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Show KUROPATKIN LEFT; COSSACKS LOOTED LOXIeON". March IT. Prom a dispatch to the Iaily Teler;iph from Sinmintin. descriptive of the lli;litii'K around and the fall of Mukden, it appear!) that ll' n. Ku-re-patkin left for Tie paste on horseback Marvh S, hi.i staff following by train the I'.e-xt day. On Alaich Hi eissacks bi-g.in l "tniK in Mukden and. maddened witn drink, committed the wildest excesses and ri.bbei e-8 and killed numerous civilians. The Russians' re-treat frejm Mukden station sta-tion was well exe-cut'd until It was dls-ce.vereel dls-ce.vereel that the cunlon eif the Japanese in the rear, two and a half miles trom te wn was nearly complete, when the retire re-tire mint became a flight. Tile, Russian left army, comprising some Kei,W) men. iicccii ellnK tee the same dispatch, dis-patch, were out off by the Japanese, but art- said to have, by forced marches from Kushan and Tunisia by way of I,u hituii, VVaynocheni; and Sunchlatl. splendidly executed ex-ecuted a junction with the main body at Tie pass in three days. 'Ihe correspondent at Tokio of the Dally Telegraph learns that the Japanese lelt army advanced toward Mukden at flying speed, ami in the last four days covered respectively thirty, thirty-five, twenty mid Pfteen miles. One force was sent especially es-pecially to search for CJe-n. Kuropatkin und his staff, but they had already gone. |