Northern Advance, 9 Aug 1900, p. 9

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at Gen. Delarey, with 1,500 men. coon.- pies dific11l'too\1ntry'on the Crocodile river, 20 miles west o,hAe.re. General Grobelfer. with` 500 burghpra. is north of Buekhvevld-t. The residants `of Midde1- bu.rg`received the British; troops with expressions of Iatjsfaction, and 9;- buressed the, hope that fhe wg.\rw]ou1d boon be over. The bur ghera.1nv-the vicinityhro turning in their arms. I 7 The Boers still have; 0116 Long Tom _t'h`at is fit for service. The o.the.x-zone has been damaged. .4--- The nunxbemiof man in` t.ho.vaVriotn commandoes to the east is rapidly .'l......I`l:_._ rn1.- L_L,I ------- ~--- -v --v v~`---v -v -_-rM-`.1 dv vi.ndling-. The -total number. of men in Botha s and the other commandoea is not: believed now to exceed 6.000. lI!I.'-_ - - Gen. De Wat is `at Reitzburg, but_it is known that his burg-hers a1`e`fight- ing under oompision. This w*as~adi:nit-V ted by :his `brother, Piet De Wet,- who managed -to escape Gliristian DeWet's svurveillance.and came inand surrend- l_( e!_.I. V / Wet Has y-ou`bie- in: ` T _l'3u1-`gnu-`sj .fl`_ojre"t'h`91-..., .1 _ despartc-gli from Pretoria, aays:-- Gen. Prinsloo, with` 5,000 men and 17 guns, has snrrnderod to-Gen. Hunt-Gr, This marks the collapse of the war in `this north -`eastern portion of the `Freetate. T sm ROBERT `HART SAFE; CANADIANS RECOVERING; COMPELLBD `To: 1= 1cH*I.;n n; Erenohi has occupied Pan (ta- are ma~tt.ored about `at sov_r9;l . `L'.] oh31v1`1y--1_ a1'):;,.%` what` la _a plutoqratt L .P3P-7`-~ A .m?'Pn'j`?Y`!9.- 313-5 33 -m'.5 1301!? iii-0 t6 luv" ` `V? ' " _--. V... ' Care is taken in! the selection from; ' the can-didates of those to go to the mission fields. They are examined as to their physical condition and their intellectual and religious" quali- ` ficationsu A large percentage of 1 those accepted are graduates from col- leges, and many have taken post- ' g~rzlduate courses. There was a time ' when the demand for missionaries ex-, - coded the supply of candidates, but 1 within the lat three or four years; `owing to. the Student Volunteer" movement, the number of those de- slring -to serve `as missionaries has ex- oeetied the demands or the Boards. The candidates selected` are usually un- places where European companions can-,nut be round`. This first year or two after the candidate's arrival up- on the field is usually spent in acquir- ing a knowledge of the language, of the country to which he is accredited. In China` it requires from a year to a yealrland a-`half to~obtain a worvk-; inng .lnnowl`edge. 4 the 1`engu,ag_e; Preaching is one of the chief tune- tlons or ithe-missionary, and he must seek out nlethods attracting peo- ple to: 1ist_en:to'=.~him;sHeTmust speak I der thirty years old. `as languages are in the street aql1a.l`0Q= said at the fairs an` audience in no o,th=.- best learned before that age, and of- tort is made to obtain persons who learn languages with particular taci- lirty.V The societies` are notseeklnc er -way.... Volieof first nnoives is the 1.0%; a 10.1`. B1510 rm .cont1'15ntio,..O l tore nnrleosesstyteoardihs married couples for missionaries as j much` as formerly. as there are few ~ i the `twat! 2 Africa the service in from three to five years.` It is dangerous to stay beyond rm` years. In China they re- main from seven to ten years. As the missionaries who remain in her- ness until their usefulness is pest `usuallyhave been able tosave but lit- tle, it anything, from their income, provision is made for their "support when they are placed upon the super- annuated list it they have no rela- tivee our friends to care for them. V SELECTIONS MADE WITH CARE. Thevtravelltngnexpemses of the mis- sionaries are ffaid by the societies sending them out. They have a vaca:- _ , ___ _l.__.__.._. ._ _-._- __ _ One society. having 9. large number of missionaries divides the receipts of the year pro rata. The leading eo- cieties allow $100 a year for each. child. Houses are provided for the missionaries. One missionary organ- izations also provides what it calls an outfit, at an expense of from $400, -toiosoo. This consists` or furniture` and clothing. Another society pro-. vides furniture and the house only. The houses would be considered plain in this country, but in China they are substtan-tial when compared "with thehouses of the natives. V The houses ` of the foreignens are placed in walled lnclqsures, called compounds, because of the unsanitary conditions vailing. ` pre- _ than 0; a yeazrmat iin-1j."or_v .Tla',dTM::cr- mined by the nature of the olim`_ata where they are statloned Ln Smith All .-wliile in Europe the most no-` ussecret societies are the various; mhical bm.therhoods, WhiQh'by iibeer desperation of their meth- Jliuve occasioml-ly terrorized en- ii kingdoms. The acknowledged her of anarchy was the celebrated cheonnoinis'tVI rou(lhon, who attr aprominent leader in the revo- -u of 1848, died in 1855. His GLY ADVANCED VIEWS. call them by no stronger name--~ promulgated lnhis famous book, atis Property? issued in 1840. Mather with George Sand and the . 1: Michael Bukunin, Proudhon. the cause of much unsttlinig of s`mlnds. The Russian a-postle. 'i= suffering several years . imprison- tln Siberia for his share in the H. riots of 1R49. founded the 1Democrait.ic Alliance in 1869.; 1570 he anticipated. the Paris C-om-V " Wan unsuccessful rising at A '._f`fhe excitable Spanish` and b The cost` or living, the social require- ments and the climate are all con- in deciding the amount - ct salary to be paid. It; is intended that] the `salary shall about cover neoes-i eary living expenses. In- the torrid zone, where` the clothing must be light. andftood is easily obtained,` the rate of pay is low. One of the leading American societies pays $450 to a man stationed in Micronesia, $500 to one in Africa, and $1,000 to every married. vpouple going to f Japan. This so- ciety `pays atrifle lessdto a married. `couple going `to China than to those accredited to Jnpen. Another so- ciety has a graded scale, payingrin China to a single man per annum, the first five years $6f0; the next tenjenrs `$700, and the next ten yrearrs, $800. After 26 years of service he gets $900} Married couples begin with $950 and `are increased to $1,000, $1,100 and 81,- 2oo. .-A third eocietyihas a fixed rate ~, of $1,000 for married couples. _ i PRO RATA DLVISION OF RECEIPTS. , .-.-.v-- ---,u p--.--_ _--v v-unit; 15 Ill Lll_lI_ n J BIJSIT 8ALAllIES. l?l1nu'~ Arc Equalized hi . (Bl,0rI`l__oIA'| contributions by the Inlet-.. elTiIoi__i_|_trIoI 'o_t_ the worn`. ' '_ present trouble with the Boxers in :(1hi.n'a_j has_ Ierveduto bring the mis- ionary. partioi_11arly_t.hie one in China. Abromimntly. bemre the eyes of the world; _ I,`-here are many things eon- nected with the missionary` which are `not generally known. The Protestant missionaries in" China are among the of those in any part of the world. While it is` true, however, that theylreceive more money than those in most other countries, when` the conditions under which they work] are taken into, consideration. the pay is found to be about equal to that elsewhere. ' ' rnosz uvma. n CHINA nun ran L:pn'1i Anxgjjnn Rica MAN. GOOD ADVICE TO IGNORE. % How dong it happen that you:Tg,1-.V_g.l'f Enccessfiil i? Pliticsf Y . l 1. '.-4;"-'5 1. `F119?l:I_.;9`l3t;lBI;ko a`o:fe;aE1'$B'`t};ry tam. Lmdi: Sivan mtby my} political _opppnggi7= `. `i|`v' .; `.\ : 7.` Germany, with its usual th'oroi1gh,\-A ness, is ,bent on systematically an - ranging-the knowledge likely to` ans; cure from its development as a power. Emperor William has o_rdered, `established at Berlin an ins,titute,for the study of the ocean. At this center materials already acquired will be 001,-` lected_., andsconiiderable additions gray` expected to bemadeto the knovsflpjggg or the marine physics, chemistry` _ gut ? nitural history. J 7 . 5:`, -..W;: - - I new Postmaster-General, th` Miarquin of Londonderry, is not\yet' w year: of age, and before he was called ` to the Dordas satvfor some six zygva,-r in the'Hbouse of Oommons as one `of the representatives of Ulster. '@g has been Viceroy of Ireland, and has not always looked with complete ` favour upon the Irish policy of the Goverllmehtu _, V _ _ :~_,. ' ;A Glasgow man in Ireland witnou-b ed an amusing incident in a London- dorry school. the other day. The qhboikmuuteir was r.u:b'bi.n:g up this South African geography of his pu-I pill, and to one of them he put the quory-"Whe'rO?- is the Orange Freq State,- Micky I" Instantly came tl a_n.swer--Belfast, air." ' 4-`V; _ At the monthly general meeting of the Galway Urban Council, Mr. M357` tin McDonagh, chlairman, presiding; e motion was adapted resolving that the names of the several streets in the town be printed in Irish charaotere, the cost not to exceed 5; ` _ ' Mr. Arthur Lawaon, one of the new, baronete, has for the last ten were been the president of the Conserva- tive party in Leeds, and under his leadership the power of the Liberal party, wiho had hold office in the Leeds Town 0oun_oil for over sixty, years, was broken in 1895. ` V About 600 carpenters and joiner: employed in the building trade in Bell test came out on `strike on the 30tN uljz. They asked reduction of an hour and a halteweekly` and an increase 0! ' hsalfp-enny per hour. _..-.. --vv-nuns; `UL I-HG-L Sum. The Lord Primate of Ireland atatei that the prayer which he wrote befer leaving Cape zoom: for the useof tn`.- Britieh troops was written at the rei- quest of Field Manual Bord Raoberte. Lord and Lady Terrence Blackwood hailve decided __goIt to assume the title of Earl and Countess of Ava, but to be known as Dord and "Lady Glande boye, a title derived from the family estate near Belfast. ` ,_ __._a....-up nu .I_.1cAal.iu'q ' "It ia.inte;re.stin.g to note that not so long ago, in County Donegal, the kn:a.rket price for knitting a. pair of socks used to be one penny and W6- men worked cheerfully for that sum. 'I\In'n `l`......1 11-1,, A _ __.,--..v-.n..nJ'C The Gaelic League has captured Dublin Gorporationfwhich has pas a resolution to 'the effect that it desirable to preserve and cultivate Irish language in Irelauck, -If in i-use-.`....._-l.:-_ H A Lord Dunraven, who is hon. of the 7th Battalion Royal 1 Fusiliers, serves in." South A a Asupernumerary captain of perial Yeoma-m`y_-. r|1],__ r1,.-I:, v ,, ,_......- -annv vv an-an tu8_Q_u9n'. purchase in Ireland were largely prep sents for her wounded soldiers. _ _ It has. been decided that the 8rd Bat- talion, Argyll and Sutherland Hihh landera, will be placed in eneamrpment` at Fermlr, Ballyshannon, during the camping season. _ haro are nawf 13 undnonn pf Duchess of A`be.roorn serving with ,th'o' British forces in South` Africa . _.!. I` Jilluo V The Dlzwaggr Duchess of A- b;oroorn":. V: who in in hm` 89th year, is busy" knite ,` ting Tam O Sh=`a.ntcra for the so1d1u_m: at the front; ;' T1 P`i`= *'tr*>-' sent from l')ublix'1{('3aa'.; : tle_ to Windsor show that the_ Q_ueen'd nnrnlrmna in `r..-r...._: _____,_ rmoawt events have taught V 118. . Chinese are particularly commit- ',i0the'po1icy of the secret society. `always theway in a land WhOiI'0 '15 right, says the London Daily ' Here in England, where it is ble to insult royalty in Hyde ;to openly proclaim_one s sym- 1 with the enemies of one s:' ;and to slate the VVar y inno measured terms, without the t fear of police interventiomi` are practically no secret .socie- ` There is no necessity for them. . is different _abroad. " _ ` Hhina, practically every rnan is number of some society of this na- :An..Irinh newspaper speaks thong)?`-f unity as being "that super':structuMro`_ .WhicVh'__,i.s the true"foundation Mot ,a_;1_1_: national greatness. ' ' J nu. , r --nq up. The 3rd-Iutgmnt of 1re1.ana,_` 121.: spitq . 0:! ~ `his . almost boyish; .appeauno_q j is nearing 60,` Al`h`e young Ladies of Dublin` are 8.! tecting red, white ind blue striped; bamb to thbir ats. V _ A '_: Ar _.-_-.._ ......n-nun: assnvwu ' V The oolmtmandecr olt the new rail}? ment allrieh Guard. wlll be Lientii ' Colonel. Power 0. Rose of Bladenu burg_ _ ' , . L. Dublin-has lost 9. mm: of great judu ment and enterprise in Mr. Pim-, chairman at we house or Ping Brothblfa. Mr. William Carson, . well xnowj ! Irish solicitor and magistrate, drop-.-Z` pod dead whilueon his way to bullnealh ln Beltabt. n- .5 T1i7a}i3ui::;t`aonm-`m- ugh ! it reportnd, take aotmmnand of the rm) ; in India in 56Il3te*n13ber.1 % ' ; _.__ -- I - ` ' '3!!! People of 8 V ~-lnorqll ronoin nu 1 nmreu -Inn-can allau. _A . . V _.,. - Dublin ma gun approima n. nh'um!o' to: extending this electric lighting 0! . the city. - -" ~ 2 mrnnnsmra nnwsn um. mom `ran I..A)l1).0F run smutaocx... [mm%EmN's enm%1sm% TO STUDY hm OCEAN. ully ' :e Lich be2o`r%_ ffovr use or` ho colonel :1 Munster. Africa as ..__.L- 3 thh has passed that it lb th 1111;]: 7` my-y mm In (`Inna a Member of ,3.-.|herhood-llIstury of Inn-lslngs In ggnlereuc Countries. _,_J._ 1.....- J--....LL .._ `gmtoh from London.` says 7 -` M. has telegrapnhed to ~th'e. ice as follows :-:- ' ' N ports 1,200 more prisyoni- ; mm,-ed on Tuesday, with` 09111;. mu Rouge and Fontenal, whilst; ta Deploy. Potsieter, and- ered to Bruce Ham-il- .,ho collected 1,200 rifles, 5650 ' and an Armstrongjgun. Lieut. - n a Danish officer: in the rtlery, also surrendered. , with five guns and .a num;_ . broke away in the 'ith district, but Hunter ex- `, the total prisoners will ambuntl iunfortuvna te ` Frederikstadt, tchefetroomr rscrvlm MUCH LIKE THE CHINESE. BOXERS. news IN Eulwm`, - .....J IJC 11-] who k,-'now the 1 `Russ disposition. '1: A5 V V E s ofuotive retaliatioh bee,` "Wu ubourt 100 of them to Sibriii; and .ou1minated_f |`inD+:4\_. murder of Roberts Rep0rts.[-`lTh%a_f.fhe tives `cj--. ' `. axantzoff, a.n(iil.'5'1";;- Hezking and Prime. mes at the; .B;'il:i;h 5 was Ta` distinctly ` from the broad 3- U.ntortuna_tel,f T`.. l1nn Al EL- _'__`.-I v---` govuo-I-U Im t_u:rth'e.r acts o_t7-V 11d concede them 8. bf A/`lgxander E a; bomb throrw-nl . A Amogfcia} mentiomerd Gen - , accident ocourredl on the Kruger ~ railway. ..'.l`h_'e t; andjh:I_;`;-' -8-wa-II-`.~-a old Mi1yuii9rYi198 iin. my; y tells fun yoiy ip9dv_hbr _1ast N . m; j ;:1.~}%....;&.;..,.u.~ A A common: _pvu'ngh bowl. may be quicklymade nto at trap for captur- ing mice. Take a. piece ot thin shingle about an indhi wide and two inches long; From one eqd to the other, taper to center. .'1\hie.t is, cu-t_tro1_n both edges to a`po1`nt';s'q that the stick will beonea inch! wide at one end arid pointed. a.t _t`ho- other. NOW. ' bolt the point and eeItf_t .hie stick up edgqwise, the bowl resting on tlie wide endgiand t-he baiteg end" oohiing. under L bowl.` The aligli`-tefet.-touoh.la't'the_'ba.it will drop trap`. V Boers` Evaeuateviljachadodom -and ' l!a.ke;For the Hills. A A deep-atchy nrom Lorecio Marqhea says :-The Boers "have evacuated. Machaadodorp. end, it is reported, `ere, ` preparing to retreat to Ly(1en_burg,.`to. which place they have completed tele- i graphic communication. ERETREAT T0 LYDENBURG. Irunxsters Will be an Great. Danger I When Advance Begins. - A d-esspamoh` from ,Rome. eaya:-.'.l'.`he- Propsan.da `has ret_oel:ved[ 9..-telegram, `from C-hima, which states` that the. `Chinese `Government 131 hbld1ng.00o `Europea.na,' Including the Eoreign. . ` Mimsters and their familial." It ll `be- Ilnevedthalt It adeohratyon Ear war is _ made `these hbstageis will be .relee.eed and ordered 't'd Ieav_a Pekln'w"-i.th1'n 24`, hours, Thia would meanilthe deliv- .ery of the Eufropaatn. to- the Boxers. !It is behaved th4eQt_ China would. con- [sider the mnroh of the nine: toward Pekln oquivalemrt _to a declaration or- DELIVER THEM TO BOXERS A The condition of things was. If `any-' thing, still `worse in France. In March, 1892, for iytanee, innumerable seiz-` three of -`high explosivesewere made in Paris; culminating on March 80th, in the arrest of "the celebrated leader ` Ravamhol. Them followed. the Vail- lanlt bomb outrage, in *thie=veryrCham- be.r'l=teelf; the Henry outrage of Feb`- ruary, 1894, and many others, Letter: 13*, if we exeecptt the recent attempt nporn the Prince of Wales at.Brussels, things Anamhical have been compara- tively quiet. ____., gun. \n can Ivwuvlll-I" ' fuli of. Austria;"\;n};1le Logan . attempt upon Crispi in 1894, and Ac- fxing Humbert in. 1397, but `uzifdrtue [nately accomplished {he other day, .....'.... .....'.I_` L_-_:'. R___.LI,- . ci-ari'to e. similar .tailu.re` ~tora.ssassinateT were ' only 1 : 35 "fu"x}t_hef"i11'u{s-i;?_atians Of the text from which the Italian Auaruhists `preach `their ddctrines. A oorreapondent witH'G`e`na- Hunter : toroe at Slapkranz, says :-9 ._ _ "The Wlnbur; and Senekal coni- mandoee __are nowearriiingk agbont. -`men.-Gen; Roux has arrived; and alho `the commandant of the Wepener oom- ~'- ando. It will` take day: to get` all in. There is a continuous stream of I waggo-ns for seven mileeaup the `val- ley road..A]l the leaders have surrend... ered. The prisoners include foreign artillarinl-.n_. - " ' ' In Italy it "h'aa'been -much" the same. Ilt we `a-n Italia_n, Santo by name, whd stabbed Preident"Ca.r1iot. A rut-.u.._.._ .._____ -._- wvv-an-vvu i A sE(361?zD= COMZE -ATRxIO'I`_, jLuccheni, foully murdered the beauti-A I .-1 111..-..- , rm llMI`\lW vs ;v.v pUU'l` V lU'[1n]; and om June 7. 1896, when 3. similar. ott- irag -killed '15, and xvoundgd 40 child rmembars of ' a religious procession. ' _ , ., this fiendish` not was rewarded by the bu11etot Golli, wthb asauinatodihat fearless Minister in t.h`6' tollolwing year. I Them. too. the strong `hand. with which I the Prem.{ e`r', Senor Oanovaa. punished ' __._ r. art{11eriats.". . blood amen the history -'otthe con- -tinent.` `We in England. have only been free fzfouin-t:h'eir oru_trage's on account` or the pmotm-tion.- - = - WHICH SOHO. `HAS AFFORDED' thieir fugitives, ` and -our`? national dis-' inclination to. interfere with`liberty"of' speech}. ` Elsewheajg they have been less amemablg. n In S;(>ai.1'1j, 1:21 `instance. th'ereL-have` been the Baxfoelona _outr"aigea, the first on November. 7, 1893, `wrhan a., bomb` j-thrown from the .gallery ot.the,_Lice.o `Theatre tkilleidm 20, and maimed up- wards of 100 poo-r victims; and again, an jling '7 1dnn '---I-`--- - enemy had utpt-railn; ply` train escorted by - the was derailed, 1' .13 "being -ki)i injured, althduah aepeoial hon A-...'I..._--J A ,--_. v-\nIJ& D\l bu p.l~'_eV6n'l2.'C1'lnB P855,- ing. A special enquiry has been or- dered to-ascertain why the order was diaoboyd. V e . 7 `V ` A enemy umrraik; -a-nfil a 1ixsl*`T escorted the .Sh`rops hire`s' de`rai'lod,*'.13"bei~.1;g`-ki)led and` although" a-special patarol `had {when 1 to sIMPLE_MoUsE mm. U1f{ABAS_iED: Darin"-g. munority, 0.! h1s._heir, the; Dulne'oVf _Al.'bz`mi;y`, t;_l_1:e gpvernment of A duogyf "will ognquotadv - -by the" ;jl1!!3.i`1it"*`r 91 7 R?hP'1 Ariieibhtxy: ;.t._`L"d'nsn1tatwn at npboianwta m_TViegnna_.; it wad "discover-' `, ad, than: them. wage a cancerous mVraowthV pt t_he r.o`ot ot.higs-`tongue. `By mu ' demise: 116 =*99dj . 8} Painful 49-W`-L. ' % T ' . \\ , > - _,____ ;`..:.__ -5 I_ ._ 'n_.r.. LL- Duke of. Edinburgh succumbs to- T ~ Paralysis of the Heart.` - A despatch {tron Caburg-, says:-- Prince Alureg Ex1'pest- `AlIb'or`t.` Duke"o1 $82`-b0d_bl1lI`V_.`1dl'tOd at- 10~n oJock Mon. fang evening, at` Rosanna oastleitrdm [ pa.nLys~is fa th6_heart. _ _ IL_l_`-,_ n he took her away arid bid 71:. Ba.i1h`.t_ A..J; Ngu1t,ot Maniwaki, % is after the man,.buutAthe country iava 1 wild one; audit may be n_1ont.he.beora he in brought to justice- - `Then after a fewrmoun_the, it is al- ` leged, he killed hie wife. It was win- ;m, eandehe took hertout to the) ice }o.nd,out. 8.-hole. through it. Through `this. hole he held her, headvdownwa.rd`e_,- -tillllte wan e;tlnot.. ' :1 AI xnauin nmed Uncle, Wife and cum In Two Years. A` deputeh turo`m?Ot_tawa eays:-'1'he ;Eveni'ng Jou-rnalprinte the following` de-tails of the killi.ng by` a._ Toto" do honuletlndian of his wife. uncle, and child at Lake Baa-riere, in the`Upper Gaatinau. Two years ago in_o.* rage the [Indian slew his old `uncle with an axe. Tenmonthn ago:-he andhia` wife, with their baby girl, were out hunting beaver. The six-months-old` [child rais- ed I `little cry of gladneas, and `the ma.n.`b'eoaua.e thle disturbed the beer- ur, tore the girl from her _m-other : arms. and held her head down `in the 1- water till she expired. `Then he hand-' led herjbaok us her mother. ' T - of attaining their g has been too`diaboliQal o{wers. The: Spanish risings l873,lns:tiguted by him, were full `at ,- rs. llnl the same year the "large ` V of young Russian stude-nts` . Switzerland, to which coun-__ Wwnin had ma from` his native 'W&re recalled 1.0 Russia by an 11 ulmse. ` l returned, as . with them the':~3ee~ds of Russian >3 : Which was nvonrtually `to be- .'01"ld-fuxnmlrz "as the draadnd: commanded; butl #- lroreign" Consufs lnv1te Hlm"to `De- fend shang_hal.- ' K A 'de'epatcah from London` eaye:-- Shanghai telegrams say the foreign Ooa:.euls~m_ert on Monday, and decided to invite Admiral Seymour. British`, to take command of the Shanghai de- fences. The United States Consgl-i General,` Mr, J . Goon-lnow,_ and the French Consul-General; M. de Beze- ume, on behalf oi the Consuls, visited Admiral Seymour. -and he promised to draw up plans and elibmlt them to _a council of 'oftioere.. The Shanghai Municipal Council objects to: the Con?- sular `action. SEYMOUR T0 COMMAND. `G-en. Bat;`na. s force is kept together by xtraordinary inventions. '.l`.hx; '_correpjondeint has seen an official iroular which, to cheer the burghers hp, asserts that Roberts was l6`mel"to retreat douth or the Vaal, _a'nd t'hat'Lady Roberts escapodin a . , . ` I . ' Kruger grows on account of the fact that he and his toftieials are persuad- ' .1 .he/1B'oer anirnosltyn to .Pres'1den_t _1'-neg. the . people that South..AJfr1ca-n Bank of England not-ea, because it is based on inalienable State eecunties, `even-though the,State should be con- quered. As the English have not re- .gh'etrs have been ruined, and unutter- %able misery prevails. .Tzh_e Wlves and Republic paper money is as good as ` cognpize-d this contention ,many bur-I ehildr-en tofthe poorer Boers are al- most stervi-ng. vf`O,_._ f'|,_.I,5I_ ,I II -.._-.- xv Ila`? `lJIll'5`IIUl' ` `Mon-3; Vwhieh Was ._.Wor.thless.~ I ..A despatohtrom-= Pretoria, Tine:-' day, says:-Mr_'s. Bdtha was the gueat of Lord..Rdhefts . at dinner Monday; _evan.i.ng. _ ` IEL- `I'- _1 1-osjdoht Gave` :1;-.Burg'he1-s Papa:-_ ' Mnnnv `llhinln urn... 1l1-...a.I.1-__ _. -- w : VI-alIJll\Il - Savizkib dettachmemt ot`70 men at- rived wtichhrblh with` a guarantee for are conduct fro_n- the Chinese Govern- Neverthelese; they were treach- `erouslyattaetked by regular artillery, while -- Chinese officers were -visiting the commanding votticers. The .Rus- sians had 20 killed and 6 wounded. 5 Q..-...J... ._;--- ` __.,._ --v ---ow-no unlit U VVIIII-l..IU-UIIU {W scouts `re-poart it.h?at.the Chinese are advancing on allnidea in the direction g 05; Jilxgdvitchvcends yard from, Cherbin. to Gen. Gradekotf, that the conditions have changed considerably- Bisnce .I~_uly. 18. The -Tehn detachment had returned withfe -lose of 10 killed and 80? wounded; Chinese Imperial troop! in%=c_ivilian dress, and with their ~badg_ea concealed, made two at- tacks an the Russians. Col. Jugovitch complained to the `authorities of Gur- ln and demanded that the offenders Ihauld be `punished. t __g 1 o. THE QUIH-:EN's SON. lthy ANIMOSITY. 1`0,.KRUGER. mum .`nqj1?bnEn. onttinu sh V dends - word .. considerably - Phe :'1`elin detachment ithfa of man or ~ axmr. in th:` uo?I:4se;'ious. Ohiveso appearing -in- the neu- - a Liaotungpeninsula, ._ ...,a 1:: _.~. _ -, %-m:.- w;ua}s W` c}1ItTw are on the` g'_voioA u.ni;xpectod aim aeriog ($21361-.-I 11th . :2 A > __ .-. -z - The documents `are aid to hwe come to light while a aeairqjh was being -made .ot the,~Gnve;mmea1t ostticeain the capi- .t_al aftpr "Gem. Rb-h`e.rts,ocupatiQuI. Ii`II._ I-n_|-__,, ,_ Thef-- i.`-elewg'-1::-1'p1.1'_i'aa.':<`i'.isw'tlgzgquiries' instituted by its -c_qrresponde'qt leave f nodoubt as to A'cl1'e`i`:~ruth-of`therstate-:. It T further says` r--. ` lump ___-,,_1. . Documents Found Showing Them to Favour the Boers. A deopartch from London. Thursday; say_s:-'-The Daily` Telegraph. an- nounces, an the a_'uth'd1_*ity!-of its Cape correspondent. that document: at gravie" import emanating `from `Eng: land and implicating certain meg;-_-_ `E-18:7 `Parliament. and` other politi-T olo`.m'-- wlhio have '_ta4ken. `a prominent part In the.agitat_ion' in favor of-the tB0:rB. -ha.va.ban_A'di.Iuovered in Pro-.,' 0 57. , ~ , - . . . (`M `the Russia memo -Alexander.` n N ihilists ad- randum to his son, MEMBERS OFVPIRLIAMENT. W;1"J;o-;1'oap.a" .`7:`l'1-ftllxrther states that Gen.Sakha_roft s toroe captured _ the prtreas.at Bajantum`, which was gar- risoned by_2,000.men, who fled. The` Rusgians seized,/five Kru,-pp_ and four naval, and {quantity ot.am- n'1u`~nition'q- . ? V `Five Krupp 'And"eui-. Naval Cannon: Fall Into Russian 1-lands, , {A aoapatch from -St. Petefsburg, says :-Admiral. ulexieff, , telegraph- lngnnder dateot July 24, says that; the railway from Tongue to Tien_Tein~ `lien been reqpened. 'He;adde that" the` line from J.`ien-'1bin- to Pelzin, can only` be repaixfedi for in distance. 01: five yerets, as the Chinese are occupying a positionln Itrength beyond that point, The Japanese are preparing to move` ._ 'n;I___. I___J_ __, If _P;l;itxi:l'):1'i: :1`; 'vi't:-;:znt_i1,_Tthey have 26,000 men. . CAPTURED chmase GUNS Message. Reeeivedwgrom the Inspec- ` tor General of Customs. A despatchi from London, Wednes- day, e'aye:-Important additional con; _ tirmation-of the safety of-thb Lega-T tiene was received in London last evening by Mr..Dunoa;n Campbell, re. preeentative in Europe of. the Chinese Customs service, from the `Commie-~ eioner of Customs at Chefoo,_ in the shape of 9. Pekin despatch} not dated, but believed to have been written on July 21, signed by both Sir'Raobert Hart, Inspector-General of Customs, `and Mr. Robert Bredon, Deputy In. epeotor-General, to the following at-V feet:--Stat! and family still sate. lI'\II.9- L`_._ I; _, . {this has been contirmedby the Com. missionerof Customs in Shanghai, who telegraphed lost evening :-Authen. tic-.-I`ns_peo._to,1_'-General `gate twenty- second." T f. e,-_ -_. --- --- --- .---.- _G'ol. Otter : diary covering the per- iod from May 26th, to June 22nd was also received Wednesday. It is arac- qcrd otf goodeffective, but, at the same time, hazrd work. The Canadian boys are certainly not 'fe'ather-bed sol- |.` By to-day's gnail letters were re- ceived from Co]. Otter, from which it :appears that on June 22 there were '546_men of the regiment in hmpital or sick, and only 434 fit for dixty. rs-.1 l'\L.I.-_)_. :9-.. ,,. Otter - Reports 700 Men of `First! * Contingent Fit For Duty. A` deepatoh from Ottawa says:-A cable was received tram Col. Otter,` dated Johannesburg, Wednesday, stating that the effective `strength of the [first Canadian contingent is in- creasing, and it now numbers 700 men fit for the eld. This in a wondertul impwdvement in five weeks} n T -vyu.-1`IU.I'8 from t `T 9' anammy. unto! 5'9? nothing came out it; `ism, albeit` 11191

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