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—— ighting at Yushu and Nagna Passes Results in Terrible Slaughter—Both Armies Are Exhausted by Heat and Forced to Rest. SEONDON, Aug. 5.—The terrific heat prevatling through the battles | marked the close of July and the beginning of August exhausted both and Japanese armies. 4 Comparieons of all the report received from the fleld indicate that the ale fighting was done at Yushu Pass, on the Saimatsze road, and at ‘Pass, between Bimoucheng and Halcheng. Gen, Herechelmann held Pass against terrific and desperate assaults until he was ovar- by numbers. One single regiment Jost 25 per cent. in dead before ‘The Russiane lost 700 men at Simoucheng alone, while the Jap- Joss there was probably 800, ‘The unfortuncte Gen. Zassalitech was in command at Nanga Pass with > @ dewly formed corps of 18,000 men, including the Thirty-first Division of | the Teath European Corps and two Siberian battalion: Gon, Zassalitch’s misfortune at the Yalu River was duplicated owing to the superiority of the Japanese artillery. He was making a splendid fight wiitfl Be suddenly discovered that the Japanese gunners were enfilading his batteries, It appears that Zassalitch in this case was not to blame, oy ‘The information that Gen. Zaroubateff has received orders to retire had yet reached him with his own orders for withdrawal of the Russian of the right, and consequently he allowed the Japanese to take up & Haw position, suddeniy unmask batteries and overwhelm the Russian gun- Bers, who made desperate efforts to remove their pieces, but were compelled to leave six of them behind. A despatch to ure Japanese Legation from Tokio to-day announced Abat Gen, Kurvi:i extimates the Russion casualtios at the Lattle of Yushu! Pee ‘and Yangze Pass at at least 2400. The Japanese captured eight off- > cere and 149 men, two field guns and many rifies. ts EVENING WORLD RACE CHART ; FIFTH DAY AT SARATOGA. | Phe Kvening World's charts are indexed from arat race at Aquedact, ¢ added; handicap; for mares Grving. Time 113-8. Winner ti ae ar i Mi Flying Dutehman— 44. Wonderly 108 a ly Amelia, Ascension. Chr ; hung on well, Letola ma as antret Se? 7 if Pin. Opa: Helneoon 134 a - hi ‘Ny i i q Jack Lory would have won | . badly inthe str etch: Agile made up 6 tot = 414 nat. ine |. but tired nina. beta around" for R ce OC added; selltt three-year-olds: | — i i ¥ cual le Fie EL Hinkel, SET TP Se che US, ge that fate } | Boara ot Health—Residents in East 1OIst “tine Boman whose socal right places _Hiiteneock. consi ei t I j her in the Five Hundred and Pitty, Jockeys “Wi Ht hh Fin. “Open Clon Pi on Street Say Sleep Is Impossible. Wiiose Wealth could command every lux- rk 10) i a’ 4s ft ? Ky 4 ury that a ianciful daughter of the 4 ie ae 1 _\¥_>—_ ——@——— ren might invent, has cuosen rather os 7 if | : the path of philantaropy, and It ie a2 oe bh S ’ ‘ ; The nightly concerts of elghty cuts, She had at chat thme but three cate|, werk ‘¥ me trey I New York and New Jersey Dis-|Miss Norma Hamitton Went] once tean, hungry and homeless, but und thece servinta fer'name ta het to fevereacere™ ot | now fat, “sassy” and vacally strenuous, | Svon she offered the small boys of the| Groul-mred-granodaughier of — th wm 4 eos 5 1 i" b t 190 f +H oe tributing Company, Raided by Through Regular Examinas | sheltered in the home of Miss Ewen, at | neighborhood ten cents (or each stray, Criginal Zoha Jaco lor, withvan jn: te Ra # ' ' No. 1% East Une (Hundred and First | hungry, homeless fellits they should | Waldort Astor, Col Jona Jago Aen ro : t the Police, Wins in the Brook-| tion Before Being Admitted to st:ect, rorm the baxis of a complaint| bring ier, «ate began to. disappear SP ponte whence Kane, wrandaigoter 2 == \ " | elghbors to the | fron und ala of John Ward, the famor f Gold Dome Overweight Fhe Glove” 1) Glisten, &, Balle of Maile lyn Supreme Court. Membérship in Corps, Sav ef pontrlia ae ute. Ne ae Peete sgt aun of Mer. Coleman Drayton Say menace ‘ The petition to the Beard of Health |Moll-fed kittes—ahe wanted homeless} Sheer" en gar, sbanler, “who — nes; nd Armstrong Chanler, wh. ab Gratin os | wns circulated. by Jacob Thorman, of [unis Were ineuructed {0} married Amelie Rives, & woman throug by Bir Diton-- | Juatice White, in the Supreme Court Tong Boach, Long Island, claims the| No. 1, and J. Kaplan, who lives in I To-day there are eighty cate playing bday b yin) he bleed oF She Stuy- * 1 Bin Geen. Cics Pi Brooklyn, to-day teaued a peremptory | first woman ever regularly enrolted in| No. 07 Eagt One Hundred and First eras ie by we BY day and olding the Rutherror ney the’ Weachrone eke 4, Martin 328 hp ‘4 writ of mandamus directing the Now 4 tife-saving corps in the country, and | "eet Plenty of Me-owlag, devoted tae) iO Reeety ahd hes Crimmins 104 rm iy York Telephone Company to restore the Gétinetion is 1b ‘ It is mot that we object to Miss pore tly sams cat, WR Ok to charity, ‘ : oI Aeigatenod by . cusionally. i a ‘yer is 8 Of gg Wes serine 1a The See Tove Gnd New! sas soation of the tn wting y c © | Bwen'e humane impuises in caring for] seqiays of anottier nopruno, or & bass Mi Wecerated by Congress, 3 gt $ Jersey Distributing Company, whore; _dositton 49K] all the stray and homeless felines of] sill feel himsole losli.g proatige in the #3 Chanler is one of the few women ff i » he offices were In the Park Row Building. | “Oman Wi ae Aiea the mop hpee! the neighborhood, but the noite of her} ov14 of Mis tnamornia then A tent whe have been decorated by Coneress i iN Last May the New York & New Jersey | . hy esaver and Old 8€&) Hers i4 someihing wonderful. It ir . 4 $e q J ee Distributing Company was raided by “Of, WToUNG Tong each, evough to drive’m strong man with 1 alee ertris like bela een et tet ole art. Lady Potente. Prince Salm Balm Inspector Schmittberger and the tele! yo1 i) 00 fat avis ee ig Bosch | newly-signed pledge in the pocket to arheot, vat Was age Red Cross nurse that she Saban seineninanashenteceneaimesinc phone instruments removed. | Norma’ Hamilton, the daughter of Mrs, | rink. fall-cut, and-he | War, and A(ter that aie served Wn the 7 epee = Lawyers Daniel O'Rielly and Maurice | 1 ian G. Hamilton, whose town house fats of All Kinds, i refuses to listen to the com-| Philippines and next in Chine during ) FIFTH RACE—8600 added; selling; for {neve year -olte and up; mile and three. | Me ho conducted the fight againat | /; Pag gy ” ai y, " “There are bass cats und soprano] plaints of her neighbors, She suys she| the boxer uprising, fe aixieenthe, Start poor won driving. Time—2#! 2-6. Winner bo ¢, ty Cherie. | meever whe ; jis at No, 6) Central Park West, When : , sa member of the Anti-Vivisesth Instead of neeking pastimes in soc Owner—J. A. Kyle 5 the company, were elated over thelr | 41 evening “World reporter called at} CAt#, trnor cate and contralto cats, but Siciety nt New England und the Bf, | blessures Misa Chenier. learned ane Sockeye. Wi 8. 4 WT Fis, pen Dine PL mn | Victory som. | the picturesque Hamilton exinmer home ;there 18 no feline Congied to drill them| ++ of Now York, and will continue | duties of @ surgical nurse the cre ‘} Soh fh £ 43], Me New York and New Jersey Com) oo che Merrick road, Lynbrook, to-day [ah4 make them sing {n unison or har-| to rescue and care wing and / Money which others. spent on cottons : Lee ie “4 3 &3| pany was but one of many whion adh Mer mony. I fond of goot fs. but [| homeless anumals as long as she wishes a @ wave to the wounded 1.) Oliphant 168 i s the expectation of seeing a decidedly ¥. Tam fon « must, bu b, \c ‘ r - ‘ort Potentate ). Travers to, 4 gh i ty j S$) raided last May by order of Commis-| i cir ond exaggerated type of the |B) not consider eighty cats singing in] (N4, Wihout reward to What the neigh- | Mire, bo i or Sue aapelee haa bag Htgprand oy 42 42° 118 j sioner MoAdoo. It was gb hat tnt | outdoor girl was changed into. the! eighty Reys and eighty kinds of time RS Hicalth Department Inapector visited Up ner whole tlie (othe wounded ua ce im hen Y Fischer ® 4 pr M 4 isseminat- | ' ! ” the use, hut gave ye nela’ ith les oome ie, wees Cormack 1 8 ay She d Hespdbvrp tends sn Moye rong |Tentisation Of beholding as artiatic a} good music. Herr Gott! No, hope of relief. ° He ie iuedthbors Httle | nig to volunteer’ again. Upoa het ne: H. Phillies 16 BOG $] ing poot-room information to Its patrons |type of a summer girl as ver stepped | Mien Ewen moved into the three-story | citte see how his department could ine we Ry ib Blatter receiving reports drom the T8Cel trom a Hamilton King picture brownstone house at No, 105 a vear amo. | terterr Miss Chanler is a member of t ? Wonteriv iit ae ont ig $4) crack. Several oMeers of the company] Miss Norma Hamilton ts nineteen Women's Municipal League ‘and is ‘a Ricboo—Bir Shen. Champlain. Mount ehank. Go Between aad “Asesiic, Keynote | were arrested at the tine, but In the ran oe os ii agteitatbyry aan Through the thick coat of tan, which| tiful young roctety girl-member of Conk'ing seemed to hang in the leat nd weltings two ye Time-108 en Wine M RACE—9900 added: seliin 1 five and a balf furlo by _Kingston—-Merry for maidens, as Start fair Dance we oe Owner-—F. w 110 wanes © nae ate ye Kune Wonterty Frasch 110 _ Smiling Alice Cotifion wad” doth mem the homes treten RATOGA ENTRIES FOR TO-MO Sous: { s| ” Berean. jeraiches— Delusio: fans, bored haley m her ‘bess at the ona RROW. A~e to The Bvening World) Fourth Re ‘TOGA. > Aug, 5.—The en- | Sygeyeare! races are as fol | ya? sorcuey 4870) Delhi ie Larve-vear-olde and up, (502) Waterboy a fouhmats' ent Tristeh tan ol irdie . je Carlo.) —~ Judge “ Meverwick; a Phantom... 4 Aurumarter | ‘as inom Wich. h insh, Witch. i Canteen i28 Bir Bhap. | Cones Maidtod Quer Maid 108 aa ty "t Agnes DY Y EVENING, AUGUST 5, 1904 THE WORLD: FRIDA HOW THE JAPANESE ARMIES ARE MOVING TO ~ | White wi saying that tibath Tighe, Brennan and Bhire also jean remember, and | don't see A5y-! saig sige Hamilton, “Of course I yhall' Perhaps that is the reason I am #0 ented attidavi thing wonderful ebout it. When 1 only eerve tn the summer, as we go|fond of outdoor exercise, You dont he distributing company was rep-|@ little bit of a girl we spent our 9um-| back to New York in September, I ex: Bay Pee Loree Cis hae bd resented by its attorney, Dan O'Rellly,| mere in Maine, and I learned (0 SWIM) Ke iy go on guard with the reat of fteesn and the country in the winters He fought the police and teleph me in the Iakes Of srvesa, Brees the evew avary Ghy eee time.” feknlisa's Gohid 4h tka aoe company in the various suits tastiiuted. | swimming is much rder thy a " ss Hamilton's wi rastie White pondered over the argu: | water, 80 it eeems strange to me that] .,/" speaking Hlevvilne Meoniae aa th ve aroused, go. much interest. that think f undrasand the mituaton « f te L 4) Albert has temple Gen hot one company was ill cxamiialon of athde need o; further talk « bv poop tle of th on on ali points. replevin taken th the pale ad were discharged, and now deen ordered one company has the service. leph — HUNTING LOST BROTHER. Misa Daley 1. From “Sur ANNIHILATE OR CAPTURE GENERAL KUROPATKIN’S FORCES, Kuropatkin {s defeated In the bactle (hat seems co be ins Kuroki, with 100,000 men, ts a Diust elther move westward in disastrous retreat or | forces; Gen. Oku, with an army of 50,060 men is om their fromt; while flanking them on the !ef: is Gen. Nodau, with his division of 50,000 men ‘GETS BACK RACE. ‘Gl fudsequent legal proceedings they were Mischarged by Justice Gaynor sitting In the Supreme Court of Hrooklyn. The argument to-day before Justice Haat Lec ed Vice-President of the New Yor FaTepntes Company, presented affidavits the service of the dis- @ very snort time, and atter t e sehies. They nd got the Bigé, of No a1? West! Hundred and Twenty-fre: rdny appealed to The W find her brother Albert, who disap-! peared from his home last Saturtay. | Who Was dressed tn a ar and low shoes, if oat _on Saturday? Fourteent a a on hy ox nis he instru. If Gen, evitable surrender, directly behind the Russian | PORTIFIED POSITION: <J RUSSIAN LUNE OF RETREAT H chin GUNBOATS ON THE LIAg RIVER: A varanese: 4 RUSSIANS: Neighbors Complain of 80 AL LIFE-SAVER is far frem being unbecoming with her pee "Hae dhe tousslavee ber evures| dark eyes and hatr, the red of her| resemblance to the actress, spat can {cheeks show through, Indicating the ise GaivadBeer Us “It's really true that {1m a member | Axe “winter” coloring that the society of the life-saving corp sald Miss girl has when the tan wears off. Hamilton, who is as brown as 4 Pr Hepes to Do Good, and lithe and graceful of figure. “I! «7 ay nope 1 will be able te do some have been able to swim ever since 1 | xooa since I have foined the corps,” laughed Mise Hamilton, “though wa: Police father's side who was an Indian kin, women do not swim at Long more Meach. 1 ewim at Long Beach all the time and sometimes siay in the water all day, One ay the Inepector for the Volunteer Life caving Compe asked me to go through rome testa and then he asked sae to join. Piret, I had to swim tn the breakers --but that was ¢aay, Then 1 took out the lifeboat and catamaran alone with. vat upsetting It.” has many challes women swimmers who wish to the young heiress in a match race. not mmtion the fact that she broke the local record for a halfnile #wim in rough water and outdid all the male competitors in deer sea diving when Inspector Brown, | the district, put her through the tenis ‘The Hamilton home at Lynbrook is always Cile@ with Mise Norma's gitt friends, andthe rumabouts, carriages and horses with which the big barn at the end of the shell road, winding down the lawn, past the white, said t rhe ¢ may Workm jadiy Injured W Lashings of Supports Gave Way. Three workmen were badly by being Prisoners pratheg bas! Pog Pada Rayer the | cottage, ts filled are always in use. at No, 2 East Forty-third surest this SEC sant anette ‘ite-bang the other day Miss Flomitton'*) airs, Hamilton, & beautiful woman| afternoon, The injured men are Thomas ments. ‘The beautiful young sciety : / _—_— eet, in tir], who Ie an hetress in her own right is one of the moet altractive figures at the summer resert. When she rides ‘over for her duy In the water she al woye wears white duck sallor sults, With fobing collars, turned back from | 9 well-mouhed throat, tanned brown by A, ENE | the wind and oun, 4-| Misa Hamfiton 19 not afrai# of raining «| her compeunion aa ves out of old daughter, is proud of the new life, savers’ ability to ewim. Next f *, et Thy ire Hamilton's devotion ts for her white/ley's t wi on. pony Foxy. qwhor she takes @ long carved f com Lanes 4. ride every day. One day when she was a her love for the water, Missin wan Inat street Cats Kept by Miss Ewen Sign a Petition and Send the Complaint to the the Life-Saving Corps bears a striking “IT haven't a bit of French blood, way back before the Dutch settled in New York I had an ancemor on my lly” Leggett, of the life corps, ed nges from meet a —— THREE FELL WITH SCAFFOLD injured arried down with « collaps- ine scaffold in fromt of the new bulld- rambling | ing of the American Bxpress Company to be the mother uf a nineteen-yeat-| wom: wifty-sixth etreet; Corneliue Bar- ron, forty-seven years oid, of No. 19 Second avenue, and John McGloin, of Mure re the Jem were ees SAT HOME OR IAL TTS Margaret Livifigston Chanler Converts Her Riverside Drive Mansion Into Retreat for Con- valescent Poor Children. CHARMING ROOF GARDEN AND PLOT IN PARK. -1A Daughter of the Astors, This Philanthropic Woman Turns from Society to Devote Her Life to Humanitarian Works, In @ beautiful mansion on Riverside Dri whose white granite architecture from a grassy knoll overlooking the Hudson, the faces of many Utils children may te seen looking from the bread windows and the enttdish votces of tiny sons and daughters of the poor may be heard as they run through the corridor or scamper out through thi imposing French entrance with a nurse, into the park helow the drive The little children of the poor who are living in this beautiful mansion—the lideal home of the wealthy—are known |to the neighbors as "Miss Chanler's children,’ and the stately residence ts that of Miss Margaret Livingston Chan- ler, or as she is commonly known, Margaret Astor Chanler. The residence is at No, 37 West Sev- enty-fourth street, and Miss Chanter has given it over for the summer—from June to September—to the convalescent children of the poor who have come out of the big hospitals, Children from Christ Church parish, where Miss Chan- ler attends, are, when it is possible, made guests of the wealthy philanthro- pist, Dut little patients from all over New York are given the benefits of the summer home when there is room, ‘erted Into a Ho: al. The entiys second floor of the man- sion {s converted Into a convalescent hospital, and here little white iron cots havo supplanted tae rich furniture, while the heavy carpet is covered with canvas, One salon ts thus converted Into a dormitory ward, another into a dining-room, while sill another is a kindergarten sehoolroom, Everything ia arranged for the chil- dren's comfort, and when rain pre vents them playing in Riverside Park there are big playrooms downstairs, while the roof, which ts arranged as & private roof garden, is filled with cluldren when grass in ¢! damp for the convalescent: On bright days, however, the tots are taken over into the park In a plot bpecialiy set aaide for them, under the care of Mtet Mary McCullough, the tron, ant @ band of nurses. Many of the ehiidron are unable to walk aad thes, are cerried or taken over in pera mburs.tors, The big house is always filled with fourteen to twenty children, and when j these are benefited other little ones are cared for, Children Worship ren, al McCullough, the matron, who HOt only ideuses her patron, but sym- | Pathiaes thoroughly with her work, ia 4 motherly Woman, whom the children NO ORINK FOR THE LADY, Instead, She Was Thrown Out, and Tham She Threw ao Brick, Annie Manning, thirty vears old and homeless, was arraigned in Harlem Court to-day charged with malictous mischief by John Dempsey, a saloon- keeper, of #1 Manhatten strey, who! says that she throw a payingstons | through one of his plategiass windows, causing $0 damage. Dempsey says that the woman antered the saloon soon after it opened this morning, snd after conaumt several drinks boisterous that she was ejected. In| revenge, ne says, she amashed the win- dow, Annie practically admitted the oharge, for she told the Judge: ‘I asked for a drink like a Iady, Your Honor, and they called me a drunken bum and threw me out. Then I threw ys N | TENTH ST.—at became so} | ALEXAN AMAZON FGHTS | SI POLIEMER Stalwart Woman, More than Six Feet in Height, Uses Her Fists Like a Pugilist When Arrested, ’ A Woman who g2 Lisale Sedo, thirty-six years old, of No 539 East One Hundred and Thirty-fitth street, appeared in the Morrisania Po- Nee Court to-day to answer a charge of drunk and disorderly, In the court | when she appeared were aix policemen, éach one of whom bore @ black eye of some other token of the combat they had with the Amazon in trying to get her into a cell. She ts more than 6 feet in height and built Ike a Greek statue of Juno. Ace cording to the testimony of Polleeman Thompson, she was singing and shout ing at the corner of One Hundred and Thirty-Atth street and Lincoln avenue when he attempted to arrest her. As soon as Thompson informed her that she would have to go to the star tion she told him to take another gueee and ‘anfed a blow on his jaw that sent him sprawling on the sidewalk, And the crowd cheered her on, Thomp+ son rapped for assistance. and Police men Seligman and Peck ran up. “Let ‘em all come!” shouted the Atnazon, as she danced about handing out “tights” and “lefts’ in the ‘mosi approved fashion of the squared circie, She kept the three policemen busy until they were forced to send for patrol wegon. The man who came wits it and the driver were both required ty assist before she coul! be placed in the wagon. At the station-house there was sttt another fight before the woman coult be put in a cell, After being locked in she MMoked on the iron bars of tne door and made night hideous for thi ince ated there. You are Not Fair to your face unless you supply it with the creamy, healing lather of WILLIAMS’ *s'e%sye Williams’ Shaving Sticks and Tablet Tollet Waters, Taicum Powder and Serve) Cream ‘sollet Soap. DleD. FOLEY.—At her residence, 187 Monroe st, MAKGARET, belovet daughter of Hugh and Bridget Foley, Funeral from her late residence, then to St. Mary's R. C. Church, Grand ani Ridge ots, Gaturiay, Aug. 6 where @ solemn requiem mass will be celebrated fog Tepore of her soul at 10 A, M. SHILLINGTON,—On Aug. 4, 1004, after ¢ abort iiness, Mrs, MARGARET SHILL+ INGTON, widow of Henry Shillington. Funera! from the residence of her daugh+ ter, Mrs, Saran Biuilin, 163 Varios st, of Saturday, Avg. 6 at 2PM LAUNDRY WANTS—FEMAL a ARONER—Wanted, oni: Wins assten noe een TR FOULDWRE, experien Hb eet Sth wt, WANTS! WANTS! Branch Offices THE WORLD. Wer the Reception of Advertisements ot Regular Adverusing Ramses ——. MANHATTAN AND BRONX, bey av Neos. 120, 838, 830, rere Ay nae Nos. 448, O51, 1028, AV-—At Nos, 259, 229, a76, 648, 50, 1034, t101, "1 300 i$, joan’ FOURTH AV.—A IVTH AV.—At TH AY.~at 060, TH AV—At No, 3263, 240, 384, 583, fect esa), 2 ; + 760, 802, 2180, NINTH AVat ¥: 74, 880, O04, cor. Bith ae 08%, 835 wast, FOURTEENTH 8T.—At W. 92 Rast, 407 West, om BS Bnet HRTY-SEVENTH SFO At NE anS FORT{-8HCO! FORTTY-EIGHTH av. AVENUE A~At Now Satan ass, C and EB ith at, AMSTERDAM AVe at Morty 290, at 918, 1889. adhe ADWAY—At by Neos. 1364, 1832, 3 AV—At the brick through the window to show them that I wasn't. Magistrate jer held her in $300 bail for trial, Commerce and Labor Oficial Has Stomach Trouble, WASHINGTON, Aug. &—Victor H. Metcalt, Secretary of Commerce and bor, was taken ill with stomach trombie jast night. The services of a ry: needed, and today, ne siclan were (on nena fy 1 ux ER ST, At Hes. 0; 08, 874, | GRAND ST—At Nos, 202, 827, HUDSON ST.—At No, 346. LENOX AV. and 129¢ MADION AV-“At Kon mal At New. 1: ST, ANN'S AY, and than st TREMONT AV. Ne. 748, WILLIS AV.—At Ko. 248, WEST DROADWAY-—At No, a4. t her name as Mra, 4 o