| Show LATEST TELE6RAMS EGYPT Alex6ndr 10 0ffiacrs say only 6 000 rebel troop3 are now at Kafir ell Dwar mOEt of them worn out and many desirous of surrendering but are forcibly prevented The Khedive assured the tJrjtieh coneulgenoral he bad given strict orders for tho abolition ot keel hauling and other punisbmsn which modern civilization has condemned Ono or the officers who surrendered at Ramleh sUtes that the dissension > n Aboukir garrison consists in the refusal of 2000 ra7 rcuits to be drilled Four of Ariibi Pashas officers surren d rfd this morning to the Brrlisb picket at Eamlph They etta that fully 30v of Arafcis men would do the same did they not Tear the Bntieb would fire on them In the gagempnt yesterday besides the Egyptians who advanced from Tel El Kebir ti force of 1600 men crossed the desert from Salihijreh and operated on tho right flank of the British Brit-ish Tjese troops continued the engagement engage-ment after the Tel El Kabir force retired They bad a Krupp battery which was handled well Tbe British heavy cavalry cav-alry pushed them hard and finally cap turod one Krupp gun with tho team and fqiiipmffnt and the Egyptian standard which was taken from the hands ot a dead standard bearer belonging to ono of Arabis crack regiments The Sali higeh contingent were rented but others reached Tel El Kobir in fairly good or dor Tho British loss was comparatively compara-tively small perht ns eighty killed and wounded Arabir play was well devised de-vised but required troops to carry it out The rebels fought bettor than they have heretofore During tho last two days an unusual movement was observed in the rebel camp There was heavy canonading today in the direction of Abouiron the Coast KgIars1n i0Not through any fault of the rebels the leadera of the attack yesterday by Arati Pasha was unsuccessful unsuc-cessful For a quarter of an hour the loaiUon of the English force and camp poked exceedingly critical ao the infantry in-fantry weie in danger of being outflanked flanked The commanding positions were all in tho enemys hands while line after line of his cavalry and infantry were seen crossing the sand hills Gen Lowe came to the relief of the British infantry with cavalry iorce and threat eniR the enemys left forced him to desist coninuing his flanking movements move-ments The rebel cavalry fell back and for half an hour each endeavored to get round the other When the enemy saw their gups taken they halted and made a show of advance as if to recapture them but a volley from the marines dispatched the idea and they continued their retreat General Lowes flank movement checked that of Arabi Pasha the active forward movement of the English infantry in-fantry together with the superiority of the English artillery forcing the enemys infantry give way when the fight was virtually ended An eye witness of the battle slates that the enemys fire wa tiemendous and wonders where their bullets can have gone It Is learned from prisoners taken in Saturdays engagement that AH Pasha Fehmy led the attack of the enemy Two wounded Brilieh soldiers have died Salurdayo repulse of Arabi Pasha is regarded as a complete success for the English who had never calculated upon his attacking them in such a manner The enemy did not retire until the English Eng-lish infantry advanced Arabi left about 200 dead and wounded on tne field The hounded state ttat the English right was attacked by five battalions of infantry with five June and 509 cavalry under command of Mabmoud Pasba bami from Sahkirjeh Tee enemy bad altogflthorl5000 men Saturday night pissed quietly the enemy having disappeared bcbi d their entrenchments At cav break OB Sunday Sun-day the English began to tbr < w up rifle pit around KusFsssin in oder to pie vent Arabi Pnpha approach ibg near enough to bell their camp The picket of the Thirteenth Bengal Lancers charged a regiment of the enemys cavalry cav-alry rode through them and killed ten men losing one of their own whose body was subsequently discovered fall of bayonet wounds The enemy threw many of their own wounded alivo into the canal The Foot Guarda have arrived ar-rived at the front Stores are coming up fast he wounded are doing excellently excel-lently The loss during the engagement was fifty wounded and none killed Ksjsossin ItThe prisoners report the object of Saturdays operations was the capture of KaEESBin which it had believed would be weakly defended The Egyptians lost over lOPO killed The number of wounded is unknown There is little doubt that the first attack cane upon us in the nature of b surprise Abont 5 oclock in the morning the Thirtieth Bengal Lancers who were out seiing videttes to their astonishment found themselves and I denly in tee presence of three squadrons of the onemya cavalry and a number of I infantry advancing in rgular attack formation Col Pennington then as EOilfl a regiment at Mandarin prepared to desert at the earliest opportunity The firing heard last week behind the enemy position which caused the supposition thrt dissensions had broken out in the camp erose from active drilling and firing practice of now levies Arabi Pasha has been at Tel El Kebir since the 25th of August The British loss in Saturdays engagement engage-ment was four killed and sixty wounded Tho Indian continent today advanced one militia so Jhe front The Highland Brigade has arrive fIom Ismailia > Col Benningtcn desxncunted his men and opened a galling fire The three squadrons of cavalry advanced to surround sur-round him and being EO hard pressed he mounted bio men and charged the nearest body of the enemy with such fury that be killod ten of them Soon the real of the regiment 400 strong came to the rescue They found o picket of hussars with the ntounted infantry already posted aide by aide with the gallant gal-lant party Calcutta 10 Orders arc received to seed tents for 5000 men going to Egypt from England and camp efjuipago for 2 000 men JsamBilia 10Th Highland fcriflado Vlbiob len on Saftrday ply advanced I ten milIDi Tha weather was extremely hot and < the men Coffered teiribly Two of them died from sunstroke and a few others Bro not expected to live Two hundred men fell out of the ranks dur jog Saturdaya march The Egyptians at Jxafr El Dwar appear to have brought up one or two mortars of heavy calibre The fire from them however was so in accurate that they are practically inof fensivE Ismaila llWe have not yet ad I vanced beyond the ridge two miles north of Ejumtsfiin but outposts have been doubted end supported by infantry ConstantJBople 10Said Pasha As sam Paba hni Artin Effendi oiled upon Lord Duff rin at the palacA this evening with a fresh draft of a military I convention which was submitted ad referendum In Turkish official circles the hope is expressed that the convention will be signed on Tuesday I be deferred conclusion of the Anglo Turkish military convention has created a feeling of irritation against England Turks accuse the British of deliberately prolonging the negotiations on the sub ectThe The police confiscated a large number of photographs of Arabi Pasha offered for sale Four transports with troops have arrived ar-rived Portsmouth nThe transport Seraph Sera-ph sailed today for Alexandria with 1722 officers and men of the first bat alion of the Buffs and first battalion of he Ponelshire regiment |