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a > WEATHER—Falr; colder oeontaht a RESULTS EDITIO PRICE ONE CENT. FINAL na Paneeser. PLATT BACKS DOWN: ODELL IS CALLED N After Declaring cd Taaitad that the Governor Would Not Be Asked to Conference, Senator Consents to Inviting Him. “JUST TO TONE HIM DOWN,” !$ WAY PLATT PUTS IT. Odell Was Conversed with on. Long-Distance ‘Phone and Agreed to Attend—Platt Says Conferense Was for Depew. ‘After Aeclaring positively yesterday that under circumstances would Governor-Chairman Odell be invited to the big conference at the Fifth Avenue Hotel to-day, called for the purpose of booming Chauncey M. Depew's re-rleo- tion to the United States Senate, Sen- ator Thomas C. Platt laid down to- day and actually sent a committee from hin confernce to beg the attendance of the Governor. Gov, Odell was not In town at the] time, as the committee soon discovered, but he was on his way from Albany and will get here later In the afternoon, The committee then consulted with cor- tain friends of the Governor on the subject of holding the conference in session until he arrived and coukl have &@ chance to join ft, but the friends assured the members of the committee that the Governor would be very busy after he got here and could not think of taking the time to Join Senator Platt's conference. Talked with Odell Over ’Phone, ‘This direct snub from the Governor's friends sent the committee back to the conference in a hurry. The cpnferrees gald that it looked very much us no though the Governor! was not taking | thelr deliberations seriously, They added that the Governor muat be seen personally about’ the matter, so Tim- othy L. Woodruff, who was the cnair- man of the committee, went to a Jong- istance telephone and made arrange- ments to communicate with the Goy- érnot when his train got to Newburg. | Ti.2 Governor came to the wire when his train reached the station and sald he would meet the members of the vommittee for a few minutes at 6.30 gelock if they really wanted to see | him, and the matter was left there. At the conclusion of the conterence br gh A Wat, Maines that when era: jell wi ° yited to the cont shapers “Not on your life! was ask ant ~ he had answered in view of this, he ed why he "had changed his “Oh,” he answored, to tone him down A bit Hr By Cee Those Who Attended, The conference was called grelock, but it was almost 1 Sreloeke F-4 fore it gut in session. There were in all about seventy-five Republicans present. Among them were Wiitaa' reno EB. Payne, iam Congressman John W. Dwight. Pet Platt, Assemblyman Hanford, of Tloga; Amembdlyman Hamilton Fish, of Madi- son; Senator |'Hommedieu, Rind Weed Barnes, Willlam Barnes, Jr Chairman of the Btate Evecutive Com: mittee; Col, George W. Dunn, L. Woodruff, of Brooklyn, wh, the three Republican Senat imothy 0 brought ‘ore from 1 te - blymen with him: Naval Omer ‘oben Sharkey, Silas 1, Congress: jadsworth, Senator’ stereos Attica; ‘Senator John Rainos, Richard Van Cott, Ferdinand Elman, ‘he Strasbourger, Senator Wilcox, ot we! | burn; United States Marshal’ Henieat, Jobn'I. Platt, of Poughkvepale; aenke blyman Jaaver Smith. 4% Olean, Con: sman ot and George ether Pla ¥ friendly, te King in the cor. tres to Parlor ee took place. shaken hands W. Addi iridge. All of the conferrees, wh Oded) men were outward) there was much handshak ridors before the party re R, where the conferen: Peed hry Piast had all around the parlors were ¢) all save those who had been invited - the conference, and then Col Burd called the meeting to order in'a briet speech in which he said that they’ bad come together to discuss the Senatorial situation. Senator Platt then made s speeoh favoring. the Fe-election of Sen. ator Depew. he aged Senator spoke feaogly onthe punter and let it be unders at he meant to hig man to the Anish, | Aight for} No opponent of the re-election ¢ Renator Depew spoke at ail and: the Odell men held their pence, It was ut this point that the conference decided to call In Gov. Odell. ei: » - COUNSEL TO HIGGINS. Cathbert W. Pound Named by Goy- ernor-Elcet as His Legal Advin ALBANY, Dec, 21.—Gov.-Blect Hig: gins appointed to-day Cuthbert w, Pound, of Lockport, as counsel to the Governor, Pound i* at present Presi« dent of the State Clvl Service Com. mission. ooo FRENCH DEPUTY SLAIN? PARIA, Dec. M—-M. Syveton, father of “the talc Deputy Syveton, to-day made a formal complaint to the Crim-| an: inal, Court that his son had been the vietim of an gesassination. The ac- cused perton was not named. an the examining magistrate is to make a spe- cifle cheater after an investigation of the coneeiat, “nove LEGS CUT OFF. HACKENSACK, N. J, Dec, 1 es Burr, fifteen years old, of H-- N. eee it in the H m= | eustained internal injuries not yet ap- ‘BIG DERRICK — RAMS TEXAS AT NAVY YARD : » » ® > > ae > ‘Hercules, herith, Is Is Hurled by Wind Against the Battleship, Smashing Armor and Rudder Posts. | WILL HAVE TO GO INTO |. DRY-DOCK FOR REPAIRS. | ws ono 8S ‘Kentucky and Illinois Grazed, | | and Minneapolis and Tacoma’ Also in Danger Before Tugs | | Catch the Derrick, —— eve | The 1 ton floating derrick Hercules, loaded with armor weighing many tons) 4 additional flonted emuck, ao to spenk, in the Navy Yard this afternoon and| damaged the battleship Texas so se-| verely that she will have to be put in| dry-dock, Several other ships of war! were In danger while the Hercules float-| ed around in Wallabout Basin at the merey of the wind and tide. The Hercules was alongside the bat: | tleship Connecticut, to which armor was | nsferred ened to the bal ip with five is cables, | There was a stiff squall whipping across | the basin from the weat One of the cables parted and the Her- cules swung away from the battleship forward, allowing the wind to get a purchas: on the derrick and the deck | work, The other cadles snapped like strings and the derrick was atloat be- yond control ] Up the basin she drifted with the/ wind, grazing the battle-ships Kentucky) end ilino!s, Whistles were blown, tele- phone messages sent and the tugs Nar-| keeta and Tentucket were started out in chase. Tefore the tugs could make fast to the Hercules she smashed into | the ‘Texas, breaking che rudder posi aid crushing half a dogen plates, She swung | loowe nad was drifting toward the Ta- coma and Minneapolis when the tues got lines abcurd and dragged her out into the main channel. Naval “onstructor: Boxter after ex- amtning the Texas said the veevel would \have to be placed In dry-dock, She was [being coal preparatoty to starting on jthe midwinier cruise of the const squad- Fu FELL 140 FEET INTO THE RIVER Charles Summerfield, a Riveter at Work on the Williamsburg Bridge, Slipped from Scaffold and Plunged Downward, om SPOODODTETOTSEES COE Soba Oe bi Charles Summerfield, a rivetor, fell W feet from the Williamsburg bridge | into the East river to-day and lives to tell how it felt to fall, Uniess he sso, | tered dawn did a bluecoat appear. patent bi 1) 1, Queen Rose (3 to t) 2, Esterre| 141 THIRD Rack mre turionga; purse $400; (wo-yeai-old, sing vine i | There is to be no Rrvestevune oy the | parent he will be able to return to his Bi Lid Bart got. Won driving. Winner, 7 Ravine: | cole thorities of | the of hazardous employment in a few days. | 9 bes ratty. Frainer— J’ Phillipe ~_ | Kingion "Gourd hooting 8 : Summerfield was working with a gang = nder._Herore, Jockeys. We. Bt — Yh Fi Goan. Clee Fi Ovet ths heads of the sop of men on a swinging scaffold under the | FOURTH RACE—Ram's Horn (2) oi! Alcantee oo... Poitin Hyg f Bo R$ had ER Ete appa ot the college floor of the bridge. Water had leaked | to 1) 1, Garnish (5 to 2) 2, Ed Tier- uy Feyerre 3. Martin 108 1 gt re) 4 af 1} Lo. 45 no Teasod wi wh) through, and the surtace of the acat-| ney 3, top Ueedich’ ‘ise veel 1% ; ‘ £ 3494 author es should take ny action i fold was covered with ice, Wo, Lampliant iG 03 4 fo fw UF s 9| SlNCed, Occurrence too! we Gateice | Reaching out with an empty keg to| FIFTH RACE—Topic (20 to 1) 1,| im Pion Amu Ww epbing top A a ee | H 4 ve emake wat Go sh a hot rivet, Summerfield slipped. h inch (6 to 2) 2, Bay W i a cious Hand Crimmina j08 e i. aed i im he Taplinesivety he. prasced hi the sents Phil Finch ( ) 2, Bay Wood 3, \4 alt B 4: Melsure Ho 6 6 TM Ft 0 oy # i “we. ate to soit get site dinner ie la tem! @ mpeed ft " ov to an fold dislodging @ plank. When Ne! giyris RACE —Chanterelle (18 to| c=Alaninrs hat Ihe toeed: Giueen Rose. ‘inished wnng, Swedish Lad ihewrie, Fertng Wonk tein cet een | started on his long plunge he held the 142 POUT RACH Mile ant 2 aaientes pure, ato: A abea pandinan desire the presence of Mr.| plank clasped in his arma His mates} 1) 1, Gravina (8 to 5) 2, Decora) '5 026 2 $0.40 2811S 1488-5, 1.40," Start good Won! vasily Gould We wouldn't treat him bruat!! on the seaffold gazed over the edge with | tion 3 | ‘ele Were tenon WO be or anything like thats we'd Just gnier: horror at the whirling body, They as — 4 | aint bs a |Tovety > A ball acer cavibent ea sert that he turned six complete som- (Sects) to The Evening World, | artin 105 1 b Commissioner MeAdoo ongeres the po- eseaults, ; NEW ORLEANS, La, Dec. n—It| (44 B ig Pein OTS lice of the Weet dundred and ‘The ferry-boat Maine and the tug) ™4Y be Interesting to that portion of | fay Pruit Aubuchon ‘wt 4 ! isveat ga We! aicel, 8 10 make an Fortuna, of the Boynton @ Bons Trans-| the racing community which te this af-| ~ *wWore blinkers. Seretohed—-fankin deal, Ua-day, + toes Gbieealbalbnes os portation Company, were under "ine |ternoon paddling up and down Brow | 4, Wam\*,Jtorn ered colt: was vanlly best. Garnioh Raf sowed, but trad A Therney \that. wie. te ay nat looked the teat way through the snow and slush to -jter up. Presumed that Kingdon | oR —Six furlongs. Time—0.94.25; O48 4:8: 1.18 1-8; 00, | Gould ta, a lisense to carr | st tn full bloom here | Han fair, Won vasily. “Winner, be, by’ On ‘eee ae: na Nearly ever onalte in New York | * joon, tha ere is plenty o! AS BUC s he declared. “One | | green grass and that the breezes have | Jockera. Wt. St. MM MN Mia, Open, Cle. Ph an. | milionalre has thee, |” . the soft, cooling caress as at Sheepshead) t bs " m8 2? bod ot even,” he deckhands on tho tug were also|on a day In June. i 2 Fa eee tt oe weahey rine man like Minnie | | looking up at the swinging seaffold Un-} No tntent to be tantalizing in this, but £8 g " Qi Gould (0 use a revolver in the city | aerate aie, And (ney nated Bummer-| simoly to contrast the climate and let mH = | sireete, 98 be le reported to have done, Thomas Callister, and he al every one know that Ideal racing con-| “jy *Magistrace. * 2 i i fue Dit auniet on senate Neen ® engineer, to ant oft steam the] ditions prevail here to-day. There was| 4% Yulimantowy 1 Li Pi F Lf ie ® before doing anythin: {ron worker whisged by and struck the | an excetient card and the racing looked! 12% (‘aryere ¥ uoawow WoW on iY — Summerfield went into the river feet| very gromising. The attendance wus Hocrutchel—Lila Noel Topie hed world of spect. Mimosa quit” Pail first. There was a treme: ’ wetting passengers on the fei t and the crew of the tug. Everybody | aged at the spot where the man had isappeared. Passengers on trolley cars lea the bridge and persons walking across rushed to the fails and looked down at | the water. emed to the watehers that Sum mart id wae sul for fv utes, All at on ot to the surface | about three feet from the, bow of the tug. He was still hanging to the plank, which had gone under with him and operated aso preserver. One ef the deckhands reached far over and two others enught bim by the legs. He rapes Bummerfield by the collar! 4 him aboard, The ferry-bowt | passengers cheered | was cartied to the boller-room of "e ty te was able to talk and said that he fel no pain, but was terribly cold. THis| teath: wete chattering. The cook of he! | Fortuna was Just preparing dinner, and order wag rent to him for a yw us splash, 10; bh ler, This poured lato vee Hed clothes Hed off, an t ime e tu tt | South: Fittn ttreet ack he hed bane | partials “* chi An am) lance oan “cal from A, i ie ‘ event than in the last two vce | tonal won after getting all the worst of & mix up in the break, Jak berg and J. W. O'Neill wore th Greenberg did hia beat never in the hunt lthe running, with Laura Hunter ¢ | Chamblee clone up to the stretch. There every fa nberg won by a head. Green- berg was two lengths in front of Cham- Jake Gr Saal Ll eal ce “ Circulation Books Open to All,” FINAL) | RESULTS EDITION | NEW YORK, WEDNI DAY, ‘DECEMBER a1. GETTING AFTER LAWSON. BY T, E, POWERS. tbh hd EHH $. BY RAM'S HORN Made Favorite for the the Important! Race of the Day, Little Bay Colt Just Breezes Home in Front of Garnish, THE FIRST RACE—Optional (7 to 1) 1,| dake Greenberg (5 to 2) 2, Cham.) SECOND RACE—Semper | (10 to 1) 1, 2, Beaucaire (75 to 1) 3, THIRD RACE—Alacantara (15 to!» good and betting There will be track next month says so, but he de matter what the W does or says, there will be for what Mr, Corr! . cepted as fact in thin part of the coun try, ¥ Optional to-day. piional ¢ jee. Somper Vivax a Winner, WINNERS. Vivax ie McCarthy (5 to i) here at the new 4 Corrigan, who t know on of the b or not. But tern Jockey Club ing here, be rac An says ma Optional Comes to Life, came to lite the opening The price was better asiona and Op- a but O'Neill wa Greenberg made a nd outgaming Homestead was a. heavily played fa- vorite in the secord race. but he not fouling was hoate ae but eeiealiset, ws HANDIGAP. WON of 1 Iz SEY en RACE Mile and a reg A008 four tng sh Hag hs, Won iy 28 SOR: Me ib Romington--vemaper‘ Nivent. Trainer—J 101 11 stro stead war disualified for fouling Weaueaire gol third place Winner erme all around fleld. | where they gut off, * iHocars i Jockeys Wt St 4 OH HD ‘Kemper V ey . . teh strnngead ach eft k } Set’ rty, Phittpe W544 8 an i ine Btoy ] 4 - L. William } 4 : wheat RE tie hae & sole "Mecarthy td atrete! PEDDLTAPADDDDDDDE EDS DOOD D4 LDORPODOOOEED § 6-0-04-00-684606-0000-0000.000044 VENING WORED RACE CH 24TH DAY AT NEW ORLEANS, ‘TRACK’ HARI, New Orleans charts are indexed from first race, + Sia furlongs: pur ear olds and upward; gett O28 1-3, 0h DW 3-5 ike 0 i sal Sart fair. Won driving. him, by Albert—vption. "‘Tratner—H Horses. Jockeys, Wt Bt < “s % % Fis . 2 pra) Shaver 100 9 eer @ itoonbere Baird ih } ae b R & amb Homaneiit 1 ae i 4 3% Leura Hunter 0 Howell 133, 1 oo me ie ay Draper J Sarin 108M, ee Dh &® Oh W. O Nelli. i Putte i » se oR wi H 4 ao ‘ leo 5% 6 4% T) OT snare Nicol Veena ‘ f Haxgerty J) Meimyre 100 ot aK 1 Feettyl ro 105 1 Lt 10) 3) Camadeed ‘Schilling 100 aor it i Te Fe se Wo Belle ot Portia. M Murphy 100 | 1 ig Ww M Chamble @ and sine Green ‘Welght_ stopped Sa Greenberg ated. blinkers. **Di if fon myer Vivwx jus agit tee Bey Js Homestead on the outelde all the way. Resse cloned big Kap. ne came home with the money. wus the second choice. He went to front at the myet in big nena! © Atenntara All the Way. and opened “R8 ane of five leng q Quegn’ Rose and Esterre were the Then he ally came “taok to Imeked horses in the third, but an out- field, and Ram's Hor. who bad } wider. Aleantara. racing co te front ar! atiog along behind him, drew uo the ed the way the en even term On the run home route, a by a length from Que Horn went to the front and won Rose, w at Esterre a length, rhe a terete and a halt from Gai Ram's fiorn was t n| who peat Bd Plerney eight lengths, Re Horn Wins Fourth. ¢ choice, and he (Batrt on page 13.) tr Win- it a ‘ Ee RE on Interetered with Garnish SOP KIDNAP A“VICTIM" FOR THEIR BANQUET Unahle to Get sb ienies Gould as Star Performer at To-Night’s| Festivities They Carry Off) Freshman Foonie 4) {gor PRISONER ONLY | AFTER FIERCE FIGHT. \Clothes Torn, Eyes Blackened | and Noses Hurt in Class Bat: | tle—Sophs’ Victim Is Vice- President of His Class. Angered at not capturing young King: | | don Gould as a “victim” | dinner to be held to-night, the enter- | | tainment committee of the sophomore | clase at Columbla College precipitated | ‘fA class fight on the campus this after- noon, during which clothes were torn, | eyes blacked, and Hobart MéCutcheon, Vice-president of ‘the freshman class, wan spirited away and is being held in hiding to furnish the dinner ety. ‘The “sopha' entertainment commit tee had been picketing the campua all afternoon In the hope of capturing H. H. Holbert, president of the freshman class, but Holdart had been warned and kept in a place of safety, Shortly after noon thé rival classmen gathered In force on the campus’ and soon were Mixing in @ freé-for-all fight. Prece- Gent does not allow classes to fight on the cafhpus, and the upper classmen, who had been watching the fray, “but- ted in" and, charging the pbelligerents, Grove them from the campus. ‘The rlot oeceme general in One Huu- dred and Sixteenth street as the stu- 4 rolled one another in the snow- ba. weine, and the frewhies sought to"guard, Heloart and MeCutoheon, Fifty ‘fresh- jes’ fipwily, massed in football fashion and rushed tnele officers to the One pens and Sixteenth one station of the Subway. olbart and MoCutoheon hustled in and prdered to board dowrittwh trals, while the Atty treah; piv stood guard at the door, ‘Woe Dodge the Fight. Windows were smashed, aod in @ charge the sopha succeeded -in drag- ging out and rolling In the snow two prominent freshmen, Helmrich and Von Saltea, The two mer, are footpall play- ers dnd husky customers, and in the fight chey made for freedom their clotiies were almost torn from them. In rugh at‘ the door the sophomores suddenly discovered Hobart MeCutch- con, who had disrsgarded the warnings of ys classmates and went back Into the-soene of hosiilities, MeCutcheon was seized by the sophs. who attempted to put him on 4 Broad- Way surface car, There was a fight and MeCuteheon agd his captors dis- appesaed. The enraged. freshmen aro searching high and with In hopes of re- | cupturing him before he is made the butt of the “high ‘ike fh night. wvuring the woole riot tne nelghbor- i was comfortably ¢eveid of police. and. not until MeCutel haa Boost kidnapped and the ugiiing sim- ‘COUNSEL FOR AND AGAINST for their class! , While the Sophomores fought to | PRICE ONE CENT. SUMMING UP ENDS DA NAN PATTERGON; VERDICT REMAINS Exciting lickies at a tte of Trial, When, After Recess, ‘Even the Pre- siding Justice Has a Struggle to Get to His Place on the Bench. HER MAKE THEIR PLEAS, ‘Lawyer Levy, in Speech of Impassioned “Eloquence, Declares that Only Ques. tion at Issue Is Whether the Prisoner Murdered Caesar Young. ' Assistant District-Attorney Rand finished his summing up of the case “against Nan Patterson to-night, and to-morrow morning her case will go to the jury. When court reconvenes Justice Davis will deliver his charge. ‘As soon as Mr, Rand finished his speech Justice Davis cautioned the jurors not to discuss the case with any one and adjourned the court. The prisoner gathered her heavy veil about her face after kissing her father and walked down through the crowded ajsles to the corridor | leading to the Tombs. Her step was firm, and she seemed as fresh as when she entered the ordeal. During the recess hour at the trial the corridors of the Criminal Courts Building filled up with an anxious, pushing mob of curious per- sons seeking admission, Sergt. Thomas Walsh, at the head of the squad of nearly twoscore police, had his hands full in clearing a passageway for Justice Davis to approach his chamber. When the doors of the court-rcom were finally opened the mob surged forward, pushing, jostling, struggling in a wild endeavor to admission, Ame ig the most persisteat were fashionably dressed women, who, despit: the protests of ‘he policemer that no women were to be admitted insisted spon getting in. Offers of money from $1 to $10 were freely made to the doorksepers. When Justice Davis went on the bench promptly at 2 o'clock the | Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court was crowded as no tribunal has been crowded in this county within recent years, Chairs had. been | brought in from every available source and the aisles of the court room were completely blocked. The majority of the spectators were women, handsomely gowned and resplendent with much jewelry, Lawyer “Abe” Levy begarl his summing up for the accused chorus girl in the morning, and at the end of his defense an adjournment was take. * He made a strong speech, at the end of which Nan Patterson em- braced her father and wept. Throughout the two hours of Mr. Rand's pitiless arraignment of her Nan Patterson sat unmoved, Not even when he spoke of her as a stony hearted, cruel-mouthed avenger did she exhibit the slightest emotion, |She held her chin slightly lowered and kept her eyes bent toward her hand which laid clasped in her lap. Her chair was pulled close beside that of her father and he held his arm about her tightly." Toward the end of Mr. Rand's address, though she showed no sign of fear of ex- hibited any fear of breaking into tears, her nervousness began to exert itself and she picked at her veil every few seconds with her gloved fingers and worked her lips as if they were dry and she was moistening them with her tongue. Prisoner's Way Blocked. a sporty pin. He began his ee | HABEAS WRIT FOR BROKERS, | wen Arrested Here Ch Embesslemen: Justice Leventritt in the supreme Court this morning issued thre ‘of habeas corpus on the applicat! Black, Olcott, Gruber and Benynge turnable to-morrow morning, direct Detective-@ergt. Michael Summers bring to the Supreme Court Henry ( Robinson, George W. Harris and Ben ed with the fon, ths. nie hern, on 100 “SALESLADIES WANTED” Advertisements were printed last week in the Help Wanted Columns of THE WALLIN Fee es Ai a jamin J. Dryer, who are wanted in he ity, Iamt night. 1 have been members of ty jcomplaint rd R. Stanton, Hoboken, who mat in July, August and Septem. he men between $9.10 and purchase of stocks in vd Point Russians Attack at Severn! Polnis hate of New Jersey on charges of em. ment. hese men were arrested by De- tective Weinbe tnboken, tr this | ‘4 kane in Mount =, bowing frst to the Judge an@ to the Jury, His frst sentences spoken hardly above # whisper, and was well into his speech before his When Nan Patterson issued from the * little corridor leading from the Bridge of, Sighs to her seat she found her way almost completely blocked, and she had , t oh bet to walk very slowly, tripping several Yolce reached a tone that could pease times between the densely packed trate throughout the court-room. He Jchaire in the alates. Her face was pa! ar and when she took her seat beside he tather she did not make her usual 80 ew back her veil and gat it please Your Honor, and eac& sne of you geatlomen of the \re very much to be congrate ar tonae shits with her eyes tan ye approaching end of & i focussed on Mr. Rand, who was p f most isdoons publ serve j Nag ae ners, ber wore: ful o¢ toe altton diverse Mee aE "FIGHTING ALONG LINE JUMPED FROM WINDOW OF : ‘ SOUTH OF MUKDEN. TRAIN AND DISAPPEARED, ) Makes for Woods tn Indiana Net Identity Not Known, VALPARAISO, Ind, Dec 2A going from Chicago to B nped from a car window of & vila parvenger train neat Rerw’ Daseenger from New You and Japanese Report Says They We TOKIO, Deo. 2—The foil port from Manchurian nade: “On Monday afternom Foond Repulaed. a my's artillery east of Da M in gey and made for the woods. bombarded the heighburhood of Siolin-| Giicers and « posse started after al Tuesday morning the enemy's) yur go far they have felled to Rew y amMacked us south of Pie He was well dressed and and at Tatsupao, Stmu to-do, The man attracted ously the enemy's Infantry attacked Chirshantung, Hetlintung and Huangtl oe enemy was compieteiy repulved capture of the North Fort of at Port Arthur, we |