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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1885-4-2, Page 1ti Vol. XII,, No. 29 HEW TO THE LINE,. LET THE CHAPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY,,. EXx TER, ONT., THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 2, 1885. VP c p Canned Goods, Fresh Groceries, Fresh Middies, Fresh Cran- berries, Fresh, Oysters, Oranges and Lemons, - �U TO G. A A. H-YN DMAN aS FANS01i'S BLOC Alae Agent £or Therlay'e $• k C i.`ood. Outy tee. per Ib., or t18 per cwt. LEQAL.. --T' H. DIOKSOl4 Barrister. tee li .i..1 • cater of Supreme Ceurt.Notary rubtia Conveyancer, Couimisafonir, fie. Money to Loan. Ofiioa in Oac on'i Stook, Exeter. M • Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer, Etc,, EXETER, - • ONT. IdaleADDEN, Office saruwell's Meek (Bali's ala cfisce.l leZNTA.L. • .1 KINSMAN, DENTIST. ie. D.S Canadian. Thos. Ouellette has reoieved $20 all a remuneration from the corpora lion of Whither, for ah injury receiv- ed through a defective sidewalk. Thomas Artnetrong watt sent to the Ceutrat Prison for obtaining money under rinse pretences. He was fiber: eted in February, was arrested and not to gaol for 80 days. Ile got out as emoted. O'Donovan Rosea, Prof. action of the heart increased, yet, consciousness did not return to the girl, and all efforts to renter° her were fruitless. She remained in this state of torpidity for twenty-six days. Ou the evening ofthe twenty-sixth day she opened her eyee and feebly asked for a drink of water. From that time on she rapidly gained atreugth, and is now able to go about again. .b'rom 1 the time etre took siok until the day she regained consciousness wee twenty-eight days, and daring that time she partook of no food. When- . ever as attempt was wade to open her mouth the inuaclea coutrolltug . her jaws became rigid and her mouth could not be opened. Lrish revo;utioniets held a largely atteuded meeting on Sunday evening. Senator Riddlebergett was not preeeut, JOHN WHITE lb SON Publishers and Proprietors THE REBELLION. The rebel lose is believed to be large' I but is not known on account cf the, police having to retire. Further news AN ENGAGEMENT WfTU REBELS NEAR FORT is awaited With anxiety, as it is be- CABLETON. lieved the rebels will follow up their auooesa by attacking Fort Carleton, where Oel. Irvine and Capt. t;rozier hove now effected a, jonotuoa. LATER. Ottawa, March 29. -Fort Carleton burned to the ground, Polioe and volauteere gone to Prince Albert. The fire wan accidental, but We police had Friday moru_ing and got drunk, oras 1 lMezzeruff and others delivered Wilma watery epeeohos and were loudly ap- plauded. In his opening address Chairman lengeut °aid the crank vrlio exploded London Tower was a free male in Ireland today. (Cheers and °ries of "We'll do it again.") Beao1- ndeae were ed pied declaring that the landing of Albert Edward Guelph, commouly known. aa the Prince of Wales, cu the shores of Ireland is re garded as an act of invasion, and that he ie entitled only to that reception which liberty loving and patriotic run i:: atn4 the same night oom[nitted amide in his veil by hangt.ng bitneelf with hie haukerohief. He was Eng- lish, atm lute no friends here. Last Thursday night a back drove up to the workingmen's lodging house Simcoe street, Toronto and the driver llaeremoy bundled hie fare, an old man. on the No ell ask'teitiewalk and then drove off. The it - Teeth e;G-° proprietor of the lodging bourse took traetttlwftlt the old man in. He complained of out pain. being ill, was pal to bed and died. early next morning. T.:era is nothing COL. IRVINE'S TELEGRAM TO SIR JOHN til ODONALD. The party wider my command has juat arrived. When near Fort Oar- leton we found abet Oroaier, with a party of one hundred, went to Doak Lake to secure a large quantity of euppliea there stored. Were met by nonoluded to nbaudon Carleton." some bandied rebels, who holdall ad -1 It is not known whether the stores vantageone position M 13eardy'a Re at Carleton were sawed or not, or serve and eudea'3ared to eurruuud the whether they begs fallen iota the polios and oiviliaae, The rebwis bred bands of the insurgents. No word of the first, when it became general. any additional encounter has been rte oeived, but it is presumed that when the police had, previously to the fire, decittad to abandon Nuoh a strong Fadden as Carletou it known to have beau, they moat have couside,ed their situation uueafe. In additi m to the troops which have already been announced as uuder orders, the 165th Battalion of Mon- treal, under Col. Ouimet, will start at once, old a cmnpa-ty of bltarp-°hoot- era is beiugeeieoied tuainty from men who li•tvo bad «rimbtetott experience, to be placed utitier .lie eoultnaud of Crozier, owing to the disadvantage at which he wee taken, retreated or- derly, arriving at the fort the same time as my Harty. Ten oiviliaus of Priuoe Albert and two policemen were killed, and fear oiviliane and eevea oouatabtee wounded. The number of rebel° killed is not known. 'Lbe pet- f.toe and civilians acted with the grate, est bravery under a heavy fire. THE KILLED.. Regiruentat No 1,008—Constable, T. J. Gibsou. Regimental No. 1,005 --Constable i . . acucttt. Capt. Todd. Civilian° --Captain John Meritou, Goveruce Dettelney a id Chief Fao- W. Nrpi°r, Jamer Bakeley, t3. Elliot, l tar McDonald, of the Iludeou'a Bay Robert Mtddleton, D. McKenzie, D. MEDICAL ; to identify him, but he appears to Beagle should ever extend to an in- > Derentail, Marin Neewitt, eoseph Au- lt.FlYND:'kiAL---COBONEIlFOR have the Casa iu hand. rho laws of war he iiivitea Haat death,!dereon, Alex. Haller. thef:ouutvoflinrait, ((nice, opposite to Before the buns of John Reyna, THE WOUNDED. str.t.oarainx'aatora[txetar the veered hoe decreed to be the desert Captain Moore (leg broken), L. Ale at Cliutou,lgat week, a report was in of a laoetile spy in lima of liar." Nath,.\V. R. Markley and Alai. Stave T \Y, li1tU 1VNIV(T Al, D., Al. C �oiroulauaii that he nae not deed, but ad, of the vain liner°. rJ • D.:•t iraduato victoriaiduivarait. ^ Ogic na - t , and to eat et reit A. Farmer's Fate. The N. W. Mounted Felice wound hail from the country. The police ceder of their country, and that by! a [u a raece a endragieeitee. nee tiort,altoratatv.Exeter ihi8 report a Couple of lnedical men made au oxamivatiou of Ilia body, pettedly satisfied that he was dead. After the burial of the body, the rumor was repeated, and au to thoraughly satisfy the friends of b- oomed, C. J, Stevaneou had the body exutned by .bur. Webb on Tuesday, Metiers. T. White and G. Cottle no- eompanyiug him. It was found in precisely the same position aa when buried, mortification having set it. Monday evening a man named M. McCollum, while walkiug on the Lou- don bi Port Stanley Railway traok near St. Thomas, being at the time under the `influence of liquor, was struck by the five o'clock express go grouud. Atter lingering in a hair ing north and killed ina.antly. The + stupefied condition until 1 o'clock, p. deceased was a batubelor, an English m,, Thursday he expired. Tenbrook man and resided iu a shanty near the was a widower. He was a ilromin- S:utl.ieru Counties Fair Grenada. He east member of the Township Council. was a laboriug man, but was known The pause of the quarrel is attributed to be one of the best educated mon in tc jealousy ou the part of Tuttle,who, the County of Elgin, and had filled it is believed, thought Tenbrook was .nany responsible poaitions in Eng- on terms of undue intimacy with his land before arriving in Canada. wife. Beth parties were uuder the The Dominion Customs officials at influence of liquor at the time. Sarnia have been making thiags lire- ly for the smugglers lately.. A gent: lemen was caught last week, and a lot cf Ja.oelry, light hardware, surgi- cal instramente' and other valuables taken from him, Ho afterwards paid a fine of $290 rather than stand trial. D. Milford, an accomplice was also fined $200, while .Koss another part• ner was fined $50. Smuggling by means of false entries and in roti A !armor: named `L'oubrook, 45 DIt. J. A. ROLLINS, :tl, O. l'. S living in the tawuship O. OfUca, Main S•.Rxetor.t)ut. Residence being Pe y years of age, house recently occupied byP.McPbtilfps, ISeq. of Grauthan, two miles from tat. OLUTTZ, H. D., • ()Meant lila residence Exeter. DR. .IRVING,GRADUATTe t3NI 0uvalciaustoil surgeon( out,.r•fficeKirkton T ERSITX 'rrinityCo1leg lifembereellece IMPORTANT :v °TICE S . HENRY ''ILBER, Lioeneed Auo- tionoorfor tray, Stephen, and McGilivrity Tow4ships. Bede° conducted at moderato rases. omen—At Post-offee, Creditor*, Ont. ` rONEYTO LOAN ON REAL ES - lei. tato tor the Huron & Erie Loan , Savings lisoioty. Low rates of iutorosl. Apply to John Spaokman,Exeter, INJ. CLARK, Agent for the Us - • bore owlet liibbort a tutualFire[•nsurancc Company, Residence -Farquhar, Orders by mailpromptlF tttondedto. MONEY TO LOAN AT 64- AND 7 per cent. accort'ing to terms. Private Funds. Apply to B. v.ELLTOT, Octoberl5,'80 Solicitor, Exeter —TRY— I. DEARINC'S Central Shaving Parlor Vox. Olean and easy shaving, fashionable hair nutting, deo. Clean Towels for every customer, Next door to Central Hotel. FOR SALE.-TWO•STORYFRAME Cntharine'senet with his dear!) Burin a quarrel with his young farm-hand, Wm Tuttle, who is not yet 21, They i stable J. J. Moore, Regimautal No. bad been to send the ovonto at 93Ounstable Meer. tten. ii, Port Dalhousie, and returned about Tt ie stated that Civilian Frannie midnight. On their arriv tl at the Elliot, who is among the killed, is a ram they nein heard quarrelling by sou of Jud a Ellwt of London, and ok'e son, A1Fred, aged 17, who was a barrtstef pit �atisiug at ?duceran out out to the farmyard. He saw his father strike at Tuttle with a piece of Albert. board. Tattle wrested it from Ten- BIEL SAVING BIS NECK. brook, and struck the latter a murder- It is stated that lea, afraid of his nets blow, which felled him to the neck, has resigned active command of the iusurgente, and has placed a nom- inal commander in his stead, while he pulls the wires from a more retired position. Winuipeg, March 27.—News from the seat of the North -weal troubles ii not reassuring to day and to aome ex tent alarming. The result to military mancauvres continue with unoea,iug activity. General Middleton,wbo ar- rived this moruing, is a guest at the Government house, attended by Dep- uty -Adjutant General Haughton. He iuspected the stores, clothing, maga- nue and supplies at Fort Osborne and was disatisfied with the condition of the clotbing which has lain there since the last Riot rebellion, and is therefore unfit for service. Riel is reoonnoiteriug between Duca Lake and Prince Albert with 600 arm- ed are :--Inspeotor J. ELMS, Carper al Glletiriet, Regimental No. 852. Constable Garrett ; Regimental No, 1,117 Constable S. F. Gordon ; Regi- mental No. 1,045, Constable A. Al. Smith ; Regimental No. 1,048, Con owns INGHOUSEaudui,eaoreoflandboats at night from Port Huron has situated on the Thames Road.2tmiles east oft been extensively 1aot18ed there for Exeter. Goodlarge frame stable and driving 1 y p shed; splendid orchard of choice fruit -beating some time. Ou Tuesday last the offi- trees• good well and cistern. Suitable for a re -1 tired farmer THOMAS Wilibe sold cheap for cash, np_ tiers bagged another emus;geler who ply to was loaded with a superabundance of Jewelry, which was taken obarge of. N• in the Court ,.P Common Pleas -Deeds, the Port Huron broom factory, who Wills,ifortgages, Leases,andalt forms ofagrae.' menta drawn and executed according to law. I is making arrangements for the open- MONEYTOLOANONREALESTATE. Partieew1s11•, ing to borrow money on account of r000ntpur- Ing Of a branch In Sarnia. He brought ahasea ofland,or to pay off exietingmill, C se a, load of broom handles on Wed- wi118nd a great saving oy giving me a call, Oan Wed - lend money DAG and 6i per cent. accordingto nesday night and made a false entry, terms. N.J.CLARK. and the officers confiscated the. horse J. CLARK. COMMISSIONER The next to follow was E. Percival of MARRIAGE LL wagon, load and all. Several small SENSES. the officers seem determined to atop JOHN eloDONELL, ISSUER OF I seizures have been made since, and orrloE IN FITTON'S JEWELRY STORE • the practice at Sarnia, Also agent for the Loudon Mntual Insurance Company of Canada,Mercautile Insurance Co —Capital 1+500,000.00 Head Office Waterloo: Ont, Glasgow do London Insurance Coy -Cap- ital '$2,500,000 ; 13eac.Office, Montreal. . JOHN MoDONELL Exeter. THE WATERLOO MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO_ Established in 1863. HEAD OFF10E - • WATERLOO, ONT. Thisoomyanvhas been over Eightteen years asuccessfu.l operation in Western Ontario,and continues to insure agaluet'.oss or damage bb Fire,Buildings,Merehandise, Manufaotories,and all other descriptions of insurable property. I n- tendiugiusurers have the option of insuring on the Premium Note or Cash System. • Luring the past ten years tt is Company has ssued 57,0011 Policies,covering property to the awwant of$40,872,088; and paid in losses alone $700,752,00 AssetS, 8176,100.00, consisting of Cash in Bank, Government Deposit, and the unassessed Premium Notes on hand and in force J. W WAX, DENY D. Preside' t. C. M. TAYLOR, Secretary J.B. HIIGnCs,[nspeotor. CHARLESSNELLY Agent for Exeter and Vicinity. The University Boat Race. The forty-second • university boat raoa was rowed over the Thames oourae. Large oruwds witnessed the contest. Oxford won the toss and selected the Surrey stake boat. The bends of the river at Craven cottage and Mortlake were thus against them. but they held the inside berth all the way from the soap -works at Hammer- smith to Chiswick church. Both crews made en exoelleat start. Cam bridge rowed a slightly quicker stroke than Oxford, tint the latter soon were a little ahead. The Cantabs quickly naught them, and.for a quarter of a mile there was a level race. The steering of the Cantab, was no per - feet, and the rowing of the Oxonians soon gave them the lead again. Rounding the bend of the river op- posite Dover,two miles from the start, they were still leading. They con- tinued to gain slightly,- by the time they were rounding Cheswick bend they were clear in front. At Bull's said to have effeoted a jutiotion with Head the Oxfords were two lengths Crozier at Fort Carleton. The latter ahead, and the same lead was main made a sortie from the fort with 100 taiued as the boats passed under men to secure supplies from Duck Barnes' bridge. Every effort was Lake. They were intercepted by rebels, who outnumbered them three made by the Cantabs to overcome this difference, but the Oxonians to one. Civilians under Captain reached the winning pout three Moore, of Priem Albert, comprised lengths in advance. This result was ualf of Crozier's command. The re- expected, .is one of the Cambridge bele made an attempt to surround the crew became very ill a few days age,, polios and first opened fire. and there was no ime to train a pro The police and oiviliaus responded par substitute. Time of race, 21.96. Betting was 5 to 4 iu favor of Oxford. Scott's Emulsion of "Pure Cod Liver 011, with Hypopitosphites, is a most valuable retnedyylfor Consumption, Scrofitld, Wasting Diseases, of children, colds, and chronic coughs, and in tall condi- tions where there is a loss of flesh, a lack of nerve power and a general debility of the Co. Qu'Appelle. have had another coufereuee with t'iapot null another chief and base await, attained that they would remain loyal to the great white mother. Word has just bean received that Hilliard Mitchell, postmaster at Stn. bart near Duck Lake, is a prisoner in the hands of the rebels. The people of Medicine Hat weld a large meetiug recently iu the immi- gration shod and resolved to form a voluuteer ourpe or home protection. About 100 men enrolled themaelrco and appointed the following officers: Tilos. Tweed, Captain ; W. M. An- derson and Dr. Bucher, Lieuts. rho Government have bean telegraphed for arms and ammunition. Canadian Pacific Railway authur- t ties have resolved to organize a regi- ment anter the style ot the Grand Truck brigade to operate all along the lino for the protection of the pro- perty of the company. Capt. Gauth- ier, of the Purchasing -Department, and tvell-kuown iu connection with the voluuteer service, has been en- trusted with the organization of the oorpe. Tue following additional particul- ars have been received of the fight at Ducts Like :—Firing Was begun by the rebate while Major Crozier was holding a parley with Riel, under a flag of truce. The engagemeut then was brisk ; the police and volunteers having responded with vigorous fire. The rebels ars reported to have lost 47 killed and wounded. The cannon of mounted pclice rendered good ser- vice in covering retreat to I. Car- leton, and, but tor them, an inevit- able disaster would have followed. The latest news says that Stoney Indians ed men. Major Crozier, from Carle- are marching on Battloford. Several men ton, sent word to Battfeford that au attempted to reach the barracks to get more attnok is expected. supplies and wore fired at by Indians and Big Bear, who was reported to have , half breeds. A portion ill f the town of Battle - Musket gone to Carleton, is still at Fort Pitt, ford is abandoned and has been burned by the Indians and half breeds. There have Musket Chief, of Stonier, fifteen miles bean four men killed. s ,nth of Battleford, offered 100 men There has been a fight at Dock Lake. to aid the police. Crozier has 200 Indians uuder arms. He has also Drawing Notice to Teachers. three pieces of artillery. Later—The startling iatelligeuoe A good many inquiries having been has just been received by the chief male by the teachers and pupils in officer of the Hudson Bay Company regard to the work prescribed in draw: this afternoon. It announces the ing for the departmental examination first collision of the troops with the next July, we have bean requested to rebels near Dilik Lake, and not far publish the following letter. recieved from Fore Carleton. Col. Irvioe is I by A1r. R. E. Brown of Leeburn, Pres. of the W. Huron Teachers' Aseooia: tion, from the secretary of the depart: went: "In answer 'to your inquiry, the minister desires me to °tete that suffi: oient work for the entr"anoe examin: ation may be douo in the two first drawing books, even without using the practice bo'ks. Until farther in; structions, teachers preparing pupils fir the 'eoond and third class teach: ers examination may oonttuue using and the fight is reported to have be- Smith's Intermediate Manual as here: onme general for a time. Crozier tofore. The pupils themselves need finding himself outnumbered and the I not buy the latter b000ks." rebels as well armed as himself, if not better, fell back slowly upon F,trt Carleton. Ten oiviliaus of Prince Albert were killed and two Mounted Polioe. Four civilians and eleven Mounted Police are wounded. American. A little daughter of Joseph Renner, North Hope, Pa., was taken ill with colic, and went into a trance state, being to all appearances dead. The heart ceased to beat, the pulse was extinct and respiration ceased. 1n this condition the body was kept for two days, and then the family began disouseiug the funeral. After every- thing had been settled upon, thefath- er looked again at the child, and she gave unmistakable signs ot life. The pulse beat slowly, but it indicated that life was there, and means were at once used to fan the vital shark in- to a 'flame. The doctor was again called and restoratives applied. Al- though respiration returned sed the system. The two drawing books referred to in the above are Nos. 1 and 2 of the newly autborlxed series, published by the Caned . Publishing Co. They can be had at the bookstores, 10 eta. each.