A Published by J. H. & 6. G. Myrover, Corner Anderson and Old Streets, Fayetteville, N. C. sr , VOL. 2 NO. 19. Subscribers receiving the Paper trith this notke designated to them by a Hue mark, are thus notified that the term of .0 their subscription will exnire in two weeks, and that at the etui of that time the paper icil bt discontinued unless a renewal is made. . . - It will also serve as a notice to those in arrears that their names will be propped at the expiration of two icceks unless a remittance it made. Tne, necessities of our business compel us to adopt this plan, which will henceforth be riijidhj enforced Look out, then, for the Blue Hark. North Carolina Gazette. J. II. & G, G. JIYHOVER, TERMS OF S UBSVMPTIOX One 5iar (in atlvauce) Six. tiii-ut lis, " Tiir-jo " - ... ..12 50 . . 1 2" 75 CL VII RATES: 10 copies (sent to oae address) witb an extra copy $ 2-2 50 i:.) ' " " 40 00 JO " ' " " " " 75 00 and a premium of a fine chrorao, value ?25 90 00 100 copies (sent to one address) with an extra copy and a premium of a line cliromo, value f 10 150 00 II A TES OF A D VERTISIXG : One square (0 lines solid nonpareil) one insertion $ 1 00 " ' " ' two - I SO " " " " " one month 2 50 " " three " 5 00 " " six " 9 00 " twelve " 15 00 XiOUgrr adTOrtisemeiitu charge.! proportion to the - uliore rau-M. Special Xolicca 2G per cent, more than regular ad vert'iMrments. Horne Circle. "Home is the Sacred Refuse of Our Life." Dndcn. TIIE'Y AND PARTLD. J About twenty 'yours ago a steamship nailed from a European port to tliis couu try. Among those on hoard were a French Huguenot geullemairaud ayoung English lady. They had never met before; but.no sooner did they see each other than an -attachment sprang up between them, which soon ripened, upon acquaintance;-into mu tual esteem and enduring love. The ves- ' sol, when ion days out, struck upon Cape ; Race Itoek. and became a total wreck. Most of the passengers were saved, among tiicm tlie two. persons alluded to, and land ed in small boats at Chance Cove, a few miles r.ort'u of the cape. Here thev re mained for several days, living a la Rob inson Crusoe, until- they were observed by a coasting vessel, and taken off in small parties to St. John, Newfoundland. At this place the subjects of this story -were united in marriage. The only means of getting away from St. John was either to wait for the relief steamer, for which the .captain of the wrecked vessel had (by way of St. John, "New Brtuiswiek,) telegraphed to his port of destination in the U. States, or to take the fortnightly mail steamer to Halifax. As this latter course involved tlie payment of passage, and most of our shipwrecked people had lost their all on the sharp-pointed rocks of Cape Race, but few could avail themselves of it. On the other hand, to await , the relief vessel in volved a further detention at St. John of, it was believed, fully "two months not a very pleasant prospect in such a place. In this dilemma our hero resolved upon a ruse. lie and his wife hid themselves in differ ent places on -board -,the Halifax steamer when she wsts ready to sail. Their plan was to remain concealed until she was out at sea, and then to discover themselves. The gentleman liao friends at Halifax, and knew he could obtain funds when he arrived there. Thev were both vdnng, gid- i dv creatures, and hardly understood the foolish nature of their enterprise. ""Well, the vessel put to sea, and after a few hours of .seclusion, the French gentle man made Ins appearance. This was a signal for a volley of curses from the cap - tain of the vessel, and a cruel order con demning the stow-away to the martyrdom of a coal bunker. But our hero cared no thing for either the heat of the furnace or the smut of the coal. He had gained his passage, and his misery would be over in two days. The only thing he cared about was his wife. So he went to work at stok ing coal -with a will, determined first to al low the captain's rage to .blow over, and then to search out his hidden sweetheart. Imagine his hofror and despair when he heard shortly afterward, from a brother stoker, that his wife 'had been discovered before the vessel left port, ard put ashore. ' In vain Lad she called upon lrer husband, who could not hear her; in" vain had she asserted to the infuriated captain that her husband was stowed away on tho vessel, v and that she would not be parted from him. She was heard with derision, and treated as an unscrnpnlous and vicious person; so she. was doubtless landed in St. John, not only minus a husband, but likewise minus a character for respectability. At least, this was the conclusion at which her un happy husband arrived, as he looked over the -trackless waters about the .vessel, and cursed the repeated misfortunes they had visited upon him. However, there was no help for the situation until he could reach Halifax. -. Next day-, or the day after, he waskick . ed rather than put ashore, and. found hiin "self in the streets of Halifax in a guiso so Ayiypicious that, but for , his obvious air of futility, tie would not have been received 4 the Arcadian hotel, wdiere. he had had "courage to apply for board. - make the' story short, he '.sncceeded -n M'mg his friends and having his drafts hon ;ti? a thing he could not accomplish in M Brunswick. Then he offered to pay ffhis stolen passage on the steamer, an. offer was imprudently refused by the gek Tie finally took passage back in the sai0 vessci for gf j0t,n wltli the siew oi Hsciung. Ins wife -from her uu comfortable and perilous position there. But new troubles were in store for him. When he reached St. John he found that the relief vessel from the United States had arrived before she was expected, and that his wife had taken passage in her.--Slie had left a letter behind for him, statf? ing that she had thought it best to pursue this course rather than lose the only op portunity that promised of leaving a place, so odious, and where she had no friends;'1 that she could not be certain of the success of his enterprise to Halifax; that she had written to him at Halifax, and to their common port of destination in the States, to the same effect; and that she would a- wait his arrival at the last named place at the house of the friends with whom she was traveling. As it subsequently turned out, it seems that this inexperienced creature made two very important mistakes. In .the first place, the relief vessel did not go to I the port to which the wrecked vessel Was bound; in the second place, her friends did not live at the hist named place, but some where else, supposed to be out west. So that when, after many detentions, our heart broken Frenchman found his way to the port of destination, he could discover, no trace of his wife. Among the requirements of the State laws upon immigration one demands of each alien passenger his name, vocation, place of destination, &e. After some weeks of knocking about at the seaport, our French man heard of this requirement of the laws, and commenced to search the records of the State Bureau of Immigration, in the hope of finding his wife's name and place of des tination. Although he expended a good deal of time and money in his search, the archives were so fragmentary and disorder ed that nothing came of it; neither did he obtain any intelligence through tho post ofhVe. Ten years passed away. About this time a Federal Bureau of Immigration (now abolished) Avas established in the State Department. "Well, one day, some years.later, a card bearing a well known French Huguenot name was brought into my oflice. The bearer of the card was introduced. He was a young man of me dium stature and of an intellectual appear ance, and bore, the traces of long suffering. His object in visiting me was to solicit permission to examine the list of immi grant passengers which' he understood were filed in my bureau. I explained to him that, although the statistical returns of immigration were compiled and collated in my office, the list of passengers, if there were any such lists, were required by law to be deposited in the State department. Upon this he apologized for his intrusion, and. withdrew. , m About two hours afterward he came again-this time with a look of the deep est dejection, almost in tears. "Oh, sir;' said he, "for the love of God, help me to find mv wife!" and he related to me the storv I have just told. It seems that he had gone to the State Department, and, being accorded permission to search the archives, had found them in such utter confusion letters, newspapers, returns, copies, books, maps, all higgledy-piggledy, without dates, order or arrangement as to render it a physical impossibility to search them. Presuming on the interest which he thought his previous brief visit had awa kened iu me, he had come to ask my ad vice what to do. I told him that, with regard to the ar chives of the State Department, it did not concern him, in respect of the matter in hand,. what condition they were in; that his storv placed the arrival of his wife in this country twelve years back, and that the Federal Bureau of Immigration had not been established over two years. It could not, therefore, possess any list of passengers upon which his wife s name as an immigrant was recorded. I advised him to advertise in the personal columns of the leading seaport and interior news papers. He listened with what I fancied was an air of incredulity to my explana tion about the State Department archives, evidently believing still that they must have his wife's name and destination on record there,, and thanked me for my ad: vice, which I saw very plainly was not to his liking. A few weeks afterward I read in the papers that he had committed suicide by shooting himself through the heart with a dueling pistol. Some lines were found in his pocket, addressed to "Julia." It is true that this storv turns not upon the bad condition of the Federal (but of t lie State) archives; nevertheless it inci dentally even refers to the former, and shows that the archives of the Federal, State and Foreign Departments are or at least were then, in as confused a state as those of the Treasury. The Old Sxonr Agaix. The story of the frugal wife who trades-her husband's old pantaloons for china, to find that he had, left a well-filled pocket book in the pockets, is not a new one, but Hudson furnishes a case w ith an unusual ending. The wife of a well-known grocer there made such a sale in July last, and learned, when she informed her husband of her "bargain," that the pantaloons contained a wallet in which were notes to tho amount of $1,500, and other valuable papers. No clew to the peddler Was obtained until a few days ago, when a citizen who had heard the story recognized the second-hand vender in the street. He was taken to the grocer to whom he at once acknow lodged that he had found a pocket book in his purchased clothing, upon arriving home, Lbut was not aware of the value or owner ship of the papers it contained. He said however, that they were safe, and that he would return them if the owner wrould send a man with him to Albany, where he resid ed.- 1 his request was complied with, and the n.inors nrn iio-nin in the nossessirm of t their owner. . r.-r x V,. RUSSIAN LOYE. '" HOW HE DECIDED. Xicopolis is a small town in the south east of Russia, where the Caucasian blood mixes with the .Russian, and produces very many remarkably fine specimens of female beanty. Among the most beautiful of the beau ties of Nicopolis was Ulyana, the only daughter of a wealthy land-owner. Her father was in the habit, every year at har vest time, to add to his force by engaging "people from Russia," as they say, mean ing people from the interior, who at this season of tho year seek remunerative labor in the more cultivated and w-ealthier dis tricts of the south. On6 of those people, Filyatieff, a hand some, stalwart young fellowr, attracted es pecial attention. He seemed perfectly in different with regard to his gains, and w7as always in the best of spirits. Ulyana soon became a willing listener when he was praised, and Filyatieff, who was not insen sible to the charms of female beanty, soon evinced a marked partiality for her socie ty. It was not long ere their liking for each other ripened into an affair of the heart, and became the subject of remark. Nor did the young lovers attempt to conceal what they felt for each other, and Filyatieff went boldly to the father of his ladv-love, and asked his blessing. But the father per emptorily refused : he was not going to give his daughter to a strolling laborer, he said. And all Ulyana's tears and entreat ies wore of no avail; her father was inflex ible, and in order to "put other things in her head," he compelled her to a betroth al with a wealthy townsman. The be trothal was celebrated with great pomp. All were merry but Ulyana; her thoughts were with Filyatieff, who gave her good cause of uneasiness. He had ceased to work, and no a- spent his time in either one pot-house or another. He drank to as suage his grief; but not long. lie soon took an aversion to schnapps a rare thing for a Russian to do and then drink did not lessen his grief. He therefore forswore the pot-house, and determined to go far a- way, where, concealed and forgotten, ho could end his unhappy life. In this ro mantic frame of mind he bethought him self of Siberia, 'and determined to take the necessary steps to get there as soon a3 pos sible. With this object in view, he, one evening soon after dark, went to the prin cipal bazaar of the town and tried one door after another until he found onejhe could force. He entered the well filled shop,, took what money he found in the till, and 1. Hiked about to see if any one came. Then ho made a bundle of some of the goods, and again looked around to see if no one came to arrest the burglar. As, however, he was still unobserved, he made a bright light in the shop.. This was soon seen, and people came and seized the supposed robber. On his trial he simply declared that, owing to his disappointment in love, he wanted to be sent far away to Siberia; that this, and this only, was his object m breaking into the shop. The jurors were unanimous in rendering a verdict of acquit tal, which was received by a loud accla mation on the part of the spectators. I he farmer was now compelled to re lent. He broke off the engagement of his daughter with his wealthy neighbor, and consented to her union with the romantic" Filyatieff.- Applcton's Journal. Truthful "Words. There are hun dreds of voting men that should be mar ried who are not married. To marry ear ly is discreet and wise, and, when men and women are of a marriageable age, I think it is in general true that it is whole some for them to be married. It is not necessary that thev should remain single because they stand in poverty, for two can live cheaper than one if thev live with dis cretion, if they live with co-operative zeal, if they live as thev ought to live. If the young man is willing to seem poor when ie is poor; ii the young woman, being poor, is willing to live poorly; if they are willing to plant their lives together like two seeds and wait for their growth, and look for a bundance bv and bv, when thev have fair ly earned it, tL.cn it is a good thing for them to come early into this partnership. i or characters adapt themselves to each other in the early" periods of life far more easily than they do afterwards. They who marry carl v are vines growing together and winding around and around each oth er; whereas multitudes of those who marry late in life stand side by side like two iron columns, which, separated at the begin ning, never come any nearer to each other; There is, in our estimation, no school that God ever opened, which young peo ple can so ill avoid as the school of care and responsibility and labor in the house hold; and a voung man and voirng woman marrying, no matter from, what source they come together, no matter how high their fathers have stood, one of the most whole some things they can do, having married for love, and with discretion, is to bo will ing to begin at the bottom and bear the burdens of household" life, so that thev shall have its education. Discontent is a sin that is its own punish ment, and makes men torment themselves; it makes the spirit sad the bod v sick and enjoyments sour; it arises not from the condition, but the mind. In France the ladies at the watering- places get up costumes for themselves o the home-spun stuff and fashion used by the women of the district. In a jeweler's window in the Rue de la Paix, Paris, there is a breastpin made from a single diamond, and marked wTith the price of one hundred thousand dollars. ,,If a man does not make new acquaint ances as he advances through life he wil soon hnd himself left alone. A man shoald keep hU friendship in constant re pair. THURSDAY, DECEMBER , A poor Turkish slater of Constantinople, being at work on the roof of a house, lost his footing, and fell into the narrow street upon a man who chanced to be passing at the time. The pedestrian was -killed by the concussion, while the slater escaped without material injury. A son of the deceased caused the slater to be arrested and brought before the Ca di, where he made his grave charge, and claimed redress. The Cadi listened attentively, and in the end asked the slater what he had to say in his defense. "Dispenser of Justice," answered the ac cused, in humble mood, "it is even as this man says; but Cod forbid that there should be evil in sny heart. I am a poor man, and know not how I can make amends." The son of the man who had been killed thereupon demanded that condign punish ment be inflicted npon the accused. The Cadi meditated a few" moments, and finally said: "It shall be so." i Then to the slater he said: "Thou shalt stand in the street where the father of this man stood when thou did'st fall upon him." v And to the accuser he added: "And thou shalt, if it so please thee, go upon the roof, and fall, upon the culprit, c- ven as he did fall upon thy father. Al- ah is good! Suicide of a Model. The other dav there was picked up ont of the Seine, at Paris, a young woman of such surpassing leautv that crowds nocked to see her body at the Morgue, and the photographs of her were scattered broadcast over Fans. 1 he ovelv unknown proves to have been an Italian, by name Lucretia Balbi, who ear- icd her living as a, model. Among the I painters for whom -she had sat was Henry Regnault, and for him the poor 'girl con- j ceived the most ardent passion. "She ne ver told her love;" and he, although, day after day, he had displayed before his eyes such witching charms, unveiled, as would lave enthralled most men, gazed upon her oveliness with osl v an artist's eve, and never suspected the love that burned so ntensely in the fair girls breast. But from the day of his death, two years ago, she cgaii to pine away in the deepest melan- cholv. Her character was stainless, aud icr deep sense of religion caused her to esitate long at suicide; but at length her mind seems to have given way. She left a letter, addressed to her brother, who is also a model. It is a very sad story, but here are no dark featmes in the case. "What a wonderful thing love is, even in these prosaic days ! Haity Husbands. It is a man's own fault if he is unhappy with his wife, iu nine cases out of ten. It is a very except ional woman who will not be all she can to an attentive husband, and a more ex ceptional one, who will not be very disag reeable if she finds herself wilfully neg lected. It would bo very easy to hate a man who, having bound a woman to him, makes no ellort to render her happy; hard not to love ono who is constant and ten der; and where a woman loves she always strives to please. Xhe great men in this world have oiten been wretched in their domestic relations, while common men have been exceeding ly happy. The reason is veiy plain: ab sorbed in themselves, those who desire the world s applause are careless of then- little world at home; while those who have nono oi this egotism strive to keep the hearts that are their own, and are happv in their tenderness. No woman will love a man the better for being renowned and prominent. Though he be first among men. she will be only prouder, not fonder; and if she loses him through his renown, she will not even be proud. But give her lore, appreciation and kindness, and there is no saenhce she would not make for his happiness and com fort. The man who loves her well is her hero and king. No less a1 hero to her be cause he is not one to anv other; no less a king because his onlv kingdom is her heart and home. A Stkaxge Diieam Fulfilled. Rev L. W. Lewis, in his "Reminiscences of the War," relates tire following remarkable in cident as literally true. The battle refer red to wTas that of Prairie Grove, in North west Arkansas, fought December?. 1862 fA curious fulfilment of a dreahr' occur red at the battle under my own eves. A man by the name of Joe Williams had told a dream to many of his fellow soldiers, some of whom had related it to me months before the occurrence which I now narrate "He dreamed that wo crossed a river, marched over a mountain, .and camped near a church located in a wood, near to which a terrible battle ensued, and in a charge, just we crossed the ravine, he was shot in the breast. On the ever mem orable 7th of December, 18G2, as we mov ed at double quick to take our place in the line of battle, then already hotly engaged, we passed Prairie Grove church, a small frame building, belonging to tho Cumber land Presbyterians. I was riding in the flank of the command, and opposite to .Williams, as we came m view of the house 'That is the churchcolonel, that I saw in my dream,' said he. I made no reply, and never thought of the matter again until in the evening. We had broken the enemy's line, and were in full pursuit, when we came upon a drv ravine in the w-ood, and Williams said: 'Just on the other side of the hollow I was shot in my dream and I will stick my hat under my shirt.- Suiting the action to the word as lie ran along, he doubled it up and crammed it in his bos om. Scarcely had ho adjusted it before a minnie ball knocked him out of line; jump 17, 1874. ing up quickly, he nulled nut his Knt w-n. Ved it over his head, and shouted, 'I'm all right V The ball raised a black spot ab out the size of a man's hand just over Ids heart, and dropped into his shoe." The White House. Ex-Senator Doo little, in a late speech, referred to the ex penses of the White House, and remarked that "whatever may said in criticism of Mr. Johnson's public course, all parties agree that the White House was never more gracefully kept and presided over than by his daughter, Mrs. Patterson a perfect lady, and a model of a republican mistress of the White House. Let me tell you a fact which has never been be fore published, but which I had from the the -lady's own . lips. ; Just as she was about to leave, at the end, of Mr. John son's administration, the steward of the house took an inventory, and found that not one article of furniture was missing or broken; not a sheet, towel, or napkin was lost; and the house was in perfect order from top to Vlttom. She told me another fact, which I Know the wives and daugh ters of the farmers of "Wisconsin will be glad to hear. When she went into the White House she purchased two excellent cows. From the milk of these cows she made all the butter, used all the cream, and made all the ice-cream used in the President's family during the term. WThen she went home she shipped these cows to Tennessee. Is it any wonder, ladies, that Mrs. Patterson received the first premium on butter at their late fair last fall V There are three things in the world that now no kind of restraint, and are govern ed "by no laws, but merely by passion and brutality civil wars, family quarrels, and eligious disputes. If even' man works at what nature has fitted him for, the cows will be well at tended. There are three things necessary to make up an adequate relisiQn. First: A power equal to the needs of the human heart to deliver it from evil. I mean here moral evil, the opposition of the will of man to God, Second : A religion which shall be a guide and keeper. Third : A help to mild character, the rounding out of the powers and capacities of man. And to this may be added a fourth, though the least important, a comfort aud support in the hour of death; for if the life has been in God's keeping, and moulded by His will, death is but a step into His joy. Dr. Ilobinson. When is a wife like an overcoat ? When ier husband is Wrapped up. in her. Correspondence. KOit THE GAZE JlJl. XOTES OF TRAVEL IX EUROPE. KO. XIT. Messrs. Editors : I will now take mv leave of the Great City of London: and will say this much about it : that, al though it is the wealthiest and largest city in the world, I was very much disappoint ed in its appearance. Ihe streets and houses are not near as fine and showv as those of Philadelphia or New York; and the smoke and fog that prevail at all times, added to the solidity and plainness of its buildings, give it a sombre, dirty " appear ance that is am-thing but pretty or to be admired. Any one who has visited New York, has seen a much more pleasant and handsome city than London. Before leaving London for France, I called on the American Secretary of Lega tion (Mr. Moran), who gave me a note to Col. Hoffman, Secretary in Fans; and this note was all the support 1 'ever used in Europe. The examination of passports is now only a matter of form in b ranee, and is abolished in Italy, Germany and nearly all the countries of Europe. An American can travel on his card almost anywhere. I sav American because I belleyo Ameri cans spend more money than any people that travel, and care very little about the governments of other, countries, con se quently they are not suspicioned or w-atch cd like foreigners are, but are rather en couraged to go where they please, and to spend their money ircely, m order that oth er nations many get the benefit of their extravagance. Yet I would not advise any one to travel without a passport. It is very convenient for identifying yourself at banking-houses, and, in ease oi getting nito any trouble, it would settle your na tionalitv on the spot. " There are now several routes from Lon don to Paris, but the shortest and most pleasant, is via Dover ana uaiais. The distance is 283 miles, and the time is only about ten or twelve hours; the fare is fif teen dollars in gold. Crossing the English Channel is the dread of. all continental travelers: and, by this route, they are only an hour or two at sea. I he distance across from England to France, at these points, is about ,23 miles; and, in good weather, tho steamers somen mes cross in an hour. Leaving London, from Charing Cross station, by the Southeastern Railway, at 6:20 p. m., 1 arrived at Dover at 10:30 Here I found a steamer waiting to carry us across 'to the French side. These steamers all belong to English companies they are very poor and uncomfortable, anil are totally unfit for passenger steamers in rough weather. ; Considering the, high price paid for passage and the amount o travel to the continent every .year, it is a shame that the companies do not provide better steamers for the comfort of the pas sengers. It would be a blessing to trav elers if a few of our American boats could bo put on the line, and, leave, the old "Ktnb" for the sneciai comfort of the English. I left Dover at II o'clock at nieht. It was a beautiful moonlight night, and the sea was as smooth as glass: a light breeze blew Irom the t rencb coast as soft and warm as from our own Southern climes. A more lovely moonlight scene I thought 1 never saw; and such a change from the raw, damp atmosphere of London ! It was too pleasant to think of. Sleep and the excitement of approaching a foreign shore kept all the passengers out on deck while we were crossing. As the cliffs of Dover disappeared in our wake, the lights on the rench coast came into view on our bow, and we ran into the beautiful harbor of Calais at 1 o'clock in the morninir. Now came the trouble and .the first se ious difficulty with trave-le's the lan- gnage. Our steamer was made fast to the pier, the bridge run out, and two French police officers took their station on each side. The passengers were all marched out iu single file, and no one wa9 allowed to carry ashore any baggage larger than a small bag or sachel : all the rest had to be sent to the custom house for examina- , a ' . tion. As each passenger passed from the bridge to tho pier he was stopped by an officer, and asked his name; this was written in a book, and Jie ; was then al- owed to pass to the rail-road station with out any further questioning or interference. 1, now b,ing suddenly thrown, for tht first time among a people where I could neither make myself understood or understand a word they said, was at first terribly awk ward, and felt, for a while, as if I was lost; but all difficulties appear greater at a dis tance : after trying around awhile, I found an official at the station who spoke a little English and w7ho informed me that the train would not leave for Paris until 7 o' clock that morning, so I employed the time in walking about the streets and look ing at the queer old French buildings by moonlight, while the most of the passen gers lay around in the waiting-roonis try- ng to sleep. With the dawn ot daylight, the cafes commenced opening; and, going into one of them, I tried my French for a breakfast. I doubt if the man understood a word I said but be understood what I unnted, and I got a very good meal for a franc (about 20 cents). By showing my ticket, I was put on the right train at the proper time,, and I left on the through train for Paris at 7 a. m. The cars and all their arrangements are similar to those in .Fnsrland except the third-class cars, w hich are longer, and will seat from six teen to twenty passengers. I hey travel much slower than on the English railways, and stop from ten to twenty minutes' at every buffet for refreshments. The country was perfectly level Iikc a prairie, and was finely cultivated. But everything food, fruits, vegetables was enormously high almost three times as much as the same articles are worth in London. I was now in a country where wine appeared to be more plentiful than water: every one drank it; nearly every man and woman in the cars had a bottle, and as often as thev emptied it they'd have filled again at the next station. It was Sunday morning, and I was astonished to see the farmers all ont at work in the fields as we passed along. Some were ploughing, some hoeing and raking, while the women (with hats on) were driving the carts about over the fields. As ve enter ed the different towns on the route, I found the stores all open and business going on just as on any other day. I saw men saw ing blocks ot stone and putting up build- inirs. The markets and streets were filled with people, trading, eating and drinking evervtmng giving evidence tuai jc ranee kept no Sabbath. I was so fortunate as to get into a car containing an Englishman who had resi ded several years in France, and who was familiar with the language. To his assist- ance I was indebted for what I had to eat on the journey. The cars were crowded; and such a fuss and chatteriiifr tho French did make! Thev could talk faster and make more gestures and grimaces do more quarreling and less fighting than any crowd I ever traveled with before. A little before 4 1'. M. we entered the Pans statiqn, 'passed through about the same examination we did at Calais, and, by giving my card and the address of a hotel to the driver of a cab, I was driven to one of the most pleas ant houses in the Rue St. Ilonore, and was soon comfortably quartered in Pans Tourist. FOB THE GAZETTE. . Reminiscences of a Sojourn of Many Years in the Principal Empires und Kingdoms of Europe. X0. XLIII. Messrs. Editors : As I promised in a former number to make some mention of the Church, I will devote this number, and perhaps another, to u Jiat I saw in various countries of Europe. I believe or hope that I can speak on this subject without giving offence to any one. - Well, on the northeast side of Saltzburg is a road that winds around a mountain peak, which stands in majestic attitude, as if in defense of the little city it appears to have in charge. This road then bears to the rio-ht. and passes on to another mountain, at least in this country it would be called n. mountain, but there it is called a hill At the foot of this bill, or mount,1 is a small house, near which is a group of wood en fio-nres: of life-size (indeed, all the fisr- ores of which I shall speak are of life f ize, and some 1 J life-size). The group now in Question is Jesus being delivered up to Pilate. Various figures are standing a round. The great pity is that, while the conceptions are all very good and accord ing to history, the execution fef this, as well as other groups, is very poor; some of them are actually painted, liie nex group is, "And so Pila'e, willing to eon WTTHT,!? ATA m tent the people, released Barabbas unto ' them, and delivered Jesus;" tho third is ln,l 4l. 1 1 ! .., - , ' "v uiumea mm wnu purple, and; plaited a crown of thorns and nut it on Ida head;" the fourth, "And thev smotn T.im on the head with a rod;" the fifth, "And led him out to crucify him;" the sixth, "And he, bearing his cross, went forth into a place called the place ef a skull;" the" seventh, "And when they were come to the place which is called Calvary, fhero they crucified him:" the eighth. ''And lm took k down and wrapped it in linen, and laid it in a sepulchre that was hewn in stone, wherein never man before was lain." All these are on the right hand side of the path as you ascend the mountain, and each group -is about tweuty-five yards apart. The whole of it is very impressive, and iliac croup wnere .Jesus has n m nnnn lis head the crown of thorns, andishowpd down under the weight of a heavy cross, and with a face expressive of just what ho must have felt at those very moments, is' enough to melt the most callous into tears. t I may be allowed to criticise. I think the most heart-rending part of our Savior's sufferings tho artists failed to conceiveand it is that part where he came to Gethsein ane, and where He said, "my soul is ex ceeding soiTowful, even unto "death:" nnd R'here He "fell on his kneas and praved, saying, 'O, my Father, if it be. possible, let this cup. pass from me." Well might our Savior, when He sought His disci pfes, and even found them asleep, say, "What, could ye not watch, with me one hourl" That part of our Saviors sufferings and' death should have been illustrated. In rather the eastern portion of the citv. at the foot of a mountain, there is a gar den, and in rthis garden there are holes in the ground where the heretics, or rather those persons who could not hclieve just as the Church wished them to believe, were put until they were disposed of.41 It is an awful thought, that the followers of he meek and lowly Jesus shonld ever lave thought of taking the life of a person because that person could not believe as ie was wished to do. Mv remarks are HQt intended for any particular denomina tion, for history telfs us that religions per-i secution has been rife in all ages and in all countries, and found among Protestant . as well as Catholics. I suppose it is the nature of man to wish people to believe as he docs, for even now we see it illustrated ' in the follower? of Mohammed. Our good friend Kaiser went with us all through the conntrj', and, as wo passed o ver those fine, smooth roads in Austria! we occasionally passed large figures (perhaps twice life size) sculptmed in wood, and in- - tended for one of the saints. I hese figures are erected by those who wish to commem orate some wonderful escape from drown ing, or some other very miraculous escape from death. . The whole account is wrrit- tcn on a sheet of foolscap. Sometimes there will be as much as three pages, giv ing an account of. the' whole- affair, and placed in a glass caso for every one to read. At the forks of roads and at cross- .; roads a cross is placed. Sometimes an ; image of our Savior i3 nailed to the cross, and often, and in fact almost always, near by is a shrine, in which is placed every imaginable trinket even such things as little scraps of ribbon, and tlfb reason for which each donation is given is related. One man's wife was saved from being burned up in a house, another had like to . have lost his sister by falling from a rock, and Jake Togle's weather horse ran away with him and stove him up against a tree, and throurrh the intervention of the Virgin Mary he wa& saved. I remember that in some of the mountains of the Tyrolean Alps there are little stone houses or boxes built with glass floors and having1 three a- partments. The.centre one of these apart ments is occupied ,by the v irgin JNlarv with the infant Jesus in her arms, both life size. In the two little side rooms are all sorts of little trinkets, which complete ly fill up the whole space of the two a partraents. Sometimes one will come sud denly upon one of those rude little crosses bearing the image of our Savior on it. This, perhaps, is on a mountain side, and on some very desolate spot; close by tho cross is" a post upon which is tacked a sheet of foolscap that informs the passer by that on this spot a 'person, -named thereon, was killed. These spots are al ways very sacred, and no devout person passes by without kneeling and making a prayer. But those places most frequented by the devout are the ones whereon are e rected a very high cross bearing the image of our Savior, and the two malefactors on each sidef or where a great accident has occurred, on account of which a statue of tho Virgin Mary and the infant Jesng has been erected there. At such places as these from early morning nntil late tat night some one can bo seen kneeling in devotion, even, Lduring the worst of weather. Those stal wart Tyroleans never pass any image, ; shrine, cross pr church without taking off their hats, and sometimes, when ono has a. load on his back, he will take it off and bow. These things may seem' triflea to mention, but I do it to show how very sin cere they are in their professions, and how . much such sincerity is to bo admired. But sometimes this reverence is carried to such an excess that it is disagreeable, even b the strictest Catholics themselves. Forin stance, during the three last days of lent I have seen in the Basilica of Munich and other churches a short cross, four feet long with Christ crucified, aud rod paint ou hw . side for blood, and his feet and hands were pierced with nails. I have seen women and men come in and prostrate, themselves on the floor before this little image, and when they think no one is looking they will rub some affected part of their handd or face on tho painted part. ! ; After i they leave others will enter and kiss , the isamo places. These, images -are laid on tho floor for that certain time the last three dayri Of lent. , VorAGECR. , -. -:.&;----3tf- - .1 . - . , -