HOLMES, TIDBALL, CAMPBELL At Collier station on . Albert HOLMES, a son of Joseph HOLMES, who recently . Houstonville to the house . PLANCE on Center avenue, was killed by the cars. While pulling o. the chain broke and he was . the track and run over. He was taken to a Steubenville hospital where he died. Both legs and one arm were cut off. The remains were brought to his father's house on Wednesday and the funeral was on Thursday. Services were held at the Presbyterian Church to which place the corpse was taken, and the interment was at the Arlington Cemetery. Albert HOLMES was about 21 years old. He had been on the road about two years. Recently he had been promoted to Conductor ad was assigned to a train of which he was to take charge in about two weeks. Thos. TIDBALL, brakeman on the work train, was killed at Jumbo Thursday afternoon while coupling cars. He was in between two cars that came very close together when coupled, and holding the coupling pin he signaled to George FITZSOMMONS, the paper man, who was standing near, to give the engineer the signal to back up. The engineer would not take FITZSIMMON's signal, so TIDBALL ran out, gave the signal and went back between the cars as they came together, but was unable to get himself into a safe position, and his head was caught between the cars and crushed. He was not injured any other way. This occurred at 2:35, while funeral services were being conducted in the Presbyterian Church over the body of another railroad man who had been killed Tuesday evening, Albert HOLMES. He died a half an hour later. The remains were taken to his house at Woodville. He was a single man and the only support of his mother. W. S. CAMPBELL, flagman on the local freight between Washington and Pittsburg, was killed Friday afternoon at Bower Hill by the cars.