Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 8, 1894, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

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

Other pages from this issue: