/ T f." -â- ^.- â- :# •A •k \ THE UNION mmm. Seoator Sbennai! on the Position of .. Canada and the States. WBY HE FAVORS AMALGAMATION Oloier Trade Belations Would Prevent Annexation. OUTLOOK POE THE FUTURE. A New York Despatch aava â- The Bun'i Wasbiugton special gives Htnator Bberman'g views uq (he Cauaaiau qaestioD. The Seaator laid : Mr. WimaQ has strong predilections for Commercial Union. I differ with bicu a good deal about it. I know of no case lu history whore Cummercial Union has •dvancod political anion. It was tried b« tweeu this country and Canada twice and utterly (ailed. Il w»B tried by the Ameri- can colonies before the declaration of iudu- peadenoe and utterly failed. It was uo: until they secured a political anion under the name of a confederacy called the United States that they were able to make a stand •gainst the parent conntry. Kven that confederacy proved to be insufficient to Mouru Commeri.ial Union, and so the United Btates formed a oouatitulion, and then for the tlrsl time had a com- mercial and political union. Com- mercial Union followed political anion. The ZuUvcrein never promoted union in Germany. It promoted discord. There were treaties of all kinds between Kngland and Scotland (or centuries, but they never ooald unite those people until by accident the crowns of both couutritrs fell apon one head. Therefore I think that these gentlemen, like my (riuud Butlerworih, make a mistake when they look to Commercinl Union as a road to political union. I think Cummercial Uuiou promotes points of difference, not points of anion. Krom the scene of the fishery con- troversy clear to Vanuouvor's Island there »re points of controversy that cannot bv avoided by Commprcial Union. The farmers of New York are in interest opposed to the farmers jubt opposite to them in Canada, alibuuxh they are per- fectly willing to unite with them. It is tms. Commercial Union tunda to increaee trade, and yet (wlitical union is the only thing that can bring about absolute reci- procity of trade and communion of in- terests. Do you think Canada is ready for politi- oal anion now V No, I lappoae not. That can only come after long oousideration. It cannot be horned. In regard to negotiations I will â- ay that no proposition has been madu. The (urtbesi anybody ha* ever proposed tu 1^ at this time is simply to express a will ingnosB on the part o( the United Btatt'S to consider (avorably political union. 1 maku no secret or reserve as to my opinion of Canada. I have said for forty years th .t the political union of Canada and the United Btates was the inevitable destiny. When cjuite a young man I travelled in Canada, and last year I crossed the whole continent from Montreal tu Vancouver, and know perhaps as much about it as any public man hero. Did you talk with politicians there ? I talked with members of I'arliamont. I dined with Bir Dunald Bmith at Montreal. I never saw Bir John Macdunald in Canada. I presume I have met him here, but I do not recall him. t<e is undoubtedly the great man u( Canada. I think |>olitical union would be of mutual benefit to both countries, but of special benefit to Canada. The loug boundary hue o( four thousand miles, half of which is an intaiiKiblu line, and the other li«lt water croused daily by vessels of both countries, makes a union necessary or war inevitable. ' do not say there is any feel ing that would justify war, but the Bitiia tion is mui^h as it was bulween the Bcocch and English. Wars grow out of tiivial things. I hiy do not ^row out of enmiiiee. They grow out of aoeidpnts. The line be- tween Canada and the United Utates is iii- oapable of furiifioation or defence, and cus tom hoiisi-s are useliss. As a matter of coarse any invading army would go srouml the forts. As for the custom houses 1 know that a certain amount of Hniii^^gling il going on all the lime. You cannot pre- T«Dt It. I would nut like to any what 1 know as having oooarred. It is a inatttrof notoriety that they get liijuors BoroHH tho line. Now the trouble is less than ever, because our tariffs approxi- mate. If you have exactly the same daty, the . prices would he juHt the same, and nothing would be (jtinoH hy amoggling. ' here are more thsu 1,()<K),UOO native CanaHiitiiH living in the Umieii Btatts, and oiiimmk of the Unile<l Btali h have more than 9100,000,000 of uapiial in. vested ill Cana^la. Tlw Hiiiiilariiy of the people in language, descent, habits and institutions make union easy and natural. The lines of commerce from Csnaia to this country are lines of limgituHe, nut of lati tude. Tho coal of Nova Scotia is shipped to New Ki gUnd and ihn anihrariie if British Coliinili* is needed in California. Ohio sends her coal to Ontario cheaper than Nova Hcotia or nntisli Columbia can. The iron, copper, niohle, silver and lumber of Canada, north of the Inkes, are more easily ttitnxported tn popaluus regions like Chioaf:0 and Buffalo than in any other direuiinns. They will not bear tmiis. portalion to Kngland, as tO* out II too groat. Canada wsnli our markets and the United Stales wants her niitural resonrco-i. All the proihutH of Manitnha smi the Northwestern Teriitory naturally follow )he valley into Minnesota and l>nkota. U is a fight with nature to carry those products east or west over tho mountains The Msiiiime I'roviiioeB of Canada have their natural outlet and market in New KngUnd, which can furnish thi m oapitnl and onterprisH. The Uiiiieii BtaTei* will find in these I'rovicioes what the Unitid K ales needsâ€" a real niirsHry for •nanwn llm rroviiicos will full heir to all theflslieriei of New England without dispute or contention. I know of no Pro- vince or (til tion bnt wnnlil dikiu largely by nniob, tttttacul losing any local advantage it now UpK-' eseu "What atatnde wonid 6t»t Britein parsne in case Canada^wished to join oi ? I think from a hfdttd point of view Eng- land would get its compensating benefits. Bh* has now practically renounced the allegiance of Canada. Bhe recognizes the independenoe of Canada. It might be a great object for her to be relieved from the duty of defending «nd protecting the Dominion Uer oommeruial interelta are not affected .... ,,,.. in the least, because Canada would nse , '»•» night on suspicion of being the White- just as much of the British products as chapel murderer. He is well dressed, now, bat they would be imported into our rather tall, of slight build, and clean country. We are altogether, the largest shaven. Ue accosted a woman m White- TflE WBITEUHAPSI. UUBDKBa. Arrest ut aa American Cbarced wltli the Crimeaâ€" New Tork Mad Doctors Give Thoir Views on the Matter, A last (Thursday) night's Loudon cable says : An American, who refused to give his name or any aooonnt of himself, but who said that he had only recently arrived from New York, was arrested at 11 o'clock oouHumers of liritish products. We are her best customer, and the union of Canadu with the United Biates would only add to our trade with Great Britain. I am not in favor of union with Canada except by [1. acnful means, by making it the interest of both parties 1 do not want to go to ohai>el, and auked her to go with him, and threatened if she refused to " rip her ap." The woman screamed and the man rushed to a oab. The police gave chase, seized the man, and took him to the Lemon Street Police Station, where he exclaimed to the inspector in charge : " Are you the boss ? war to ao()uire territory. Territory ac- I guess I am in a pretty fix now." He was juired by war is worth nothing. What I would like to Bee is that the Provinces of Canada now organized in separate and dis- tinct aatonomies and having suflicient population should bo represented in Con- KreS4, like our Btates. 'Then the jealousy and rivalry that now exist between Ontario and Quebec would disappear. W'e absorbed Louisiana with the French population. We took in Missouri with much of that popuUtion. We absorbed California with the Mexican Spanish population, a more incongruous population than the French in Canada would be The French-Canadians were friendly to this country at the time of the war of independence and they are now. Quebec would as readily adopt political union as Ontario. Can there be iiny such thing as a partial ac(|nisiiion of Canada, for instance of one of th" Provinces? I do not think Great Britain woald con- sent to that. There would be greater diffi- culties to encounter by partial union than by a general union. You are in opposition to the President on the Retaliatory Bill. I am not in opposition to him. I differ with him. I think the retaliation measures probably will never be authorized and would never bo put in force by the Presi- dent if anthorized, but the right of American fiHhermen to enter the ports of Nova Scotia and tranship their catch will always be insisted on, and every American of every party and every oreed will think it is small and petty basiuess to exclude the fishermen of America from entering Canadian ports, while we open our ports to all the nations of the worldâ€" black, while, barbarous and civilized- and Great Britain does the same. So long as that grievance exists it will lead to retaliation. is there a strong desire on the part of the United State* for the peaceful accjaisition of Canada and Mexico 7 I do not think there is a very strong desire about it, but I think there is a willinKness to agree to it. I think that ex^reises i*.. Senator Sherman further said : Tho pubho debt of Canada, 8300 01)0,000, would not trouble us. Three years of the whiskey tax would pay it all. JACK. TUK Itll'PKK, TlireatenInK t<i DlRembnwel Mure White- fliapel Wcitufin. A London cable says : Nothing that the newspapers can present to their readnrs receives any attention except tho While- chspel murders. Important politieal utterances which ordinarily would pro.oke gnneral discussion are unread, and oonti. neiitnl affairs of vital interest to England are thrust aside as of no consecjuenuewhat. ever. The police have adopted the theory that the lettur and postal card signed Jack, the Ripper," sent to the Central News a week ago Thursday, emanated from the actual murc^erer. Facsimiles of the letter and card are posted in every police station and upon every dead wall, aocom panied by a paragraph begging any person rc'^gnizing the wilting te oomuiuuiuate placed in a cell and will probably be charged to. morrow. WHAT nn. U.iMILTON THINKS. Niw YoiiK, Oct. 4. â€" New York has be- come a great whispering gallery since the latest news about the Whitecbapel hatch- eries. These awful crimes are becoming the general topic of conversation. Lawyers, detectives, judges and doctors wrangle over theories. All agree in denouncing the Loudon police. " I can conceive o( these crimes being one only by an insane person," said Dr. Allan MoLane Hamilton, the well-known alienist, " and they were very probably committed by a man belonging to a class of insane persons known as iiiqiurt. It is a form of insanity manifest- d by a variet) of impulsive desires to do mischief, such as to Destroy property and cut and mutilate. With this condition is associated a homici- dal tendency, and a state of sexual aberra- tion." â- â- Aiiuming the murderer to be a mad- man, what is hii probable mental condition now?" " Oh, ho is probably leading the news paper accounts of the murders and enjoy- ing it, going all over the crimes again in his imagination. But he may belong lo another class of lunatics who have awful spells of remorse, and who only kill when the impulse seizes them. Ue may suffer great mental anguish. 1 here is another class of lunatics whose lust is excited by the personal peculiarities of their victims, who will be seized with a fury on seeing a woman with a peculiar kind of hair or a peculiar figure. In these Wbiieohapel cases there are strong signs of sexual aberration in the manner of mutilation. I think the murderer will do a great deal more killing. The more be gives way to his passion the more pleasure it is likely to give him. Uis mental condition at the time he sheds his violim's blood is one of extreme exhilaration." " You have spoken as though you as- sumed the murderer to be a man ; might it not have been a woman 7" " Il is very, very improbable. Women who suffer from the form of insanity that the defilement of these bodies indicates do not commit homicide." Ml. KI'ITZKa'h TMEOIIT. Dr. Edward C. Spiizka, who is known far and wide as a tireless and advanced in- vestigator of mental diseases, also believes that if the cabled stories of the White- chapel murders are true, the murderer is probably a lunatic, and a man, not a woman. " How do you supiiose ho manages to cut the throats and mutilate tho trunks of these women without covering himself with blou<l, BO as to maku detection certain 7" " It could be done by making a sudden pass at thx throat from behind, but it is a very ditlioult operation, requiring great practice. This man is probably eduo«ted, but I hardly think he is refined. That ho knows something about surgery is, I think, pretty certain. The fact that he is able to DASHBO TO TBS QUOVUD. Over a Handred People Isjared at a Church Dedleatli.nâ€" The Walls Give Wmj and a Temporary Floor Falls. A Beading (Pa.) despatch says : Over 100 people injured is the record of an accident which took pUcd;3C^^'erday afternoon dur- ing the ceremonieST attending the laying of the cornor-stone of the new St. Mary's Polish Catholic Church in this city. Pre- vious to the ceremony of the corner-stone laying there was a street parade, partici- pated in by all the Catholic locieties of thin city and adjoining places. Probably 7,000 people gathered at the site of the church in the afternoon to witness the ceremonies. About 1,000 were crowded on a temporary floor laid on the joists and walla of the edi- fice, which bad been carried up one story. Archbishop Ryan, of Philadelphia, arrived in the morning and personally condactod the ceremony, assisted by the priests of the throe Catholic charches here. After the corner-stone had been laid Father Libichi, pastor of the congregation, arose to epeak, and had hardly commenced hit remarks when tho newly constructed walls gave way and one-fourth of the floor fell with an aw- ful crash, precipitating '200 people to the ground a distanoe of from fifteen to eighteen feet. .Xen, women and children were thrown into a confused mass, with joists, brick, stone and mortar on top of them. The excitement was intense, but willing hands at once commenced the work of ex- tricating the unfortunates, many of whom had to be carried out and placed in neigh- boring houses, where their injuries were attended to, and they were then removed to their homes or to tho hospital. It was folly two hours before the wounded were all cared for. It is said tb^ ' several children are still missing. Nine aiu very badly hurt and may die, and fourteen others had limbs broken. The remainder are not very seri- ously hurt. RKXABKABLB CAVE FOUND Near Lake Mlndeuioya, od the Manltoulln laUnd. A Providence Bay despatch mti : On the Slat of September, as Bev. William Schroeder, of Carnarvon ; Meaars. J. C. Kvana, of Poalinch, and Daniel Hagey, of Woodstock, were hahing on Lake Minde- moya, the latter- named gentleman took a stroll on shore and discovered a cave 78 feet in length and 11 feet width, with an arched ceiling of sufficient height for stand- ing room. There are also (wo beaatiful domes, formed by some freak of nature, in the limestone rock. Two branch passages on the left of the entrance have since been found, one of them over 130 feet in length, which cannot be explored in an aprigbt position. Several skeletons, in a fair state of preservation, were grouped near the en- trance. One of the skulls had the appear- ance of having been perforated by a rifle bullet, others crushed by some blunt in- strument. It has been learned that some of the present Indian population discovered this cave, with its lilent inmates, over 30 years ago, but had no knowledge as to how the skeletons came there. None of the white settlers knew of it, and it is to them a source of wonder and astonishment. Nothing besides the skeletons was found except a broken arrow-head, a shell orna ment and a large quantity of fish soalns. It is situated on the (arm of Martin Bock, second concession of the township of Carnarvon. BBATKN TU DBATH. A Wouian, Uurrlblj Abused, Uer Ii\|arles. Dies From with Qen. Sir Charles Warren, Chief Com- I slay his victims so ijaiokly and effectively miasinner of tho Metropolitan [lolico. The and to disembowel them in such a short Central News received another communi- , limu points in that direction. Then nation from " Jack, the Ripper," Saturday ' in all but one usse he has re- afternoon, announcing his intention to | moved the same organ from the body commit more murders that night, and upon ' ami taken il a a ay with him. To find and the strength of this the police have ordered cut out this organ would be a difficult thing every man on duty and are assisted by for a lay iiiau. The madman probably has hundreds of amateur detectives The reign put these specimens in alcohol, and is thrilled with pletsiire when he gloats over tlieiii or perhaps he has eaten them." " What will be the probable effect of a I continued exemption from detection upon I the brute who in terrorizing Whit«cha[iel ? Will he grow bolder ? " Mo may, and yet it is not impossible of lerror whioh hai prevailed in tho White- ohapel dist''ct during the past week still continaeB { AN UDU WKDDING. She Can't HfieMk lliiii laii and Her iluaband I'MU't N|leak tMlgllllh. A l)elr«it deHp»t(ih says : The marriage *','»' ''" '""y sinldenly subside and be heard of Uaroii Ilarthod lloyningen Uuene, first lieuieiiant of the UeKiment of Chevaliers Ouides of Her Majesty the Emprees of RuHsia, to Misij Annie Lothrop, eUh-Ht daughter of O'oriieV N. Lothrop, recently Minister to Itusiiia took place at Hi. Paul's Church last evening. The edifice was filled with tho frie ds of the famil). Fol of no more. Ue may become overgratified Us very likely has exhausted hiuiBelf till he isi^apable of no titht r form of pleasure, and from too great indulgence may become even incnpable of that. In \VeBt|ihalia three or four )earB agoa man killed thirteen innocent country girls and defiled their bodieH hy imiiilatioii to gratify the same A St. iTohn, N B., despatch says; On Wednesday last Coroner Ross, of St. An. drews, held an inquest on the body of Mrs. John Naylor, who was beaieu to death in her house, five miles from Clarendon Station, on the New Brauswick Railway. The finding of the jury was that deceased oame to her death from blows inflicted by some persons unknown. Two men of a fluhing party lodged at Naylor'a on Friday night of labt Week, and while there they had several drinks. This is all that was known of the ojcurrenoe until the following Saturday afternoon, when the woman was found lying in an insensible condition a few yards from the bouse. She died on Sunday morning. It is alleged that the woman was indecently treated and so badly beaten that she died from the injuries received. The whole of her body when discovered was discolored, and tufts of hair from her head were found on the floor and in the bed. The neighbors have demanded an investigation and another inquiry will be had. The woman's husband was arrested this morning by the deputy. sheriff of St. Andrew's and is now in custody. He is believed to be in part responsible for the death of his wife. lowing the oerenioay Mrs. Lothrop held a extraordinary passion or fury tlmt has in brillmnt reception. i'" likelihood inspired the Whitecbapel Baron Ilueno is the descendant of a Oer- orinien, I'hey were all stabbed in the man family loiiu settled in Russia. Ue is hack in the same way. Ue suddenly ceased, ;tO years old- Mi-s Lothrop is very beaut i- ""'^ "° o"" ''*« "^e' discovered who ho was, ful, and her father is one of Detroit's mil- Ho was satiated." lionaires, hesidi h being tho leader of tho ' * M chigan bar. The betrothal only oocnr. I Horace Davenport's »l.t. red • few weeks ago in London, and the " We have received to day the biggest young I'onple have been ac(|uainted but a contribution tu the yellow fever fund that comparatively short time. 1 he btido does has yet lieen made," said Secretary Eiig- not apeak Russian nor thebridegroom Eng- lish. A <1rndle fur arolTlii. Mrn. Ruth Hull, of Wii,llin«ford, wIiohi grestest wi..|i was to bo buried in a cillui made from a cradle in which she was rockod when a babe, died Thursday after- noon at the ane of 74 The ooflin was made from the cradle two weeks aijo and iaid'awajiiis bruVh and" kit' lifh, of the Mayor's oflice, last evening " It was (loiu Horace Davenport, of the Board of Trade, bootblrick, who brounht tii 816 as his gift. The $16 represents hia entire eariiiii^s for la>.t week. Where is another ^ifi that can ei]ual ilV No millionaire has iiouti Bo generous till act as tho lad who shines the shoes lor niillicnairea. His is an act that will ' ehinu ' lung after he has -Chicajio Tribune. takiii to her lesidence while she was con- fined to her bed. Since then she has had it kept ill her room. She seemed to take Swimming. inu(-h pleiiBiire in it It was her idea to' Albert Death is the name of a Bwimmer have the c,(ift'in made a number of years who recently undertook to beat time in a ago and in., il RH a lounge. Her dyingwish race from the Queen's Road Bridge, Dais- was that ijo funeral services be held nor ton, to the locks in the canal, an un. any ministtt attend. meaxured oi^itaiine. Death swam in ordi nary strettt aiiire, and this is what made the race intereHliiig. Uo covered the dis- tance, beating time nearly four minutes. Uo naw cffers to swim any man in the Diath is 40 years Thirty ostriches, which arrived at Mar- srilles from Alg"ria, were l>eing placcil in the train for Paris, when a man endea- vored to plQck Konie feathers out of one of worldifully drensed the " birds of the desert," He Iinmediat4'ly old, and weighs 154 pounds. received a kick from Ihe ostrich which , '- «â-º â€" â- â€" killed him on the spot. i Bngar barrels are no longer wasted. They Caution I "I was gano to axe ye, are bought at eeennd hand and broken up ; Donald, if ye'd lend me a half croon." the Mtnves are then washed, pack*l in â- Eh, nion; I've got hut one lendiii' half- biiiidli h and sent back to tho West Indies croon, an' that's oot just at present." at a profit, to be rehooped. Death Is Palulesa. The act of dying, it is now ascertained, is absolutely free from suffering; is really unconscious, insensibility always preceding it, eays the "Forum" for October. Any anf:uiHh that may attend mortal illness ceitspB before the close, as thousands who havo recovered, alter hope had b«-en sur- rendered, have borne witness. Sudden ai.d violent death, shocking to the senses, may not be, probably is not, p«inful to the victim. Drowning, hanging, freezing, shooting, falling from a height, poisoning of many kinds, beget stupor or numbness of tho nerves, which is incompatible with sensation. Persons who have met with such accidents, and survived them, testify to this. Records to the effect are number- less. ruHtoina Decisions. The following decisions were rendered by the Board of Ousiums uf the Dominion last month : " Aiiploton'a Uailway Ouido," 6o I'er lb. and 20 l»<'r cent. C'olTee and cream, sweetened, condeUBod iu tins, t^c per lb. and 'd5 per cent. ('i>ttolpiie, H HubHtiiute for lard, 2c. per lb. Inlind Printer, ChivAgo, t>c. per lb. aui 3 per cent. Leatlieroidfl, a uiauufacturo of paper, 35 per cent OX'de nf iron, dry.^i per cent. I'aiiitod cotton nettiuK, au Imitation of wire cloth, fw. i>er square yard aud 15 per ceub. PfHrl collar tiutteiis or atudB, 25 per ceut. Tin fiiil labelB, printed, 15o. pur lb. aud 25 per cent. Tin whisk holders, lacquered, 25 per ceut. The growing utility of celluloid in the j arts is having a marked effect in lowering J tile prict) of ivory, notwithstanding the I yearly decrease in the outpnl of the i latter. > on. KAOKxiizni as am ACTTBOB. Bis Mew Book Certain to Create a Great HeasatloD. A London cable layi : Dr. Mackenzie is heavily handicapped. He has been abao- lutely debarred from obtaining any copies of official documents, while free access to them is allowed bis adversaries. At the very last moment he was compelled hy certain august perBOna):,Qs to suppress the reproduction of an autograph statemer' of Emperor Frederick, which reflected on the conduct of Prof. Bergmannin the strongest possible language. The twenty illustratiocB which appear will doubtless t xoite a great deal of interest. The most important are thfl carefully prepared diagrams thowing that Prof. Bergmann made a false passage. The various stages of the growth in the patient's throat are illiutrated by wood cuts. The book may be roughly divided into a narrative of the medical controveri^y and statistics. In the first chapter is m graphic description of the flrsi consulta- tion at the Kron Prinz palais. The histori- cal portion concludes with the death-bed scene. The second part will principally interest the medical profession. In the third. Dr. Mackenzie proves almost inevitably the fatal oonseqaence of thyro- tomy. In the ninth chapter is an eloquent sketch of the (lersonal character of the Emperor. Dr. Mackenzie has labored under countless diflioalties, but no medical work is ever likely lo oausi so profound a sensation. He dedicates it to no one, but has chosen the pungent motto from Shaks- peare : " What trick, what device, what starting-bole canst thou find to hide thee from thy open and apparent shame ?" Ml'RDEBOt'S TUOTH-PULLINO. KetoltlDg Bevelatlona at a Nova Scotia Inqoeat. A Halifax (N S ) despatch says : The iuqueBt on the body of Mrs. Wm. Selig, at Caledonia, Queen's county, shows that she died under revolting circumstances. She was ill a delicate state of health, and had the whole of her teeth extracted by Dr. Andrews under the influence of ether. The woman's wrists were held by her husband while Dr. Andrews drew out her teeth. She struggled very hard before she went under the influence of the drug. When â- even teeth had been pulled out she began to struggle and raid : " I am awake now ; don't take any more teeth out." Her hus- band let go bis wife's hands, when Dr. Andrews said in an angry tone: "D it, hold her hands." The husband did so. and twa or throe more teeth were palled out. Subaequently pieces of teeth were extracted from the gums. Mrs. Selig com- plained that ber gums hurt her, aud Dr. Andrews, after hesitating, gave ber "some- thing to ease the pain," by lujecliog a fluid into her arm with a needle, remarking at the time : " Why do I have it if I don't use il ?" After that the woman said she felt sleepy, and Dr. Andrews said shVd be as bright as a button in the morning, and he went to bed. Mrs. Selig moaned pite- ously, coon became unconscious and died shortly after midnight. A HAD FATE. The Terrible SuRkirloas of a Toanc Man Crushed by a Tree. A Montreal despatch says : A peculiarly sad case came under the notice of the Notre Dame Hospital authorili"a on Satorday week. Ovtla Gauihier, a 23-year old man from Vaudreuil, was almost orni<hed by a pine tree falling upon him at Riviere dee Lievres, 3'J miles north of Le Ferme des Pins, near Buckingham, Que. His fellow- laborers picked him np, put him on an im- provised litter and carried him 32 miles, camping in the woods during the night amid torrents of rain At 10 o'clock on Monday morning they arrived at Le Ferme des Lievrea, where a physician could not be got to dress the poor man's wounds. Hia agony was intense, bat his friends could do absolutely nothing for him. Drenched by the rain, they had to proceed by the river in canoes, making two portages of consider- able length. On Tuesday evening ihey finally reached Buckingham, where a physician attended to some of the injuriea and others be pronounced already (>ast a cure. They arrived here in the city on Wednesday evening and proceeded to Vau- dreuil, where the young man's parents live. Finally, as the physioiatiS there could not do anything for htm, he was taken to Notre Dame Hospital on Friday morning, where ic was found thai gangrene had set in in one of his legs The last rites of the Church were administered and the poor fellow is not expected to live. F.tTALI.T HANGLKD BJ THIS CAKS. Tho Body Bobbed by Hrether Traiupa. tVhu Deeainp. A Montreal desi'alch says: A horrible accident occurred on tho (' P R. yesterday morning by which a man whose name is at present unknown lost his life. Shortly after the Ottawa express for Montreal passed Laohute three men were noticed walking on the tra^k The engineer whistled and rang the b.ll. Two of tho men left the track, but the third kept on yvalking, paying no attention to the danger signals. Au endeavor yvas then made to atop the train, but too late, and the unfor- tunate man was run over and his head and one arm completely severed from his body. The tram was ranning at the time forty miles an hour and could not be stopped for some diatance. It was backed up to tho scene of the tragedy, where the two com- panions of the victim wa« seen rifling the pockets of tho debased and had even removed the boots from his f.et. On the approach of the train hands the pair made off into the woods. The remains of tho unfortunate were gathered up and laid at the side of the track to be sent for and brooaht to Lachute later on. ! he deceased and hie oompanions wereevidently tramps, m The ObllKlDK KdltoT. Facetious Visitor in Newspapwr office (to Editor)â€" May i use your brains a mo- ment ? Editor My brains? Visitor (smilingly picking up scissors)â€" Yes. sir. Only a moment. I want toâ€" Editor (with great oordialiiy) - Certainly yon may. Vso them as long as you please. Always glad tofnrnish braiiis to a man wh o hsrii t anv. There is only one sure way to stop a small boy from asking quest ioi>s, and that way is not lalisfaotory it yon have any further nse for the boy. â€" Jou mat of Kdvcw tion. t f ^k i v-4