DAILY mil PRISSo PUBLISHED EMERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDRY, 7bL H No. 250.. KINSTON, N. 0., TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1000. Price Two Cents. AGED A STIFF FIRE. ritish Fought All Day Sunday On The Kopjes. The Boers Are Less Tenacious. Engagement Was Renewed by Them at Daybreak. fThe Boers May be Short of Big (Ammunition. Spearman's Camp. Jan. 21. 10:20 D.m After ten hours of continuous andter pie fire yesterday Gens. Hart and fery advanced 1,000 yards. The Boers jaintained an Irregular fire during the ght, but the British outposts did not 'pjy. his morning at daybreak the Boers ened a stiff. nre. The Untish stood to e guns where they had slept, and the gagement was renewed vigorously. e field artillery poured shrapnel into e enemy's trenches. rumor that Ladysmith had been re- ved enlivened the British, who sent up nging cheer. This was taken for an vance. The flrst kopie was taken at e point of the bayonet, and the Boers tired to the next kopje, which, like ost others, was strewn with immense wlders, surmounted by mounds on the immit. The British advanced steadily, and the pers relaxed slightly. The latter did pt show such tenacity as previously, heir Nordenfeldts fired at long intervals id their cannon fired but seldom. Ap irently the Boers were short of big nmunition. - ' All day the roar of musketry fire con oued. , The British, took three Boer psitions on the mountain, and found ielter behind the bowlders. the rough table land which constituted the key of the Boer position. "After a fierce cannonade had been di rccted against the enemy's lines for some time, the British troops assembled near an eminence known a Three Tree Hill, which forms a center of a semi-circle of crests, crowned with the enemy's works, and some six miles long. Steadily and with great dash the British infantry went forward in the face of a heavy fusi lade from Mauser rifles. Our troops were disposed as follows: "Mai. Gen. Woodgate's division on the right, Mai. Gen. Hart's bricrade in the center and Maj. Gen. Hildyard's brigade on the lert. "Soon after midday the battle on the hill became furious, and from 3 in the afternoon until 6 the fire from both can non and rifles was extremely heavy. Pointafter pointof the enemy's positions were seized by the British troops, and eventually the Boer right broke, and was forced back toward Spion Kop. RELIEF OF LADYSMITH. Adranoe of Warren's Forces. Spearman's Camp, Jan. 21, 9:30 a. m. Gen. Warren's engagement continues. 9 has forced the enemy from three tosi- pns. TheLiancasmre and Irish brigades f e advancing sceaany. me nre is very vera occasionally.. r London, JanT .Gen? Buller cables p the war office: ,. 1 Spearman's Camp. Jan. 21,9p.m. jen. warren has been engaged all day, piefly on his left, which he has swung prward about two miles. The ground i very aimcuit, ana as the ngbting is all he time up-hill, it is difficult to say ex- jctlv wnat we iiava iminprl hnt.T thinV ve are making substantial progress. The war office has posted a dispatch om uen. uuuer, dated Jan. 21.10 a.m;. sating tnat ii officers and 278 non- rammissionea omcers ana men warn vounded yesterday. ; Considered by British War Office a Matter of a Short Time. London. Jan. 23. (Tuesday) General Buller reports from Spearman's Camp one omcer and nve men killed; three om cers and To men wounded and eitrht missing as a result of Sunday's fighting, Though there is considerable anxiety as to the immediate result of Gen.Buller's dash at Ladysmith, which later devel opments indicate was undertaken inde pendent of Field Marshal Lord Roberts the war office has now come to the con elusion that the relief of Ladysmitb. is only a matter of a short time. According to the war officials' ideas, a dash to the release or Kimberly will quickly follow the relief of .Lady smith, and then wil follow a long spell of organization and perhaps three or four months will elapse before the column or columns will have the transportation service in shape to advance with the certainty of meeting with no serious reverses. The latter con ditions are held by the authorities to be absolutely essential before any forward movement towards the invasion of the Transvaal is begun, hence there is smal probability of the war endintr within six months. The widow of Gen. Wauchope, in an open letter, denies the stories that the general m any way critizised Gen. Me thuen. Lord Wolseley has issued a denial of the report that the war office is in pos session of a letter from Gen. Wauchope, written the' night before the battle of Magersfontein, saying that it would be the last letter he would ever write, as he had been asked .to perform an impossible task and he had either to obey orders or surrender his sword. GENERAL MEWS. Matters of Interest pondensed Into Brief Paragraphs. f Avoiding Infantry Charges. From the information which the censor as allowed to pass it is as vet imnos- British tactics. One thincr. however, is uite clear. - The British commanders ave profited by experience, and are now voiding Infantry charges, giving prefer- THE CAPTURE OF TA AT. Majors Johnson and Mu)r Defeat 800 Filipinos. Manila, Jan. 22. Two companies of the - Forty-sixth infantry, under Mai Johnson, and1 three companies of the Thirty-eighth infantry, commanded by Mai. Muir, defeated 800 insurarents at nee to the more judicious use of ftrtillnrv: laal, province of Batangas, Saturday. fheireneral ideais that Sir Bed vera BnlW. taking the town. Jvith some 8,000 men and 18 field guns; The United States gunboat Marietta a holding tne northern bank of the H,usu BnBI!U pitu a ne insurgents rugela at Fotgieter's Drift, while Sir na1 Iour cannon, two or which were cap r-rt . , I u.J rrl,M. k 1 . 1 1 anes arren, with about 12,000 men, U1 cu wu ...Americans were wounaea, 30 guns and a large force of cavalry, is Working around the right flank of the tsoers, eight or ten miles away. ( One account of Saturday's fighting says )hat the British had few killed. Little Reliance can be placed upon these reports nd although the main position of the 3oers has not yet been attacked and Nothing is known as to its strength, Sat- ban hardly be described as more than butpost affairs, evidently entailed serious : I The Boers are following: their old tac tics making a show of resistance and it r a . tnen retreating uv good order : to pre pared positions, and as they are working from the interior of their lines, they may be able to bring strong forces to j aeiend the main position. Hard Fighting In Front of Them. Nothing is heard regarding any coun ter attack Dy sir Ueorge White from Ladysmith, and Gen. Buller's "I think we are making substantial progress" remains the last words. This shows that there is still Home very ' hard work in front of the British forces. and 10 insurgent dead were found on the field. .. Pritchard Speaks on His Resolu tion. senator rntcnaru snoKe two and a half hours Monday on his resolution in the senate declaring the proposed amend ment to the constitution of North Caro lina to be in conflict with the 15th amend ment to the United States constitution. He declared that the nesrro has never been offensive, but always as meek as a lamb. He . alleged that the vicious Dem ocrats have preyed upon the meek and lowly negro. He also stated that the Democratic party is not the white man's Earty. He abused the white leaders in brth Carolina, and declared that thev wished to destroy popular government. The barn of A. K. Weaver, near Ma rion, was burned Sunday nieht. He lost I four head of horses, four head of cattle and about 5,000 bushels of grain by the fire. - The fire is supposed to have been the work of an incendiary. "A young man came into our store yesterday suffering from a severe attack of cramp colic," writes B. F. Hess, miller 'T . ana general merchant, Dickey's Moun- The Daily Telegraph has the following tain, Fa. "He had tried various home lispatch, dated Saturday, from Spear- remedies without relief. As I used an'B Camp; ''Gen. Warren's forces have Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar. ought a ds!,berfttElj planned and sue- rhoea Remedy I gave him a dose and it xssful battle. TL'j important enrage- soon brought him out all right. I never 3ent occurr? 1 to tls wtst of Cpoin Kop, saw a fellow so rejoiced." Sold by J. E. ind practicaljy resulted In our securing Hood. Jnlia Morrison's proposed lecture tour is about to prove a failure, owing to the fact that southern managers refuse to give her dates. Thousands of bullet proof shields, each weighing seven pounds, it is oaid, are being manufactured atSheffleld. Encrland. for the British soldiers. : These are de signed to protect the vital parts at a range of 400 yards. The buildings, machinery and manufac tured lumber of the Taylor Lumber com pany, at LaFayette,Ind.,were destroyed fire Sunday. Loss,': 17,000; insur ance, f 37,000, covering the entire plant, The lumber yard was sayed. Secretary Boot ha issued an order ex tending the time for the foreclosure of mortgages on property in Puerto Rico six months, on condition, however, that such extension shall not apply if contrary to legislation enacted l)y congress in the interval. The British steamer Sutton stranded Saturday on Fenwick Island shoals, eight miles off the Delaware coast. The vessel filled with water and there is little hope of saving it. The crew were all rescued. The vessel was loaded with iron ore from Car.tagena, Spain, for Philadelphia. Representative Payne, of New York, chairman of the : ways and means com mittee of the house, and floor leader of the majority, has introduced into the house a bill to extend the customs and internal revenue laws of the United States over the island ol-Puerto Rico; A dispatch from Colmia, Mexico, says that on Friday night, at 11:45 o'clock, an earthquake - at Tenmiata damaged many houses and destrpyed several. Seven people were killed ?and. 60 wound ed. There are small damages reported from other Mexican towns. .-! ... One postage stamp b'njaght- Jf 1710 at th sale of the collection: of F.W. Hunter, of New York City. This is the largest sum any stamp has ever brought in this country at auction. It was' a specimen of the first issue of British (iuiana in 1850. The stamp was purchased by a prominent stamp and coin company of New York, who represented an English collector. Mr. Hunter bought this speci men for f 1,010. At Macon, Ga., Monday, J. H. Butler, a negro, resisted arrest, after having threatened to kill a colored women. The negro ran, his pistol in his hand, shooting at everybody in sight. He shot 15. Zelt man, white, through the stomach, who will probably die. John Reed, white, was shot m the neck, and is in a precarious condition: He shot and killed Armstead Bryan, colored. Butler was finally shot down, mortally wounded, with five balls through his body. Butler is a North Car olina negro, having left for a Georgia turpentine farm eight years ago. It is said that about a year ago he killed two negroes at rinehurst, tfa. A dispatch from Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 19th, says: Bank robbers entered three country banks this i morning and blew the safes to atoms with dynamite, securing about $10,000. The banks were the Commercial bank, of Silver Lake, a bank atEUettsville and a bank at Akron. After leaving the Commercial bank, the robbers were met by a night watchman and a citizen. A fight ensued, during which 30 shots were exchanged. , The cit izen was shot, and it is believed one of the burglars was wounded. The robbers escaped, carrying their wounded com- anion. There is great excitement in the ocalities where the robberies occurred and lynching is talked of. GIRL ACQUITTED OF MURDER. Sensational Case of Miss Herbot soheimer Ended. An Accidental Shooting. Princeton, 111., Jan. 21. Miss Kate Her- bot8cheimer, who has been on trial here the past week for the murder of Charles Salzman, a young man with whom she bad been keeping company, was acquit ted yesterday. The engagement between the two had been broken off as the result of a quarrel and, while riding in a carriage, Salzman was shot three times and killed. Miss Herbotscheimer claimed that the shooting was accidental, and the jury took that view of it. After Salzman received the fatal wound ne shot at Miss Herbotscheimer six times, hone of the bullets proving effective. YAQUIS CRUSHED BY DEFEAT. state mm. Interesting North Carolina Itema In Condensed Form. Free of Charge. Any adult suffering from a cold settled on the breast, bronchitis, throat or lung troubles of any nature, who will call at Temple-Marston Drug Co.,will bepresent ed with a sample bottle of Boschee's German Syrup, free of charge. Only one bottle given to one person, and none to children without order from parents. No throat or lung remedy ever had such a sale as Boschee's German Syrup in all parts of the civilized world. Twenty years ago millions of bottles were given away, and your druggists will tell you its success was marvelous. I It is really the only Throat and Lung Remedy enerally endorsed by. physicians. . One 5 cents bottle will cursor prove its value. Sold by dealers in all civilized countries. The best job printing, at lowest prices, Utheonlfldndto.be had at the Fus Pros bf2ceV . Send us your work. Mexican Victory at Macoyata Likely to End War. Prisoners Rescued. xogaies, Ariz., Jan. zj.. isews comes from the south this morning confirming tne report that lien. .Lorenzo Torres en gaged the Yaquis at Macoyata, Thurs day, killing over 200 and taking 500 prisoners. t ather Beltran and several sisters of charity who have been held as prisoners oiwamytne xaquis for the last six months, were rescued by the victorious Mexicans, and are now with Gen. Torres. It is expected that this last important victory of Gen. Torres will have the effect of scattering the Yaquis and will result in ending the wat. Saw Too Much. A farmer hired a man and put him Into his field to work. After awhile the farmer came along and accosted the new hand: "Did you see a carriage go down the road awhile ago?" "Yes, I did, One of the bosses was a gray boss,, and the other was a roan and lame in his off leg." "I thought I heard some men shoot- tog mr there on the edge of the WOOdS." "Yes; one of them was Colonel Jones. He was the tall one. The second one was Major Peters, and the third one was Tom McSnlffer. Colonel Jones had one of tbem newfangled breech loadln guns what breaks in two." "Did you see those wild pigeons fly over Just now?' "See 'em? Rather. There was 19 of them. They lit in that old cornfield down yonder." "Well, you see too much for a man that is hired by the day. Here's your wages. When I want a man to keep watch of what is going on, I'll send for you." London Answers. Trie Doe and Her Fawn. Fawns when first dropped are for some hours unable to stand. The doe does not remain beside them, but paces slowly around at a considerable dis tance. Every now and then she gives a little tremulous, bleating call, at sound of which the fawn lifts its head and tries to struggle to its feet. Should a man or a dog appear meantime the doe runs away in a straight line, but lag glngly and halting, as though herself hurt unto death. ' When she thinks she has lured the enemy far enough away, she gives three great flying leaps, which take her at once out of sight, and goes back to her baby upon seven league boots. But If left undisturbed she keeps up the pacing until she sees the fawn standing, then paces daintily away In -a straight, line, choosing al ways the easiest grade. As she paces she calls faintly and every now and then baits, looking over her shoulder to see if she is followed. are HI Very Own Jones. There nre many Joneses In this world, but perhaps not quite so many as peo ple think. Not long ago two friends met who had not seen each other for ten years, since their school days. "Whom did you marry. Billy?" asked one. : -' "A Miss Jones of Philadelphia," re plied Billy, who was a trifle sensitive. "You always did take to the name 'Jones. I can remember when we went to school together you used to tag around after a little snub nosed Jones glrL- - - ' - "1 remember It. too," said Billy. "She's the girl I married-Youth's Com pnlon. . Some of the people of Henderson agitating in favor of a curfew law. The Southerner says the electric plant inTarboro is to be installed without delay. Smithfield Herald: Mr. M. V. Barefoot was here one day last week and sold two bales of coti" . vhich he raised on one acre. He sold them to Mr. J. B. Hudson at 7 cents per pound, the two bales, amounting to f 69.12. The seed from the two bales, if sold, would bring $10 to 111, making about f 80 worth raised on one acre. Greensboro Telegram: According to reporte the negro magistrates who are yet in office down east are beginning the business which brought on the hot cam paign of 1898. And if it is kept up there will be another warm time during 1900, and thereafter, nntil matters are regu lated. That can be chewed or smoked to suit the taste. Greenville Reflector, 22nd: This morn ing the firm of It. B. Jarvis & Bro., doing a dry goods business here, made an assignment, F. C. Harding being named as assignee. The liabilities . of the firm are placed at about $1,900 with assets at about $1,700. Both members of the firm reserve their homestead exemption which will reduce the assets correspond ingly. . v The Deljrado mil), the new cotton factory at Wilmington, began operation Monday with a capacity of 25,000 yards of fin ished cloth per day. The mill - now has 18,000 spindles and gives employment to 860 operatives. A prominent stock holder said that the company would begin work by June 1 on an addition which would double the present capac ity of the mill. r , . ' v Capt. Turpin with the Protector, which arrived at Morehead City Monday, re ports leaving Ocracoke Sunday with three barires in tow for . Charleston one of which barges was completely wrwked and left at sea five miles off Loo out. He arrived at Morehead Monduy with the remaining two in a, leaking c 'Edi tion. The barires are supposed t o luive been unseaworthy when they left port. Charlotte News: Gastonja is taking strides forward which will soon put her in the lists of cities and out of the lists of towns. Besides her industrial progress, - in the shape of several new cotton mills, she is to have waterworks, electric lights and sewerage. The contract for same was let yesterday to Moore cc Macready, of Atlanta, who will do all of the con structing. Henry B. . Worthington will, supply the pumps. Mr. A. W. Jones, representing the pump company, came in last evening from Gastonia, having secured the contract for bis company. The improvements will cost $65,000. v r s lime is Life The father? Gone for the doctor. The mother? Alone with her suffer- inir rhUA Will A tne doctor never fc?" come? When CZht-SL there's croup mine nousc you can't set the doctor quick enough. It's too dangerous to wait. Don't make such t mistake again ; it may cost life. Always keep on hand a dol lar bottle of , JCjJi It cures the croup t once. ; For bronchitis, whooping-cough, hoarseness, asthma, pleurisy; weak lungs, loss of voice, and consump tion, there is no remedy its equal. A 25c. bottle will cure a miserable cold; the 50c. size is better for a cold that has been hanging on. 'But the dollar bottle js more econom ical in the long run.