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The Exeter Times, 1894-6-28, Page 47 EX 1'41 Ell,• ONT er,:et gen e rat banhiti eb ueinte s. edivee the A.ecounte of hletellaute °there eat faverehle torxtit. effete every aecoaunedation eaustetent with see end e.onservative liankieg erineheles. 1 etzere g Allowed on dep.:Alto. eenrefte iteued eaeable at any Eettiee o tte atereli tent 3itaeit„ Ntervel/leeoleeTtle, and m BY TO J..40AN N Neale 4 Slid MOtatnIGES. moirpo01 ,a'!;c.,;...txr..4-,onot199411t00r.0000140040,..40.04,avap.liz, TleUTISDAY' JUNE S. 18a1. The iteeult- eEceted.: in theeat of the cities and the nearer rnral • emietitueuciee, the re- ti.1.;Mt.e.f. Tuesday's elaetion are roe. per - feet; Nebo cities remarkable results lutedhcon ecored, Torento, •for ex - ha* recorded the tremendous Coneervative Majority tif—i7-d, •Meeeer defeated Mr. Tait by 847 ; Dr. •De tee.= tat; won by 1i3 ; Mr. Craw. • v Ion° ;, and t3tIrallowland by • The titmice aleihe mete extra- 0e/dile...of when it le borne in mind that two pee e ago ',reroute elected a Liberal de a hernia:me majority. Phey are • eneete ehlountling till when viewed in the liott ef the expectations entertain- ed wiit. reference to the lost redistribu- tion- a‘F.,. conservative majority has been An:ingest in the constituencies in which it it as expected that it would be •altogether wiped out. Lithe rural con- • zetiteteltelee the fight has been between three patties, the Liberals, the Conser- Vativee, ited the Patrons, with the • P. Pe A. tirpeating her and there. The Liberia heve reetecl very largely upon theTh vote, the orders in respect ot wife+, were that -while it WAS not to go toile Tories, neither WaS it to be waSted upon the Patrons- The marks of this vteth are to be fuund in a large proponion of the constituencies. in • apite of the vote however, the Conser- vative.: hove raahe a geod fight, and the Datr.ona and Independents together here . :dean frcul the parties intliacrint- luatele wenty seats - In South liuron, thefight made by Mr. D. Weismiller, the Conserygive Candidate, was one of the best recorded • in the Peovince'as a glance at the ett*.aities the different municipali- ties will ehow. Mr. Weismiller went into the fight -with a determination to win, end would have carried the riding to victory by a very largemajority had the Comiervative vote been nearly all • polled. En Exeter,tephen and Use, borne, there were a sufficient number •of vhtte to elect 1111X1 by over 100 enajoeily, but these voters being in- different oli aecount ot continuous de- feat for years, were indifferent about votiog ed this election. The temper- ance tomb, notwithstanding that it had • dimeexploded, was an hnportant factor • in thtedefeat of Mr. Weienailler. Step- hen and Hay did nobly and polled for Mr. Weismiller all that wan promised, his German friended-and he may well feel prottd o them-remainhod true to their pjedge. The end) however, is not •yet. ,A. vieeting was held in Heneall yesterday, for the purpose of conahler- • Mg further action along the line of pro- testing Mr. McLean's election. The . representation was s ery large, and • after deliberation it was decided to ap- ply t'sT vreeount, which will take place shertly. There is evidence collected, widclo it is safe to predict, will yot piece Mr. Vir.eismiller as member for Soueh Huron. Farquhar. ,NL. --Mr. John Gard- iner • died at Morrison, Iowa, on Friday evening, May 25, 1894, aged 70 yea, s and 17 days. Mr Gardiner's death was eurprise to his family or friends, for he had haen gradually failing for some dna. The high respect ancl esteem in which Le was held was shown by the are e etineourse of friends present at the •runoval rvices. John Gardiner was born in Veilearn, Scotland, :May 8tla 1824. In 1849 he was inarried to Miss Zrareetret Oilfillan, and immediately re- el:wed to America, settling in Daffalo, hut laterite Canada, where he XeMallietl. 213 years, or until 1872, when toi went t Iowa, On4oc. 27, 1867, the first Ontario Ltivc etasernbly began its deliber- , and that which was elected • ; is the eighth . eeteetteillion acre:, of wheat has dueoted in Manitoba this year. - els is only about 200,000 less than the ecre,age, in Ontario. The young giant f the west will soon outstrip the eastern mother, "se -7g Aeeorsling to the annual report issued the last of hfay the Salvation Army is now estehliehecl in forty-teo countritae it ha it eorps, runnbering 6,111 (Slew, 10,)2el heal officers and 2,331 bandsmen. The number ef "Euildiers" is not stated) but Geos Booth claims that the army eon - verbs to Christianity 200,000 people every year. ,Ovet five tons of fish were taken item e Lune Poiat Company's nate one day St Week by the dompanyht boats after an emericeu tug had visited some of the netif • nit etele the fish. aaatraat The inarriaee lime been regietered in intim of Henry Keyes, teged 76, a widow- , to Lueatta Bill, a widow of 60 summers a a resident of Westatinister. The "tome tie the men curler betweeidEaet Lon. and tbe eity. malty huainees houses in the United gee een boot of fifty years' standing. busiatee ofDr. l. C: Ayer & Co., 110 Mem, whose iaeorepatab"e •Serge - ie knowei and used everywhere, Ita.0 0 its half -centennial and Was Paver he neormas sat at Preeead, need'e Lieiment oures la grippe, IV Nk.WOOfAWLKToT AQQauj AssINArfEr VOW 11T04`li Va Lieg,i0 j lelny Senteiteted to Die iu the Eleetrie Claire TAKES HER FATE STOICALLY eetwe.ee e Con It ea.41 We* n•an't. VelwAol, n'ee; 'et; to To,..e..1 the Seat enee re t ten to Tattl.s valve the viest Lu Attgo0t. Ittoe o t ;eta, N.Y., :fetus, ail-- tire. Lie zie I Eeidelay. -add, woe 1": ttiel Loney ot eeeteneed. yeetere.iy 11, eleetioamed derine the wee•te leaarnaina eanguett,I sa4. "Mae II ,ettus. it tl.e s• with Sae: l'eeisaer, wieee lee else. sured ,Z1111. ("0.0'1.1 :ilia n ea -aa " .1, sie se!.. te • wiea sae 1, sa.., .1. e .Sur - Lug t• ' a ;.,•• tO her eve:, S. ' . riddled e • . LUZIa ilALLIDAY. .Lawyer Carpenter watched her, his eyes dim, and ithicere pity showing in his face. Judge Edwarde epoke in low, Measured tones in itnposing sentence,and the room was intensely qtilet, so eager were the listeners to catch every word. Mr. Car• pada responded to the lodge's invitation to sneak by saying; "I have nothing to say, Tears streamed down his cheeks as the judge condemned her to death by eleo trieity in the place designated by the State, in the week beginning Alonday, .August 6, 1804, Lizzie was led out with- out a sign of recognitioft of the terrible sentence. Public opinion has changed Since the verdict was given. . .No one expected con- viction in the first degree, and now that it has been given and the clamor of those who thought she was sharamiug has been satisfied, there is a general expression that confieement for the remainder of her life shoall have been the penalty. There is talk of • appealing to • Governor Flower for a commission to look into the case. eaSeee DEATH OF MGR- TACHE. The Distinguished Prelate of St. Bonilace Passes Away -A Brilliant Career. Weserneao, Mena June 23. -Archbishop Tache died yesterday morning. Funeral on. Wedneedag net. Alexandre Tache was born July 23, 1823, at Riviera du Loup, of an illustrious family of Frenell origin. He was a son of Charles Tache and Henrietta Boucher. Finishing his classical studiee at the col- lege at Si, Hyacinthe he went to the Semi- nary of St. Sulpice at Montreal to pursue his theological course. He coueluded with the Oblate Fathers at Longeuil and was re- ceived into the priesthood. Then he went west. Six years, under any trials and tribulations be spent evangelizing the savages of the Northwest. With the missionaries of hid congregation he pushed Lis spiritual conquest into regions hitherto unknown to white men. Pius IX., in the consistory of June 13, 1850, preconised Father Tache, coadjuta. toe bishop of Arath in partibus with the right of succession to Mgr. Provencher, bishop of the Northwest, now called St. Boniface. Ile was consecrated bishop November 23, 1851, at the tathedral of Viviers. Bishop Provencher dying on June 1, 1853, left Bishop Tache i0 possession of the diocese of St. Boniface. In 1855 the Hods= Bay Company nominated him counsel to the Government of Assiniboia, and mi June 17, 1837, he was appointed prelate assistant to the pontifical throne. He was nominated Archbishop of St. Doniface on September 22, 1871, and ap- poinzed shortly after, He had so much control over the Iudians of the Northwest that when the first uprising took place in that twenty, Sir John Macdonald sent to Rome fot Win, where he was attending the Vatican eounen, asking him t� return and help quell the rebellion. . TRIAL OF MRS. HARTLEY. • = Tutoeedee wee the 1-11e .anniversary of the fonn•thig i Iteliiete.- • . • • •Alleati, the eekehreteti renger, •theel ixt Paris. •on .aattatday Mght, Wied at,d,lightning did reat • daianteeet iz partot New joreey on Wednesday. •The. eittnearlein Mitten. of .Magitatee has paeaed th;• aliviligarriage Bill by a.majori; • ty of 1, . -Prot,. 1.1.ezhert Tuttle, • profeseor of mu. d0Tii ale a yen: idetoty in itoraell,Univee- sity. • " • • .• • • ' 9:11'e IlislOy teem will sall • ona•Saturday. mei:lit-eel/eon lioratreet- by. the steamship • - • A ee•e:..;.:. 11,,e1 11,nidel...0egen Tew wee. killed :t VTITIAW:ty ...\•;',J.i.:Atrint ar- Dundas Iiiktart:Aty • aalil miners bait. titeir • .by en explosion it. the Albioa rainO„ York, . Er.g• dated, ee . teeeeed laee, twelve, oi Welland . was drOW.I.f.J. Pelt .colhorne 00 • day while lettising. - The eloeiee es.s.iets ue the peathytertaa General ee.g.,...; .,,y wee Isola • at St, John, N,11s, oe. Thursday, Eraetne Witten' was last Nr ea sec.- • talc- tl to, five yeaee and eix months in. t Sing dene lededie = deed tamealierts id:ending the. University - Itetelisioe thingrese, now .in sesiden in Letoton. .e. lead eleerec ceemired in the Erie Oauel sir pilled west ei Alietny oa Frieley. Nay, igati.-n et:sae:AA • A a •venteendeetr-old youth.named Lind-. , say vete drove...al v. lale bathing at Galt on I Satur hey afternoitit At Winds, e. :servant girl has been ar- rested with several trunk's filled with stoe len geade ie her pteseeeeion. tieer a:gee:ail) worth iet building int- prorenteete 'repined , in Winnipeg teal:Mee dret half of this 'Year. At 11iaiUe on Friday George Page was smite:a:eel to two years in the Penitentiary. for rtnieitsieni at asoxboreugh. A desaatelt from Paris says sixty cases and fifteen deethit front cholera littve• oo- ourred atSieraeppe, near Liege, Belgium. Ties, contract fer the statee of Sir John alitedonald, to be erected in Kingston,. has been let to lir. Wade the English scelp• tor. A railroad. disaster occurred on Snnday night near Chillieothe, Ohio. Three per- sons were killed and others . fatally in- jured. 1 eve 'young men, Lin Cru.mb and Claude Roof ei Clayton, while returning from Ganautique in a sail boat, were upset and drowned. Mr. C. E. Britton. o Gananoque was elected High Chief Raud,er of the Canad- ian Order of Foresters at Woodstock on Thursday. The first annual pienie of the western division of the C. 1. R. took place Saturday to Woodstock, several thousand persons taking part. , About 6i10 tailors employed in fashion- able shops oh Fifth ayenue, New York, strut.- on Saturday against a 10 per cent, reduction in wages. The I. 0. G. T., at Paris on Thursday elected J. D. Andrews of Hamilton Grand Chief Templar. Next year's session will be held in Toronto. Walter Manuel had two ribs broken and was badly injured internally by a falling beam at a barn -raising on Joseph Mitchell's faera near Whitby on Saturday-. - A. double drowning accident occurred in the Red River, near Winnipeg, on Friday, two young ladies named Abrozitch and Speen being drowned while bathing. The senate of Diiblin University has decided to confer the degree of LL.D. upon judge Russell, of England; Bishop Stevens of Ohio, and Bishop 'Walker, of Dakota. . All the bakers in Listion have struck against a muuicipal regulation requiring master bakers to deposit -a sum of money as a guarantee that they will sell bread of proper weight. The Williams Palace Car Comnany, cap- italized at 8'3,000,000, will immediately begin constructing oars in SL Joseph, Mo., to compete with the Pullman and Wagner Companies. The seaihig schooner Uaga capsized in a typhoon off the coast of Japan and all hands were lost. Neves is anxiously awaited from five other vessels which were in the sanee locality.. During a thick fog near Yarmouth, N. S., the steamer Yarmouth ran clown the lobster smack Monterey Of Portland. The captain of the smack. William Condon of Friendship, Me.. was drowned. Ilenry Calms, a negro, charged with at- tempting to assault a white woman. near Magnolia, Ark., was captured near the Louisiana line on Friday, and taken back to the scene of his crime and lynched. . Adjutant -General Tanney of the Colo- rado State National Guards, who had made himself objectionable to the Cripples Creek miners, was tarred and feathered ,by a mob at Colorado Springs, Col, on Saturday mosirrTietgh. omas David Gibson -Carmichael has been suggested by the Midlothian Lib- erals to contest let the next election the seat now occupied by Mr. Gladstone, the ex -Premier having deelined •to stand for re-election. • At Rochester N. l'Se on Thursday, Ste- phen D. Kish, aged 29 years, an employe of the Bell Telephone Company, while re- pairing a wire on a pole 80 feet 'Agit, got hold of a live electric wire, arid was shockedso that he died soon after. George Hat:ably disappeared feenn Win- , uipeg a Short time ago, and on Thursday etbottle was found in Reti rierer which contained it letter -from him saying he had drowned himself, being, tired of life. He had weighted himself with hen. • • 'Harry Spring, a vouug Chiciteoan, who wrote lettere to tieleix Gould' and Mrs, Emmons Blaine, and attempted to obtain money frem several millionaires. in New York, Boston and Chicago, has .been ar- rested, adjudged insane, -and sent to an ' asylum. • Rev. B. B. Swartzenber, it native Of mo- rocco, and a member of Livingstone's ex- ploring party in .Afrioa, was arrested at ou - Thursday - on it eliarge of Murder, committed two years ago in • Chattanooga. After being locked up, he cit1i hie throat. • Mrs. alatieline• Taslrer • Polk, of Phila- delphia, aged .abotte 130, .Is said to be en- gaged. to enarry- C. He Cramp, head of the greatehipbuildinga Anna whose age is 00, The preepeetive bride is . described • as .6 beautiful and charming wonaan, deseended from tb e Stuart kings of •Segland. • , ' Seaman Laird,a barber,. has been ar- real-A(1..31 Tiverton, Ont„.. no suspicion of having .kiIlea Donald Idatbeson,.of the vil- lage of Ripley, Wii0 disappeared last NO- vember, after heving attended it dance at the. Walker 'house, Kiecardine, Laird is morgue. Tile deceased was known as a tt young merried mato • With nothing sober and tellable. man. An. lege* will against his,eliataeter. He is out ori $4,000 .110 held by Coroner itikinte. • : • ing's Mother ip the Box—The Trial Farther Adjourned. BRANTFORD, Out., June 23. -The trial of Mrs. Hartley and Henry- Ling for the death of Caleb Hartley was re- sumed itt the police court yesterday. Thera was a large crowd of spectators on hand. Constable 'William R. Alien, G. Frauk Allau. and Catherine Wogd.- ware occupied, the attention of the court until about 2 p.m., when there was an ad- journment for inucli. In the afternoon Mrs. Lime, mother of prisoner Ling, and James Doherty occupied the witness box. Evidence given by witnesses was much the same as that given at the in- quest. The case will eome up again on Thursday. Trampled to Death. Came* Sougn, June 23. -Win. Doherty, it farmer, of Keppel, left his house with a team of horses, intending to clear stones off e field. He was found lying in the read in an =conscious condition. Medical, aid was at onee sent for, but the enforta- ante matt died almost Immediately after being found, ft is thought that the horses had in Owe *ay become umnanageare awl trampled upon hien as there were two braises upon his Oleg, one of them just above the heart.. Drowned in Termite Hay. Toitteerro, June 23. -The body of it man named James Tinning, a eoachtnan, who resided oe Portland etteet, was found. floating. in the bay yesterday. End Clover, of Stewart street,. and Geo. Tuft, of No. 2 Company, R,C.I., took the body from the water and telephoned for the patrol wagon whieli conveyed it to the • •"" The President of France 3.1ordered by Dal Italian Anarchist. STABBED IN HIS CARRIAGE ante norrible Deed Was Committed While the Wreeident 'Was Atten(liog a 1)00 MOAStratiou at Lyons -Tile As- BASSIll Attempts Escape Mit 1tVaptnreth Pains, June 25 -Stull Omuta President of the Repnblio, was stabbed mortally last evening in Lyons, by Cesare Giovaui Santo, ax anareldet 21 ;oars of age. President Carnot went to co -ons to 'nett tho exhibition. He leftthe Chember of Commerce limpet given in hie honor shortly- after I/ n'elock meet w:dked to his eel-et:Igo which was wahine in the Plaee de la Bouri' lIs hal hardly tahn Inc t when Santo, a newspaper in hie 'baud, pressed through the crowd nett retinue up the earriage eters, President Carnot started elightly. Saute snatehed a dagger from the le wspapsr anti plaugca it into the President's abdomen near the liver. The. President eauk back neconsctoas. ale was taken at -once te the arefeetare and the most skillfid suraceons in the city were simemoneds Meantime Sante was arrested. The news spread swiftly to every pert of the eity. lanriated crowds filled the streets. Before 10 edelock an Italian res- taurant had been satked .and the police were obliged to strain every Deere to pica tect the Italian eolith:ate. President carnot arrived in Lyons on Satarday and intended to remain there over to morrow. Yesterday the president and his party paid it state visit to the exhibition in the Parc de In Tete d'Or, Afterwards the president held a reception at the Prefec- ture, He planned to go to the grand • MARLS FRANCOIS SIDI OARNOT. theatre on the Place de la Comedies in the evening after the banquet at the Chamber of Commerce. He was in a particularly happy mood during the banerest and was noticeably elated by the cordiality of his reception not only by the crowd outside the building but also by the guests within. He was cheered incessantly from the moment he left the Chamber of Commerce until he took the carriage for the theatre. The demonstrative effect of the crowd caused. the confusion whicsh gave Santo his opportunity as he was able to push his way forward quite unnoticed until at the step of the carriage. As Santo sprang from the carriage step and. tried to escape he was seized and sur- rounded, But for the prompt interference of the notice he would have been torn and trampled to death on the spot. As soon as the police extricated him from the hands of his captors they hurried him off to the stakon, house. When Santo was within a few feet of the carriage he waved a paper as ef intend- ing to present a petition and thns threw off their guard the persons nearest the Presi- dent. He was seized just as he was about to jump from the step and had but half withdrawn the dagger. The President had repeated hemorrlaea- ges after he was removed to the pre- fecture. He sank gradually but steadily until 12.45 o'clock when he died. Mine. Carnot and her two sons left Paris at 11.51 o'clock by special train for Lyons. Ali the Ministers who did not go to Lyons with the President were in council at the Elysee itt midnight. Disappeared FrOM London. LONDON, Ont., June 25. -Mr. Thomas W. Birks, a prominent young man of this city, is supposed to have left for parts unknown, and friends, creditors and sweet- heart are sorrowing as a result. 3irIce was formerly bookkeeper for the firm of Stevens, Clark & Stevens, but had lately entered business on his own account in the junk line. He was a leading light in a Sunday school. He was engaged to marry aa estimable young lady who stands high in the same church. The amount of his indebtedness is not known. Five Drowned at Brooklyn. BROOKLYN, N, Y., June 25, --Five per- sons were drowned. yesterday morning in East River about 400 feet from the Atlantic Yacht Club at the foot of Fifty-sixth street, Brooklyn. The drowned people who are at present 'unknowit were two uien, one light the other dark, two women and it child. Another child, a girl about 2 years old was rescued. They were all evidently Swedes or Germans. Deorosy at Niagara Falls. NIAGARA VALLS, Ont., June 25. -The health physicians, Drs. Oliver and Mc- Garry, of this town, have pronounced Thomas Sheehan, a teainp, who Was ar- rested ,here Thursday last, to be suffering from leprosy. The authorities have the man housed in a pest house on tho out- skirts of the town pendine, instructions for his disposition from the Government. , THE: LOS$ OF THE WELLS. fdeir Crew at the eitethiree Sue. plolon of rent. HALIFAX, N.So Jano 20,-0f the four- teen men composing the crew 'of the American schooner iary j. Wells, wreeked at Whitehead, Guysboro, it few • days ago, eleven are at the Sailors' Hotne here under the cam of the United States consul. Each man probably lost 875 worth of elothiug, rubber goods; head and. foot wear. Not it cent's worth of personal property was saved. Tile whole eummer's prospects are gone. Whet remains of the lishiug season will not suffice to retrieve the Whitehead disaster. Out et the a:loaner's new oat!. lit and stores enough was landed to goal- ize it couple of hundred dollars perhaps at auctiou. Had the havoe resulted frora • natural catises the crew would take it as a matter of course, bat they elaim that the echooner met her fate by are, and the fishermen owe their present deetitution to a mysterious Oonfingratibe. • Martin Nelson, a Mane mina enes Mary J. Wells „arrived At claire Banks -early in Juno forhalibut tiebing. On Thursday evening last they went to White- head. for bait. The sehooner was brought to anchor it qautrtee of a mile from the shore. All hands but the cook, Tun Ree•no, of Liverpool, 12.8,, went ashore. Nelson atel two others were the fleet to re- turn. They clitabed over the schooner'a rail about two hours from the time they had left to go on shore. Flames were pouring from the forecastle companion hate:ha-ay and mounting half way up the spars. Vain -efforts were Made with buckets to extinguish the fire. The fire spread rapidly and foreeel the mew, who had nearly come off by this time to save what they could; on deck and to tele to the dories. Reyna said he was asleep in the fore- castle, when fire and smoke awoke tim. The forward part of the schooner. was then in flames. He had no idea Low the lire originated. There had been a tire in the forecastle all day but that did not seem to be the source of the conflagration, Nelson says crowds of shore people boarded the schooner when elle first began to show signs of fire and carried away everything. moveable. The ciew of the Wells say it was it clear case of piracy. Their clothes were all lost luthis way. Lines and port- able deck articles were carried off before the crew got aboard. • THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. Dlr. Hillock Attacks the Government on Their Dealing With Freight notes. OTTAWA, June 26. -In the House Mr. Ifulock once more brought to the attention of Parliament the question of freight rates charged upon cattle from the port of Mont- real and the necessity for legislation to remedy this evil. He regretted that it was impossible for his bill being again reached this session, since the Government bad taken all the days of the week for its own business. Ho went on to say that there was a combina- tion among vessel owners to keep up rates, and this combination had the ereet of injuring not only cattle buyers, but the farmers of the cc:nutty. If the inanufae- telling industry was injured in this way the Governmeat would not have hesitated, to grapple with the grievance. The cattle trade was equally as important. Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper denied that there was any proof of a combination, but promised at the same time to carefully look into the whole matter during recess and see what was necessary to be done. A large batch of Government bills of an unimportant character was cleared from the order paper, and a few hours were spent on the estimates. capital Notes. The Governor-General has written a letter to the Mayor protesting against the immoral character of the show bills lately posted lin around the city. Jameslauddart, who is promoting the fast Atlantic steamship service, has re- turned to the city. The ease of Gilbert, of Montreal v. the Queen, a suit for $300,000 for balance of contract unpaid tor deepening the Galops Rapids, in the St. Lawrence river, was concluded in the Exchequer Court. Judge Burbidge gave judgmene for the Messrs. Gilbert for $205,000, with leave to the Crown to move against it within two mouths; • Hilled By Lightning, Hweirsvn,ree, June 25. -This vieinity was visited yesterday by a very heavy Thunderstorm. Jane Martin, wife of 'Thomas Martin, of the township of Chuffey, 'arta their thirteen-yemeold son, were killed :by a flash of lightning which struck the ale/ailing. Three other chtldren were etunned brie reoovered. A neat er negley Car Fatality, 111o:endear, Jame 25. -Trolley car feta. ;ties ate now becoming a daily occurrence lit this eity, Another shocking fatality toob place yesterday when Bit Piehette, it asoteng child, was Ten Over by an eleetrie car atut killod IT WAS A FREE FIGHT. The How at the Match Between the Capi- tals and shamrocks. OTTAWA, June 20. -The Free Press, re- ferring to the laoroese =atoll, says : People swarmed on the grounds at once. Other players tried to interfere for the sake of decency and peaoe, and among them was Tansey, but scarcely had he used his efforts to quell the unruly throng than he was assailed. by another party, With remarkable good judgment Tansey evaded a couple of blows and ran for his life. Just then the passionate throng had got beyond all control and it general maslaught followed. The wearers of the greext made the best of an ugly situation: With com- mendable courage they stood their ground and with their lacrosse sticks cut whirl- wind circles right and left through the crowd, which scattered in all directions. Many felt the hard. end of a piece of hickory, and it was not long before the fighting elements showed the white feitther and stood back in more congenial quarters. Tremendous excitement followed. Every- body was shocked at the murdevous as- saults made all round, and not a few ladies turned away horror strioken and left the stand. in. disgust. The police made it great attempt to control the vast crowd. The policemen pulled out their batons and fol- lowed the example of the Shamrock stick handlers. They fell foul at the outset by • doming in contact with a couple of Mont- real excursionists, who retalieted in char- aoteristio Griffintown style. Pandemonium followed. Three Boys Etowned, MONTRSAL, Que., june 26.-A sad drown- ing ace:dent took place last night at Point St. Charles. near here. Two boys of the name of Collerette and. another of the name of Wilkes, were swimming in the river. The two former got out of their depth and commenced to sink. Young Wilkes went to their assistante hut with- ' il i d all three were drowned. I Th b di s were not recovered I , I rOUr Yealli Inc Embezzler. alogeanan, June 26. -Jos. 11, Pomen- virile bookkeeper for the Son Life, stole $1,568 from his employers recently and event to Chicago. He eves followed by Detective Carpenter and agreed to retarn, waiving extradition proceedings, pleaded I guilty and sentenced to four years in tlee I penitentiary. A. Crime in LONDON, Ont.,Juns"Vi. w Ind Bowers ie in jell charged with shooting Wm, Coin in.BIddniph on the Itomaii 11110. Cale is badly injured, Great Britain's Representative to the intercolonial Conference.' , WHAT THE DELEGATES, WILL DO None of Thein Having neer, vested with itneulpoteutiary Powersah eiredows 'vein. not Bind Their Govern- ments—Cape Delegates In Hoinreal. • Morietraere, dune 20. Earl of ;tor- seea who will represent Great Britain at , the colonial confereeee to be held at Ottawa,is in the cite-. In au interview• he said " As to the views of the delegates and their goverta meets 1. do net think any cif them an be °leer about them before we beeiu to ex• ehange ideas and suge,,stioes. 1 dela. suppose any of the delegates c4111.. pleuipotentiary leavers, for yon eee eee eau always refer everything% by tol,:;rod.,ii to their own governml nt,aed letietel even if the coeferenee does adept ...etude resolutions, 1 fancy the adherenee of a THE EARL OF =SKY. delegate to these would not bind our own. government, for in these days of repre- sentative government the electors would probably want to be asked to endorse and to ratify what had been done. "You ask if 1 will speak at the confer - ?nee ? I don't know. Everything de- pends. I do not think there will be set speeches or addresses. I expect the pro- ceedings will be catried on much after the style of a parliamentary committee's pro- ceedings more in a cenversational way than bn any spirit or shape of "debate or argu- ment. I don't know how long this con, ference -will last. I hope to be able to etay till the end of it and I trust that some good may result." Sir Charles Mills and Hon, 3. Hafmeyer, who represent the Cape of Good Hope, are also in the city. INQUEST AT DUNDAS. The 1 wo Hamilton Youths committea to stand Their Trial. Duernas, Ont., June 26. -Coroner Ross yesterday began the inquest on the death of Reuben TONY, of Greeneville. After the fury had viewed the body of deceased and the buggy in which he was driving at the time of his death they adjourned to the town hall, The evidence shows that deceased and Mr. Riley were &dying west on Xing street on Saturday, Riley sitting on the right tide of the buggy and driving on the north Bide of the street, close to the sidewalk. When about the middle of the block a sorrel horse, hitched to a top buggy con - !mining three young men, ran into them, one of the shafts striking Mr. Tew in the abdomen, making it terrible gash, from which he died. Two of the young men who were in the rig that caused the dam- age were Frank Hancock, of Hamilton, a nephew of Ald. Hancock, and Charles Darter, also of Hamilton. Who the third young man was is not yet known. Im- mediately the injury had been done the Hamilton rig:drove away, not making any attempt to see whether anyone was injured or not and were chased and captured on the Hamilton road. The jury brought in a verdict that de- seased came to his (loath by the unlawftil ana furione driving of the prisoners. They were tried before Mayor Knowles on this aharge and sent up for trial at the next assizes. There was no evidence to show that the prisoners were under the influence . of liquor. Affairs in Newfoundland. ST, JORNS, NBA, June 25. -The Supreme Court has granted a mandamus tipon the assistant Collector of Customs re tbe revenue question. The court declined. to make the mandamus peremptory or final, but gave the collector four days to make a return showing cause why leandarmas should not be granted. The whole general question will then be avgued but peohably the court will then grant permanent man- damus in which case the Government will be compelled to take new steps to get. revenue. The Pullman Strike. More:raver, Juno 26. -Referring to the Pullman 'strike at Chicago, it prominent Grand Trunk official said that in the event ot the American Railway 'Union, which is very strong in Canada, declaring a boy - eat, as they threaten; . against Pullman ears and forbidding its members to handle them, the Grand Trunk will be compelled to shunt Pullman cars on sidings, and en- deavor to Aceonemodate passengers with their own rolling stock during' the strike. Drowning at Poterhorough. PETBRUOROUGIT, Ont., trp.138 26.-A second drowning aocident 000ttrred here yeeterday morning by which the seven- year old son of Ma John Halfin, black- einith, Hunter St„ Was drowned. 'lhe ' little fellow in eompany with a yonng companion were playing round the P'eter- I borough Canoe Company's boat house 1 and it appears that. "Tobe;" Halfin, as he Iwas familiarly known had endeavored to get into it canoe and was drowned. Grand Trunk Shops to Xteopen. MONTRDAL, Que., June 26. -The Grand '.Trunk shops will be probably reopened on Tuesday next, July 3rd. Over fifteen hundred men are now out of employment at Point St, Charles, awing to the closing down of the stores and, only a number of these will be taken back to work for the present as the business. is still ,very slack. West East:legs ttee-Itleetion- Bnizartur, Sono 20.-G. W. °strata, of TrentoP, has been appointed returning officer for the Commons election in West Hastings, Nomination July 4; election on the 1111, 111 6 SUGAR, SUGL The market for Sugar iirm with an upward top:— denoy, We are well pre- pared for the vie, Fruit Jars in all sizes, and prices very low,; A new shipment of Dinner Sets and Glassware to hand this week'. Very handsome; Call and see thorn, •- 11,--• e • cgs,!.:8c, • a3utter,fErst quality,160, J. P. CLARKE MAR.]EPO.RTS. eexeter, jam te, 1224. Ball wheat Derbies/1.'a e.. a t'15 $ cis Spring wheat per bus , .. .... 63 til Bodies -per bash.. 55 33 Oats per bush... ..... a SE Peas eer bush ,,,.. ..... 52 6C Flour per bbl 401) 420 Apples per ba 75 e - Petatetw per bag ..... -ed.. 40 . 40 Ray 4, eT ton 5 00 " 00 \Voodoos cord hard- ... ...A4 3 00 3 50 'Wood poilcordsoft..... 200 023 Batter Der lb, ........... 13 12 Eggs per dozen ..... ,..,. ....... , 7 e Turkers perlb a- 0 e Pork perbimdred.,.... ... . ....... 6 Da 11211 flogs, live !eight.- - ... 4 10 4 50 Geom. . s. 5 6 Omits e 7 Chioks.,. .... . - London, .1 lino et WI. \sheat,whittafell, 100ffis S 95 to $1.00 W heat, red, fall, per nee lbs......93 93 to 95 heat.epring, pent:mho 93 to 11 Oats, per 106 lbs... ..... . 98 to 1 60 Pt as, per 100 lbs.... ..... ... PO to 00 0,.rn, per 100 lbs ................ 96 to 95 Series, Per 10C ths 55 to so e, per 100 lbs 20 to 00 Buckwheat.per lOUThs 90 to 1 00 Beets, per bus.- 1 00 no 1 10 Ens, fresh, single doz.. .... 15 to 16 ram, fresh,,baaket, Dor cies 12 to 14 Eggs, fresh. store lots, per dos rdi to 10. Mateasinglerolls,per lb .. e. . • 24 to 252 Butt er, per lba lb roles,leaktete 21 to 20 n utter, P er 113, largo rolls or crocks- 17 10 ne Butteraierib, tub or firkins 18 to 11 Lar, per lb .. 11 to 12 tThick ens, Der pair ..... 40 to 70 Duelto . . 70 to 14 Turkeys, 8 to 90 oar lb: eaeh 60 to 1 '15 TorontooTune Wheat, white, Per hes-- 67 Wheat, spring, per bus. .. CC et 29 law to ',1) Wilt -at, xed winter, per imii 67 to 37 Wheat, goose, per bus-. ........ 56 to 66 Barley, per hue .• • - ..... -- ---•••-• 42 to S. 08.6, Per bus .. ....... .. . 32 to Peas........ ........ .. ........... ....... 53 to 53 Hay ....... ..-....,........... ....... ..... a •oo to r atl, Eggs per dozen 00 to 25 Butter, r er lb 3.7 to 22 ; Dressed hogs 6110 to 6 50 Peteteee, cer baw fie to CO Z. SHOULTS, CENTRALIA. Office oet °site Methodist Parser age. rrt ICKETT M. D. 0. M., • Trinity University M. D, Toronto Deivtreiu. Offices Orediton. KINSMAN, DENTIST, 0 Lc, fi. SPROIALIST in GOLD PILL- ING EXT.Ra ()TIN G and PIA= WORK. Gas find load Anaestbetics for painless ex- tracting. 2nd doortnorth of cgal,LING'S Store -n ALTON ANDERSON D.D. S JLf • L. D- 8, Honor Graduate of the To» ronto Laaversityane Royal College of Dental Surgetns of Ontario. Specialtees, painleee esti action and preservation of the tatural teeth. Unice over the Law Office of Elliot, Eitiet, opposite Central Hotel, Exeter, Ont. AGNEW L. D. S.DENTIST, • CLINTON. Will be at Greb's hotel Zurich on thesecond Thursday of each month and at Hodsin's hotel Hansen every Monday. J. C. CLAUSEN tiARDIESS MAZER, — Ontario Dogs to announce to the public that he • is pronarecl to do all kinds of Carriage Triarming, Furniture Upholstering, etc. Carriage and Buggy Tops of all kinds MADE TO ORDER. ()Id Boggy Tops recovered tend made .-as good as new. Our harness are well known, as giving )4. t fact etstisfaotion. We raanufacturs largely and consequently our prices are boa A. call will convince . 0, OLATISMIT. IAN an. always Be Dressed Well If he g000 to the proper Tailor.. We lime a large tango of Pat- , terns to .elloose From Natty Tweeds, Serges and 'Worsteds, made:up in anystylo, and fitting . the customers so well that inti - Mate friends , do not scruple 'to ask tvile made your Suit. Our costomere never hesitate but answer with a knowing smile, UCY-E71,:rr C'*•4 The Tailor. ovuatooATs Nvt LIDA I) het; oases--