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Ashanti Expedition.I

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Ashanti Expedition. I Letter from an Officer to a Cardiff I Gentleman. An officer with the troops at Kumasi, writing to a friend at Cardiff, gives some very interesting details of the recent expedition. His letter is datad Kumasi, 24th Jan., 1896, and the writer says We entered this place on the 17th January without any resistance. King Prembi and a large number of his war chiefs and others were arrested at a big palaver held on the 21st; and so the Ashanti kingdom has come to an end, as we have practically annexed the country. Kumasi is a large, straggling place, much the same, except as regards size, as any other village that we passed through. Premfci had rather a larger mud hut-dignified by the name of palace—than others. It is a good thing we have taken the place it only for the sake of putting a stop to human sacrifices one man was sacrificed every morning regnlariy, and the place where the corpses were thrown was simply a mass of bones. Sometimes 20 or 30 people were sacrificed by the fetish priests. We have now burnt down all the fetisli houses and groves, and blown up the fetish trees. All the white troops have now left, and only the West India Regiment and Colonial troops remain. I am staying with the West India Regiment, and expect to be here for about six weeks, and. then to go to Sierra Leone. We are having a fort built, but I don't suppose it will be needed. Wo are 150 miles from the cOMb, and the path is through dense bush the whole way. Iu some part?, where the country is undulating, it is decidedly Pretty some of the trees are very large, and the olumps of bamboo picturesque. The sickness has not been excessive, and so far I have e?c?pad fevsr. We were rather startled at the news of Prince Henry's death at Sierra Leone, as though he had been very bad before leaving the coast he began to improve as soon as he got on board. Prince Christian has kopb well he is a very nice fellow, and is friendly with every- (,ne. You will I daresay have seen the Daily Telegi-aph the special correspondent out here writes very good letters. I have done a great deal of walking, but am now settled down for a bit. I was attached to the native levies for about 16 days, and we were in front up to about nine miles from Kumasi, so it there had been any fighting we must have come in for it. I have had about enough of expeditions on the West African coast, and don't think I shall volunteer fo-i another. It is not a climate for Europeans to campaign in. I am not sorry to escape the winter in England the temperature here is very pleasant."

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