cl » k .4 ated The Russians occupied a range of high hills north of Tomueheng (Simoucheng), M were strongly defended with cov- ored trenches, a. fortress and covered upkeements which consumed months in construction. The Japanese seized a range of heiehts to the southward on t',rdT They began the attack at doybroa on Sunday. The Japanese left wing encountered severe opposition. The Russians were gradually reinforced and their artillery was increased to 21 guns. The Japanese, who were also reinforced, renewed the attack at 3 o'eloek in the nfternoon, and drove the Russians north- ward. The Japanese right, freed to a severe artillery fire, was fore to halt. as. Bunions. who vote rohfonod, w named the offensive at 5.30 o’clock in who evening, but were repulsed with a heavy loss. The Russian artillery pre- Jgnted the Japanese from pursuing, and during the night the Russians withdrew toward Ha†lieng. She Japanese casu- alties wore about 400. - _ 2"srii,'i't' 1"†' i, "I '.'.ilu "m“ Wm“: 'llm"sia Looking Up the Law as to the ' : no: fr-Ln Tokio announcm: tha . . thepJalnn-n- .;v .1 iv! cruiser Kmuga‘ Knight Commander Seigage. “formerly 1hr 1c:cntine warship Rinu- St. Petersburg, Aug. 3.-Rutssa has not davia. aw! _ Am " in Italy). had been invoked any further protest from Great punk. Tru, :rv.'l uxzwozmnt calmed great Britain for including foodstuffs in the cxcitemon: !. "C'. list of contraband of war. The state- --_____ ment of the British Under Foreign Secre- Tho KIM“. nr,', Niuhin. armored tary, Earl Peres. in the House of Com. m:, were purchased by the Jopan- mom Monday, that Foreign Secretory gierort Frcm Rome That the Armored Cruiser Kasuga Has Been Sunk. Rome. Aug. 3.--The Giornale d'ItaIia “any ;.'..‘-E:<1-'\~ in an extra edition it “patch frum Tokio announcing that the Jap:m:~~.~ cr-n::r.v.l cruiser Hung; Mormerly the Srgentino warship Rivas- gdavia, and lunv'sznc-l in Italy). had been punk. The "urtottttriutteitt caused great .xeitement Lure. Gen. Kuroki has telegraphed that in the two days' fighting at Yushlintzu his looses were six offic:ers killed, sixteen officers wounded, and 950 men killed and wounded. _ ""C,Tt.TCit' .- _.- .37“, There m no senous Tiews trom the intern front." Will Hake a Stand in the Neighborhood of Liao Yang. St. Petersburg, Aug. 3.---Gen. Kouro- fpotkin‘s armies are now concentrating gupon Lino Yong. falling back respect- lively upon Anslmnshnn. Liandiansian .ond Alping, as expressed in the des- .-patches to the Associated Press. Those {three points form a ring of closely knit defences around Liao Yang and enable General Kouropatkin to risk tt general rcwgemont. The only cause for anxi- poty is Anping. and Gem Kouropatkin's swords that ho hoped the troops hold tthat place indicate a misgiving. The {Japanese midently roulizod the advant- of attacking this point and direct. :g.their strongest advance along the lthtzi-Ijao Yang line. A brief telegram! from Gen. Kourapat. thin received this morning reports the ,ovucuntion of Hui thong. and declares Nhe Japanese did not continue the at. Itfek toward Liao Yang, Aug. 2, adding dint they evidently were unable to 'ol. mrw up their advantage of the previous Aby owing to the stubborn resistance of tthe Rusuiam coupled with the tropical lheat. The General says the soldiers idhrew away their overcoat: and equip- ments and mus : That everything pos- pible was (lum- to relieve them. but nev- ertheless thvre Mere n great number of deaths from sunstroke. Ile does not rlpccify the cosualtios of the battle and makes no yin-union of the Ines of guns. Tokio, Aug. 3, 10 a. m.-The Japanese defeated the Russians at Tomucheng (Simoucheng), and drove them townrd MOheng. in a sharp engagement which begun last Saturday and ended on Sun- day. The Russians left 1,500 dead on the field and lost six gum. Bil Army is Haunting Prom Kai Cheng Toward Anshanshan. St. Petersburg, Aug. 3.--In n des. potch to the Emperor, dated Aug. 2, Gen. Kquropatkin sags l .. . "The terrible heat has caused many unnatrokcs and measures have been tak. .01! to diminish the equipment the troops have hitherto been used to carry by inn-porting it in supply carts. Our"troops have retired from Hui Cheng along the road toward Anshan- shun. The movement was accomplish- ed in perfect order and the enemy did not. disturb us. Jan Drove Russians Toward Bai Cheag --The Latter Lost 1,500 Men. Tokio, Aug. 'l, 10 a. m.--The Japan» look Simoncheng on Sunday. Six guns were captured. The Japanese casualties were 400. The Russian loss we heavier. Gen. Kuroki's losses in futurday's and Bundsy’s fighting were 972. Japanese Captured Simoucheng on Sunday-- Russians Lost Over 900 Men in the Fight------ Kouropatkin to Flake a Stand in the Neighborhood of Liao Yang-mis Army in a Critical Position ----Japanese Attacked Port Arthur Defences With Fanatical Fury, but Suffered Disastrously -----Report That a Jap Cruiser Has Been Sunk. Twenty Thousand Japanese Said to Have Been Killed or Wounded. Kouropatkin’s Troops Driven To, ward lliai---aag. THREE DAYS’ ATTACK h ii,,'ri-., PORT ARTHUR FAILED. KOUROPATKIN REPORTS. HOW IT WAS DORE. my CRUISER SUNK. RUSSIAN ARMY St. Petersburg Reports That the Jars Lost 20,000 Men. St. Petersburg, Aug. 3, 10.25 p. m.-- The first Russian report of the storming operations at Port Arthur has just been received from the consul of Russia at Ghefoo, dated to-day. It says a general attack began Saturday, with the Japan- ese in immense force. There were two days of a bombardment of unprecedent- ed violence. The Japanese, at the time of sending, this des teh odds, had everywhere been nfj'it,'),'d' with great loss. The Japanese casualties are placed at 20,000, but the Russian losses were light. The Consul further reports that the Russians have an abundance of am- munition. It is possible that it was by a. wireless message, reporting events which have oc- curred since last Saturday. On the other hand, the message may have gone by junk to Chefoo, in which case it refers to events of a week ago, and practically covers the report mentioned in the Asso- eiated Press 1lespatches from Chetoo. In either case the reports have been rir ceived with otmsiderable exultation " ter the pessimistic rumors repeated abroad from foreign sources last week. It seems apparent that the Japanese ad. vance again" Gen. Kouropatkin was timed simultaneously with the assault upon Port Arthur. The exact date of the v',',',,';,':)):,','?,?,,,',,?:) in thi tale am is t as the memos of" _teg,tu,i:iot1A,','l TGjaLi. Three Days' Assault on Port Arthur Ends Disastrously to the ans. Cheioo, Aug. 3, 11 a. m.--A desperate three days' assault on the inner defence on the northern and eastern side of Port Arthur has failed. _ - A Russian states that the earth trem- bled under the terrific otuusonadintr, which began July 26 and ended during the night of July 28, When the battle commenced a Chinese who had arrived here on 8 separate junk confirms the Russian statement that the Russians killed and wounded during the assault number five or six thousand. The Jap- anese. in their repeated assaults against the eastern forts on the hills through barbed wire entanglements and over mines, displayed fanatical bravery. They were mowed down by the hail of the shells and bullets and the explosion of mines under their feet. Their losses are estimated at twenty thousand. The Rus. sian declared that the Russians held all the eastern forts lending to Golden Hill, and that the Japanese, shattered and ex- hausted. retired to the eastward. As related by the passengers from the two junks, the Japanese advance, which began from Kwokan before daybreak on July M, was directly against Kirwan, Kingishan and Piehtoushan forts lying near shore. The Russian outposts were driven back. In the meantime Admiral Togo shelled the forts at long range, but the return fire of the forts kept his ships at a safe distance, rendering the eo-operation of the fleet ineffective. On the morning of July M, the Rue- sian fleet steamed out, kovping under the protection of the Golden Hill guns. The assault on the northern side of the city occurred July 27. The, Japanese left at Hslkmx advanced on the Russians at Shinshi Ying. but were, repulsed. The junks were within hearing distance for three days after leaving, but no more firing was heard. The Russian hospital at Port Arthur is said to be swamped. Thousands of wounded are lying in houses and shops of the Chinese, the owners having been one from Argentina. The Kasuga on May 15 collided with and sank the Jalr nnese cruiser Yoshino, only ninety of the latter's crew t1',5g',Tid; Both the Ka. suga and the Kiss in have taken part in bombardment, of Port Arthur. The Kasuga was of 7,700 tons’ displace- ment, carried a crew of 500 officers and men, and mounted one 10-inch gun, two 8-ineh, fourteen 6-inch, ten Tineh, and eight smaller rapid fire guns. She had six inches of nickel-steel armor. - The Russian vessels did ribt fire on the Japanese ,aud soon returned to their arwhorage. up“; t mm ATTACK 0N PORT ARTHUR. ATTACK FAILS. CONTRABAND. I Taking this contention into considera- tion. the Imperial Government decided ito liberate the cargo and vessel. This decision must not, however, be inter- lpreted as a. renunciation by the Imper- ial Government of its intention to des- patoh cruisers and warships in genera'. Russia Gives Reasons for Her Capture and Release. St. Petersburg, Aug. 2.-lhe text of the Russian Government's statement re- garding the release of the British steam- er Malacca, seized in the Red Sea by the Russian volunteer fleet steamer St. Pet. ersburg, is as follows:. From the beginning of the Russo-Jap- anese war, the Imperial Government took measures to prevent the transport of contraband of war to Japan by ves- sels of neutral countries. In the regula- tions sanctioned by the Emperor Feb. M, 1904, which Russia proposed to follow during the war, a list was given of the articles regarded by us as contraband. It was also declared that the military and marine authorities would reserve to themselves the right of rigidly executing the decisions contained in the regula- tions for naval prizes, sanctioned by the Emperor March 27, 1895, and in the in. structions confirmed by the Council of the Admiralty Sept. 20, 1900, regarding the procedure for stopping, visiting and seizing as well as for the carrying off and delivering over of vessels and car- goes seized. The volunteer fleet vessels St. Petersburg and Smolensk having re- ceived a special command the term of which has now expired. on proceeding to their destinations acted in aceordurnee with the above decision, ond while pass- ing through the Red Bea stopped and vis- ited all suspected vessels encountered in those waters. "It was under these conditions that the commander of the St. Petersburg stopped, among others, the British steamer Malacca, the captain of which refined to show his ship's papers relating to the cargo. a refusal which led to the seizure of the vessel and the decision to send her to Libau. with the view of throwing light on the matter. Never- theless. in view of the ofiieia statement oi the British Government that the Mal. aeea was carrying British cargo, the Im- perial Government, acting in agreement with the Britiih Government. decided that a fresh visit should be paid to the seized vesael at the nearest port on its route in the presence of the British Con- sul. This visit occurred at Algiers. The British Consul-General officialy certified that the military stores on board con- tinued to be the property of the British Government, and that the rest of her cargo was not contraband of war. Russian cruisers hull n) difficulty in cluding him. I The cruisers steamL-l up and dawn in front of the Jam'm-ec capita. but saw nothing of the opt-my's warship'. Ai- though the Ruu‘m veoels 1cul only three doors throu th which to make home ---the Straits of L'orea, ‘a Perotts Strait and Tsugaru Strut, which apparently could easily ham: ben roacliml by vice. Admiral Kamimntr vessels-And luck pursued the Japanese admiral .awl thr The last mentioned two were a. rrying contraband, and hal nearly reached their destination, Yokohama, but were almost without coal, and it was. there. fore, impossible to send them to Vladivo- stock. VLADIVOSTOCK SQUADRON. Returns to Port Arthur, Having Raided the Japanese Cont. Vladivostock. Aug. ".-Che Vladivo- sbock cruiser divisi m returned to port at 4 o'clock yesterday aftrernouu. They captured, during their cruise. ihc steam- er Arabia, and destroyel some. schoon- ere, a small Japanese steamer, one Ger. man steamer and one British steamer. The Russian Government has not yet made any further reply in the case of the British steamer Knight Commander (sunk by the vladivostoek squadron off Izu), but it is said that a reply will shortly be made, as the v1tidivoistoek squadron is now back in port. All prece- dents bearing on the destruction of neu- tral vessels carrying contraband, when it is impossible to have them taken before a prize court, are being examined. hnsdowne had instructed Sir Claud Bird. in‘f‘e, the British Ambassador, to protest to ussia against the inclusion of food- stuffs in the list of articles declared eon- trabsnd, probably referred to the pro- test presented by the Ambassador a meth ago. . _ GENERAL KUROKI, Who Has Defeated the Russians in Two Severe Engagements. THE MALACCA. TORONTO ":-'tfsiiji#,e"i't.eigit'rV8 An interesting detail evidencing the fierceness of the artillery duel south of Ifai Cheng, July IH, is the fact that the Russian batteries on the left flank fired 4,842 shots in four hours. New Rochelle Good Templar: Carried the Coffin of Their President. After the service at the house, which was conducted by the Rev. Dr. Saul 0. Curtice, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, they carried the coffin out to the hearse and marched to the cemetery. At the cemetery they took the casket from the hearse, carried it to the grave, where each dropped a bouquet of flow. ers on it. The Average Will Not Be Up to Last Year's. Winnipeg, Aug. 8.--The latest crop bulletin from the Northwest Territories, issued from Regina under date of July 20, states that while indications are for a fair crop of wheat and oats, the average yield will not be up to that of last year. Drouth during the months of June and July prevented growth, end the straw will be short. In view of the inability of the Rusnilns to hold Simouclleng, it is considered un- likely that Generals Zaroubaieft and Sta. kelberg will attempt to offer stubborn resistance to Hai Cheng. It is possible that they are already retiring on An. shanshan (also written AnschanLschtut, half way between Hai Cheng and Lino Yang), as indicated in them dospatches last night. There is reason to believe that all of Gen. Oku's divisions are ad. vancing from New Chwang on Hai Cheng, with the view of flanking and cutting off Gen. Stakellierg's retreat, but this move- ment is not likely to succeed on account of Ntakellrerg's ability to retire north- ward on Anshanshan. New Rochelle, N. Y., Aug. 8.--At the funeral of Mrs. Agnes Green here yes. terday six of her women friends were pull-bearers. The women ore members of the Independent Order of Good Templars, of which Mrs. Green was the local Presi- dent. They were dressed in white with black sashes. which is the next position in the dime. tion) Lino Yang, __ . The failure of the garrison at Simon- chong to retreat along the northern road grobably was due to the presence of tho .apanese column flanking the late Gen. keller's corps from the south. Official despaiehes detailing the gagement are hardly expected till evening. Gen. Count licller’s position at Ikhavuen (east ot Lino Yang), and Yangtse pass (30 miles east of Liao Yang), but heavy fighting continues on both the southern and eastern fronts. the object of the Jap- anese in the east being to flunk Gen. Keller'b corps from the south and north, which is easily possible. The progress of the enveloping movement may have fore. ed the corps to retire on Liandiansian, Unable to Hold Simoucheng Russian Will Retreat Northward, St. Petersburg. Aug. ft, 1.52 p. m.---The feling at the War thrice here to-day was distinctly gloomy this morning. No official telegrams had been 10 eived by the general stuff from Gen. Kouropatkin, who was communicating direct with the Emperor, but from private sources It the front it already was apparent that Simoucheng (15 miles south southeast of Hui Cheng), at the juncture of the Feng Wang Cheng-Siuyeu roads, bad been lost, Gen. Sttrkellserg's outposts having fallen back to Hai Cheng. No word was received enabling the staff to either confirm or deny _the reported capture of the late to prevent ‘the carrying of contraband for our enemy." Battle is Being Fought. St. Petersburg, Aug. R.--.A11 the mili. tary critics this morning take the View that the decisive moment of the cam- paign has arrived. The army organ says that Gen. Kuroki prepared for his ul- vanoe by drawing in his forces, which were scattered over a front of forty miles. The paper says it is evident that a. large Japanese force is working along the tgaimattsur-Litur Yang line. It ex- presses doubt, however. which advance of the enemy will push home, and whether it is Kuroki’s intention to try to flank Kouropatkin north or south of Lino Yang. - The Russ says: The decisive moment has arrived, but, judging from the lateet reports, the Russians have retained their positions, and this time it will not be an order to retreat. WOMEN WERE PALL-BEARERS. THE DECISIVE MOMENT. m. 'sr'.Y ONLY A FAIR CROP. A GLOOMY FEELING. 3i; That the Supreme en- the A Toronto Woman's Deliberate Attempt at Suicide. Toronto, Aug. 8.---A young and good looking woman created something of a sensation last evening shortly after 6 o'cloek by jumping into the Humber River from the platform of Devin's boat house, just northwest of the Humber bridge. The lady end her eacort went to the Humber early in the afternoon to enjoy the holiday. but something hap- pening to ruffle her feelings she loudly exclaimed that she was going to throw herself into the water. and, running down the plank sidewalk to the boat house, promptly did my. There was quite a crowd of pleasure-seekers gath- ered at the boat house, who saw the woman go into the water. £25: County Constable George Simpson plunged into the water to the rescue, and succeeded in reaching the young we. man, and brought her safely to shore. Her escort. when questioned. stated that the woman’s name was Mrs. "Is- king, and gave her address an 77 Elm street, and said ho was her husband. Neither ntuue nor address can be veri. fied by the directory. In a couple of hours, however, the Indy had sufficiently recovered to proceed home. The county constable is looking for her to lay I charge of attempted suicide. She Crone: Ocean m Ball Dress and Without Baggage. New York, Aug. 8.--A young woman who made the trip from Antwerp on the Red Star Line summer Kroonland in a ball dress, and without baggage, is now held on board that vessel await- ing permission of the immigration tut. thorities to land. She gave her name as Mrs. Constance l'nelnn, and her last address as Cheltenham, England. The ship's officers know nothing about her, except that she came aboard at Antwerp, followed by two men, each bearing a case of mineral water. She. declared that she was going to the Hot Springs of North Carolina, but had only thd G. n-nnnn CL- __3- I --- - ti in money. She said she did not cr. aetly know why she came to America. as she had hoard the baths were better in South Africa. and that she would have preferred to go there. Her {oth- er. she said. was James Hunter, tg' pro- minent chemist of Aberdeen, Scotland, and her mother an American, whore maiden name was Laurn Prince. She showed . letter from Ikin & Crowther. Chicago, Aug. 8.--Four Ingnwnymcn, all heavily armed and two of them wear- ing masks, last night held up the_pss' sengers on the Illinois Central’s Chicago and St. Louis express train, known u the "Diamond Special,†on the outskirts of Chicago as it neared Matteson, Ill. The robbers secured all the money and valuables carried by the thirty passen. 11ers in the two Pullman sleepers., stopped the train and escaped in the darkneas. The forward sleeper was entered first, The occupants were aroused, and with nothing on but their night clothes were marched back to the Pullman car be- hind. Two of the passengers who were slow in responding to the commands of the robbers were hit on the heads with a hatchet, and one was seriously in- jured. It was impossible last night to ob. tain the names of the injured passen- rs. , Jiie: the passengers in the two can dbeen lined up in the rear Pullman two of the robbers stood guard, one at each end of the car, with drawn revolvers. The third one. who is supposed to have been the leader, ordered the psssen rs, who had been compelled to bring lie/it their clothes from the first car. to throw the garments on the floor of the car. The passengers in the rear car were then commanded to return to their berths and dispose of their clothing in the same way. Then the leader with the utmost coolness began to search the clothing for valuables. When he had fin- ished this search he made a close ex- amination of the passengers for run money they might have secreted. . râ€.-- n, The colored elevator boy, whose care- lessness is said to have been the cause of the accident. was arrested on a charge of homicide; and will be arraigned in the Adams street court to-day. Hundreds of women shoppers and shop girls wit. nessed the death of Mrs. Betts. and half a dozen women were being carried into the women's waiting room when Coro- nnr Huhortp viewed the body of. yrs. New York, Aug. 8.--TBe no» u... morning says: Caught by the neck in the doors of the elevator in the hue- ment of the department store of Abru- hnm & Strum, in Fulton street, Brook- lyn, Mrs. Ella B. Bette, 45 your: old, was pulled upward until her body struck the ceiling, and was then thrown with terrific force into the elevator pit. Her neck was broken and her head was almost torn from her body. When doctors reached the store they could only pronounce the woman dead. nessed the denih of Mrs. Betts. and nun a dozen women were being carried into the women's waiting room when Coro- ner Flaherty viewed the body of Mrs. Betta he" an hour after she was killed. An attempt was made. to keep the death fifom publicity, and information was de. niod it the store Two of the Passengers Badly Hurt by the Train fl Who Went Through the Passengers' Clothes. Her Neck Broken and Her Head Almost Torn Off in a Department Store in Sight of Hundreds of Women. -.----------------" Passengers on the " Diamond Special" of the Illinois Central Lined Up in a Pullman and Robbed. 'iiiiiaii" YORK WOMAN KILLED IN M ELEVATOR. ii:jiin"iiii, acgrchlmd been completed JUMPED IN THE HUMBER. AN ECCEn new WOMAN, Pauengcn Robbed. Four highwaymen, The Press this -----. 1lt'ttaburg.--A cross bill to its suit against the “intern Union Telegraph Co. In. been filed in the U. Fl. Circuit Court by the Ptnntrylvarritt Co. Tb. yn “In the curt for a perm-111:1} m Jumstton against the defendant gamma"? to restrain it from using any portion of telegraph line- ulong the line of the an“ I “my Railroad. The train. which left Ohivagu at 9.27 o'eloeir, carried many tM"rPtW't's" for the St. Louis Fnir, and air remained on tho train, despite their experience. “but: other passenger, a boy 13 year. old, was but partly awake. and the shot startled him. Be. too, was slow, and when I. bandit told him to get into the aisles, the robber struck him with a hat- chet. He was cut severely. “The, drove att the min to the amok- ing (,'g,'rti",'.'t',t; and there two of then search us while the other" sum guard at the doors. They took $100 from me and m from I m nut me. I - those were the largest individual am- ounts they obtained. They searched the women who were nuke. but did not bother those who were in the berths where the curtains were drawn. In the second Pullman there were only five or six passengera. and ther had an osperi- ence- like the rest of up." At the solicitation}! her husband. whe new?!" misses n Sunday game. and upon Which she did not look with favor. Mrs Gndley mmpaniod him. They (u'l'llpiU 0. seat in the front of the grand stand Just after the game Mann! Chute it“ " the ttmt bull. which flew ovvr the catcher’l head, Gridley reached out to 'top it. The lull pulled him Ind muck his mW, The men must have bonded the train at Harvey, for we were but tt few miles out when they apparel! at the door of the last Pullman, Ltd, curaing the brake. mun and porter, ordered them into the smoking compartment. They went through the car and ordered all the mm out. At first the men seemed u: think the affair a joke, 1nd did not, hasten. One of the bandits then fired into e berth whose occupant Wu! Mower then the rest. He came mumbling out in a. hurry, and the rest responded more rap- idly to the orders after that. Foul Tip Cmuhed Ber Cheat and Broke Severn In». Syracuse, Aug. ft.--Her chest erurhed Ind several ribs broken b.x a foul tip (mm the blt of Lrft-fielder Chute, of 1M Symon“; State League team. during u 'tttttte .xratetxitty with the Binghnmmn nine, Mm. William Gridloy. of 625 Mm- 1ey.tt.teet, is ft the point of death. t tsolicitors, of Lincoln's Inn Fields, Lott. don, which had evidently boen “Tune. Mme time, and which declared that the woman had In annuity of 153.000 and Bodies of Dublin Pauper: Sent to Col- lege for Diuection. Dublin, Aug. g.--Dublin [maple have been shocked to lean: that unclaimed dead bodies are sent from the work- house to the dismerting table. At a meeting of the North Duhlill Guardians of the Poor yesterday. one of the members broadly alleged that le or " bodies went each month to the College of Surgeons. and that some official. derive an income of probably $500 a year out of this traffic. It was authoritatively mlmltmd yer" terdny that the unclaimed bodies of pupa-s tkre, ttettt from Dublin union. to three schools of surgery-Trinity, College. the College of Surge-mi. and the University School of Medicine. "The robbers secured more than $1,000 in money end valuables. I Particulars of the Affair. Chicago, Aug. 2.--E. R. Grace, Superin- tendent of Telegraph of the Illinois Cen- tral, who was one of the men robbed, left the train at Kalhkee And notified the Illinois Central Railrocd detectives in Chiongo. The Ishtar notified the con- tral police, and detoetivea were sent out on 0 train to WI the search for the robbers. Superintendent Grace’s story. as told at Kunkukee, wu u (allow: that her debts would tie cared for. Some hundreds of bodies have been disposed of in this way. but it in de. uied that the officials are influenced by nny pecuniary inducements. Th (00 that is paid by the surgical othorities is to cover the cost of registration, re- moval and subsequent burial. "h, 4tte.r, tingwg§lrlgié1iiv operations the body, it is Shad, in properly intorred, engines, in mponne to the sign-J, brought the train to . Stop and seeing noth' of the remainder of the crew, walk? back to the rear of the train to “Win what was the maul-r, that he learned of the robbery. No attempt wu made to rob the mail or exprnu can. darkness. nil the booty w ttrf, in n flour sack, sud the three nob joined their com. psalms, who had stood guard in the vestibule of the trail. Pulling the bell rope, the signal to the engineer to stop w" given, and when the speed of the train had shunned sufficiently the rob, hers, after having locked the doors of the can, jumped off and fled in the So systematic was the work of the robbers, sud with so little 'tonfuriiort, that the train crew was unaware of what was going on. It was not until the WOMAN INJURED BY BASEBALL TRAFFIC IN DEAD. b'kea' 4ity'r Robbers Ix "Oh. yes. of om Ind to Too, wax pause "But mum. tttat ? HU ward. nrdaon. is :1 mm panama. cum-J " round half million1 as d thone any: on ttunits cotter- mm It mnrrmm J â€d -tut of Mr. “(‘0 have m: tow months hence. "You. Walter, I - do†not up union gran-1y , how. too, that In ohhtet'o" to Four --tter bu always I): to me. and would Hit. urnqnumn H digthrm-rfhl cm qumm-xy Jan up. 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