PART I. /TA HE 'OMAHA STTT PAGES 1 TO 10. JL JLJLy V y 1 vAjrxJL AJT.L W J U _ tiSTAKLlSHISD ] ! ) , 1871. OMAHA , SUNDAY MOHXIXG , JAXUAKY 1-1 , lOOO-TWKXTY TAG US. SlNTSLltJ COPY VIYK OHXTS , AT THE EXPOSITION American Commissioner Secures Important Concession for Uncle Sam REMISSION OF SOME CUSTOMS DUTIES Advertising Matter , Circulars , Prospectuses and Pamphlets Go Tree. NO BONDED WAREHOUSE FOR THE GOODS Conuqtienty United States Exhibit is Stored All Over the Oily , TROUBLE IN THi AMERICAN ART CLUB llrlUnlicrn AVnlk Ann ? i > Hli PrlroiH OfTereil lij Senator ClnrU of Monlllllll American ( Jlrl'S Itiiphl IliMtnvtnril Cnnrnc. ( Copjright , 1000. by Press Publishing Co ) PARIS , Jan. 13 ( New York World Cable , gram Special Telegram ) Assistant United States Commissioner Woodward regards as ono of the most Important victories of the United States Exposition commission over the Trench officials the exoneration of all printed advertising matter , circulars , pros pectuses and pamphlets from customs duties The rule , $22 per hundred pounds , was pro hibitive and would have seriously detracted from 'the ' benefits expected by the American exhibitors The Vlnccnnco annex lias not jot been constituted Into a buided ware house , though the LommlBslon three weeks ngo announced that It was In order to encourage - courage early shipments In consequence ' .Mr Woodward had n hard wrangle with the Trench custom house and wns finally com pelled lo store the ofllcl.il exhibits brought on the American cruiser Pialrle right and left In Paris under government seals till leleased The American line of beats which was to run In the Seine from the pier cf the American building to the annex at the extreme end of the city Is another scheme which has collapsed Commissioner Wood ward declined ito explain why. Trouble threatens to disrupt the American u\rt association Scnatoi Clark of Montana lately gave a round sum to bo divided Into n number of prizes for the best work of American Undents Against the Intentions of the donor , three out of five prizes have Just been awarded to Britishers. This Elartcd a revolt against the state of things under which most of ( ho American students ha\o long been fretting Englishmen , wheat at first were admitted sparingly and through courtesy , have gradually assumed control. In the hanging committee the llrltlsheis are largely propondeiant Dissatisfied members charge that unless ono has a pull bo Is sacrificed at e\ery exhibition , the excuses being lack of space or lack of inorlr. Sev eral flagrant examples ot favoritism are given and there la a pietty tempest within the usually jojous precincts of. the club. Illttllll ItlMlll < < > Ulllll. Molllo Curler , uu American girl , cmplo > ca na a typewriter at nn American blcjclo ngency hero , Inherited two months ago $18,000 from tin uncle In Duluth , Minn. The girl , who Is inther good looking. Immedi ately bought a lot ot expensive dresses and when uttlred smartly enough began to enjoy Pails. She became acquainted with u dls- rcputablo crowd of American sharps and vaudeville Boubrettcs Today Miss Carter Is ] > Ing critic-lily 111 In n hospital , having been picked up In n state of frightful in toxication Ilei money has either been ex hausted or stolen and she Is now penniless. Bho begs continuously for absinthe. Phy- hlcluns say she will recover , but that she Is evidently a continued nbslntho fiend and the liquor IB bound to kill her A newspaper of this city has conducted what It claims to have been nn ex haustive Inquiry to asccitaln the total num ber of automobiles now In use In the world The following Is given as the result : Auto mobiles leglstereil In Paris , 3,701 , In the suburbs ot Paris , 1,219. In the rest of Trance , 2,445 , In the whole of the German empire 1.-I27 , In the whole of England , G30 , In the Lulled States , less than 300. Another paper , the Velo this ono Is a technical uuthorltj In Ihcso mailers queslloiiB the ntuiracy of these llguics , at least as far as foreign countili-s. The Aulomobllo club of Trance uomo months ago appointed a committee to as- coitiiln who wns the real Inventor of Ihe nu'omobllo. The committee now reports Mint M Lenolr , who on January 24 , I860 , took out a patent for a motor operated by the explosion of gns , IB entitled to the honor Lonoli who Is Htlll alive and aged 78 ycau. was dlhcovcred In nn obscure village. The Automobile club Is now organizing a bU fete In his honor and will present to him n handhomo gold medal. \ouiia l.oulii't ritslilH n Diifl. Paul Loubet , though by order of his fntbor , IJmlle , nil the newspapers were told In advanto of the nttnlr , arranged and fought u duel on Wednesday with M ban- nay , who had written to him disre spectfully about the president of the repub lic IbiiiiK Ixiubet wounded his adversary , the bullet lodging In Hie lefl shoulder. The presldenl'u sons were oul of patience with thu Bcunllous attacks ngnlnsl their father an 1 announced saint ) time ago the ) would light any duilng lo Insult him M henndro , dtsigner of mo t ot the anll- llrltlsh cnrkntuu'H which aroused Colonlil Secretary Chamberlain's wrath , has Just been madea chevalier ot the Legion nt Honor Deputy Luclen Mlllevojo will , early In the silling cf the chamber , demand ex planations from the government on what II Intends to do In regard to M. Do lllowltz. the London Times' Paris correspondent. Do Jllowltz , since the hi ginning of the Trans- vaiil war has been bending the most ucurrllous letters ngaluat Trance lioth the public nnd the govurnmcnl olllclals mo now thoroughly aroused against him. Such a campaign of whit Is described as dellhernto llng nn I mlbrvprcscntatlon would certainly have resulted In thu expulsion ef any other member of the foreign pretH. but DB moult : , who Is n German by birth , got naturalized us a Trcnchman long ago In order to nvold this MIlle\o > o says ho will n K 'com the chimbcr whether detainers and 8iles | can thwait the purpose of the Ins and pl > their nefarious business in security b > becoming cltUeiiH of the country the ) uro under salary to Insult and Injure. l.onu l.lfn Sfriini. Dr MetchnlUoff , dlbcoxcrer of the "long llfo Boruins. " toys of the anll-ilcohollc fccrum "I have no time lo waste on the work of auch empirical quacks ns the Inventors of that stuff" Other prominent scientists taKe the sauio vie * . The academy of medicine has not jet reported on Mia antl-alcohollu wruiu LeMatln , founded hero b > twn Americans tin > ears ago has now grown to bo one of the most powerful newt > pappru In Paris Six months ago It rdlsed enough money In one week to build two submarine boats LP Tnncals anil IVAtgeilom which It pre sented to the government , securing at the some tlmo a dtcroe ordering ten more Now the same paper devotes $200,000 to equip a survcjlng mission for the Trans- snhara railroad declining to accept nnj help In equipping It The Trnnssalmrlan rail road Is destined to link Algeria with the Trench Soudan nnd the heart of Africa. It has long been advocated b > Lcroy , Ueaulleu and other prominent economists , but the powerful Rtoamor lines have eo far defeated the project The nationalists iinanlmouMy regard the promotion of the Fnshoda hero , Mnrchond , to bo a lieutenant colonel , ns nn nttempl by Iho government lo placate public resent ment on account o'f Paul Dcroulede's ban ishment. More sensible opinion points out the fact that Captain Traystnetler was also promoted to be n major , ridiculing the Idea tint the publlr cares about Dcroulcde or that the cabinet In afraid of the natlomllst party. I.cniIHO Xlatvsct , the Trench governws who wns hanged In London last Tuesday for kill ing her little son , was firmly believed to be Innocent on this sldo of the channel The Ihotisand of the bcsl Krcnch women ad dressed to Queen Victoria n petition for the pardon ot the joung woman , but the queen refused to Interfere The Paris press denounces the queen's course as a "low re- vcngo" for anti-British nttncks , Louise Mnsscfs Innocence being held ccrtnln. Col- umnn nre devoted to the subject , nnd the case rivals In Interest nnd Importance the Mnybrlck nffnlr. Miltiip of AVnnlilliKton. The Paris Municipal council has desig nated u very good spot for the crecllon of Iho stnliie of Washington presentwl lo the city of Paris by tl'c American women , namely , Place D'lena , at the Junction of Avenue du Trocadcro and Avenue D'Icna The aldermen at Ihe bame time voted thanks to the American donors Jean do rteszko's musical Institute for Americans Is not going to adorn the Boule vard Mnleshcrbes as soon ns expected bj the tenor It does not meet wllh the en couraging financial support he expected ftom his United States admirers nnd as he Is unwilling to risk his own foitune , his beautiful scheme , De Itcszko himself ad mits. Is likely to bo burled flnallv Among the skaters on the lake of the Club du Bols do Boulogne a lall figure clad In fur cap nnd reindeer bkln coa * Is attracting attention by his biiperb skill as n skater He la Ilerr L Moller , editor and pub lisher of the KalortKmlk , , i paper printed In the llttlo town ot Godthiab , Greenland Iho Kalorlkmlk Is n monthly periodical and constsls of three columns of mailer. It Is written In the Esquimaux longue and Is composed , prlnled and distributed by the editor In person. The lerms of snbscrlp- llon arc Two elder ducks tor a quarler nnd n seal for a vcar , while for single copies a dabchlck , a common sea blid up in Hint region and one very delicious lo cat. The 'enterprise has paid Herr Moller well and for a Groenlnnder he Is wealthy lion Walter Rothschild , the eldest son nnd heir of Lord Rothschild , hns been ro- jeclrd for service wllh Iho jeomanry on Ihe ground of his weight , which was about 200 pounds. SHOOTS DENVER POST MEN Ijiiwjer EntcrM the AcY > iiniier Illlll IltM' x Hunt tfttMliilv. " "l tls I'roiirlctom. DENVER , Jan. 13. H. H. Tammen , ono of the proprietors ot the Denver Post , was bhot several times nl Iho office of lhat ncws- pnper at noon today by W. W. Anderson , an j | attorney. The cause has not yet been learned | Attorney Anderson also shot Tammen's partner , Trcderlck G. Bonfils Both the pub lishers , are severely wounded. Tammen has been associated with Fred erick G. Bonfils , formerly ot Kansas City , In the publlcallon ot the Post since 1815. Mr. Tammen was founder of the Great Divide , a monthly magazine , the publication of which wns begun In this city , but which was sub sequently removed to Chicago. Ho Is pro prietor of one of the leading curio stores In r the west j ! 1 Anderhon went lo Iho editorial rooms of the Post and entered the office of Bonfils and lummcn Polly Pry , a well known. newspaper woman , was also In 'ho reemIt It is understood thai Anderson objeclcd to i something that had appeared In the Post and demanded retraction , nnd that Bonfils nnd Tammen both attempted to put him out | [ j of the olllco Then he commenced to shoot As he wns lenvlng the Post olfico Ihe lawyer bald Mill Bonfils and Tnmmen both attacked him ami that he used his revolver In self- > , defense. I i Tammen nnd Bonfils say that Anderson I walked Into tlielr office and commenced shoollng wllhout moro ado. "Anderson came In nnd commenced shootIng - Ing al oiK'e , " bald Tammen "Ho shot Bon fils nnd Mien cumo nftcr me He follow CM I mo up nnd hemmed mo In ono of the cor- neis Polly Pry Jumped In front of mo nnd i trli'd to shield mo She saved mo from being killed , allhough she could not ptolect mo from being shol. " Two of Anderson's shols are said lo have wounded Bonfils , one In Iho sldo nnd the other In the arm Tammen wnh ehot In Ihe shoulder , Iho bullet going Into his breast The physlclnns , from their hasty examina tions , declared the wounds were not danger ous , although a closer examination might show them to be otherwise. Both of the wounded publishers are restIng - Ing comfortably tonlghl Mr Tnmrnen's Injuries , though painful , nro not dnngerous Mr Donfllu' condition is critical , one bullet having lodged In the neck In the region ot the great blood vessels and nerves NAME OF VESSEL IS UNKNOWN Wentlier ( 'onlliitu-H IliiiiKli mill I'Mnli- < ! men Inplile to Iloniil Wreck I Near M , .loliiiH , ST JOHNS , N T , Jnn 13 The name of the wrecked vessel Is still unknown i The weather continues rough today and the fisher folk WUA unable to board It. The 1 wreck ,1s almost wholly submerged and the j | hull Is bully battered There Is a notice.- ublo Improvement In the weather tonight and it Is believed it will bo possible to get full news tomorrow At present the eas nro breaking over the ship nnd running mountain high against the rocks Much wreckage Is strewn along the slrund , nnd many bodies , some of them dismembered , nro visible Portions of the boats remain hooked to the blacks nnd this is tnKcn to Indicate that the boats wore swampul In lowering and that their creno perished Most of the bodies nro only half clotlud. HALITAX. N. S. , Jan 13 The Allan steamer. Corean , arrived tonight from Glasgow and Liverpool via St Johns , N T The Corean wns twenty-four hours overdue and It had been foaiod that the steamer wrecked at St Mury'B bay was this boat Three I'etinle llnrneil < < llrntli. Niw YORK Jan 13 Three people vvere burned to death In u two-story frome duell ing on Pint t > truet Corona I * I They nre i Elizabeth Campbell 49 years tild Jennie Campbell 21 yours old and Archie Camp bell , 10 i curst old The i.iuhc of the tire IH unknown The damage will amount to about fl,0i * > JEALOUSY CROPS OUT Wolseley Not Eunmortd with Either Lord Roberta or General Kitchener. 8ULLER SAID TO DESPISE HIS NEW CHIEF New Commander is Hnmperod at the OuUet of His Campaign. STORM BREAKING OVER WAR OFFICE Showing a Disposition Now to Take Advice of Well-Posted Men. CHANGE TOO LATE TO SAVE DISASTER Inilirrlnl 1 coiiiimry IVnt Up ( n the .Mur I. OtllciTN fitrr ) All Sort * of UN UIIKKHKC. ( Copvrlghl , 1000 , by Associated Press ) LONDON , Jan. 13 The time has come when the people of Great Britain no longer keep silent regarding the mismanagement ot the war. The lloodgatcs of criticism have been opened and under Iho slream of ad verse comment pouilng forth rcputntlona nro wilting. The sleru upbraiding of Ihe governmenl by papers that almost for n century have been conservallvo has already been touched upon In these dispatches Abuse of the War ofllce has alwavs existed and now It Is only n few degrees more bit ter than II wns before. Whal chlelly marks Ihe passing of Ihe Brltlsn irom a period ot passive discontent to most aevere fault finding , Is the oulspoken nbuse ot their gcnerils In the field There nre unpleasant stories ot fierce service , Jealousies and. In short , all the army's shortcomings , which neictofore have been secrelly whispered In clubs , are Ibis week finding their place In print nnd not In dlsreputnble Journals , but in orgiMiu Mini n mouth ago would have fiercely denounced such tales ns unpatriotic , whether they were true or othernlHe. It Is now well known thai General Buller despises Tleld Marshal Lord Roberts and hales General Lord Kitchener , that Lord Wolseley , the commandcr-ln-chlef , shares General Bullcr's feelings and that Wolseley Is scarcely on speaking terms with the sec- relarj ot ctate for war , Lord Lansdowne. To such a flagrant e\lenl does Ibis enmity go tliat Lord Wolseley wrole lo Lady Buller lhat ho knew nolhlng about Lord Roberts' appointment to command the British troops In South Africa nnd that ho disapproved of It. Without enormous obst.vcles to overcome In the way ot the Boers' btrenuous resist ance and Initial advantages , Mils condition of affairs between the army leaders would constitute a stupendous drawback to the success of the British. Ono paper , usually well Informed on service mailers , declares It is quite likely that General Buller will throw up his command and come home and be a thorn In the side of the government. This Is probably an exaggeration , but It Is ndmltted on all sides that ho Is likely to make himself as disagreeable as possible to "Lord Poberts. The officer to whom this remark was made has como home , demanding a trial by court-martial , but It Is probable that ho will not get 11. Generals While , Gnlncie , Clery and French all como in for Ihelr share of abuse and Ihere Is evidence presenled that the senior generals nro divided against Ihem- selves. Where Will It Kiid. How all Ihls will end if the campaign drags on much longer without serious change for the better , no ono can toll. The resignation of Lord Wolseley would not sur prise those who nre cognizant of the Inner workings ot Iho War oince. A great victory would probably quiet t'ac feeling of dlscon- tent till Ihe day of reckoning In Parliament arrived. Bui , lacking lhal , Ihcro seems pending an unheaval whlsh bodes ill for Ihe governmenl , the War office and some of the generals In the field , for these rankling * nre current , not so much among the lower sensation-loving classes , but among the highest born nnd most ovcu-mlndcd of Great Britain's best citizens. Nor Is the dlscontcnl confined to the In- action of the generals Several ot Iho most powerful civilian factors in English life , some ot them almost as much financially Interested In the future of South Africa as ,1110 government itself , have repeatedly urged certain reforms In the methods of carrying on the war , nol meddling wllh Ihe purely mllllary phases , bul offering , for In stance , to purclnso horses for Ihe Cape , pointing out n betler method of transport , urging n more vigorous campaign , ghlng information as to the best routes toward the objective nnd supporting ovcrjthing by ex port witnesses brought , often at n great expense , from the Cape. A repiesentnllvo of the Associated Press learns thai a dlsllngulshed body. Including a former governor nnd about a do/en men who have held civil , military or Irregular positions of control during Iho recent troub les In South Africa , waited on Major Gen eral Ardngh , director of the military intelli gence department of Ihe War office , every week previous lo lhal which marked the three dlnsters lo Ihe British arms. These men begged General Ardagh to accept cer tain offers and Intimated thai ho had under- efctlmntod Iho opponlng forces The general Ilslened and replied "Thank you , genllo- men But you are wrong. We outnumber them al every polnl and we have gel 'em like that" Thereupon General Ardagh banged his open palms togelher. Ae < < ! > I Ail * let ; nt I.nut. Ill spite of this discouragement Iho men referred to repealed Ihelr offers and the War office now eeoms to have awakened lethe the seriousness of the position nnd the of- ficlnls nro likely to nccept one of the most daring projects over undertaken , the full scope of which the Associated Press Is next nt liberty to disclose , but which , If jier- fcctcd , will work , Independenlly of the War ottlce , to achieve ono of the most Important British objectives. The Imperial Yeomanry , after the first flush of public applause. Is being Judged gingerly It Is dawning on the minds of all what Great Britain wants is rough riders after itho tjpo of the American cavalrymen and frequent comments appear pointing out that the average ) coniflii , who Is a farmer , docs not come up lo this standard , whllo the average lordllng who adds brilliancy to the force Is not generally much nearer the mark In Mils respept than his jeoman < tenant , that boih have far less military training than the members of the volunteer force and U Is a fact that a laigo per centage of the enrolled Imperial Yeomen have never served even In the veomanr ) \ \ hat Is being forced on the War office ls Mint ICO colonials , accustomed to bush whacking and scouting , are worth 1000 English clerks and farmers To llncl In stances of the appalling Impracticability dls- tlcguishlng the formation of Great Britain s irregular coips it Is only necessary to read the list of the kit being taken out by the , City of London volunteers , The officers of this bodj carry to the plains of South Africa nn air pillow , cork mattress , canvas basin , canvas bucket , < x tin bsx of rnndlcs , n lantern , a filter and n host ot other Impedi ments ilmt an American officer would burn before starting on n ten-mile march , while the men are laden with four pairs of pant' , four pairs of shoes , three caps , pajamas , two largo Turkish towels , n ttlier , o clothes brush , n writing portfolio miijlfiS&r & domestic articles. No wonder the B f forces arc not mobile The revival of "She StVKflo Conquer" Tuesday and "A MUIatimmojEphi's Dream" nt Her Mnjestv's Mientcr. Jnesday , have given a decided Impetus 100 languid the atrical eeason. SAM.SIH HV LOOKS llclliMc' * Siilvnlloii HiiiKtninl l > o- liriuls I IMIII ( Copj right , 1MO , bv IWRlatod Press LONDON , Jan. 13 The frivolity dls- plived in his recent speeches bv Bilfour , the government lender In the II use of Com mons , has Inii'lcd ' what has been kiiiwn : > s the strongcsl governmenl ot mndcrn limes In Iho aloiigh , from which cxtrl atlon Is dinicult. If not doubtful Ills llghl-heartel remarUj which were pleasantly accepted by the nntIon when times wrro good ami nil was well , were offensive to a people mourn ing for lost sons and deeply angered by unprecedented reverses Balfour , If ho had tried , could not have more successfully put his countrjmen on edge , and when Lord Sallsbwj epeaks ho will have much to ntone for. The memory j of Clnnibcrlaln's alliance speech wns dying | away before Bilfout put hla foot still deeper In Iho mire The conserjatlvea devoutly hope Baltour will follow Chamberlain's ex ample and keep n discreet silence Au j I the Saturday Review , ono'of the govern- i ment's stnunchcsi supporters , puts it. ' "Ihe ndmlnlstiatlon Is now face to fa e nol with the opposition ) but with the nation. II Is n crisis out of which several must come with repulallons smirched and may pceslbly icsult In the wreck of the government. In any casojn rcconstiuctlon lot Iho cabinet seems Inevitable" I j I The Speclator protests against making Balfour the scapegoat and declares that | though Lord Salisbury Is still the wise mind | ' In Ihe empire , II Is impossible for him lo | i conllnuo ns prime minister and foreign i minister. It advocates his retention at the head of the foiclgn office and the nppolnt- menl of Balfour ns premier , the mnrquls . of Lansdowne being succeeded at the War j olllco by II. Arnold-roster. The tame paper , grnvcly reviewing the serious mil itary conditions of the country , ndvocatcs nn elaborate plan for homo defense , Includ ing a volunleer army , recruited from civil ians and former soldiers , who would not bo called out except In case of Invasion , but which would form a nucleus to the standing army to bo sent abroad wlthoul qualms "If wo are lo escape conscription , " says the Outlook , "tho public must be educate 1 j 1 to take a moro serious discriminating and j I I self-sacrificing Interest In the army " ! i j In the meanwhile , so the Associated Press I leirns , Lord Salisbury does not mean to be Inacllve. Ho believes Iho sulvaM-m ot | Greal Brllaln's nillllary system depends on General Lord Kitchener , In whom he has i long had Implicit faith. It has already 1 been' planned that If Lords Roberts and I Kitchener bring thecnmpalgn to n sue- j i cessful termlnalion the latler will be brought homo to honors almost equal to those of Ibe duk.e ofAyollliKlon. , , He will be put Into lbe\Vai ofl'iefiV'i ' < rwlYi ] given a fice hind To brush uway the cobwebs which clog the British army. Lord Rob- c erte , ot course , will not be neglected , but I then he would bo lee old for such work as Is outlined for Lord Kitchener. I Perhaps before this can bo accomplished Lord Salisbury will bo out ot power and I Lord Kitchener will be discredited , but upon 'such ' rehabilitation , by means of a joung and brilliant agent , has the heart of the British premier been set. It remains to be seen whether fate will enable him to I carry It out. Mention of Lord Kitchener Is Inseparably connected wllh Khailoum. i where 11 was announced this week , the first j j train from Cairo had arrived. , i Balfour's statement that Ihrco army corps I were placed In Iho field wllhoiil a hitch has given the critics nn elegant and not wasted opporlunlty to slalo lhal , allhough Ihe In dividuals who make up Ihe Ihrce corps arc on Ihelr way to South Africa , they only have the artillery requisite to Iho British regulalions for ono corrs , while In cavnliy and army service componenls Ihey are al most equally deficient , proving the very lack of organization so frequently laid at the door of the War office. j j YOUNG \ST01l MtST STIY AT IIOMH. 1 ' Kilt her ItrfiiMpN to Allow Him to Kil- i i llHt ttltli Imperial Yfoiiiiiiirj. ( Cop right. 1900 , by Press Publishing Co ) ' LONDON , Jan. n ( New York World Ca- I blegram Special Telegram ) William Wai- dot fstor's oldest son aidently ( Usliol to ] volunteer for service In South Africa with Iho Imperial Yeomanry , In company wllh several of his companions , but his fathci ; refused lo allow him lo do so Young Aatoi Is said lo feel his position Keenly , as It is quite the cult among hla college com- ladcs to volunteer , und Ihoso who slay b3- hlnd lose caste , Waldorf Abtor's friends regard his refusal as a mistake , for service In this war by his eldest son would establish his p-sltlon ns nn English citizen in a way that even the handsomest donation to the war fund can not do. In one direction or another Waldorf Astor hns already given nearly $70,000 to war charities Alfred Belt , however , heads the list of millionaire donois , with $250,000 to the Im perial Yeomanry and $25,000 to other funds HAUL 01' 11SSIJY I1 * TOO POOH TO ( JO. t'lialilio l'n > Illn Ilclilx III Tlmo ( o Sail for War. ( Copv right , l')00 , by Prrss Publishing Co ) LONDON , Jan 13 ( New York World Ca blegram Special Telegram ) The reasonn the earl of Kescx has not gone to war nre principally pecuniary. He Is not well off Although ho was doing well In the Stock exchange , he suffered heavily in the last slump At different times ho has had to negotiate largo loans by llfo Insurance and now the latcs are so raised on account of war risks that ho l unable to pay the sums necessary before bo could get away. U was u disappointment to htm and a ho to Lady Essex , vv'io had Intended to go wllh him as ii Red CIOES nurse. She will bo aided by Mrs Brown Potter In having an entertainment for the war fund at Watford this week The countess of Essex was formerly Miss Adola Grant of New York. She married the call six > ears ago. Mil * I'llll'Ilt * of Ol'CIIII Vl'Hxl'lH , Jill ) , tl. ! Al New York Arrive. ! Utrurln , from Liverpool ; Wlllehnd trom Hn men ; Mui- qupltc , from London. Norge , from Copen hagen , ele Sailed Samalan , for Olns- KOVV Lucanln , for Liverpool , Belgravla , fur Hnmliurg Al Yokohama Arrived America Jinru , from San Tranclnco , via Honolulu , for Hone KUIIK At Anlvverp Snllod Soulhwurk , for New York At Liverpool Siillcd Cnmpanlii , for New York. At QurviiHtovvn Arrlvd Germanic , from New York for Liverpool At Naiileii Arrived \Vrru. fiotn New- York , and proceoiU'd for ( jenon At Rotterdam Sailed Rotterdam. for New York At Cherbourg -Sailed New York , from Bouthamptun , f > r New York. vp C Univenal Condemnation of the Bntih Min istry Indulged In , SITUATION UNPARALLELED IN HISTORY Grant Britain on the Threshold of a Calam itous Period. NOSTATESMVN IQIMLTO THE SITUATION Ono is Needed Badly ns Well as a General in the Field. CABINET RECONSTRUCTION A CERTAINTY liilii N Ivpi-nliiKT Uiilfl anil Snlil to lie 1'laiillliiK lo lict the HrliiH of ( ! iiv ermnoiit In HIM DunilnKitin. . ( Copyright , 1100 , by Press Publishing Co ) | LONDON , Jan. 13 ( New York World I Cablegram Special Telegram ) The rolltl- I cal slumllon here is absolutely unpainllcled , leading unionist papers In London and J ; I throughout the counts } vicing with each other In denunciation of the cabinet. No ministry ever expcileuced such a uni versal consensus of condemnation and lived i n week , but that Is the least deplorable I feature of England's predicament Crlt'ciMii ' I tl.ero Is In Inexhaustible abundance , but ot . the civic courngo needed lo replace Mils I discredited ministry and face the empire a I difficulties Ihcie Is none | The temper nud attitude of the political parties Is only explicable on the assumption ot an Inward conviction that Great Britain Is only on the threshold of n calamitous , perhaps fatal , period Novel In Its annals his the empire more dcsperntcly needed a j statesman at Westminster and n geue : il In the Held , but neither is forthcoming Eng land has fallen upon nn era of niedlocril' ' " " , Iho position of the government Ins become Intolerable and Its members nre suspected of planning to crown the ollllco of their failure by deliberately riding for a fall. Parliament ha- > been summoned a month earlier than was Intended a forlnlght ago The ministers seem to hope It nny offei a short way out of their awful responsibilities They are credited wllh Intending to give Ihelr own disaffected majority the alterna- live between a cessation of criticism or their surrender of office. The scheme of the liberals Is to sll tight and allow the uilu- l&lerlal dlsconlcnt to provoke the apparent Inovldent crlals Office Is worthless and 1m- possible to the liberals , who have neither a policy nor a leader. CrMnet llccuiiNtruutlon. The reconstruction of the exlsllng cabinet on Iho lines previously predlcled Is rccog- nlcd as the only way out , but It Is very ] doubtful If Lord Rosebery , lAsqulth or Grey , who Indlscrcelly plunged Inlo Ihe Jingo ltdo and are now nonplussed by Us sudden i ebb , will Join a cabinet for mitlonal defense. i In this panlc-strltken chaos there evl- 1 dcntly Is an opening for a cool , ambitious man llko Chamberlain , who will undoubtedly make one moro bold bid for power before ho goes permanently under. Salisbury , aged and broken down , Balfour , disgusted and worried , and Dcvonshlrp , bored to dealh , are not likely lo make a resolulo flghl against Chamberlain , while the remainder of the cabinet nro mere deadheads. Cham berlain has cleverly kept perfectly quiet ' While the jingo papers ar pounding awny 1 dally at the War office , he has afforded no opening for a diversion against himself and i so strong is 'the ' partisan feeling , even In 1 the face of such stupendous dangers as now threaten England , that an onslaught on him by the radicals when Parllaraenl assembles 1 would regain for him sympalhy and power j on his own side | I The Parliament that opens on June 30 i will bo big with fate , not only lo the lead- I erb , but the parties , and perhaps the empire BRYCE WILL NOT ANSWER llfll-H N0 < ( "flllHllltT . W. SlIllllloj'N At- tnckH I IIIMI Illlll Wortlij of MM Notice. ( Copyilght , 1900 , bv Piess Publishing Co ) LONDON , Jan. 13 ( New York World Cablegram Special Telegram ) Ex-Cabinet Minister James Uryce , author of the "Ameri can Commonwealth , " does not think G W. Smallo's pertinacious nttneks on him In the London Times for his rroolute hostlllly to the South African war worthy of notice I ottered to cable any rcplj Mr Brjce chose to print , and received the following reply "I am obliged for your lettei offering lo tiansmlt any remarks I might make re garding the attacks made on mo by the i Now York correspondent of the Times. They do not , however , seem to deserve any notice from me. " Smalley attributes Amcilcan disapproval of the Transvaal war to Mr. Br > co and a newspaper which ho describes as "President Kriiger's organ , " nnd almost dally serves up editorial quotations from the Commoi- clnl Adverllscr ns expressing Iho "best opin ion ot the best Americans " The dispatch last Sunday giving Prof , Bryco's Iho conclusive reasons against the i war drew from Smalley a violent attack on Brvce , on which the Westminster Gazette editorially observes "Snnlley really sur passes himself in his attack once uguln on Mr Brjce. " Seizing the fact that the New York World has quoted Historian Brjco as agulnst the war , Smalley actually cables to the Tlmen. "Ilryco docs not reach the minds of those best Americans In whom his partisan views might stir a Intred of England they are too Intelligent , too well Informed and too sincerely friendly to England. But lo Ihose Americans who are ncllher Informed nor friendly ho has become an oracle and from the lilsh-Amcrlcan enemies of England any Englishman bearing false witness against the English Is sure of a cordial welcome. To treat lirjco as a person bearing false wll- nesH against his country Is of a piece with all the other efforts made to Insult or muzrlo thftio who ventured to criticise the policy of the Inevitable war " An extraordinary story Is current hero which explains the complete fore-arming of thu Boer republics In antlclpatl n of British provocation of Ihe war U Is alleged lhat a promlncnl member ot the Rhodoelan ccterle which plotted the war gave Information mation from an early stage In ( bo con spiracy to the Pretoria government , which was thus cognizant of every move of their rnrmles , and even of the purport of the meat confidential communication * between the leaders In South Africa and their agents In England who deall with Colonial Secre tary Chamberlain and other members of the government Jealousy Is mentioned as the motive of this treachery Two beautiful women were Intimately mixed up with the conspiracy , and the preference shown by THE Bc.E BULLETIN , cnlhor Torei-n l for Ncbra'kn - T.tlr. Northt'tl } Winds 1'n.jp 1 Vmerlen nt I'nrM i\iiiixltliin. . ) oiilou le Xinoiiu KniillNli Olllt'ers. KnulUli t nlilnet I rltlrlit tl. Ilrlllili OlllcftN llnril 1'redj.eil. 1 ! IviMiliu'Ulntit Nine Slnietnent , Hello Mcreliniitw VAi'iil Ontunm'x. ! l t'liriisKn Neux. Xiiii'N Miutir riictitiM Oiieneil. I Illllllllll Snell-M NelVN. * > Itovviiionu Ioral llemoerals. Soillll Oltlllllll NeVV . ( I I lllillfll "lulls l.oeill Matter * . lllVVH NtM\H Illlll ( Olllltieltl. 7 l'roKii | > rlt > n ( aiiiiuilKii limits hitoutliN Department , ( ieneinl Miinton HI , \\eet.l } Siortltit | | Hevlen. II ) Moih-N of VliiNl.n. tIn llii > Doiniilii of Woiiiiiu , 1.1 \ \ eeklVtllllNeitteilt II\I M\ . \\ee1tlv MtiNlenl lie * leu. I I llillloi Inl iiiiil ( ninmetit. J.I Trill'IVM * of 'I eleiinlli } . 1'liiinl I.lu > In Outtioiuco , III "TinIVe of tlitlinN. . " IT Conilltlon of Oinnhii's 'I mile. Cniumei elal mill riniiiielnl NiM > .i. IllClnrU llrlliei > li csllmitloii. ! _ ( > Com I Ilims.salailei lleatljniitcil. Tempi-mini < nl Oninliii jmlerilii ) i Hour. Di-u. Hour , le - . " . n , nt ; | | I p. ni 17 it n. in : tt _ : p. in is 7 n. n iii n M. in r.i s n. in : ti i p. in , * ii n n. in : iu n it. in n > to a. n : iii it ( i. in m tl n. in ID 7 ii. in 17 1- III Ill S | i. in Ill i ) ii. in 1:1 : i one of them for n more fortumto confed- crate aiousocl the Idea of ft ust nit ing the plot nnil ruining nil those concerned The nichhcH nt Pretoria are said to con- tain a complete history of theRholrslnn ccuspliacvlilch would duly be brought to light when pence negotiations nilso and tan be used with especial effect If the Hoots cntci upon thi'in at a disadvantage This story Ins caused the utmost ronslci nation among the leading South African financier. ! and mi energetic attempt Is being made to DIVIDENDS FOR CHAMBERLAINS Member of ( oloiilnl Src-rc- I'll in ll > lciiilii | r Pliiiinolal l Out ot War. ( Copyright , 1800 , by Piess Publishing Co ) LONDON , Jan 13. ( New York World Cablegram Special Telegram ) The Ky - noch Small Anna and Ammunition company of Birmingham has supplied a largo pro portion of the cartridges that nro being used by the Boeis nnd are now working double shifts diy nnd night turning out ammuni tion for Iho British forces An Investigation at the Joint stock com pany's department nt Somerset House ( In land revenue offices ) shows thai Iho Cham berlain family own $800,000 worth ot stock In that company Every member ot the family , except the colonial secretary , is a Inrgo holder All bis tons and daughters are among them Thus this war Is enabling the Kynoch company lo earn heavy dividends. FEAR OF AN INDfAN UPRISING Serlonn Condition In Nordic-Mi Cim- nilu Ottilia ( o ( lie Wltliilraual of .lloniileil 1'ollue. MONTREAL , Jan 13 There Is fear of the Canadian Indians In the northuost rising owing lo the withdrawal of some of the mounted police for Ihe Transvaal. The condlllon Is considered serious. Clifford ' Slftou , minister of the Interior , aud the , commissioner have telegraphed the Indian I agents to warn the Indians that misconduct I on their pait will mean a stoppage of ; i | governmenl bounly and any oulbreak will I bo suppieased by forco. The while men and halfbrceds , who have been doing Ihelr bcs > t to create Irouble , will bo made to leave the country. The Department of the In terior was Informed by cipher telegram lhat a serious state of affairs exists In the northein poitlons of Asslnlbola nnd Albertn , along the Saskatchewan. j The Indians of the northern district , prln- ' clpally the Crees , it appears have been taking a great Interest In the South African | war nud have been most nnxlous to get every scrap of news concerning It. At first their anxiety to get news seemed to bo that merely as members of a lighting race , who took an Intelcst In nny trouble any where , bul within the Insl forlnlght affnlrs have lakcn on a dnngerous aspect i j White men , advcntureis of a most undoI I I slrable type , have been tolling Iho Crees j that the British government is doing exactly , what the Indians believe the Canadian gov- eminent did in ISSo thait Is , attempting to steal from the Boors- the lands upon which their fathers lived and which belong lo them Just as much , as In thu belief of the Cree braves of a decade nnd a half ngo , the whole i northwest belonged lo the red men The Indian ngcnls nnd Iho mounted police hnvo found the Crees to bo oxclted by thcso talcs nnd In some cases Hie agents have gone lo Iho trouble of frying lo couiilernct the reports by getting the aborigines lo- gclher. SNUB RESENTED BY EDITORS SI. IOIIM | I'aiteiN AIiNoliilely Ignore llaniinet lo I'renlilent Iliullej of \ : le. ST. LOUIS , .Inn 13 Arthur Twining Hadley , president of Ynlo university , was j Iho honored gucsl of the Yule Alumul nsso- | elation of St Louis at a banquet today at , the Noonday club. Mr. Hadley Is making a tour of lhe wc-sl for Ihu purpose of acquaint ing himself mere familiarly with former atudents of Yolo university Owing to thu fact that the managers of Ihe banquel nfloicd an affront to all the re porters of all thr < St Louis papers they will absolutely Ignore Iho banquel and Mr. Had- Ipy's speech In Sunday morning's Issue The piess rejiicsenlallves were denied ad mittance to the banquet hull , being com pelled to Hit In an anteroom , and were ten dered , but refused , supper In the kitchen These Indignities wrro communicated lo the city editors , who mutually agreed to with draw Ihelr men and print nothing regarding the affair President Hadley was In no way responsible for the unpleasantness JliiU-cr'H trri'Nt Develop * SiiriirlxrN. ST LOUIS , Jan 13 - The nrrcst of John W linker , head of the Urn * of John W Bakir iCe commission brokers , on the 1 i harue of ublng "IP mulls lo defraud , has I < Ic \tloi id a Biirprinl.ii ; < ondlt on of affalrx Trom c'mplalntH in liln possession Chief | "ostoll'ie Insijuclor Did < 'sllmnUs Mi it Baker H out-of-town patrons have lost In tie 1 nggrt iute- over JiOO uOO Hv thinks the flgun i inenUomil U final ! nnd him deddid lo In- I ht'Kfite u searching InveHtluatlon to uncer tain the full exti m of Bik < i s opirntlimii. i > > l'rle < < foi Till'iii'iillne. I ATLANTA Cn Ian n-Spirits of tur- lifintlnt were quoted lnday at the Hoard of 1 Trade .U 51 ei inn ThlH Is j nc-vv uric i nol only for thlx FC 8on but for mans veim past The JilKhiHt price hiri-iofaru him been 5 < A cents whlih was icacheil u few vvec-ks Several British Generals Victims of the Strain of Wnr , YULE LIVING IN SlCi.USION IN LONDON Syraons Rwhos to Death in Frotsj of Despair nt Glencoo. EVEN GENERAL BUILER IS SUFFERING Kitchener , Tucker nnd French Solo IIopo of the British Army , INDIGNATION OV R SHOOTING OF IRISHMEN Cnlrrril Shot li > llctliiu-n DciitcnliMl ( iiMifinl InxllfN l.oril WiiUi-lc ) mill I'lliULof VVnli-H ( o Spend fin tululii nl U inlilcr HlMT. ( Coin right. 1VX ! > , liv I'IPSM Publishing r.i ) LONDON' , Jan 13 ( New York World Ca blegram Special Telegrnn ) Lord Methnen la not the enl > victim of the strain in this war. It Is now ndmltted c-vrrvwhoro that General Sjmotis rushtd to his death In n ficnz > of despair , seeing tlu > lliltlsh reg iments beaten nt Glcnco' General Yule has been ming In the strictest seclusion slnco his arrival In London , llu Is premn- luiely aged and fioble General Barton , who led n brigade nf Co- IniBo , Is said to have bte'i Invalided home. Ho Is In thp same sad condition from the terrible experiences of thai llghl ivon : Gcciiral Buller's health. It Is de clared , IH surfcilng giavelj , and if his new movement falls It IK dee-mcd certain that he will return Generals Kitchener , Hector , McDonald , Tucker nnd Krench nro now the f.ole remaining hope of the British nunj When Geneinl Kitchener was ordered to South Africa ho wlted bnck "I will accepl If i have carlo blanche lo bring anj man 1 choose " The icpl.v gave him cirte > blanche Lidy Methucn denies Indignantly Mint Loid Mcthucii Is elthei 111 or injmod. But. unhuppllv , the War olllce not oiilj through reports from the pilnclpal medical olllier with Methucn nnd from responsible combat ant officers , but In the character of Mi'thu- en s own dispatches , which Inve hail to bo almost entlrelj suppressed during the lust month , hns abundant evidence of his Irre sponsibility. IiMltrN AVolHclo.i lo Modilcr It Ivor. Ill OHO dispatch he Invited Lord Wolselov and the prince of Wales to spend n forlnlght on theModder river Violent Indignation has been excited In Ireland by the news that General Methucn has oidercd two Irishmen who were cap tured at Modder river lo be shot. The In cident Is dcscilbed In a letter from Private Sharp of the Tlrfit Shropshlrca aa followH "While al Do Aar u man f > t the Gordon Highlanders was taken out and shot for cowardice. At Modder river Micro were also shot nine Boors , or ralher seven Boers , who bad fired on doUoiti , und tuo Irinhmcn oap- lurcd nt Bclmont. They were placed la a row , their hands were tied to a stake nnd n company of the Cornwalla gave thorn their last pill. They mndo the other Doers see them tdiot and dig their holes. " Steps have boon taken by Irishmen to bring this Incident Immediately under the notice of Dr. Lejds with a view to gelling Ito Boer government to Intimate that re prisals will bo taken on Hngllsh prisoners If such nets arc repealed. MOVEMENT TO STOP THE WAR PrleiulH of 1'enee Acllvr In Junorril li > .HIIKO PIM-MN ( ) r- Klinl/e for \\orlt. ( Copyilght , 1100 , by Press Publishing Co ) LONDON , Jnn 13 ( Now York World Ca blegram Special Telegram ) The move ment to slop the war by mediation of the United States hns powerfully stimulated thu fi lends of peace , although the Jingo prejs persistently Ignores the peace movement. Among the prominent persons InlerestcJ nro Ihe Right lion Leon ird Courtney , M. P. , Lord Coleridge , the bishop of Hereford , R. C. Lehmnnn , Mrs. James Bryce , the coun tess of Carlisle , Rev Stephen Gludstouo , Trcderle HiirUon Stead , John A. HODH n , II. W Masslngham , ex-Attorney General Sir Robert Reid , K C Selous , ex-Mlnlstor Shaw Lefevrc , Herbert Spencer , the dcnna of Dm ham nnd Winchester and several members of paillnmcnt Inmimcrnblo nonconformlsl rleigymen on Thurs lay packed a meellng held In Exelnr hall uiidci Iho proslden-y of Rev Sllns Hccklng Two icKolulloiiH vvero unan imously adopted , Iho first pronounces the war "a scandal to Christendom and a dis grace lo elvlllznllon , " Mien expresses a do- slro lo "pavo the way for an honorable agreement , either by negotiation or the mediation of some friendly neutral power In accoidanco wllh Iho principles of The Hague conference " The second demands the dismissal of Co lonial Secretary Clmmberlnln , declaring aa dishonest his attempt to revive the suzer ainty of 1881 , which was abandoned In 1881 , ci/ndemns / ns an act of distinct bad faith hla repudiation of his own offer of a Joint com mittee of Inquiry Into Iho Transvaal law of a soveii-yi'nr franchise for oiitlnnders , the moment It was accepted by Kruger , nml rcgnrds with horror nnd Indignation his cynlcnl udm'sslon thai thin bloody , dis astrous war Is < luc to his failure In wrlle an Intelligible dispatch In reply lo the offer of a flvo-ycnr franchise An Influential committee was appointed and offers of hiipport nro pouring In from nil parts of the kingdom. Another committee of members of Par liament Is bolne formed by Philip Stan hope , John Burns and Lloyd George to uss every means of forcing a full Inquiry Into the Jameson raid to ascertain the extent of the complicity of Secretary Chamlxrlnln and other officials In the plot But the most nffccilvo peace demonstra tion posslblo was rffordcd by the scones at the departure of the city Imperial volun teers this morning. The route between the city and the railway station was lined by fully 250,000 of people , who so pressed In upon Ihe khaki-clad corps as to make progress nl times Impossible In Ihe cliy propsr and al some oihor polnls Ihero was wild cheering , but over the greater part of the route Badnctw provalhsl Iho vast crowd evidently was oppressed with the horror of this bootless. Inglorious war The volunteer ? , chltlly young men of good business position , had hanging on their arms mnartly dressed girls with tear-swollen pyc > s An occasional goodby , good luck , may God bring yen nafely back , was uttered in a pathetic lone from the crowd , to which the men despondently waved a reply It was a tilgnlfiiant contrast lo the scenes of light-hearted excitement Joyous exhilara tion and fesiivu war songa which marked the departure of the Guards u few wccki BGO ,