14 FEBRUARY 1891, Page 3

The police believe that the Whitechapel murders attributed to "Jack

the Ripper" have commenced again, after a cessation of seventeen months, the last, or seventh, having occurred on September 10th, 1889. At 2.15 a.m. on Friday, the body of 'a woman, believed to be an " unfortunate," was found by a policeman in an archway connecting Swallow Gardens and Orman Street, in Whitechapel. The woman was just expiring, her throat having been cut, evidently with the same kind of unusually sharp instrument believed to have been used on previous occasions. The body was not mutilated, but the police attribute this circumstance to the murderer having been disturbed. The centre of the archway where the body was found lies completely in shadow, and the theory is that the unhappy victim was lured there in the usual way, and her throat out from behind so deeply that she could not cry out. A second woman's bat was found on the body, which lends colour to the idea that the murderer may after all be a woman ; but the little actual evidence there is points to a man in a slouch hat, who, it is thought, was seen talking to the de- ceased a few minutes before the tragedy. The hat may have been designedly placed to give a false clue to the police,.