It is rogan‘dled as probable that the arbitration treaty quiestion will be re- ntad in “Washington shbrtly. and mt an agreement will be drafted 8b tqptable to the United States and Brit- hh Governments. ‘ ‘ Mr. Labauohlere‘ who was mm of the members of the Parliamentary Com- mission appointed to enquire into the Transvaal raid. has gLven notice that he will make a. motion in the House of Commons that the name of Cecil Rhodes ho removed from the list of Privy Councillors. ~ LIT. ;'[‘. V. Powde'rbey has been ad)- pointed [by Pnesident McKinley C'om- missionerï¬teueral of Immigratnon, but the Knri hts of Labour will fight, tooth and mi , to prevent confirmation by thaï¬enate. v 1 (Ewanty (prisoners In the King’s County, N. Y., mnibantiary have be- come insane since the beginning of the your owing to enfloroed idleness, the fault of the Anti~Convict Labour It is stated in Lotmdorn that, while Lord Salisbury is by no [means pleased with the tome of Secretary Sherman's [otter cm the seal question. he is not djspmed txt bake the matter too seri- uwsly. and his reply. while firm, will be podite and couched in diplomatic language. At New York bar silver has declin- ed to the lowest price in) Lwo‘ years. It is thought at VVashimgton that England may participate in the bi- metallic confluence to be held in the Mmerican capital next fall. The Phttalm-rg council of the coal miners has passed a resolution call- n‘g on President McKinley to use his good offices in the settlement of the mal miners' strike. Ain anonymous writer in! the London Daily Mail urges thn British Govern- ment to rectify the Canadian frontier by adding Maine, Vermont, New Hampâ€" shiu‘e. and part of New York State to (hundian tarribory. The order df thy British Admiralty for the battleship Renown, the most. powwrfufl imclade in the navy. to pro- ceed to Behr'umg Sea, is regarded as Lord Salisbury's reply to Secretary Sherman. The British Postmnster General make a. personal investigation of blue grievances of the "overworked" post- affioe clerks. ~ quuflries in Engfland have resulted im the discovery that Roland G. I. Hammett, of Lflmtmal, isgno relative to Barney Bamato. the deceased African milluonsairo. The. Archbishop of St. Boniiane is making a determined effort fw secure an increase of < tine French-Canadian p0 wiatitozn of Manitoba, and. with that 01) t in View commissioned the Rev. Fa,th Car 11.0 act 88 an im- migration and repatriation agent in easbernVOama’dn andibhe United States. GREAT BRITAIN. Miss Jean Ingelmv. the English poet mud novelist, died on Monday night. She was sovenky-seven years of age. Sir John Bumkndll, one of the found- .rs of 1111's volunteer movement in 1859, lead. (He was eighty years of age. Sir Johan SkelLon. a Scotch writer,who med the norm de plume of Shirley, is is dead. He was sixtyâ€"six years of age. John Banner. of Lunenburg, 1313f the schooner Ida. of Halifax, who was unlawfully imiprisoned by the Spanish authorities at Porto R100, has return- ed b0 Halifax. He has preferred a claim through time British Government for: $3,000 damages. , One hmmdred and eightyâ€"five immi- grants from Galina le't M’ontmal Fri- day for “Western points. They are all in.qplendid ‘hwflth. are ple of com- parative means. 'agricu= turists by callâ€" ing. and are ‘boumd to make good. set- us. The Highland cadets of Montreal will shortly visit Ottalwu for the purpose of being 1 bed by Uhe Governorâ€"Gen- ??Al and . Borden, Minister of Mi- 1:19.. ‘ I [I‘he Grand Trunk car works at Brantford have been closed and noâ€" tices mbed instructing the employees to apply for mark at London.» he population as 63,480. Galt‘s town: hall is to have a - Jubiâ€" oe clock to cost $1,000. (Heavy battle shipments to England .re reported from Winnipeg. It is rumored that the 0. _P. R. is o be extended from Heston mto the ’hpesbolme wunbry. ' Tlhle shipment Olf cheese from the port uf Montreal unis season far exceeds the [uwntlty sent for the correspoudmg pe- ‘Lod last year. I " Mr. W. \V. Buchanan of Humillbon has aesngmml the offices of General Manager i the Royal Templam 01' Temperance uml ediltor of The Templar. J. Behind. a, sword~swallower of Prynlce Albert. died in great agony at Wunm from injuries inflicted on We while practising the trick. _ wrivnte telegram from Sir Wil- n'ld banner. announces that he will all f‘gom Liverpool for home on) Aug- ‘HB VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. Itch-eating Items About Our Own Country. Great Britain. the Unlted States. and All‘ Parts 0! the Globe. Condensed and Auomd tor Busy Rcadlng. QANADA. Apigj Maud for lumber is reported Maiï¬toba. ‘rualrgxh: is to have a, new park pack- : oomrp‘amy. , 311's mew djlrectory of Ottawa. gives a population: as 63,480. U‘N‘mED STATES M NUISHHL 2111‘ Cyclistâ€"VVEat's gettin th‘NI-Uh you? Did not I :ring my ball? Condvuctoir 'Lo (W014ist who has been thrown by trainâ€"See, here. my man. don't you know any bette’r than to try to_ru'n an engine down ‘1 Barkeeper (Bi Bazoo H'obel)â€"â€"Hi there stranger! \ hat thâ€"are you do- in‘? Can’t yer see that's ter be used only whlur there's a fire? V Strangerâ€"Yes (gurgle). I know (gur- g‘le, gurgle). I just had a. drink of your whisky (gurgle, gurgle, gurgle). Clevertbnâ€"H“m! It ought to. They charge champagne prices for it. Was the phonograph empty? . Um! now I think of it, I believe it did have in it you! Deception of me when I came. home late the night! 'be- fore. Maybe he‘s changed his mind about marrying. " Miss Summarboaxdâ€"Have you notic- ed what delightï¬ul air this is? \Vhy. it absolutely Lntoxlcates one! Mrs. De Pridg, anxious that her daughter shall make a rich match-â€" I wonder why Mr. Richiellow doesn't come to see our daughter any more. MT. De Prideâ€"II don‘t know. The last time he was here be borrowed my clockâ€"work .pheonugraph to have some music played into it. He brought it back to my office the next morning, saying that the musician was sick or something, and that's the last I've seen of him. VVu.s the lrhnnmzmnh emntvv [low the Farms are Conductedâ€"Large Con- sumption in France. Snail farming forms a peculiar branch of agricultural industry in France amd other countries, and the uonsumptian of them in France is very large. Edible snails vary greatly in size; the large white ones are the real escargotd but this term is usually em- ployed to designate all edible snails ad- apted to table purposes. but in the marâ€" kets, besides escargois, there are two other varieties. known as limace and limacon. the former being of medium size, and tihe latter quite small. Though the great majority of the edible snails produced in France are of natural growth, their artificial culture is car- ‘ ried on to a. very considerable extent. They are propagated from August to ,Octobeir in ground especially prepared ' for the purpose. and. fed with cabbage, ‘clover, etc. During the winter they are shelter- ed in house composed of brick or wood, and they are gathered and marketed from April to June, In the Tyrol from June to the middle of August the snails are collected from every available damp place and. taken to the feeding ground near the owner’s dwelling. This is a bit of garden ground free from trees and shrubs and surrounded on all sides by running water. In this feeding ground we Little heaps of moulntain pine twigs, mixed loosely with wood moss, and these twigs when dry are replaced by fresh onles. Every day they are fed on cabbage, leaves and grass. and when cold weather sets in they go under cover, that, is. they oo‘llect under the heaps of [wigs and bury themselves and there seal themselves up for the winter. When this has been sumessfully accomplished, they are col- lected packed in perforated boxes lin- ed with straw. and sent off to Paris and other towns. A Japanese paper, the Kokumin. ex- presses the hope that no rupture of the harmonious feeling between Japan and the United States will take place over such a. paltry affair as the Haw- lt'Lian question. Large quantities of arms and ammu- nition are stored. on the French bor- der of Spain for the Oarlists, and in ‘the event of discontent over the Cuban question spreading Don Carlos may try his luck again. T-hJe Customs Committee of the Nor- wegian S‘t‘orthing has adopted areport propos' this introduction 06 differen- Lmltarif duties on several argicultural products. and giving greater protection to small manufacturing interests. Jennies R. Keene. the nbted .Ameriâ€" can broker, who reoemtly speculated on' bible wrung is credited with hav- ' made $2,000,000 ‘m stodk opeu'ationa 1m Wall street. New York, in bhie past Franrk Moss, an oddâ€"time (miner, has returned ho Grand Falls, Afloat, from this Klomdyflm gold regions. He confirm all the Departs bf the wwndertul auri- ferous nature of the country. but says Lt is a. death-trap. and that theplaoe is dotted thick with the graves of thoge yvChJo dyed of starvation and hamlth m then quest for The Indian Government has decided upon prosecuting a number of editors of native papem who have of late been preaching sedition. Edna/m Pasha, commander-in-chief of the Tlurkish tomes. in Thessaly, was se- verely wounded by the explosion of an internal machine sent to him. accord- ing to a report; from Budapest. The tenor of 111m reports of Messrs. Dun andBu-adstreet as to the business altuation Ln the United titatesis not of am especially encauzraghng nature; gtill flhiea'eis a. uni/mum feeling wmomg busi- nsss men in the United States that we shall witness a marked; revival in trade all along the linenand Ln Weepinion 'of professional business experts. this belief is well founded. The finest shOng at the Exhibition at Brussels is made by France, Great Britain being a. good second, and Ger- many third. , GENERIAL. The Harvest Lu Hungary will not be as great as last year. The/re have been serious outbreaks and minute at Barcelona. and the gen- daJ‘mes have been stoned by the mob. The best scientific opinion in Berlin is not sanguine of the success of Herr Andrea's attempt to reach the North Pole by balloon. A MEAN HUSBAND‘S REVENGE PUTzTiN‘G OUT THE FIRE IN THE BIOUNTIAINS‘ NOT HIS FAULT SNAIL RAISlNG. wat the polny with his stubborn head almost between his knees. and the habi- tarnt. with his perpetual "Marches doncl†do not parutse to help you readjust your canceptiloun of things. The buckboard reefls (1on to the St. Lawrence shore and speeds along a. level road between narrow ï¬elds in which apologetic grain; is making a pretence of growâ€" img. You blame heard so much about the sand hills. the wonderful sand hills ; Rome watâ€"m't built in a -ay, and the concessiian drive cannot lxa‘ulescribed in a. word. Filrst. your hnbilzmt driver says "Marclue dome!" to; the pony, and this quwer burlkboa-rd reels away. Up the shrug-Le village street toward Cow Pot'cn't you go. rolling like a. ship in a gale. At vane side there is a. hill of solid monk; not any purvenw, day-be- fore-yesterday formation, but the primeval budkboqme of the earth. These Lavurem'than mountains am the geolo- glITJfl first families of the globe. Queer- ly enough. however, the grumiite ledge is capped with a. hill of fine white sea- beach sarn'd. High and dry it lies gleaming against the blue‘slky as if the whole thilmg was out of a topsyâ€"turvy book. and the granite hills were stand- iln‘g on their heads. with thersandy 116ngth inmlosing the blue sky-ocean ai ve. “take the cunwssion drive.†Everybody takes this drive been‘use)"it is the thing to do and i550 Well worth the doing. A. few hardy su'ullsâ€"ur spirits. rather â€"talke it more than once. But they are few. The concession drive deserves a chapter all to itself. It also deâ€" serves this attention of a few of the artists who are painting in Algiers, amd from theme. b9 Norway. n._._.,, , , The figure is not a, bad one, although it might be moire comma to say that the St. Lawretn:e pastwres itself up- on the sa‘mhs of the shore, sane every year ixt eats away A FOOT OF THE BANK. But there is some stm'mge kind of re- ta‘lmtian as yug. \v'i_ll' see: yhenjqu v I‘LaflA, u rod; called the Point: of All the Devils. The left halnd shore its a, lung. high hlufl of salad. This is called Cow Point. From thle willd. sandy Cmv Point to the prauwnnto'ry of All the Devils is a gaiiniult up-un whiuh this weather clerk pllays some remarkable meteorological tulnes. T1113 point “hirh honors the devils is washed byp‘he irnzky, treat-her- ouls currents of this strange Saguâ€" enay. Cow Podmt parsUuu-es upon the salads 9f the. St. Lawremce. In the mean time. while awaiting the fuflfillmenbt of the m'guine father’s pro- pfhwyl Tadovulsac is won't!) a visit for its own] pwzfliaxx‘ sake. One can en- joy more violent contrasts here in the cotflrtsre of am War or two than are generally obtai'ned by weeks! of travel. The village, as before explained, lies oIn the Shares of wpretty li‘ttle bay. A‘tfluhle‘fiught‘, 11mm in a. mimmontory of THE REAL TADOUSAC lyirng along the shores of a. lovely little bay. The pony rattles dowrn the hill art as vigorous a. pace as he went up, flourishes past several immense old out- of-door ovens. past the big new church and the little old (me. and draws u-p Wilthl a. jerk in front of the hotel. You feel yourself quite as much: of a, di- covea‘etr as did Jacques Cartier when he cast anchor in the bay away back in 1545. . demnsac was the earllleat settlement made in: Oanada. It had a long way the start of Quebec and the other places Wh'llch have now become flomrlshing cities, w’hiLe ’I‘aJdouBac is scarcely as pop- ulous as it was three centuries ago, It is tune that Father Lazcasse, a mis- sionary who has travelled on snow- shsoes all over this part of CaJnada. pre- dicts tllmt the village wlll some day become the New Yank of Camada. “Tadowsac," he says, "is the terminâ€" ws of the, Atlantic by sea. and will be the terminus of the Pacific by land." ’mne little Canadian pony scampera qu the hill for a. quarter of a. mile, turns over the brow, and them you see 81‘ fotr the reason: that there is no other WW 0f getting here. This pier is in a. little cove betweelm immense granite hills, and. the big steamer pokes her noise iIn amid a great clatter of bells, above which rise the patois greetings of the mtbves on the pier. ’You are disstiirwtly pamio'ky at first. You. see a. few houses up the ravine. and you fancy them to be Taxiousac. Nothilng can in- duae you. to stop: in' such: a. hole in the groulmiï¬so you think. The purser re- assures you, however. One of the habi- tamts gets you into his buakboardâ€" whisk is unlike anything else ever dreamed of im the bumkboard lineâ€"and. (mice there. escape is impossible. SIGHTS IN THE FIRST SETTLEMENT MADE IN CANADA. W AT UUAINT ULI] TADUUSAM Contrasts l‘lml Men the "lsl[or,~'l‘he llnbit In". Ills Backboard. and Ills Pony â€" Marvellous lill‘ecis or ngm and Colorâ€" lhe (Tunelery. Its name isnoti‘theonly queer thing about Tadousan. Everything is fixed “19 hï¬l‘e; fact and fiction, fashion and primitive simplicity, shifting sandand Primeval. granite hills, writes a. cor- 1' e“I'POlmdient. Everything seems the ex- treme opposite of something else right beside it. The little Jesujte chapel. the oddest ohnnrch. so they say, in Can- ada, sits persistently in its forlorn Willing ground between the big white hotel and the villa which Lord Dmâ€" feriln built. Upâ€"todate tourists sit on We back seats of the buckboards amd 50ml“? English questions into the un- mprehrendimg‘ cans of the habitant Who occupies the front seat. “White whales†disport themselves in; the bay. and the black Sngusenay waters run one W! in this: morning and. another in the afternoon. Froun the very moment of your ar- rival 0'11} the steamer the confusion be- giinS. You are sure to arrive by steamâ€" Isn’t it rather a, sudden determine: thou? Yes. It’s the doctor’s orders. Why, you don't look a bit ill. Oh. l'm perfectly well. Auntie is the one who is ill. a THE causes tibia space of the grave has been in‘clrused with boalrds, and it has been fiilled. in with earth which is reason- ahly stationary. Most of the graves, however, am utterly imdistingulshable iJn owtline, and the] wooden crosses are all awry or gimme prune. On one of these crosses, which is kicking promis- omously about the wmetry, is the record of acne T‘mmblwy. who died not long ago. aged 102 years and 10 months. Most of the crosses hear recant dates, but the pwrish priest is authority for the statement that the iiodi'w lie three wnd,fourr deep. and that the older headboards are lost. In! that shifting samrt even the recent interments soon drift together in hearps. Silas Hinkley, a. son of the millionaire President of the Poughkeewsie, N. Y., Electric Railroad Company, is heaving coal as a. shaker in the’ employ- of the company at $1.50 a day. He‘ is aHar- vard graduate, but took his present plane voluntarily in order to learn; the business thoroughly. The young woman who takes music lessons and practices scales announced to her friends that she was gQing away. r‘-†it. n u, .. Wth Sober historians tell such tales about a place one cannot sur- firused at anything which: tradition re- ates of ht. Taduusacris rich: in tradiâ€" tbofn's. The Indians and the Church are both swéoessful in developing roman- th legends and when they join forces. the resuflts are exceptmnal. Some 015 the mmt interesting of the trmditlons awe those which centre aborult the per- smnality of Kare de la Brosse. That there was sulch a. ersan there is not the slightest doul 1:. If on are in- clined to he skeptlcal. you. ve only to go Unbo blue little old dhmrch. built‘m 1747 om the foundations of an earlier One erected im 1661. There, in a 1335 came, you will see some ieces o the goodFather’s skull on “511mb the hair still clings. These and some fragments of his ceder coffin! am the only tangi- ble Fell/cs of awe of the most imterest- flbgg figmres in early Canadian his- ry. er to be seen. The histoi'iam Parkman says t_h.at same fishermen who were de- scendmg the river in a skiff, were in- t/erruspted ilq their progress near Tadou- say: by g), laugh mountain being preci- Pt'tated In the water a few yards from â€,V «.man m uu Two isolated rocks were at the and 0f the prenbnsufla, and the sailors ave them the name of {ban 1101111118 and n- nIe femme. If this is true, these mks have game the way of other good men andL ggod womeg, for_ they am_no Alongâ€" 'l‘hxe stones are tuned. sometimeg. by a. thin stream. Often there 18_ n0 stream]. Nobody seems to kmow USU why this is called Baude's mill. It ad that name as far back as the timgof Champlain. IAcwrdLng to a. tradltlon of the oomn‘try people the left shore of the prook Daruu'mabed_ i9 a pomt; rm.“ 2 , Elmem a mu. mt is now a°hnost level with the sand around it. Its fields and fences have disappeared. Before long the bqulse iltseLf must be abandoned. One mught as well try to live in the mindle of a, desert w‘here all the oases were pre/mpted. Somehow the place makes You: think of the man whose death V10- bor Hugo descrilbes; the man who sat 0{n has perch among the rocks while the tldg cyept imch. by inch. up and up. umtul 1t closed over his head. Beyond. these great sandhrillls and sand planns the rod: mountains aud- geilzly begin) again, and here you Will 1m great wimgs against the sky, where the blue meets the white sand. The bird is as large as am eagle or a buzzard or a hawk. It can’t be a crow. Still] an imwamd conviction thnt it is acrow, though iit looks as big as an eagle. mkes you hesitate about computing the height of that great ridge of sand. The effect of light and color are mar- vellous. Algiers comes irresistibly be- fore the mind’s eye. As you: go on a great ledge of polished pink rocks crops out of the sand at the base of the ridge The tirnts are exquiite. The pony is not scam ering now. Be is plodding. a‘n'd you {fear the'kound of his panting above the swish of the samd on the wheels. The driver. unexpectedly merciful to his beast, has leaped out and is trudging along ankle deep P9- hufnd the vehiele. You my be riding over fences now, possibly even over the roof of a. house. Filfty. years ago they called this "the Jesuits' Garden." It was the Jesuiybe missionaries who first settled Tadousac, arnd this stretch of shore bone good crops, and there were flowers and trees and thrifty homes. The sand has swallowed them till. You Oogmeh'pom one house now, standing With its outbuildings on what wssorl‘ce _ L'II and you: have drivan out for the exâ€" press purpose of seeing; them. When. therefore. you reach this; level road be« tween the rocky bluffs mad the river you wonder if those roof garden Sea Maxims bank there were the only fea- tures in the show. Interesting as they wqrq, you cannot help a. shade of disap- poimltment. Dn five min-mt hetbe‘r. Grad-u! come samd ï¬leld woulld. T931 deepen amd I. stands to it mush: grass ter; and th: timing btth and, to the right. .the dancing waves of the St. Lawrence, twenty mides wide. At your Left; the sand gradually rears itsle into am enormous ridge. It. is so brinlliaxnt and sol strange that it de- ceiives the vision. You would guess it b0 be several hundred feet high. onlyâ€" at that moment, you. see an enormous bird. lxlwck as polished ebotny, flapping great witnrgs against the sky, where the blue meets the white sand. The bird is as large as am eagle or a. buzzard or a hawk. It can’t be a crow. Stiill Angel'imeâ€"T‘here mev )od fe’l’low as Edwin. Her Frhandâ€"I hope he . be L‘rwe. ‘ The cemetegy a‘rolynd ithe little church PI’A’NIS'I GOODNESS AND TRUTH} A MJIfLLL’OINTA IRE‘S SON BAUDIEI’S MILL AND AND SKY an. you see ,roaden. and 5 waist in does im the mâ€"there is 1l-umlly the alds. The mg the st MADE AUNTIE SICK mpany, is heaving the’ employ- of the day. He‘ is aHar- took his present order to learn; the ver. you know grain fields be- sand seems to ahks as a. tide rirvulets which then the grain sand. as Line advancing wa- no gram. No- an was such a. t too good 1 news he- 1 seems to as a. tide lets which 1 the grain nd. as the musing ya,- WumJern gemerallly detect the pres- elnrcte of the (Lev'ill. in a victim and leati like a pack of furies in the chase after him. In Gretna. recently a. strangen attended dlmu‘ch. Suddenly a. woman im the, congregation gave a hysterical! B‘hlr‘ilelk mud plhulnlgved at him. He fled for ‘hrin life, follow»de by anoult twenty Boremmiimg women. They chased him cult of doom amd around and around a-nmmg this partiucmlur ailon of a fufll allow‘ajm gunning to talks on L111. piygty. water Mrs. Ficgg is aux DIM settler in Nebraska amd a. woman of mulch imfluence upon thlose ilmmedialtaly ailmut her. Her disa oiples are called Filggsltes, alnd they be- lieve that when a stranger comes in. to this preselm‘o. of n. ll‘iuggsite they. the Eiggsites, can instantly tell if God or like ye,le unle ms. yresam in his 0T her body. . if it hmlpprunn to 'll-h the evil 01m '1!) l6 Vvery unmpllemsant for the stranger. With a. wild whoop they swoop down. ulpun him. If he takes to his heels they! (muse lmhm amid if lthey catch him they pmumd hxltm umti‘l he is half dead. In this way they thirnd they are doing him a. personal faWrrâ€"Umey are “thusimg the davill cult of him.“ im the congregation gave a. hysterical! 31;“er mud pfllulnlgved at him. He fled for life, followde by akayult twenty Bcremmzizn‘g women. They chased him cult of doom amd around and around the church. He dodged them alnd mam.- a‘g‘ad to map a. feJnUe ilnto a. cornfield. where the devill rhals'ers lost his trail. Some 0f the more: canwva/t'we mem- bers of the oowgregalium attempted to frown: down too murlh devill chasing. but the faJnvatiJ :3 still], hold full sway. headar of Bum this did not: shake the preacher iln his work. HJe: continued instruct- ilmg his flrodk that his interpretation of 111le MM waskhe correct one. Many‘ of them believed him and bagzm knock~ 3mg their eyes owt. Iand now a consider- amlie portilanv of tfma congregation is in various mgressive stages of blind< flees. But we need non {go to far away Rus- 5113. to find outbreaks of this mligloul madness. Unit in Nebraska. the Rev. Rte/when Bloclkiim began) recently to preach the doctrilme that! the Lord lov- ed one-eyed men. He found sori' turn to back lhiilm up In his failh. The wen- tyâ€"sacomid verse off this sixth chapter of Matthew says: "It. therefore, thine eye be single. thy, whole body shall be fulll of light.†Riev. MT. Bloakim i‘u- tarpnets uhye scriptures literally. Hie powdered Over this passage 3. good. while. Than he knocked Gum one of his eyes. The other is umv so inflamed Uhlalt he is threatened with total blind- _ Im' another part of Nebraska, Mrs. hjigg mtg brolkaeln out as the Within a wedk still another suicidal religious seat has lawn discovered in apart of Russia. far remote from the scene of the Kovaleff tragedies. These people thought fki‘lllxmg theunselvu by starvatixm ï¬lm highest form of re- ligious dsvotiom. Two women were foundâ€"(me dead and the other dying â€"and ï¬t is known that many mare have vmmdered off iLn lonely places and me“ death. im the 33.1118 (way. Kovalveff when arrested Only“ regret;- bed that it had nbt been his good for- tune to ba buribd 'hlimself instead of be- ing called u(pon (by 111118 Imd. as he do- V’ofultly beliJeved he had been, to act as gravev-dhggxer for tibia rwt. Bu baa been conï¬ned in a. remote monastery. STRANGE REVIVALS IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE WORLD. In preparation for b'hlerhortible cereâ€" mroln/y they had can'tth themselves in t‘lnehr best garments. over which theyl had thrown shrouds. Before taking thtebr places im the graves they conduct;- ad some sort ofl ’ RELIGIOUS SERVICE. The bulrin'ls were in ethe dead of nighb amd the graves ware made in the gar- denls adjawnt to the cottages of the vintians. wrought themselves up to the same plirtdh religious frenzy which had possessizoln of Kovmleif. With them the hideous agony of death by suffocation; wthlIle shovelfull by shovelful the earth was slowly thrown upon them. as they lay tightly packed together in the shal- low trdmclhxezs that had been dug for their gra/ves was as nothing to the paradise to which they believed‘they were going. Tibia slightest effort on their part wovufld have saved them, 0! course, but flhleilr bodies when uncov- emedl by the purine did wort show that any of flhlem had yileflded so much as evem' to struggle at this 'unstane of death; iltsealf. All “33 victims submitted Without: f1irn-clming to the ordeal. They had RELIGIUUS FANATIUISM. A DEVIL-CHASING SECT {gistâ€"501118;? and them Mb I. r of new names for old mxupm Indâ€"Am ther s'LLrusps‘thxis y ‘e many new soda-