| OCR Text |
Show I'lTlllIt SVLI.C 11 1 1. rtie rnton r I'mnro nntl Itusta, lie stlnnt of his llriKtriarr. IAitlf Sor. 17. Rev. Fatner lleuiv oolle was foSud tlesd in his bed t.cio this morning. It wo4, hot a romantic death exact!; it was mtrely a case of suffocation by the fumes of a gas stove, left burning all night In ajairtmcnts doted, aftei the French custom, almost hermetically. hermeti-cally. This ia tbe tevond priest this week whohas been fuunu dead from the rams cause. It seems a pity that presdiiably educated men du cot know more titan td keep a (ras -tcve burning iu a room from which tliey have deliberately closed all means of ventilation aud cut tlT ac-i-tss lu fresh nlr. Father Salle was only an assistant juirtt, a Veiy ur man, very poorly paid, wiio did a lot of bard work u I llvt-l Id a little apartment con-eistlng con-eistlng of two tiny rooms and a still smaller kitchen up eight flights of siairs lu 'he Square Gaillou. Trie romance in coum-ctlon with Father Salle's death is of a some-it some-it hat unusual nature. 1 1 has reference refer-ence to a preseullmeut often ?, oktu of by the old man, an I strangely Interesting Ucaute fulfilled almost uurally Usju the day of a certain wedding muih talked about, thatol llnd.UKlit.ict 1) lU.wb.ln to Ihe Vioowtc de IJele. Like many another Frenchman, Father Balle was fully convinced that an alliance would trot only place the world at their mercy, but would insure everlasting peace and Ihe restitutian of Lorraine and Alsace, Al-sace, lie ne?er mietl an opwr-tuuity opwr-tuuity to expound this delicious theory. 1 1 w as a dreaai, and the ljor inau'ii inlud ould lake iu no srgumeut w lilch Uid net colucmr with his views. Iu this be resembled resem-bled many other iieojde. ' You will ee."hei.sed tosay, "icu will set; I shall live to hear the bells pealing mi t the Joyful neitsthat Frauceauu Ru!a are united, one iu tluught, one In lt tire, one iu life, an i wneu that day coturx I am ready to go, and may the Holy One have mercy on my soul." |