. | ments more. They once more went round | gotten up at the top of the walls of the bered the little lake he had noticed on the . within these few square yards! All this | But no one came this way: the cradie was | the walls, lifted their eyes to the smoky | apsis, might have led one to belleve that | disfointed cement up in the cholr, where mass of people buried alive, without air, | forgotten, it was left {n the darkness, and | celling and gave a last glance out over the [ they were to be covered over the very quite a considerable amount of water had without lght, almost without bread What | where the seed had been sown that today | greenish court yard. It was indeed a cry- | next day. It was only whon they retraced | been left by the storm of the preceding Jow misery! what humility! the pocr, | flourished and produced such prodigious har- | W shame thus to see this room with Its | their steps and came outside to see the | DIEhC. Evidently it was filtering through, ‘piteous creatures!” vests, that were gathered by the workmen of | cobwebs, the dirty old casks, broken tools | facade that the lamentable condition of this | for an actual stream flowed down, covering Here he was interrupted. A shadow, that | the twelfth hour and amid the sovereign | and debris of every kind that was rotting | young ruin was wisible. On this side the | the crypt when the rain was very heavy. Pierro at first |.>o|k t be that of an old | pomp of coremany, no one ever breathed one | in heaps on the foor En.&‘:llhou! adding | work had been formerly less: pushed, and 'r'nry both r.-:xkxluuluyi un they verlialvenlllh;tl! EXACT SIZE ‘woman, entered. t was a priest, the vicar | prayer. L] a word, they slowly turn away, thelr the triple rch was alone constructed, and | the water trickled down the vault and fell " Ty ) oImp n " W MTAD of the parish who now lived In ihe house. | = Plerre, who was greatly fouched by the | hearts lightened by a hand of sorrowful | fifteen Fents of wintry neglect had suficed | in large drops right on the tomb. THE MERCANTILE IS THE FAYORITE TEN CENI' CIGAR. “He was acquainted with the doctor. immense human emotion of this sad story, | feelings. It was only when they reached | to reduce the carvings, the columns, the The doctor could not restrain a groan. *It “F heard your volee, Dr. Chassaigne, so I | fiually spoke in an undertone, halt murmu the street that Dr. Chassaigne waked up. rehivaults, to such a state of singular de- | is raining now. It is raluing on him." sale by all [irst Class Dedlers. Manufactured by tho came down. 8o you have come again (o | ing his own thoughts in a single word, “It Is [ He shuddered slightly, quickened his pace, | struction that it looked as it the stone, | Plerre stood still, in a sort of sacred fear F. R. RICE MERCANTILE CIGAR CO. t this room " Bethlehem ! saying deeply mossed and ruined, had melted un- | Under the faMing water, the howling wind + W RLANE Sl SAUASH S¢ % U¥es, Indeed, abbe. I gave myself that | “Yes" said Dr. Chassajgne, “the same [ "It is not fnished yet, my dear child. | der'a Sow of (ears. It wmade the heart | that must enter In winter (irough those Factory No. 804, St. Loul