ldrva Teothing. 1. the gume, cares win a day Sun, of Lonâ€" id _ White says : oducing over $26,. about k, and It costs ish Gunboats. Mstemper. [othing 6 too o od als â€" mR W:;u. 8‘01:; d these ip you UNKY SOUTH by guh.l.;x": he overâ€"taxed pulation . of ~the he past the Imâ€" directed not toâ€" urden of the emâ€" Englishuhn. are nselves w pay ies in the ;&iflo Railroad South eaboa all Suits and up to cood D, $100 WASHER AWARD, 49 ositive cure now ternity. _ Catarrh ise, requires conâ€" I‘s Catarrh Cure dizfll{“ upon the » t system, dation of the disâ€" ient strength by on and assisting The proprietors cCO evel L bett:g d read of the use of f five ‘at" TCH, CAN t of this gton or New olinas, Georâ€" d all vln.t'.. i. Connect ard Air Line, {are, aps, the rk Ccmm; this award ssed very 1, that the form the f America. 1d you . You hes to ser says: expense ~nv. Comâ€" tubfu ogger Bank. re smt. s advantage ixpayer." leed, â€" and 10 nâ€" . centrat ire State 1c service t expressâ€" London, Cas. 11 ireaded dt‘-: to cure trh. Hall‘s Most e pleased to just reâ€" ior â€"Jury 1ment on ard first n its exâ€" m at St. Medal to ‘va powers irs for any Â¥spa per h .ï¬a sen * nstipation oledo, O ins i shave » ad ver call *‘"This was the phrase used by the Buwhhdist priests to encourage their men during the time of Nobunaga, who "*li you return alive, added ge ofâ€" ficer. ‘the ordez of the Golden Kite awaite vou.‘ a moOrrowâ€" _ And the unfortunate officer who had survived in madress all ‘his brave solâ€" «liers, continued to counrt the corpses as living men, and finally had to be carâ€" vicd into the camp by force. $ "Paradise Ahead." turn alive from the attazek. . Where is tbe man who does not hesitate to adâ€" varce at the sight of those before him being shot down?" ‘"Even the men of the two regiments who have distinguished themselves for cat courage appeared to hesitate. At aia the officer commanding one batâ€" talion mustered ‘his men in the face of rain of fire from machine guns and qfles. and guve the final order. . He during the Sue flu' |l'dt in, erti ports wawenr conmite to come in irom the battloctfielis of Manchuria in perâ€" somal letters from Russian officers and soldiers at the front. An officer of a Niberian regiment in a letter to a friend in this city describes a harrowing scene from the batil of Liao Yang. Owing to a surprise by Japanese hidâ€" den in a field of millet, nearly 2000 men in one regiment were killed and woundâ€" ed. Of six companies, only two or three men escaped unhurt. The comâ€" pany of Capt. Schoroff was annmihilated, he himself, slightly wounded, being the only man to leave the field. His men had been mowed down in a mass in a few minutes. . That night Schoroff disappeared,, and as his queer mannuer â€" had been noticed, a brother officer _ went in search of <him. He found him on the fatal road where the urburied corpses lay, neither Japs nor Russians daring to approach. The captain was sitting on a stone, RBefore him, in little heaps, lay his comâ€" pany, including his two young lieutenâ€" ant=. _ "Get. up!" he was shouting. "What do my men mean by such cowâ€" ardrce? 1 ::) not lie down in the ‘face of the emnemy." _ The officer _ caught him by the arm, but he shook him off. "I won‘t stand boots like these," he continged, raving. <*"Sergeant Mamir, sece that these men get boots! Are you all here, men? Fall in; one, two, three, fourâ€"we still have oevent{' men left. and there will be a big fight toâ€" abouted:. . ; k , "Advance, nï¬ brare men. and, there i‘ paradise. etreat, and hell awaits During the last two days the Chinese have been moving in large _ numbers from the east, rorthward, taking their wives,. childrea and household goods in order to save them from the Japanese. They evince more confidence in the Russians than in the Japanese. _ The Chinese ‘complain that the whole counâ€" try between. the Russians and Japanese, lines is laid waste. Port Said: eable: A settfon‘ of the Russian second Baltic squadron bas arâ€" rived here. > Al precautions have been taken to prevent any untoward incident during the passage of the vessels throuzh the Suez ecanak _ ‘The division consists of the battios\ips Sissoi Veliky and Navarâ€" in, ervisers Jemtchug, Almaz and Svietâ€" lani, the tanmlo boat destroyers Bodri, Blestiaschy, RezumpreehAi, Bystri, Bravi, Bedovi and Euiny, and the transports Gortschakpoff, Voronéj, Kitsmi, Tamboff, Kieff. Jupitet, Markut and) Viadiniroff, The division exchanged saiutes with the town on entcring and the Russian bands played the British natioral anthem in honer of the presence of the British guardship Furious. ~‘The local Russian representatives visited> Rear Admiral Voelkersam‘s flagship. All the ships are fitted with wirecless telegraphic apâ€" paratus. ‘The ships are not ordered to coal heré¢, but wil 1ake water, frosh proâ€" visions and hay for ‘their live stock. mkt â€"or e CANEKIE | 1NAERRIOIDEY: ANTANTNMENCT to the Port Arthur besieging army, deâ€" seribing the tatuck on certain. forts, states that. two of the r(‘%:monts which participated in the attack ‘ were comâ€" Q?mn- to th ttine. 7A8dagaw, Manchusia, . cable; The Japd#ese lost 500 men in the attack, of .\’m'.jfl?, and Nov. 18, and were evidentâ€" ly disheartened. When they renéwed the §ttock. Nov, 19, the Japanése sent ont gReveral: battalions from _ Doubleâ€" )lr.fl?.ed Hill, but their movements lacked decision. The Russians opened t'irc-r‘lrom Poutiloff (Lone Tree}) Hill and ing ©peration: in Chanlindza, but: there also‘ they were dispersed. There was a slight encounter, ‘Nov. â€" 20. _ Russian scouts penetrated a short distance into the Japanese lines, but without much result. L tien. Lineviteh, commander> of ( the first army, rode around: the <Russian positions toâ€"day. t The divis.on town on ent played the honer of t euardshinp P The carth eomfortable Niberian in _ this scene fre Owing den in a in one T a néighboring eminence. Several shells burst in the midst of the advancing SJapanese columns ard quickly . checked thert. The Japanese aiso tried a turn: y [ pht te Hilerrts 410 | %1* ad Vet‘%efsfdf Russian ‘S‘w‘#fl%’if “fl%ï¬â€˜bn 4 Water~st Pogt Said. . â€" | ind hn d A., â€"â€" ) ~Carnage at f.ssse Hitmksmend rey ~Crazy! by the C 0c3 "y10 Russian GEQMYGW* J How the JapanQSé Troops % e Encouraged to ‘[pcef; ' j 'Certaiï¬â€œl)r;tb. s o okio â€" cable Russian Vessel at Port taid. in a single dwelling is standing, irth dwellinges of the soldiers are â€"of â€" men drawn from: provinces the people are devoted adherents Shir seot, or the Honwanji docâ€" man,." he saied, "expecetd to re Harrowing Battle Sconss new courace into the : it e: _ The : was â€"correspondâ€" Osoka Mainichi, attarched Dreadiul TC \ _ It is reliably reported that the digâ€" gsing of tunnels to «pierce the scarpgvat ‘rtlwD Sunshushan, ‘Elg?msl:an rand ?}ag- kikwan forts has already. begun. _ The ‘sappers are making satigfactory proâ€" gress against 203 Metre â€" Hill, which ‘when it is captured, will render the barâ€" bor untenable for the Russian: warships. A despatch front Tokio to ‘the Stanâ€" dard reports increasing desertions . from the Port Arthur garrison into the Japâ€" anese lines, the stories the deserters tell indicating the demoralization of the Rnsâ€" siam .defenders. ‘The same, correspondegnt zavs the Russian forts on the seaâ€"front of Port Arthur no longer fire on the apâ€" proach of Japanese warships. A despatch to the Chronicle ; flpx ‘Chefoo state3, that the" Japanese hg:’ captured the British steamer Tnugâ€" ‘Chom, bound from Shanghai for Port Japs Open Recruiting Offices in Manâ€" churia. \ St. Peeersburg cable: A despatch to the Listok from Harbin states that the Japanese: have: opened @a recruiting office for Chinese at Shilintin, 85 kiloâ€" metres from Sinmintin, They â€" have distributed thousands of cirenwlars, , inâ€" visiting Chinese to enroll under the, Japâ€" anese fiag and fight the Europeans. | A London cable: The Wei Hai Wei correspondent of the Daily Express says that the Russians who arrived théere from Port Arthur in a lifeboat yesterâ€" day admit that. they stole the boat. for the purpose of escaping from the besiegâ€" ed city. They say that water and amâ€" munition are very scarce in Port Arthur. but that there is food enough there to last for several months. There have been many cases of deaths from typbhus fey; er. There are now fewer than 2,000 ableâ€" bodied troops forming the active gartiâ€" son. Twenty thousand are sick _ or wounded. Arthur with ;30,000 cases, of canned meat. The Russoâ€"Chinese Bank financed the attempt to run the blockade, which cost $185,000. The captain‘s bonus _ was $20,000, The stcamer cleared for Kiao:â€" chau, the:German‘ port in Shantung: Proâ€" vince. China. f t j The cireulars point out that the reâ€" ligions ‘of the Chin &nd . Japanese are\ identical,. . and t)%\\ngu sip‘-’ lar. At the outset, the Japanese enâ€" listed daily an average of 7,0060 men who were immediately supplied _ with Japanese uniforms. Subsequent differâ€" A young Russian officer fell in lov with her. _ The pretty nurse receiproe cated his affection fully. Recently thi: officer was among the missing and waâ€" wounded or a prisonér apong the ‘Ja; anese. In order to find him, it is allege© Miss Correlle strolled from the Russia: camp and, very chearfuilly allowed som« Chinese bandits to _capture Jhor.. This was about temn days ago. The next sts; in her schome was to become a Japanese prisoner, or reach their lines. The ban dits, it is asseretd, allowal her to com municate with the Fronch Consul ‘ at Newâ€"Chwang, following which a detail o Japanese soldiers reached their â€" camp and Miss Correlle was taken:â€" to New Chwang. . She tried to secure permissiox to go to Japan ard search for her lover but the Japanese gave her twentyâ€"{oin hours in wrlich to leave the town, sus pecting her of being a spy. ; Miss Correlle, it is now said, was nurse during ‘the Boxer rebollion, an won the St. Stanislaus medal. «Durin that war she was wounded in the arn and received the St. CGeorge medal, bs cause she continued to work when h wound was dressed. S&he is a remark ably handsome woman of 21 years .« a e â€" The French Consul at Chefoo is nov endearoring to obtain permission | fo Miss Correlle to nurse the wounded Rus sians in Japan. f was about ten days in her schome was t prisoner, or reach t dits. it is asscretd, A â€"~Chefoo eable: .A romantiec story develops around Miss Correiie, the Rus sian war nurse, who is on her way t: Japan. She refused to talk, but are liable authority says her capture by t Chinese bandits, who took her into. ts Japanese lines, was part of her schem« to find her lover. ‘The first reports sail Miss Correlle had voluntarily enters} the Japanese‘ lines. This now seeins t« be incorrect. 4 Four riflemen voluntecred to blowup the place, and, armed with . grenades loaded _ with ‘pyroxyline, the riflener succeeded in evading the sentries, plac ed the grenades and retired undetected A;few minutes later the grenades â€" <exâ€" ploded and completely .. wrecked . the bwilding. When the _ Japanese _ reinâ€" forcements arrived they fourd all th occupants dead or wourded gmong the ruins. f +23 % A €% %} Romantic Story Comes â€"From Chefo‘ About a Nurse. Four Russian Riflemen Explode Build f ing, Killing 25. § 144 A St. Petersburg cable:. (Cign, Keuro: patkin telegraphing under â€" yesterday‘s date, reports a daring deed accomplish ed‘ by four volunteers _ of a â€"Russian patrol, on Nov. 16th. While reconnoitr 1 the patrol discovered a Chinese bï¬lding occupied by, twentyâ€"five Jap anese. i $ wht charged, shouting, ‘Namu,* A‘Eigh Butsu!‘ (the adoration of Buddha). and carried the forts, despite heavy losges." ‘BLEW UP JAPANESE REFUGE. LOOLING FOR~HER LQOVER, ENROLLING CHINESE. i on "F8Q And Wc London, â€"Nov. 28.â€"Keen frost . and heavy smnow falls are reported. from all parts of the United Kingdom. A gale raged all night long over the coasts, driving the vessels to shelter and blowâ€" ing the telegraph wires especially in the north of England and in Scotland. Blindâ€" ing snow storms are causing deep, drifts hnd rendering traffic difficult in the country districts: and are necessitating a cessation of outdoor . work in many of the provincial towns. In Lordon litâ€" tle now has fallen but & sharp fall â€"in temperature is, acce_ntuatinï¬ the distress among the poor which is a ready prevaâ€" lent. The snow is so deep at Chatsworth that the King, of I‘ortu%:fl and others of the house party there have been preâ€" & WINTER IN GREAT BRITAIN. Christian Factions Now Fighting Among m 11 Themselves. _ Biinding Snow Storms Impede Traffic and Cold Causingâ€" Distress. London, Nov. 28.â€"The Standard to-hm: been‘ relcurringB ionfliets I‘:tweg 4 . Yival nationalities, Bulgers, Serbs, a (1::0 plnn;s ‘;. tong .E:tet; fro,:a C:::‘“‘f Greeks, accompanied by barbarities, ple dealing with the situation M quite as outrageous as those with\which Macedonia. The writer says there basthe Turks were formerly r‘gmched. been a marked change in the last six The truth is, according to the S andu:d’l monthé. Formerly it was a ‘question _ rcorrespondent, each of these : Christian | pioteciine, the | :Chifighltn pmtmgmups wants Tcpendence and their iprgag ains. C populatio®Mngtreq of each bther..eX their _ deâ€" against. violence, But now it has becometestation :of Ms,g: ustroâ€"Rusâ€" one of interyention .between,; .v8ri00u8gian reforh'ghh\:e"’{h . has not Christian elements. Since the policing ofhastened the folution of the Macedonâ€" Macedonia has been taken out of Turâ€"jan problem, nor brought autonomy any key‘s hands, the corespondent says thortasarer. "I will have something sensational to tell some time, concerning the real reaâ€" son Yor my imprisonment," he said. He then intimated that a wellâ€"known magâ€" nate had promised to pay for the work he was doing, and that the failure of this man to keep his promise was re: sponsible for his plight. E) 5 ~The manuscript which led him to jail related to reciprocity with Canadaâ€"anâ€" other of his .pet projects. THE SITUATION IN MACEDONIA. Whe Jaï¬anesef accorditig to an official report, have received a severe setback in the vicinity of Rintsintin, in which direcâ€" ii0on ‘they apparently were attémpting to execute a wideâ€"turning . movement. . Milâ€" itary opinion sqarcely believes it possiâ€" ble that the two great armies can winter less than a rifle shot from cach otheér, though‘ the heavy defences on each side made it extremei’éf difficult for either to assume‘ the offensive. It is believed, however, ‘that i#f the deadlock is to be broken Gen. Kouropatkin mwill let. Field Marshal Oyama take the initiative, ‘as the Russians have the better of the presâ€" ont position, namely, a, strong, line of defence, and Mukden behind them, makâ€" ing satisfactoryâ€" winter quarters where the Russian reinfnrcomon%s' areée now acâ€" eumulating for an advance fnext spring. The Japanese: are also: strongly reinâ€" forced. The rivers are already frozen sufficiently to permit of the movement f artillery and commissariat trains, so that the country gctually> is better adapted to a Japanese advance than durâ€" ng the summer. Canadian Did This Rather Than Pay a Bill He Did Not Owe. New York, Nov. 28.â€"Francis Weyland vlen, for eight years a member .of the Canadian Parliament, and since then the promoter ‘of a republic which shall emâ€" vrace the whole of North America, is in the Ludlow iStreet Jail because Miss Josephine Kneeland, a public stenograâ€" pher, says that he secured $50 worth of work by false representations.: Mr. Glen says: "L am not sorry that L : am in jail; in fact, I am glad of it, for I am learning many new things. I refused all offers of assistance from my friends, nor would I allow any one to go on my bail bond, as I intend to remain the full ilftcen.days in the jail. § Armies Canvot Winter Less Than a Mile . Â¥rom Eeach Uther. f tA s;. Peiersburg cable despatch says: Appeararces agaim point to the possiâ€" diijty of a big battle south of Mukden. _ _ "The enemy left thirtyâ€"nine _ dead bodies on the fiela. We‘ took six prisâ€" oners fs well as spoils, including thirty rifles, entrenching tools, ammunition, etc. Our casualties were Subâ€"Lieut. Inâ€" ouve, woundaed.= and twentyâ€"eight. men killed or wounded." "The enemy‘s strength was about 600 infantry,. and 300. cavalry, with four guns, , h "Subsequently a > superior. force , of the enemy graduvally pressed our ~left flank® and ~ rear. Receiving reinforee! ments, we drove the enemy toward Chenâ€" holin at 9.30 a. m. _ Army . hegdquarters yesterday _reâ€" ceived ti"e' fqllov?ipg telegram from Manâ€" O CeEORE, Ml ,-;’,;‘,.;".f,";s W %}liï¬gï¬a‘,â€[ 14.3 "On Monday, Nov.â€"21, ‘at 6.30 in the morning; our detachment tdva:xd ‘toâ€" wards Weitzuku, north of Sienchuang, and‘ attacktd, and ; occupied the enemy‘s bivouacking . ground, f leaving forty dead and six prii l‘;bel inb on t raption it equipments, ‘ ‘, Japanese | casualties were about thirty. ©}} ~0 {elosod 00 0300 On Monday night‘the Russians made a counterâ€"attack on the‘ Japanese posiâ€" churian 'hel'('iqugr;tve‘;s: tion. _ , x uk ‘.‘mï¬"f". The offical despatch follows: . _‘ â€""Army â€" headquarters ~ yesterday â€"reâ€" A Tokio.cable: . On . Monday last ,a‘ demeiuut‘ht’ ï¬!p%\fl‘!’;fl“fl‘e 1mfm _‘m;&‘ at , Itszuchan: ‘‘The! Russians were ~ inforced; »aind vendewvored ‘to Fetake) the camp with a foree of 600‘ infantry and 300 cavalry; and hnrï¬\ma, â€" After :a fight that lasted three hours, they were, driven toward;the Tsien River Pass, MR. GiLzN WENT TO JAIL. BIG BATTLE IMPENDING. vented from shooting. Some small craft have been wrecked. Up to the present, November had been unusually mild and the siudden change is beimg reported so far south as Naples. i In Westmoreland the unusual sight was seen of trains stuck in snow drifts and blocking . communication .. on . the North Eastern Railroad. The race meetâ€" ing at Warwick had to be postponed, as the track was deeply coyered, with snow. The land lines in Ireland are affected, causing delay ‘in : e#mmunication with America. â€" The life boats: are busy, but the most serious wrecks so:farâ€" reported is that of the British steamer Indianro (from River Platte), which was driven ashore on the rocks near Sunderland. The life savers took off the,crew. A few fatalities have accurred .as the re sult of wreeks of small erafts. [~ "I asked him what I had better do," continued. Armstrong, "and hbe told me to go on, and that he would tell someâ€" body about it." The brakes on the car worked all right until the car reached Broadway avenue, when they failed to bite, and he had to turn the point while the car was in motion. , ~ ‘The inquest at 11 o‘clock was adjournâ€" ed until Mondoy night next. Armstronz Piames Motorâ€"ard Brake of x I.itFated Car, dOPH Toronto, Nov, 28.â€"Wiliis â€" Armstrong last night told Coroner : Cotton‘s â€" jury how. he had tried to stop his car on its rush to destruction at the Queen street crossing on Thursday night. When he had: finished and was leaving the court Acting Detective Wallace piaced _ the the motorman under arrest, and he was taken ‘to the county: jail. Armstrong had stoutly denied that he had been deâ€" relict in his duty and placed the entire blame for the disaster on the jinefficienâ€" cv of the controller. He went home for supper at 5.45 p.m., and then at 6.23 p.m., relieved _ Wilâ€" liam Macguire, the regular man, at thes railway barns. Maguire Jleft the vestiâ€" bule, and walking around to the side of the car, said that there was something wrong with the brakeâ€"rod. "I asked him what I had better do," continued. Armstrong, "and hbe told me He started in pursuit ‘of the negro. catching him just as the negro got even with a man named Wray, who was drivâ€" ing a wagon. Edwards fired, the load striking the negro, who returned the fire.; Edwards was wounded in the face by .a . gplinter knocked from _ the wagon by one of Davis‘ bullets: Not until the third load ‘struck the negro did he stagger to the road fence, whereupon the boy ran. to him and emptied both barrels of his gun into his body. Then he jumped upon the negro‘s body and stamped out. any life that feimained. Agreat crowd gathered=and wanted to burn the body of the negro.and lynch his family. _A council of cousins of Edâ€" wards‘ family preveated «this, however though the erowd »wa‘s parti¢cularly <inâ€" censed because it was said that Davis wis from Bulloch county,, where he had belonged to an alleged *Before Day" Club, that was said to have brought about the murder of the Hodgos famâ€" ilv. $ In a letter: hé wrote to. Lewis .. after Â¥veceiving the, summons, Glen said sevâ€" eral ‘fmultiâ€"millionaires had "gonc back on" him because he had offended them by . writing faceursed Orangemen." â€" He traces all his troubles to,the . work of Orangemen, who, he sa¢ys, have been antagonistic to his peace! crusade â€"among Toman Catholies. <â€" ; _A Macon, (ia., Nov. 28.â€"Additional: reâ€" ports of the tragedy in Fatnall county, Ga,, Saturday, in which A. J. Edwards was killed and Coy Edwards:beaten by the negro Davis, says that the wife and mother of the two men notified Eugere Edwards of the occurrence when he reâ€" turned from a hurting trip. _ Mob Wanted to Burn Body and Lyach Family. _‘ £TORY UF THE MOTORMAN, NEGRO KILLZD IN DUEL. tÂ¥ ONTARIO ARCHIV § TORONTO The journey to the Nyamâ€"Nyam counâ€" try will take three to five weeks, as the tribe may be met with at any point from 600 to 800 miles south of Kharâ€" toum.â€" The troops will first move by steamer to Meshraâ€"erâ€"Rek, a distance of 744 miles from Khartoum. Here they will ‘disembark, and march through the White Nile Valley. .. _ . 34 Phss The Sirdar, Sir Reginald Wingate, and his staff, have already left Khartoum, and proceeded up the White Nile toâ€" wards Fashoda. The expedition now being organized consists of 2,540 men of the Tisagi Ashragi and Khamastashr battalions, a Maxim battery, and a mounted infanâ€" try corps. About 25 British officers will be attached to the expedition, which up to now has been prepared in the most secret manner. Permanent posts will be established as the troops i);dooeed, and ‘when _ the country is settled railway communicaâ€" tion will be opened up under the superâ€" intendence. of Slatin Pasha. « _ . _ . The TI\;);am-‘i\'yamn .:u'-cl described . by travellors, and . especially .. by Dr. W. Junker, as a _«ki.pdg'.al;q._gyut #mokâ€" Junker, as a kindly race, great asmokâ€" ers, good to their womenkind, and pasâ€" sionately fond, of . music. After each da{y"s not. very. strenuous toilâ€"for the goil is extremely fertileâ€"they gather toâ€" gether for a concert;. in which fantastiâ€" iubalthuatcn »DAA sds Ti 4 N0 â€" 30â€" canh Vid Cannibalism and human burnt offerâ€" ings are alleged against the" Nyamâ€" Nyams, but there were no sattacks on traders till the tribe ‘came under Belâ€" gian influence. A second patrol under Major W. A. Boulnois, R. A., Governor of tl‘::fl!ahr- elâ€"Ghazal, has also been attacked, antl he reports that a strong punitWerexpeâ€" dition will be necessary to reduce the tribe to order. inolth ut ioh is In addition to the attack on the paâ€" trols two merchants have hbeen_murdered, and except for Belgians the country is no longer safe for traders. _, ; ‘Bt. Petbigburg, , Nov. .28.â€" Interior Minister BWiatopolkâ€"Mirsky went to Tsargkoe celo toâ€"day to ~present the ZLemstyps‘ } kemorial to Emperor Nichâ€" olas. / Th gituation is extremely deliâ€" cate.. Twg fncidents have occurred both and increge¢ the difficulty . of Prince Sviatopol & irsky‘s ~ position . Prince Mestchers] id editor of the Grashdanin, who is h of the reactionary press, this morn ' unmasked his batteries, atâ€" tatking interior minister in such a ‘fashion fe * his liberal tendencies that Prince 8 opolkâ€"Mirsky, for the first time sine eaassumed ministry orderâ€" ed the ‘comfigeation of the issue. In the strength of the influonce"@ch!ndmkh,a- attack ligs" the real significance of Frimcee Mesterchersky‘s mct. _ At th same‘ timp from the opposite d'ir&.u';m the Nash@ Zeiczen (our life) a new Radiâ€" cal ‘pape thorized by Minister Svisâ€" topolk-Ml‘*y, indulged in a direct atâ€" tack on the Emperor with the result that the minister ordered the suspen â€" sion of publication. ‘The action of this paper is considered yvery unfortunâ€" ate as it mlaces a powerful weapon in the handg Of Prince Sviatopolkâ€"Mirsky‘s enemies. | Many of the minister‘s friends are in now to believe that the Zemstov went too far and have jeopardiz¢d, the position of their best friend. ince Ukhtomsky, editor of the Vied@mosti, said to the Asssociated Press : the duty of all friends of the siberal r@pine is to uphold and sustain Prince SÂ¥igtopolkâ€"Mirsk$ in every‘, posâ€" sible way." His retixement \will be a zreat migfartune." airo, (Nov, 28.â€"The expedition of 2500 t against the Nyamâ€"Nyam tribe will proceed almost ~immediately to the Bahrâ€"elâ€"Ghazal country, 300 miles below Fashoda. (According to the news received here from trade*the Nyamâ€"Nyams _ have been stirred" up to revolt by Belgian agents from the Congo Free State, who have supplied their f(x')hhting men with Remington rifles. _4 e At‘the beginning of the year only a few hundred carried Remingtons. Since then Belgian traders have supplied them with several thousard in exchange for tusks. Last February a British patrol under, Lieut.â€"Col. Wood, which was escorting a caravan, was fired on by the Nyamâ€". Nyams, and Major Heymer was killed, and two Eygptian soldiers wounded. _â€".There are 25,000â€" Nyamâ€"Nyams under arms, but many only carry bows and poisoned arrows. . 1B ‘ British prospectors who have gone to the Nyamâ€"Nyam country with armed parties report that the tract is rich in coal and iron ore, rock salt and saltâ€" petre, but only Belgian prospectors are immune from attack. &u,v deeneel ateoling itc * sing to e necommment of a sort of guitar. ‘ Bince Belgian advance from the Congo : Free State towards â€"the . Bahrâ€"clâ€" Ghazal, the â€" Nyaimâ€"Nyam#s, | or Zandeh people as they: call themselves, have lost most of these peaceful characteristics. The tribe is negroid, but not ~black. Some of ~the® Nyamâ€"Nyams are copper colored, ~others a>â€"dark bronze. â€" They wear huge headdresses, and are> elaborâ€" ately .and fantastically ‘tattooed, cach family having its"totem," . or special An C14, Old Story. Bufialo, Nov. 28.â€"Farquharson Lansâ€" bury and William Cardington, Englishâ€" men, were arrested yesterday afternoon es. | Many of t ncl" now to tovea h s went vdiz¢d} the pos L. Prince Uk "iedgmosti, said : the duty . 1 repiine is to e SÂ¥igtopolkâ€" M way." His re m' tune," AngtBer Britis] ro, ‘{ Nov, 28.â€" trgops agains will proceed : C w Torks Five Woeeks‘ Journey. r British Expedition. Serious Trouble in French Arsenal and Powder Factories. Paris, Nov. 28.â€"A series of strikes in the Government arsenals and powder factories at 1‘Orient, Brest and Toulon is assuming menacing proportions, Five thousand strikers at Brest made a deâ€" monstration toâ€"day and there was minor disorder.. Large forees of troops have been concentrated at the various ports, The stgikeu include arsenal telegraphers, thus interrupting : Governmental desâ€" patches. _ _ Lk . w & ‘The Minister of Morine . has teleâ€" graphed â€" to (the maritime prefect at Brest, saying that the Government can no Jlonger tolerate a. suspension of work essential to the national defence, and ordering that: all of the arsenal hands who doâ€"â€" not return to work Friday morning shall be considered as having ra'r-ed. The telegram of Minister Pelletan has caused great excitement at Brest. Terrible~~Disaster to the Portuguese Troops in West Africa. «OJ M,, Nov.~ 28.â€"Letterg®>s received Ilï¬ï¬â€˜}duguow West Africa give a graphie account of the disaster s?ferod ty the troops at the hands of 186 rebel Cuyute tribesmen. _ The _ PoR®@puese column had erossed a giver and camped, while reconnoitriag. parties were sont out to burn the native huts. They met with only a slight resistance, the tribesâ€" men retreating and c\mfllflz attracting them into the intonsr:~© eelprnltua>its Woman Looking for Savings in Pantry Lost Her Life. Chicago, Nov. 28.â€"As a result of a dream, Mrs. Lisze Couct, 41 years old, lost her life toâ€"day, and her husband and infant child were fatally burned in a fire which partly destroyed their home. ‘The woman dreamt that her eavings lmd , The 'cql.u‘-rg had no chance of sucâ€" ceéss; the cnemy were fifty to one, and from behind their cover they directed a hail "of Bullets from their Mausers and Martinis against the little force armed only .\\'iflal the wretched, obsolete Kroâ€" patchek rifle. _ The odds wore worse than when the British were assailed by theeZulus: at Isandhlwana. _ To make matters worse, ammunition ran short, and the Portuguese fire eventually ceased. Realizing the situation, and disâ€" covering *the weak point of the «quare, wares. of howling savages rushed upon the troops from every side and surâ€" rounded them. â€" The slaughtese was terrible, blacks and whites fighting savagely hand to hand with bayonets and assegais, The offiâ€" cers displaydd® Qï¬blime heroism and selfâ€" sacrifice, but all was in vain. Suddenly the din of batt#ceased. The natives, fearing, it is sutpposdi, the arrival of a relief column, fleds#caraying off their trophies. â€"In all 16 @Wieerssand 250 men were killed. To M 1 smy . 2 At dawn on Sept. 25 500 men, comâ€" prising infantry, cavalry ond artilllery, with two field glvmlf of the doree being compqcsil pf natives, began the march. After®fdfive hours they, wore beâ€" set by swarms of tribesmen, who atâ€" tacked on every side, firing with their shperior weapons from the shelter of huge ant hills. The Portuguese valiantâ€" ly repelled the gtifing thousands, and a small square was formed as a forlorn hope, but this only afforded a better target to the enemy, who poured in a ceasoless. fire _ been stolen from a hidingâ€"placein the bottom of a sugar jar in the pantry. Startled by the reality of the dream, she tookalampinone{-ndandherbaby under her other arm, and went to invesâ€" tigate. The lamp fell from the woman‘s hand and exploded. # Knhusbuml,unuudh‘omo!eepinn adjoining room, made a brave attempt to put out the lhme,.nd'ï¬nllalneceeded. with the aid of‘a mattress, but on‘!y afâ€" ter he, as well as the wife and child, had been frightfully burned. Mrs. Couct died while being hien to a hospital on Nhga,l street on charges of vagâ€" ramcy, . Both Avere arraigned in early court this morning before Justice Vanâ€" Natter and entered pleas of rot guilty to the charges against them. Although Alsangbury‘s clothes were badly worn and torn, he had a refined look, and !I;ie arâ€" rest seemed to depress him.greatly» He was very reticent about giving the jusâ€" tice m?' information, bat after a A\‘lt deal of questioning on the part of the court the prisoner finally broke down and told his st6ry. The prisoner‘s voice became husky and he was unable to continue his narrative. " Discharged," was all Justice YVan Natter: said. was comingâ€"agross the ocean, she met a man . whom she liked better than she did me. «»Taggther they came to Toronto to li\f'e. I pleaded with her to leave him and live with me, but she was persistent in her refusal,. Discouraged, 1 resigned my: position, and sgince then I have been doing odd jobs on various farms. When I was arrested my friend and myself were walking to a farm to get a job." "Kome time ago," he said. "I held a good position in a Toronto bank. 1 was born in England and came to this counâ€" ity to make ~my ‘%f“m' Iuvinï¬ my young wife behind â€" ‘until I should get enough, morty to support her. That time finally, canigy and I wrote to her, telling her to come at once. She answerâ€" ed my‘ letter, saying she would start imme'dialel'y.'t‘)n 'tiw steamer, while she DREAM‘S FATAL DESULTS. FIVE THOUSAND STRIKE. , SOLDIERS SLAUGHTERED. ,\ ‘1 AM