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HN0-0-M AT ORT ARH Japanese Swordsmen Engage Russians with Bayonets, and Resulting Carnage Is Appalling —Russians Repulse Enemy. MIKADO WANTS FORTRESS TAKEN WITHOUT DELAY. Rush of Baltic Fleet Arouses Him to Necessity of Taking Port Arthur Before Its Arrival There, LONDON, Nov. %.—Trained bodies of fwordamen, all fresh recruits in the Tre WORTD: MONDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 28, 1904, HAND-TO-HAND SWORD AND BAYONET FIGHTING IN LAST DESPERATE ATTACK ON PORT ee a | OVA RR eR MTEL NLT ENTE IT TEM TAT POR ARTHUR JOSEPHINE BURNETT. Getting back the “old vigor.” Japanese ranks, are engaging the de- Nothing causes so much discouragement, blues i Shae oh Port Archur ty haod-r-band and despondency as the realization that one ig ie contilots, not #0 vigorous a year ie ‘ ; The battle began on Nov, 26, and the The great trouble is that in a run down i latest advices lead to the belief that condition usually sit back for a while and wait e- i ide t tnaraoainhantenon Hoping will not restore the tired nerves to their ao expected struggle to the death true strength, ray Why the Japanese should have re- The nerves are tired and s have been Sf TR (ot, hiasiaah tas aot bean Mose abused and they won’t do their work in the right , plain, For tho past week it has been wa until they have been fed new power and “ig known that the Russians have been ‘ built back to their old strength ; then you will feel * fo shioft of ammunition that they have BABY STARVING MRS MAYBRICK the old vigor again. ar een firing wood and gravel from their \ You can get back the “old vigor” with Paine’s * gh large guns, It was therefore thought | | gx here, tho theory having ben gained ' Celery Compound quicker than in any known & from the information sent by the cor way. At the besieged fortress. and strength, Get your nerves right and gt: hier Of Japs Frighttul, | “vigor” will be right. » The firing was no more stubborniy .. ' : ¥ met by those handful of men under| Father Dying in Hospital and'Bowed with Grief at Funeral wigntaging 9, worneut person te the old a . Bi 1 th hi e c . 5 : Igo! ise Burnett sume up in een. * . form the breastworks with svord ana| —Dissipated Mother Wandering| Services of Mrs. Densmore, tence exactly what Palne’s Celery Compound es bayonet. It is reported that the car- dees. . Al ' Site ciseke tub Jocuusee G cavtans| Street, Helpless Infant] Benefactress Who Aided Her) Cet, 1, 190% f : LS Tass Live aes adunad: tb Wails Twenty-four Hours, on Return to America, | Welle & Richardson as Seriingen Vi , take Port Arthur, no matter what the n cortainiy the acme of perfection phe ys | - cost. The order was sent to the Jap- to the old vigor, 1 fanese commanders by the Mikado| It !s setdom ¢he police are cated upon! Dr, Emmett Densmore did not go t spring | worked very steadily, from bd when it became known that the Bal-|{° witness the Lon igealld pit’ misery | his wife's funeral to-day, Mra, Florence twelve to fourteen houre @ aay, W hed om 3 tle fleet was bound for the Far East Rasa Me jsp | Maybrick, befriended in her time of — 7 sued tee ui at time, but coon The Mikado realises thet with Port |” the tenement at No. 68 Weet Twenty sia | wo. a18 wast. Tweitth ot tected that excessive labor with lrregular ! Arthur in hia possesion he cen hold oft |CiShth street. There they found » way | trouble by the dead woman, occupying thi thesia: eee the ‘me in meals and too little rest told on my health, ~ General ansaulc wan made on tue ate-| attention, and uey could not peed the|cargnoniam wnlch were 08M AMY) go QO pay | uate Lat ae Geteeeeremmage:| twate’s Warrant Defective When you stop and think of it—there must te noon of Nov. 26, but owing tb the} cries ot the suffering mite voicing its Only three carriages followed the . sf i Ege hs Ge a ote a pretty good reason for Paine’s Celery Com- $ “ x er of the baby, day after day has made| ——___ re Jury fi that the man was | , Ad. ev i thet the report In Chefoo is that (ie te ese ea the little one, |A lanes bunch of rosea was sent by the | to.day released on $2,000 ball each VICTIM OF EXPOSURE. Kinled ‘by the accidental discharge of « doctor in the United States (it is always sent F ’ assault on Port Arthur has been f@|o1 006 were two children born Into hig Cresco Club. : Thomas Brady and Willlam Barnes, | revolver, hopes to age Mg to registered doctors on uest)—that is why it pulsed time and again with heavy] scoiete home, and he had struggled, Mr. Maybrlok’s grief was the mow). dens held on.charge of homicide — or to-morrow Lo er erg : " i ( f all the mourners, She laa ik Vie bearer Garant u counsel, Cheeles B. lee Barbipr, of Man is constantly prescribed by broad-minded doctors ‘ A eon pace Page Mei Mandy e gts fod faa see eceonnaly the services and was tn connection with the death of an une) MA" Fe ee or mia aa Doce) natian, | Barbier, it expected, will ere. This same correspondent says that Fe-/ago to provide warmth and food for| Wert throuhot {Mder.tified mam who was found dying in ware | Mr. 9 Brook: | , r A * pairs are being made to vessels in Ad-| them, bowed with srist when ane enternt ine |front of Edward Sullivan's aaloon | Frank Quing, forty-five years ol, of APPL gs Serie of habe na for hls Remethber this—Paine’s Celery Compound is fespondents on the ground, that the Japanese would have continued to fire the Russians as his army has been heid off by the Russians, and he wants the fortress without delay. Despatches say that the swordsmen were ied over the breastworks by Gens. Gaito and Nakamura, Advices from Tokio would indicate that the Japanese Dave been repulsed time and agala. and withered mouth with @ clawlike ty-seventh street, testified chat they’! natu v ul thi ut u ’ re to perform her work and restore me Baveral basoriariars| 8s Tokio MM pans the gel gcd gg Pegre tl gids were In the saloon drinking at the Claim Made There Is No Evi- to arnermal conaition.. Witbia wees weake dust Issued this statement: For a day thla child had iain there none knew when M wis fo Mite hat, (Bartenders Arrested After time of tho alleged assault and swore) | felt well and strong again and | have had Prepare tor Baltic Fleet. slowly crying ite fife away. Of course | [en Dr. Denantte oe ene Rev Death of Unidentified Man in ‘ts! tity my Barnes tut the dead man, dence to Hold Her for Hus- no trouble since."—Josephine Burnett, 800 “The works for our attack having] there were other mothers in the house, | MULTI Nhs te’ Oates oF ge phil eath of Unidentitie AN IN who was singing and acting jovially,| band’s Death and Magis- Boroist Bidg., St. Louls, Mo. President St, been g@ompleted against Port Arthur and) enemys stubborn resistance our object) Was not accomplished. “The fight still continues.” ome floral pleces, Mrs, Maybrick’s | “You needn't thank me. You’ under \s still in the Queens County Jail on a ‘The correspondent of the Daily Tele-|_ Dying on a cot in Bellevue Hospital | enter ot respect being a large cross of /(Nesses apparently pointing to guilt, nO obligations to me,” said Magistrate oharge of having caused the death of Some few years ago the formula of Paine’s S graph, telegraphing from Chefoo, says miral ‘ogo's fleet, in preparation for ALON ATOM baby boy sprawiing under the ruin of the only chair in the apartmert. ‘The infant was blue with the cold and so thin that the little bones almost | protruded through the flesh, There was 4 fluttering spark of life in the emaci- ated body manifested only in @ con-| vulsive kick and a clutch at the drawn the first coach with two other clos friends of Mrs, Densmore. The ser vices were held in the handsome hous at Mleventh avenue and Eighty-fourt) street, Brooklyn, with only twenty peo ple present, the most intimate of rela tives und friends, but their infants, thelr hungry children | °° and thelr turbulent husbands held their | !0's Eplecopal Ohureh, oMciated at th hunger ard its agony amid the wreck- age of h neglected home. Lett Her Bate t body to the crematory at Fresh Pond. In the third carriage were many hand- Starve. Patrick Gordon, a hod carrier, the fath- white chryeanth me and pink roses, The mother of these obildren, Ellen Gordon, tore down as fast as the toil- MOURNS FRIEND ‘vhere lad been no announcement of TWO ELSE HCE SE Front of Saloon Out on In spite of the testimony of four wit- Magtstratg Pool in the Yorkville Court | Third avenue and Fourtventh street, down and kicked twice after being | thrown from the saloon. Strvangied, Saye Witness. Smith testified that the bartenders) threw the man down and strangled bim, Joseph Briggman, of Elmhurst, L. 1 | and Joe Chidwiseh, of No, #7 East Thir- ‘Dhue blow followed a@ threat to “knock yer head off if you don't @et out.” men's ball, and on receiving permission thanked the Magistrate. Pool, shortly t there No, 168 Bast Twenty-seventh street, was client on the ground that MAS, NOBLE TO SK COURT FOR FREEDOM Mrs, Josephine Leighton Noble, who husband, Paton Noble, although « her la not The reason {s—Paine’a Celery feed i new power to your nerves. It gives ‘hon 3 1 became nervous and Irritable, suffered from headache, heartburn and Indigestion, with loss of memory, and at times everything would become black before my eyes. One of my club friends had been restored Sree the use of Paine’s Celery been cy decided to try it and was ag ly to find how soon It relleved me and E Louls Young Woman's Literary Club. a pound being the most universally used tonic in the world for over 17 years. Celery Compound was sent to every registered si the prescription of one of the most famous hysi- (riend in the time of her great Glotrets Baturday evening. John J. Murphy, pS si ; When Mrs. Maybrick arrived In Amel iw ag Sisey Ngee ean’ joa after her long imprisonment the pave pei rp! rother, first helping hand stretched out to her taken from the doorway of his home sufficient evidence on which to hold her. to Bellevue Hospital to-day by Dr. Me. He will also claim that the Magistrate's which Mra, Noble ls now Leod in an ambulance, Mart ig? from held 1s based merely on hearsay evi- LJ the coming of the Baltic fleet. It is evident that Togo wants every- thing in readiness for this fleet. It 1s cians known in medical annals—Prof. Phelps, of Dartmouth University. ing father built up, When they mar- ried there was no handsomer young wo- man in the district than this exposure and alcoholism, and fs now . and that her innocence of the Al uitable druggists recommend and sell Delleved here that he will venture forth |man in the district then | this same inst 2 lhe, Dacamere, Tee ove! Phage dlrs Pele Thre ga! in pros: | in the alcohols wand of that institution, charge wae clearly established at the Paine’s Cel Compeud * dist and ah bee tate te 12S for her benofactrese was great and the ) and from the) A citizen, pessing Quinn's door saw Coromer’s inquest. ery . geas, and that the battle will mean the mark on his linen the pollce belleve| "im, lying on the ptepe. At the hos- Sheriff Meyerrose sald to-day that Gentruetion of Togo. or the destruction] fFeeze In the bleak, raught-awept | oss ¢ most polgnant source of ariet ©0/ that hia name te D. F. Rehfuss. There | dition ‘wes’ In nowise earloua | CO! MIs. , Noble, was confident that she WELL®, RICHARDSON & CO. ‘ of:the entire Baltic fleet. rooms, ; ¥ |are two Rehfusses tn the city directory | q BURLINGTON, VERMONT, But though her shoulders were broad| The body was cremated and the ashe#) Car}, 4 baker, at No. 419 West Tene. — = _—_—_————- — — ——— = a _ KUROPATKIN VIEWS HIS LINES WITH AN AUTOS CHEFOO, Nov. %.—Gen, Kuropatkin fs the possessor of a new twenty horse- power automobile, with which he Is able to hush at high apeed from one part to another of the Hne, twenty-five miles loug, according to M, Ravoir, who Feached hore to-day from Mukden, Ku- popatkin has asked for twenty auto- Mobiles, specially constructed to carry Amunition speedily in emergencies, On dis first trip in the new automobile Kuropatkin's only comment waa: "T have the advantage of Gen, Bhat- The Chinese regard Kuropatkin and Dis machine with superstitious awe, believing the latter to be an atrociously powerful specimen of the “foreign devil.” M. Ravolr sald to-day: “The two armies ile facing each other, each hav- ing three fortified lines, The soldiers of both armies live mostly in caves, be- hind their trenches, The Russian troops are in the best of spirits. They @xpect uKropatkin to attack during the winter, The Russian forces now umber 300,000 men, There are only a few hundred wounded at Mukden and 6,000 wounded at Harbin. “Th "belief at. Mukden is that Port| Arthur will hold out till relieved.” — POLICEMAN INJURED. Runaway Ho: Knocked Down and Wagon Wen Over Patrolman Jeffries O'Connor, of the Bast Bighty-cighth street station, while q@deavoring to stop a runaway horse 4t Bayoty-stath street and Fifth avenue, 40-day wae knocked down and trample the horse and run over by the vehicle ye animal was drawing His legs we: lacerated, but after bel sev trgated by a police surgeon he was to his home. 310 Business Opportunities advertisements were printed in the SUNDAY WORLD WANT DIREC-/ einer. TORY. she did not square them to bear the burden of her domestic cares, She 800g leurned a way to forget ber ephemeral hardships, carousing with her neighbors and friends, nd this habit grew upon her in the face of her husband's en- treaties. J At last her desires engulfed her better sentiments, her mother’s love and her wifely devotion. As the years advanced and the first boy grew to a sturdy Httle| lad his father had to tend him when! vas sick and perform the other ces of the household that should have been the mother's oare. Rver Kind to Erring Wife. Patrick Golden was only @ hod car rier, uncultured, unfettered, but in his heart there glowed the sentiments of a loving father, a faithful husband anda man who fought and won against the temptations that besleged him. Every man and woman tn the district looked up «o big Patrick Gordon. He had their respeot and their sympathy, though there e any who said he Was too meek with the young woman who did her best to desolate his home. In all their life he never struck her, and his yuice was gentle and pleading | when he urged her to be a mother youngster and me care to_her home. Inurned, Their diaposition has not been determined on as yet WOMAN 1S HURT IN CITY HALL SUBWAY Mercer Street Milliner Slips Be- form and Train Platform on Way Downtown and Faints. Mr. Liane Penny, thirty-seven years oM, a milliner with a shop on Mercer steer and living at No, %4 Pith ave- nue, Brooklyn, waa serlously Injured at the Chy Hall Subway station to- day by falling between the car platform and the station platform when getting Time and again he sought her out at the police station and appeared at her | on board. = train. aide In the police court, begging for| Mrs. Penny was accompanied by her release and the ‘Just One mere prederick Borgeson, of No. 618 Park ohal on which 7 80 mue > hope. Then seven monthe ago came| Place In the big crowd that surmed tha second little one to tho hapless |towami the train ahe did not notice the home. gap between the car platform and the Father Acted as Narne. station platform, She is heavy, and For a few months the mother strug-|one of her kiss slipped between the gled with her appetite and seemed (oj car and the station platforms. She vo conquered and the man felt that! fainted and was picked up by the train his burden waa at last to be lightened, ‘ t ble OOD MoaUminG Are. burke ene | hands and Bargeson and carried into again and she wen back to the. oid | the car for hi Tita cant workide at Gap eine At Bleecker mreet Mrs. Penny eaid or his yw | ; in tion and laid on a bench. An ambu- nto cell on him and two weeks no | lance was summoned from St. V:neant's Be Greck 0. Helievue M\| Hoepiial and Dr. Laonard attended hee has 4 fatal erent | She refused to go to the hospital and and his span of life is rapidly narrow-| was carried in a chalr to the street, ing down. The mother promised on| » her knees at his bedide to cara for | Ber Be SHCEES 6 VER. OR Was Griee the infant, but how well she kept this promise the fate of the child hears elo- quent testimony. Ik is now in the same hospital where the fa lays and ttle hope of recovery Is held out for ng though he was, the at to tellon him and two weeks ee EIGHT BURIED IN CAVE-IN. : Three Men Taken from Thench and tween Subway Station Plat:| j sixth street, and George, No. 129) Park | avenue. | ‘The dead man Is five feot seven inches In height, forty years old, weighs 19! pounds and has a gray mustache and ray hair. He wore a checked coat and vest, silk underwear, striped trousers Jand a black overcoat, No, 488M, of the jmake of the Mnglish Woollen Mills, a concern that has no establishment in New York. Man's Skull Fractured, | “Rehfuss” was found tying uncon. | sclous before the saloon Saturday even. | ine Policeman Hauptman calied an ambulance and after trving artificial | respiration for some time the man was hurried to Bellevue, where it was dis- | covered that his skull was fractured Tn his possession were $99.40 in money. a fold wedding ring. a gold ring with an “R" in diamonds and an open-faced silver watch with eoM chain and charm | In court Ed Sullivan appeared us witness for his bartenders, With dra- | matic gestures told of warning the dead man out era! times, an he “never allowed an intoxicated man to drink at his saloon.” The man re- turned four times. ‘The last time, sald Sullivan, “the bartender and the lunohman ‘passed’ the man through the door. | Says the Man Fell Down, ‘The man turned and made a lunge at the lunchman and feli down,” sald Sullivan. “Goon,” said Magistrate Pool "That's all, The swinging doors closed behind him,” said’ Sulliva Four witnesses testified that man | had been assaulted by the bartenders. 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