BRITISH AND BOERS LATEST MOVEMENTS IN THE CAMPAIGN. A Full Summary of the Transvaal War News—Progress of the Con flict From Day to Day—The British Encouraged. The silence observed regarding the advance of Gen. Buller's army toward the relief or Ladysmith is regarded in London as extraordinary. No press despatches have been received in Lon don from the seat of war, and the ex planation is ventured that the War Office has found it unwise to disclose the character of Gen. Buller's tele grams, if he has sent any. The Duke of Westminster, who re cently succeeded to one of the greatest estates in Great Britain, has started for England from Cape Town. It is his intention, however, to return to South Africa with the Imperial Yeo manry. The reports in London that a peaco movement is growing in Great Britain is received with incredulity in Berlin. The Lokal Anzeiger says:"lt is im possible that the British government in any event would be influenced by such a movement. Great Britain's prestige imperatively demands, since once she has gone upon the warpath, that she should carry matters to a suc cessful issue." The army under command of Gen. Buller and Clery in Natal Colony has started a forward movement, looking to the relief of Ladysmith. Buller re ports that he has occupied the south bank of the Tugela River,'and is pre paring to cross, although the stream is at a flood. A few miles from the north bank the Boer forces are strongly entrenched, and when that point is reached it is expected that one of the hardest fought battles of the war will take place. Probably CO,- 000 men will be engaged. In the besieged town of Ladysmith enteric fever is prevailing to such an extent that 2,800 patients are in tho hospital, and deaths arc averaging from eight to ten a day. The German government has called upon Krupp & Co. not to furnish war material either to Great Britain or the Transvaal Republic during the progress of the war. Manufacturers of gunstocks at Frankfort Ind, have received a rush order from the Transvaal for 125,000 gunstocks, to be shipped via New York to South Africa. The officials of the British War Of fice deny the report that Gen. Me thuen has been recalled from South Africa. The Queen has summoned an ex traordinary session of the British Par liament on January 30. The Cunard Line steamer Umbria, which has been chartered as a trans port by the British government, has sailed from Southampton with 2,200 soldiers for South Africa. The Queen has notified the King of Belgium that she is not ready to medi ate the war in South Africa. The Berlin correspondent of the London Daily Mail says that 45,000 lyddite shells have been turned out by the Krupp works, which were or dered some time ago by Dr. Leyds, the Transvaal agent in Europe. The great battle at Ladysmlth the other day raged fiercely for seventeen hours. Points were captured again and again by the attacking Boers and retaken by Gen. White's forces, who finally repulsed the burghers. The situation of the garrison is still, how ever, regarded as perilous, and, weak ened by disease among the troops and shortness of supplies. White may be compelled to capitulate. The relief expected from the army of Gen. Buller has not been realized, and the latter's attack on Colenso on the advance toward Ladysmlth appears to have been little more than a demonstration, according to London cablegrams. The British lost fourteen officers killed, thirty-four wounded and over 800 non commissioned officers and men killed. The Boer losses are estimated at be tween 2,000 and 3,000. A private of the Irish Rifles, who fought at Stormberg, says that when Gen. Gatacre saw the trap the guide had led the troops into he shot the guide dead. DEATH RECORD. Gen. George H. Sharpe died in New York Jan. 14, aged 72 years. Mr. W. W. Ogilvie, a wealthy miller of Canada, fell dead on the street Jan. 12 after attending a meeting of the directors of the Bank of Montreal. The Right Rev. Joseph Rademacher, Roman Catholic Bishop of Fort Wayne, Indiana, died Jan. 2, aged 60 years. Spotted Tail, the well-known Sioux chief, has died of heart disease in Paris, where he had been exhibiting. He was 89 years old. R. P. Fitzgerald, one of the largest vessel owners of the Great Lakes, is dead at his residence in Milwaukee, aged 75 years. General Felipe Berrioizabal, Secre tary of War of Mexico, is dead. The Rev. Aloyslus Schyns, head of the Order of Alexian Brothers in the United States, died in Chicago the other day. Alfred E. Burr editor of the Hart ford (Conn.) Times, died Jan. 8. BPORTINQ NEWS. James J. Corbett has begun training at Lakewood, N. J., for his battle with Jeffries. "Kid" Lavigne "has sailed for Eu rope to meet Charelmont. the French foot boxer. The McCoy-Choyinski fight in New Yark Friday, Jan. 12, was a disgrace ful affair. McCoy was really knocked out, but the men who got up the fight wanted McCoy to win because their money was on him, and so the fight was given to him. Assassination of William Goei»el, Democratic leader in Kentucky, and several of his lieutenants, is openly advocated in Kentucky, and Republi can State officials are expected to re fuse to surrender their offices 'f the Legislature decides against them THE MANILA NEWS ACHARGEWHICH SENATOR HOAR WILL ANSWER. News and Notes From the War in the Philippine Islands, Classified and Condensed for Busy Newspaper Readers. John Barrett, ex-United States Min ister to Siam, has publicly named Sen ator Koar the United States Senator whose anti-expansion speech was cabled to Hong Kong and subsequent ly putin the hands of the Filipino soldiers, causing, as Mr. Barrett be lieves, the open insurrection. "I was in Hong Kong at the time," said Mr. Barrett, "and I remember the incident distinctly. I was coming downstairs in the hotel when I met the president of the Hong Kong Junta, and he had in bis hands a long despatch which he had just, received. It gave a large part of Senator Hoar's speech in full, and a summary of tho rest of it. I asked the president what he was go i -.T tg do with it, and he told mo that V' intended to send it to the officers of the army in the Philippines. He was urged not to do it, but he pro tested that it had been printed in the United States and was public prop erty. Four days after that speech was printed it was in the hands of those who saw an opportunity to make political capital of it. The speech was published and distributed among the soldiers, and I belive it was the cul minating influence that brought about the open insurrection. This speech, you must remember, was delivered before there was an open insurrec tion." Senator Hoar declined to take any notice of the statement attribut ed to Mr. Barrett. The Senator said that Gen. Otis's reports give the full est account of the events that led to hostilities, and that he expects, as he has already given notice, to deal with the whole matter in the Senate. Colonel Bullard, with the Thirty ninth Infantry, has attacked and de feated ten companies of insurgents strongly entrenched on the Santa Thomas coast. The insurgents lost twenty-four killed and sixty captured. They retreated toward Lake Taal. It is asserted that Archbishop No zaleda contends in his interview with Mgr. Chapelle, the Papal Delegate, on behalf of the Roman Church and the Brotherhood, that the titles to all property held by the church and the brotherhoods In the Philippines should be recognized: that the Roman cate chism should be taught in the primary schools; that the existing religious orders should continue to administer the parishes; that other parishes should be established under the same control, and that the parochial control of the cemeteries should continue. He also lays stress in his intentions upon the importance of allowing the church to administer its own affairs without State interference, upon the necessity of a regime that will guarantee the liberty of the church, upon the de sirability of European clergy; the es tablishment of a row college for the instruction of native priests, and the continuation of indirect contributions for the maintenance of churches and clergy, and upon the expediency of maintaining the system of parochial fees, including revenues from births, marriages, funerals, dispensations and apostolic indulgences. In addition Archbishop Nozalc-da advocates the continuation of the Church's control of pawnshops and certain designated hospitals and schools, together with the establishment of a special form of parochial administration exacted by the actual conditions in the Philip pines. A FATAL FIRE. Residence of Joseph Pulitzer, of New York, turned. The handsome residence of Joseph Pulitzer, publisher of tho New York World, at 10-12 East Fifty-first street, was destroyed by lire Jan. 9, and two women servants lost their lives. The total loss is estimated at $300,000. The insurance is $250,000. The victims ol the fire were Mrs. Morgan Je.'lett, the housekeeper, and Miss Elizabeth Montgomery, a gov erness. The origin of the fire is variously ascribed to electric wires, the steam heater and an open fire. It started about 7:50 a. m., while Mrs. Pulitzer, her daughters, Constance and Edith, 12 and 14 years old respectively, and Herbert, a boy of three years, and the housekeeper and governess, were asleep. Mr. Pulitzer and liis son, Jo seph, Jr., were at Lakewood. There were sixteen servants in the house. Mrs. Pulitzer got her children togeth er, and, with the aid of their nurse, got them safely to the street. Sev eral of the servants had narrow es capes, one of them making his way out of the building by way of the roof. He says he saw Mrs. Jellett on the roof and that she went back to get a bag containing Christmas presents. When the firemen found the body of the housekeper on the top floor the bag was in her hand. It contained a number of silver trinkets and fancy articles. The body of the governess, Miss Montgomery, was discovered after several hours. It was found in the ruins on the third floor. Mrs. Pulitzer, who is a niece of Jefferson Davis, had a number of jew els in a safe in the house, which were buried in the ruins. She says that everybody had time to get out of the house after the fire started, as there was smoke only for some minutes be fore the flames. Duel in a Court Room. Oak Ridge, a little hamlet 18 miles northeast of Vicksburg, Miss., was the scene last Tuesday of a pistol light, In which three of the best-known resi dents of the county were killed. The dead men are A. D. Holland, R. S. Ste phenson and Dr. Otho Austin. Only meagre details of the encounter are obtainable, but it is learned that Dr. James Austin, his son, Otho Austin, and his son-in-law. R. S. Stephenson, had been arrested in an affidavit sworn out by Rollsnd, charging them with whipping one of Rolland's negro tenants. The trial was set to take place in Justice Griffin's court at Oak Ridge. The trial had hardly opened when the shooting began. When the smoke had cleared away Rolland. Ste phenson and Otho Austin were Btretched on the floor dead, and Dr. James Austin and a youns son of Rol laad were seriously wounded. COMMERCE AND INDUSTF.Y. Latest News From the Active Busi ness World. Notices have been posted ly the Peck Manufacturing Coiai any, Picti field. Massachusetts, of increase of from 10 to 15 per cent, ia t.he wages of the employes of No. 1 mill. The piano makers' strike at Chi cago has been resumed with increased energy, the peace negotiations having failed. A Cleveland despatch says that the boss rod rollers of the Cleveland dis trict of the American Steel and Wire Company have resigned from the Rod Rollers' Association. This action was taken because they have no griev ance and believe it is unfair to insist upon the present demands, particular ly in the face of the voluntarily ad vance in wages already made. The trouble between organized la bor and the Pan-American Exposition Company, at Buffalo, has been amica bly settled. Union wages will prevail and union labor be given the prefer ence. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company has signed a new contract with its trainmen, grant ing the conductors and brakemen what amounts practically to a 15 per cent, increase in wages. The rod mill workers employed by the American Steel Company, in Cleveland, have demanded an in crease in wages of 12 Va per cent. The company offered to compromise, it is said, on 7V> per cent. This offer was rejected by the men. It Is announced from Anderson, In diana. that the State Rod Workers' Association, on Jan. 1, made a demand for an increase of from 3 to 20 per cent, on the wage scale. This was refused. The National Building Trades Coun cil of America has adopted a resolu tion condemning the Anti-Scalping bill. A St. Paul, Minnesota, despatch says that James J. Hill, President of the Great Northern Railroad, Is about to build a mammoth steel plant at Great Falls, Montana. The consolidation of the Ohio Cen tral and Hocking Valley Railroad will result in the building of new docks in Toledo for the united roads. The ter minals will be near the Maumee Bay, and will cost about $1,000,000. The Order of Railroad Telegraphers has declared a boycott against the Colorado and Southern Railway on account of a disagreement between the company and operators regarding wages and hours of labor. MILITARY AND NAVAL. The transport Kilpatrick, with the Tentli Cavalry on aboard, has arrived at Galveston, Tex., from Cuba. The transport Thomas, with the bodies of Gen. Lawton and Major Lo gan on board, is due at San Francisco January 29. Captain F. A. Cook, who command ed the cruiser Brooklyn In the battle of Santiago, has told President Mc- Kinley that he was responsible for the loop made by the Brooklyn, for which Rear-Admiral Schley has been criti cised. W. L. White, former Quartermaster General of Mischigan, disappeared af ter being indicted for conspiracy to defraud the State in the sale and pur chase of military supplies. The hospital ship Missouri has sail ed from Manila for San Francisco with 28G sick soldiers on board. Work has so far advanced on the United States battleship Wisconsin at San Francisco that she will make her trial trip within two weeks. Her main battery of four thlrteen-lnch guns will be the heaviest ever mounted on an American man-of-war. "I am going to kill you," exclaimed Leon Ray, a seven-year-old boy, to Ruth Barnes, his seven-year-old girl playmate, at West Point, Ga„ Monday, and then he levelled a big pistol at the girl s head and pulled the trigger. The bullet crashed through the child's brain and she dropped dead, while her companion looked upon his victim with Indifference. NEW YORK MARKETB. Flour and Grain. FLOUR, Minnesota Patents. CI B'> © *4 10 Winter Patents, :) 60 © 3 75 Winter Straights. 3 40 (a) 3 45 RYF. FLOUR. Fair to good. 3IS © 3 30 Choice to fancy, 3 33 © 3 65 RYE, No. 2 Western, per bushel, OOJi State, do. 06 BARLEY. Feeding, per bushel. 43 © 45 Malting. do. 41) (a) 54 WHEAT. No. 2 Red. per bushel, 76 No. Northern, do. 80 CORN, No. 2. f.o.b atloat, per bushel. 41 OATS, No. 2, por bushel, 29 No. 3, do. 28>i Produce. HAY, Shipping, per hundred lbs., 65 © 75 Good to choice, do. 80 © 85 Hoi-s, State, 18% crop, per pound, 6 18119 crop, do. 12 © U WOOL, Domestic Fleece, per pound, 21 © 26 Texas, do. 14 © 17 BEEF, Family, per hundred, 12 50 © 13 00 Mess, do. 10 50 Beet Hams, do. 22 DO ® 23 00 LA it i>. Western Steam, per hundred, 6 17)^ Continent, do. 6 25 © 6 60 PORK, Moss, per hundred, 10 25 © 10 75 Family, do. 12 00 © 12 50 BUTTER, Western Creamery, per pound, 23 © 28 Factory, do. 16 (a> 21 State Dairy, do. 20 © 27 CIIEE.SK, Fancy small, 12V® 13 Late made, 11 © 12 Eons. State and Pennsylvania. 24 © 25 " Western ungraded, 15 © 22 DRESSED POULTRY. Fowls, Western, choice, 9,','© Fowls, Western, fair to good, HJ»© 9 Nearby chickens, 9 © n Nearby turkeys, fancy, U)i© 12 Western turkeys, choice hens, 11 © 11U Ducks, western choice. 10 © H (leese, Western choice. 9 (112 10 BEANS AND PEAS. Marrows, choice, per bushij/ 315 © 2 17U Mediums, bright " © 200 Pea lleans, choice. " 195 © 200 Fruit and Vegetables. APPLES. Spitz, choice to fancy, per bbl. 3 25 © Kings. •• " 3 00 © Baldwins " " " 3 00 © 32S Greenings, choice, 275 © SOO Mixed Winter varieties, 2 25 © 275 CRANBERRIES. Ca|H< Cod, per barrel. 7 00 © 7 00 VEGETABLES. Potatoes, N. Y. anil Western. 55 © 57 Jersey sweet potatoes, ]>er basket, prime. 40 © 45 Onions. Yellow Globe, jier bbl. 1 20 © 1 40 " Yellow Danvers, •• ye © 1 00 Cabbage, Danish. |wr ton, 23 00 © 25 00 domestic. - is uu ©ao uo AMY STEKIO US CftlME BODY OF A MILLER FOUND BE« NEATH A WATER WHEEL. The Hands Were Tied and a Heavy Piece of Iron Was Fastened to One Leg—The Man Had Been Missing for a Week. One of the deepest mysteries which ever stirred Battle Creek, Mich., as sumed a new phase by the finding of the body of Sherman Church, a prom inent young miller, lying under the water wheel of the Augusta Mills, with both hands tied behind him and a heavy weight attached to his left leg. Tuesday, Jan. 2, Henry Marvin, a leading resident, came into the Augus ta Mills to get a sack of grain. Sher man Church waited on him and ac cepted the money. He then went from the office to the mill as Mr. Mar vin was departing. Church's wife kept supper waiting for him, but he did not return. She went to the mill and found that he had disappeared. The mill was searched, but Church could not be found, and the entire community was startled. Parties of friends broke up the ice in the liver and searched the country, but the man was gone, and the mystery of it was that he had not been seen to leave the mill. At the end of a week, as a last hope, the water was let out of the flume, which the residents had been certain was froze over at the time of the dis appearance of Church. The body was found wedged firmly between the big water wheel and the bottom of the wheel. It was with difficulty that the bloated and bruised corpse was extricated and brought to the bank of the river. Both hands of the young man were tied behind his back, and to his left leg was firmly attached the piece of heavy iron. The body was badly bruised, as it naturally would be beneath a water wheel. CRIMINAL. Lewis E. Goldsmith, the assistant cashier of the Port Jervis (New York) National Bank, who pleaded guilty to stealing about SIOO,OOO from that in stitution, has been sentenced to serve eight years in the Sing Sing prison. The Massachusetts Executive Coun cil has commuted the sentence of Ed ward Ray Snow, the 19-year-old mur derer, from death to life imprison ment. Lieutenant Commander F. E. Green, of the cruiser Montgomery, has com mitted suicide at Montevideo. Mrs. Josephine Smith, of Harlem, was bound, gagged and locked in her cell by a thief Jan. 11, who looted her house. A fight at Pound Gap, Kentucky, Jan. 11, growing out of a quarrel over a game of cards, resulted in the kill ing of two men and the mortal wound ing of two. Charles W. Pickel shot Mrs. Lizzie A. Graham, at whose house he board ed, in Wilmington, Delaware, inflict ing wounds that may prove fatal. Then he shot himself in the head, dy ing Instantly. Jealousy prompted the crime. Thomas Moore, a resident of Am herst, New Brunswick, and formerly Intercolonial railroad agent there, is charged by secret service officers with dealing in counterfeit $2 notes. Mrs. Maude Johnson was shot and killed In Chicago the other day by John M. Toner, who turned the weap on upon himself, inflicting a probably fatal wound. Toner has a wife and children at Terre Haute. Cornelius Shaw and James J. Eag an were hanged Jan. 9 at Montrose, Pa., for the murder of Jackson Pep per. Alfred Morrison, who fatally shot his wife on the night of December 28 last at Mt. Vernon, N. Y., has been placed under police surveillance, a po liceman being at his side night and day. CASUALTIES. A sudden flood In the Pottlach river in Idaho on Saturday caused a loss of three lives, swept away twenty house at Kenrick and destroyed bridges and tracks of the Northern Pacific Railroad. By the premature explosion of a blast, in the Mountain Consolidated mine, at Butte, Montana, Peter Sulli van and Thomas Smith were instantly killed. Both were single men. Richard French, Thomas O'Brien and Charles Pachow, 12-year-old boys, of Louisville, Ky., were drowned in Gashouse pond while skating. It is reported that the steamer wrecked at St. Mary's Bay, Newfound land, was the Norwegian steamer Falke, employed for the last year by the Dominion Coal Company in the coal carrying traCe between Louis ville and Boston. The gale has not yet blown itself out, and the Bea Is still too rough to allow boats to get near he wreck in St. Mary's Bay. As yet there la nothing to show the name of the vessel. Ten bodies have been located among the rocks, and others can be seen floating about. Dewey's Loving Cup. The loving cup of Bllver made from the melted dimes contributed by over 70.000 American citizens, the majority of whom were children, was presented to Admiral Dewey In Washington Jan. 9. A small but notable gathering assembled in the parlors of the Dew ey residence on Rhode Island avenue, and participated In the ceremony. The cup, which is a massive and artistlo creation, nearly six feet in height, and appropriately inscribed, occupied the bay window, draped about the base with the American flag. At one side was a large silver bound volume containing the names of the subscrib ers of the dimes who had subscribed to the token through the instrumen tality of the New York Journal. Sen ator Depew acted as spokesman. In accepting the tribute, Admiral Dewey thanked Senator Depew for his gra cious words, and said he was over powered by this new proof of the gratitude of his countrymen. To hirr the most pleasant thing about it, aim one that would make him cherish I. all the more, was the fact that the children of the country were so large ly represented la the giving. A Boid Robbery. The Long Island City, N. Y., office of the Prudential Insurance Company was boldly entered Jan. 11 bri two robbers, who, awelng the clew in charge wlh a revolver seized SBOO In cash and escaped. When the rest of the office force left in the evening, Harry Athing, nineteen years of age. of No. 694 Fifth avenue, Brooklyn, the cashier and confidential employee, re mained behind to close up the books for the week. Athing was to put the cash, after he had counted it, in the safe and lock it up. He had not finished separating the money into piles when a man en tered from the street and walked to the glass and brass partition between he inner office and the section outside for customers. The man asked Athing if any one was there at the time, and where the superintendent was. Athing told him he was alone. The man remarked that it was all right and started toward the street. He did not go out. but passed into the private office by a door at the front, which was open. As he young man turned to demand what was wanted he found himself covered with a revolver. He was warned not to move or make an out cry. A moment later a smaller man entered through the private office and went to the desk and swept the money on it into a pile and stuffed it into his pockets. He then passed out. The taller man waited a moment then, with a warning that any alarm within five minutes would result in death, he departed. Athing. when he recovered from his fright, ran to the police sta tion and gave the alarm. Victim Failed to Appear. Willis Rosser, a medical student, who shot Frederick Slater, a well known wheelman of Rahway, N. J., in Madison Square Garden, New York, at the close of the latest six-day bi cycle contest on Dec. 9, has been dis charged from prison. This Is the sec ond time Rosser, who is a member of a well-known family of Stevenson. Ala., has escaped punishment after engaging in a shooting affray. The shooting of Slater was a sensational one. Rosser had come to New York to pursue his medical studies, and was one of the spectators at the bi cycle contests. Rosser and Slater, who had never met before, engaged in a quarrel over a wager on one of the races. Rosser shot Slater and was hustled to the station house to pre vent him from being attacked by the crowd. The case was adjourned sev eral times because of Slater's illness, but he was not In court finally. No word was received from him, and Ros eer's lawyer asked that his client be dismissed from custody. Magistrate Poole then discharged Rosser, who had been confined In the Tombs. McGovern Defeats Dixon. Terrence McGovern, of Brooklyn, whipped George Dixon, of New York, Tuesday night in eight rounds of the fastest, roughest fighting ever seen in that city. Dixon was knocked down eight times in the final round. It was the Dixon of old, fast, honest, true and game as a pebble, but youth, not to be denied, added another of its long lists of victories crver age, mature judg ment and ring experience. At the conclusion of the battle McGovern was comparatively fresh, though lie had gone through the hardest battlo of his life. He is a fighting wonder, and Dixon, though defeated, can look back upon his long list of victories and feel no disgrace. It was a battle royal, in which strength, stamina, en durance, intelligence and courage combined to achieve success. Defeat for Dixon was no: written until the dusky veteran had exhausted all his marvelous resources of generalship which have puzzled his antagonists— not until his ring tactics had been tested to the uttermost, his strategy exhausted and his staying powers wasted. At the end he was still full of willingness and courage, and would have gone on until nature would have Btood no more and he had fallen into merciful InsensibUity. Sir Thomas Lipton states that it is not his intention to issue the chal lenge for a race In 1901 before Aug ust, this year. John D. Rocckefeller, in his reply to the Industrial Commission, says that industrial combinations are nec essary, and urges federal legislation to govern their creation and control. The claim of Admiral Dewey and his officers and men of the Asiatic Squadron for bounty for the destruc tion of the Spanish fleet at Manila was argued before the United States uirt of Claims Jan. 9. L. H. Severance, of Cleveland, Ohio, no iy Treasurer of the Standard i : ( fimpany, has given $60,000 to < • v i.i College for a laboratory. An SB.OO Dictionary for $2.00 The New Werner - Webster's Dictionary. pllaC 5>, V .^|J Newly and magnificently Illustrated. KB li' fc We offer you the best dictionary ever put ■ MICJR-< on the market at a low price. This la an BSf "*T Br l n I 'nyptl American Dictionary of the English Lan- PfTS!WHIK<?SS. ' . SVAv*\VA\J guage, containing the whole vocabulary ByOTf A\™? of the first edition, the entire corrections ||HS(|BWpilKE£!!^ and Improvements of the second edition, - - iSy. " ' to which ia prefixed an introductory dis- -YiWi 'C • ' tertation on the history, origin, and con- KSt.i 7 k3l"|"rV-•'JrffiMHl nections of the languages of western Asia and Kurope with an explanation of the Kgpki bi' '■■■■■ StMBISH principles on which languages are formed. Hfcjß. '■ ' r& vSIStMI This book contain* every wort that ■BSEf-.' ■ ' l'y' ' ! 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