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Re ut OF AOGK ISLAND TRAINS, Fast Express Plu Train and Every Passenger, It Is| Said, Was Killed nges Into a Stock or Injured in the Wreck When the Cars Were Piled on the Demolished Engines. WANSAS CITY, Mo, Jan. 6—The Rock Island's California and Mexico express, which left Chicago on Monday night at 11.30 for the West, collided head on to-day at Willard, Kan., four- teen miles wost of Topeka, with a cat- tle train. ‘Thirty persons were killed and every person on the train was injured. ‘A relief train that left Topeka for the scene returned to that city at 7.30 this) morning with the dead and injured. The train, which left Kansas City at 10 o'clock last night, was twenty minutes ‘ate and at the time of the accident ‘was running at the rate of thirty miles in hour. ‘The train carried many persons for Oklahoma who had taken advantage of the homesteaders’ excursion rates that closed yesterday. It also con- tained through sleepers and chair cars for San Francisco and Jos Angele! One of the Worst in ¥ ) .The wreck was one of the most serious that has happened on the Rock Island system In years, Between Kansas City ‘and Topeka the Rock Island uses the tracks of the Union Pacific, and as there are no general offices of either road in this city details of the dis: . Were obtained with difMiculty. Several _ reporters who boarded the relief train as it left Topeka early this morning were put off the train shortly after |p gtarted from that city, and the firs) Getatis of the collision came from pe wons bn the wrecked train after they had been returned to Topeka, Ooourring as at did at a smal) siation with few facilities for ald and in the darkness. there Was much delay in ex- ‘tricating the dead and injured and in “caring for the latter. Tho train was composed of a combination baggage and mail car, a regular baggage car, a en:oker, a tourist sleeper and a stand- elsreoth, a reporter of the To- peka State Journal, who was on the wrecked Rock Island train, arrived in at § o'clock this morning, after Griving overland from the scene of the golliaion, Parsons escaped with slight injuries, while two persons on the seat in front of him were killed: Story. Bre-Witn Te Parsons télis the following story of the wreck: “The wreck occurred at 1.8 o'clock this morning two miles west of Will- \ ard, Kan. At least thirty persons were ~~ thstantly killed, while several others _ Were fatally and a large number slight "ly Injured. Two cars filled with passen- gers were demolished, both locomotives Were destroyed and four carloads of stock torn to pieces and dozens of dead @nimais strewn over the right of way. Both trains were running at a speed ‘ot from fifteen to twenty-five miles an hour, and when the engines met they were welded together by inmoct, The e the freight escaped without Injury by Jumping. train was seriously Injured, but the en- “) ) gineer escaped. 5 Killed Without Warning. “It was in the third car of the pas- | senger train. the firet coach having been preceded by a smoker and bag gage car, that the greatest loss of life occurred. The smoker, which was oc- cupied by only two or three men, was overturned @fd pushed through the car behind it, which was crowded with passengers, some standing in the aisle. The first warning given tho passengers In this car was when the sudden sot- ting of the.airbrakes shut off the lights, leaving all in darkness. A moment later a mass of splintered wood and fron was crowded down upon them No one was thrown out of his seat by the blow. Most of those in the forward end of the car wore killed instantly. Many Physicians Summoned. “A dozen or more Topeka physicians arrived at the scene on the relief train from Topeka as soon as a brakeman could run to Willard and notify head- quarters, The physicians went to work relieving the injured and made no at- tempt for the time being to remove the crushed and disfigured bodies from the debris. , After daylight the work of removing the bodies began. The engine of the wrecking train coupled on the two cars, a sleeper and chair car, ‘which were un- injured, and started back to ‘Topeka with the victims, At Topeku all the In- Jured were hurried to hospitals. “Some of the bodies found in the wreckage were so badly crushed as to be unrecognizable. Through a hole chopped in one side of the car the body of a gray-haired heavy-set man and a woman with long yellow hair were vis- ible, Fires were bullt along whe track at short intervals, and by ‘the igi of these the rescpers, In their eagerness to remove the victims, chopped open- ings In the wrecked coach until ex- hausted, then handed their axes to other. “rhe entire sides of the car had beer chopped away when the work was coni- pleted. Occasionally the reseu would desist upon an glarm being raised by Watchers, who declared that the chov- | ping away of the coach was letting the smoker down upon the victims, So ter. | rific was the force of the collision thut | the smoker left the trucks In its back. | ward rush, leaving the trucks still upon | the tracks, Not a wheel in the entire passenger train seemed to be off the track. “The freight train fared differently The four cars immediately behind t cngine ‘were crushed into kindling Dend and dying cattle littered the right of way, while many which had escaped from the cars tininjured ran about, add- ing to the confusion. ~LLED MOTHER OF HG NME CORE ~ Morris Fallick, in Fit of Drunken Fury, Attacks His Wife in Their Tenth Avenue Home and Shoots Her Dead. pushed him out into the hall and closed | the door. Follick went back Into the THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANUARY-6, 1904. Stns FSi tates CHEMULPO, COREA, WHERE WARSHIPS HAVE GATHERED, AND SEOUL, TO WHICH YANKEE MARINES WERE RUSHED, Tee Amer1eda.Church And Anchored in Ice Five Miles Off the Seabright Shore, Fisher- men Make a Ghastly Dscov- ery on Deck of Sloop, Anchored in the fice five miles off the shore in a direct line {rom Seabright lies a large sloop. On the deck are the bodies of three men frozen stiff by the cold The sloop was discovered to-day by two fishermen. They were setting their nets from a small boat when’ they caught sight of the sloop held fast by the ive cakes In the water beyond them. ‘They quit laying the -nets and sailed off for the distressed boat, A strong wind was coming up at the time, and, realizing that they were un- able to tow the boat in toward the har- vor, the fishermen set sail for the life- saving station at Monmouth Beach, A crew manned the lifeboats as soon as the news was received and started out to the sloop. 1,000 PUPILS FLEE FROM FIRE: (Continued from First Page.) the rear fire-escape, and for a time it seemed that the ladders and platforms were so choked that some must be crowded off. Several women and chil- dren had reachéd the second-story landing, but there were stalled because of their inability to release the movable drop ladder, which would have reached the yard. One woman had climbed to the railing and with a child in her arm was about to leap into the stone-paved yard twenty-five feet below when a negro, whose name the police did not get,'ran up the alley and called to the woman to walt a minute. SAVED BY A COLORED MAN. Scaling the fence, he leaped for and reached the bottom round of the ladder and then, lke an acrobat, pulled bimself up to the platform. With superior strength he released the ladder where it had rested on the jron- work, but by that time the flames were shooting out of the first story win- dow, directly under the fire-escape, and if the ladder had been let down in the piace intended for it it would have extended through these flames. Seeing this, the negro stretched the long iron ladder across the area- LEIS OD AMERICANS IN PERIL IN COREA (Continued from First Page.) recognizing Russia’s special interests tr and Twenty-fifth street. across this treacherous aerial path t children across in this manner, and ¢! The fire did about $3,000 damage single alarm had taken many of the ing for the creation of n neutral a: Crippled Physician Helps. frat git rane tf TPB lats, anes Neue va from the China-Corean ai for all, all quéstions in the Far East] tier to Wongtin on the Kast and to ‘On the r i 0 or, Wane Foun sayin the sisePs lin the Interest of future peace and| Pingyang on the West. This zone com poked i” oruten 4 the result of som tranquillity, To this end Japan made] prised almost a third of Coren spinal trowble le Was thrown down] the following proposals | “This Russian pretension took from man Serna itor vba unee ey “One—Ruasia and Japan should mu- | Japan all the guarantee of the prot Fire among bales containing 100,000 inomediately Dean aiding the Injure ly respect the indepe and | ton of her rights in Manchurin nnd se-| pounds of waste paper caused fifty He had a poruion of the ‘chalr oar an torial integrity of China and Corea, | (Mestrated a considerable part of Corea,| Ltallans to leave thetr work and run totem the Victina were carrot’ The To reengnize — reciprocally |¥Nere, without contradiction, Japan’s| wildly from the pler at the foot of nysician was without Instruments or| Japan, the special interests of Russia | Mt rests preponderate, and wit every] West One Hundred and Thirty-fourth ‘The only thing he could do} in Manchuria; Russia, the special in-|'tUon recognizes as being within the! street this afternoon. the terrific eB eae wAeh bandares | torests of Japan In Corea iiceiiinata sphere of Japan Street-Cleaning Inspector John Ve- gireer and fireman on ets und pillow cases and giving t “Three-To engage mutually not to] tee Ui ee Ser resctae senate rola, who was on the pler at the time, a htaxher to dence nea ee ae ait buble opinion. Japan could not accev! a ¥ cone yimaey to deaden the paln Infringe—Japan, the commerelal rights) {ile OmMan taper could pot mecepty and Joseph Morrone. who has the con ‘The fireman on the passenger | who wax injured in the leg. An artery | {Md immunities acquired by Russia (| yeni and creating a permanent men-| tact for the disposition of waste paper was broken, and he took {i ap with al Corer; Russia, the corimercial rights) ace to the Independence of Corea, whieh | Picked up on the Harlem streets, tried penknire and Uae wal a Unread, and immunities acquired by Japan in| Japan must pre ent at any ni for} to stop the Italians to have them a Mleeding. to death. He. performed ine | Manchuria Tine OF defense And Che sates of eau] sist in extinguishing the fire, hut they Humerable acts of a ike nature before | “In making the third proposition Japan, lsh condition sine qua nun of her own|eefused and took a position across the the arrival of the Topeka phystclans."” wished not only to protect her own |ecurity, i in an nd force} Street and watched the flames. A tights in China and those of Russia in| against the pretensions of Russia in| Assistant Battalion Chief Sullivan ar- heart. The woman staggered out into! Corea, but to consecrate by the princl-| the Far East, Japan works not only for] rived in charge of the Fire Department the hall and into the rooms of Mra.| nie of equality of treatment the com-| Herself, but for all nations. Japan does| and saw that It was going to be a bad Beh warts .the jauitiens/ crying! meretal rights of all nations In Corea) irmed confict with Russa. and does | fire unless the baler of paper were sepa- My God, I will die! What will be- “I nay Goal L wae) and Chin not embark nt with a ght heart |rated and each sprinkled separately. some ote a RiSeiTel (HE GRIORINE Russia declined the Japanese propo- eels beew aero tae Siva i Than for ‘This would require more men than he Shas tf ‘ avet Cite cue caneaietees AL COUnLSEZDE Ono: tg rvation of ititernational com-| had and he ordered the Italians to re- revolver in his hands. As he looked at /ajtion, which contained a clause provid- her prostrate form ne made a move as 4 . my turn to the pler and help the firemen though to fire again, but Mrs. Schwartz "Aine They laughed at him, Chief Sullivan telephoned to the West JAPAN HURRIES BRITISH way to the landing of the fire-escape next door at No. 548 West One Hundred Then taking a woman and child, be guided them probably lose all they had. Tivo alarms were turneti ‘in, because a, previous on the pier at One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street. oe POLICE DRIVE MEN TO FIGHT FIRE ON A PIER. 0 safety, He took many women and hen the police came and assisted him, to the building and the tenants will fire-engines in the district to the tire One Hundred and Twenty-ffth street police station and the reserves came up on the double-quick, Still the Itallans refused and then the police surrounded them and, by the use of their clubs, drove them onto the pier and forced them to assist the firemen. Several re- sisted and were roughly handled The fire started while the Itallans were sorting the paper and packing it Mn bales and would have spread and probably consumed the whole pier had not the tugboat Aaron, which was in the river breaking ice so as to make a landing for a couple of barges, come alongside and sprinkled the pier with its hose. ‘This wetting delayed the prog- ress of the flames until the Fire Depart- ment could cover the whole dock with iS } ‘This is a dumping pler which belongs to the city and from whieh it removes the refuse picked up In. the Harlem streets, Morrone has a contract with the city whereby he secures the scrap | Raper, He was preparing to ship away the 100,000 pounds that had been baled when the fire was discov red, kitchen of his own fat, and taking a plece of rubber tubing from the gas stove carried It Into his bedroom. ‘There he made a slip noose in one Morris Follick, a peddler, who has been out of work for some time, and who| has lived entirely on the earnings of tis wife and the older of his ehildren. shot and-killed his wife to- @ay in thelr bumble nome at No. 4 Tenth avenue. There was no excuse for the brutal murder, outside of the fact that the couple had quarrelled because Folic wes drinking up the earnings of the woman and her children, and had re- fused to do any work h'mself After the shooting Fallick trie hang himself, but was cut down alive Wife Had (o Support Him. The Follicka had four roomy gn the first. floor of the ‘Tenth avenue house. Nine monthe ago Mrs. Follick had her ninth ehild, all of whom are living, und Decause her husband would not go out ‘and work she was obliged to get up her- self within a few days und do « lot of “washing. The older children earned a ) few dollars 9 week, und in that way the ) family managed to keep alive. "Pa-day Follick came in from a neay- Py guloon with « fresh demand tor money. Mra. Follicx gave tim what ‘few penties sho had ond then chided him for his brutality. Fired Four Shots, (Foilick, who was drunk, took the mey iwithout a word and went out ler he foturned with “money. His wife. who had her fi her arms, said that she had to givé Wim. Follick threatened | do some Gamage if he didn't get i Mra. Mollick laid the baby d and tried to reason with her Before she had said a dozen Wan pulled out a revolver nine a demand for DEATH-TRAPS. (Continued from Page 4.) personally investigated Keith's Union Square Theatre, He found that 150 MIKADO RECEIVES TAFT. American ENGINEERS TO FAR EAST, Japan's Ruler ‘Tells He end, tied the other end to a hook in] LONDON, Jan. 6.—The party of marine so ungent that the men left without Wants ce Melnssin) tence: the wall and hanged himself, ne . TOKIO, Jan, 6.—Gov. Taft, of the Nile Peleemen Sheridan and Scuktin [engineera trom the Clyde district on- | having provided themselves with out \ es had been summoned and Dr. Zingsnet | Kaged by the Japanese Government to | ts Philippine Islants, and Mrs. Taft have bad urcived with an ambulance from | procévd immediately to Japan, pre-| A detachment of 120 British naval} been grant udience by the Em- Roosevelt Hospital, Mrs. Folllck was | POC Heailan beara tranbe| penuisnces os UP SOUan ADAYA | RESO RTatl eda nn Audlent el bys hes Bp removed to the hospital, where she died |Sumably for service on board tra isioners and maval reserve men and | peror ard Empress, Wnching with them # half an hour later, Folltick 4 ports, have sailed for the East ten British offles started for Genoa, Jater Tollceman Sheridan cut Follick down | hoy embarked at Liverpool on board | italy, to-day to assiat In the navigation | te and hustled him to the hospital in AN} eng British steamer Lake Brie, bound fof the Japanese warships Kasaga and| Subsequently an informal discussion Was mationed to watch bim, Phe mu | for St. John. N. B, whence they will | Niasin, formerly the Moreno and Riva-| took place, the Emperor expressing hie at unconscious, but the doctors say Spor b} 4 » he Pacitle a, of e “ty vy. to the Fi hes uF PL fe Te a Sat ATE isn ported iby rail to the Pacith pn orth ad ptinanayy.:t thi ras satisfaction at the friendly relations ee coast. 8 e railroad station was crowded | ere he - Another draft of Scotch engineers | with sightseers, who manifested great | Whlch extat between América and Jap HUNTING THEATRE Yett Govan quietly for Japan a week | enthusiasm, There were repeated cheers |an. which he hoped would continue, He U agu. The summons thoy received was | for the “gallant ittle Japs wished thé Americans to understand 2 $2 _ JAPAN GETS RUSSIA'S REPLY TO PROPOSALS. that Japan was striving earnestly and patiently to maintain peace. ro HIPPING NEWS. FOR TO-DAY. ALMANA’ pie were standing up in the gallery and Sun rises, 72 Sun ects. 4.48/Moor, rises 9.19 ae the Mallee ‘of exita and stair-| TOKIO, Jan 6.—-It is believed here with whom he remained an hows, and THE TIDES, ¥ . 1 0 Russian sponse hn been | tater he ed Piaralon ttat i ch Water, v Wat waye werc to lead him to believe {that the Russian r mt he ; t ter | ° vialt ‘a Premier Katsura, when High Water, Low or the y patrons had litte | handed to the Government, but the se extended con’ © was hee S¥ 1021 46 4.28 hance in casetabnne Jeret of its delivery has been jealously here ts every Indication e.y tbat eat eg pad "After returning to his office Commis. | Sarded ict Mie nature of thi reply SHG, Hegotli ians wil “Ava phice, : ia e sioner Hayes sald: “Permission to build | HANS Undiseluse Miho eh it is ex ed that Jay wil Sy he such a guilery as T found in that the: | Minister of Foreign Affairs Komara transfer the diseu ul PORT OF NEW YORK. atre should never have been given, called this after on: dpon Maren de fabs to St. Petersburg ff tris is pro- _ Manager Albee protested vigorously | Rem, the Russian Minister to Japau, |p sev ARRIVED. against arraignment, saying that | Tee aT Esme lo Wrest Lixerpoo! soe Gieatre nse pean) Sonera ed 4 *'COTTON DROPS ON THE JAPANESE TOLD TO { the new building Jaws and that tt had passed the inspection of all the depari- PROBABILITY OF WAR. LEAVE MANCHURIA, » Cardenas ments for years. He declares that the} pi eS ———— pen ruan gallery ean be emptied ia one minute -RKIN. J 3 aetven Ne javana formani ast caused a drop in prices of from | : g y ily Cardenas 1s id oe ea 7h ta a peinta on the Cotton Exehange | 2cunced that the Japanese commercial Hepat . . ‘houses had instructed their agents to Harb FIRST FOAL OF YEAR. to-day a , {send thelr families away from Man- — ee LEXINGTON, Ky., Jan. 6—The A Advices from New Orleans waa that), INCOMING STE. foal of the seagon of 1901 came Mon- | all the strong traders lke Haynes, Col. | Siegen fe SS DEO Seong: raran® (Btud | Brown and others were still buying. | BRITISH CABINET Arkansas, ft Rotterdam, Gretchen. by. Luke Blackburn—Ping, | Despite these advices the selling con- Ofelorine’ Ll r heaN tema fore. by. Enquirer, foaicd a bay filly | tinued HURRIEDLY CALLED. | Aistis,, Hambure ‘hy, Bwainsen, by ‘the noted | English stallion’ imp. | spot cotton dropped 60 points to-day aderland, Antwerp. Deals Woolsthorpe. ‘This filly iy a half-at S Seine keice ode item hen. oa aby) aes er to the race winner Maggie Clop-|oF $ a bale e low price ed ; pn, v Pl sis.90. Up to to-day there have been| ‘LONDON, Jan. 6~A Cabinet meeting ou AGOING. STRAMBEIFA: alah LPAI yep ALBERS 1,701 bales of cotton exported, and| las been called for this week, probably Blaseptte. LAyerpool. rt tello, Mu. ching. Hleeding Sov is ding | 28, the average price, ts ~ b the | for Saturday. rte ‘fummons was un- a zaain eI Om ‘ Prince. Arsen- Z ‘ Mfund. toner} figures reach $2,462, ist _vear up|expectod. Premier Balfour and othor he Ww Pt OEM rue ey ceund many Il to thie date there were %0,718 bales! Ministers having arranged for a Lore | owe Charleston. Prince Willem «ILI. 44 days, bic. exported, Tae . : y ail night's absence from London. .. s aia awa DGE J. . BARNARD ~ DIES AT AE OF 6 Served Three Terms on the Su- preme Court Bench and Had Been Retired When He Reached the Age Limit. POUGHKERPSIE, N. Y,, Jan. 6.— Judge Joseph F. Barnard, of the Su- preme Court, died at his residence in this clty to-day ag 1.90 o'clock, Me waa born In thig vicinity about clmhty years ago, and was a graduate of Yale University ofthe class of 1841. He was olected to the Supreme Bench in 1888, wae again elected in 1871, and was re-elected in 18%. In 1898 he retired 1 account of having reached the ago jimlt, Since then he has ved at his home In this city. $$$ COLD KILLS PET TERRAPIN. Shell Inscribed “G, ©, 18 De Sent to Mr. Cleveland, The diamond: back Ii. terrapIn from | Chesapeake Bay with the inscription G.-C, 1888,"" carved on ite back, which has been the pet of the Gregorian Hotel; in West Thirty-fitth street, for wii the past few weeks, died to- cold "wave. wan too! much fork. The cause of the initials on its shell the terrapin escaped the stew at the hotel and became a pet. It was called Grover until last week, when it deposited some eges Ina corner, The: oe eed ‘0 rae FFE HORNS, Wee Grace showed signs of wearin A terday and was Wraped in funnels eed Placed in the warm oven In the kitchen, race, revived for a time, but thia morn: ig she turied up her toes for The shell will be removed from Grace the ohef, to-morrow, Mis, body by Loi $i £6 Ut Weare lead | ase THREE FROZEN MEN ./WAH-TE-NAH TAKES ON ICE-BOUND SHIP} AN | CE COLD BATH He Does It to Show How Good He Feels in Freezing Weather, but Injures His Reputation by the Act. NORWALK, Conn., Jan. 6—There is a deep suspicion fn this city that Wah- te-nah, who lives at the home of Will- lam Ziegler, the New York millionaire, is not an Exkimau. He came back with one of the Ziegler North Pole expedi- tions and was supposed to be what he seemed until yesterday, when he took « bath. Men conversant with Eskimau character assert that elther Wah-te-nal is a fakir or he Js losing his mind. ‘There ts one thing in favor of the claims of Wah-te-nah that he Is bona fide and that ts his ynadulterated joy in the cold weather. ‘The current frigia period has made him lively as a colt He gets out on the {ce of the harbor, whoops loudly and tolls in the snow ap- parently in an excess of satisfaction. it {s the first Ue he has felt comfortable since he left the frozen North, he says. The arrival of sero weather drove everybody but Wah-te-nah to cover. He refused to stay in the house. It was his pleasure to go down to the edge of the Sound and let the ‘wind blow through his hair, The colder it got the more he permeated the exterior atmo- sphere, until there was some talk of a public subscription to buy him a nen duster and straw hat. Wah-te:nah was around town vester- day telling everybody who would listen what fine weather it/was. He stood on street corners and posed in the bitter cold, He talked about Eskimau land and custome, and It gave the townemen picemicn to sep him having wo much un, Then he up and spoiled his reputation Making his way with a hatchet to a Pond near the Ziegler place, he cut a hole in the ice, Following this he re- moved his raiment, and to cap the. cli- max he jumped into the water. After sloshing around like a peal, he alimbed out. put on his clothes and’ went home So far as is known this is the first time an Eskiman ever took a bath—that is, uf course, if {t de conc thi Wati-ternan'is really an Bskiman, —— JOB FOR SULLIVAN MAN. William =f. Calvert Superintendent Appointed of Tenementn. William 8B, Calvert, Treasurer of the Timothy D. Sullivan Association, Cap- tain of the banner district In. the Sixth Assembly District, of which Alderman Timothy P. Sullivan im leader, and one of the most active captaims in the or- ganization, was to-day appointed Superintendent of the ‘Tenement House Commission by Ten ent House Com- missioner T. C. T. Crain. The salary is $8,000 a year and is a position of in- fluence. Mr. Calvert was recently presented with a handsome sliver service by Con- gressman Sullivan in recognition of his work during the campaign. Corporation Counsel Delany to-day appointed Henr, reau for the Collection of Arrears and Personal Taxes. Mr. Steinert was for several years an assistant corporation counsel aevigned to the H - ments His salary: is $45on ut Depart —— NEW LAMPS FOR THE MAYOR. Art Comm fon Passes on Designs for Them. With{n a few days the Mayor's lamps will be placed opposite the residence of Mayor McClellan, in accordance with a time-honored custom. When once placed in position the Mayor's lamps are never removed and are always kept lighted at the expense of the city. The Art Commission to-day passed upon designs of the lamps for Mayor McClellan's residence. —— HALF DOLLAR A COUNTERFEIT Man Charged with Pai Coin at Proctor’ George FH. Merwin, a timekeeper, liv- ing at No. 58 Palisade avenue, Jeravy City, was arraigned before Magistrate Crane in the Jefferson Market Court to-day charged with having passed a counterfolt half dollar at Proctor’s Fitth Avenue Thertre, Broadway and Twen- ty-elghth street, yesterday afternoon The prisoner was taken by order of the Court to be arraigned before United States Commissioner Shields in his fice in the Federal Building. According to the police four other pieces of cou terfelt money Were found In Merwin's possession, Oculists. We mean that our patrons shall have the best professional service it is possible to give. These Oculists are in charge of our eye-testing rooms at the addresses given: } A. W. Brewster, M. D., 247 B way. a Brooklyn Eye an ir isponsary. G28" Brigden, M,'D., 1343'B way. (15 years-in private practice. M, Kenyon, M.'D., 223 Sixth, Av. (8 veurs Manhattan Bye and Ear Hosyital.) Glasses Only if Needed, Ghirtich OPTICIANS—41 Years’ Practice. 25 Broad St... Arcade, Broad Ex. Bldg 217 Broadway .... Astor House Block 223 Sixth Avenue ... Below 18th St. 1345 Broadway. -Below 36th St, STORES OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. DIED. BYRNES.--At hie residence, 866 Amsterdam ave ‘ P., beloved husland of Ann Tlyrnes, native of County Wicklow, Ire- land. Funeral notice later, DOLAN,—On Jan. 5, MARTIN V, DOLAN. Funeral ‘Thursday at 7.45 A. M. from his late residence, 814 Wert 119th st., thence to St. Thomas's Church. ne Bogan Laundry Wants—Female. GIREA 10 Won oh mangle, Pallmde Steam The World’s Cure For the SKIN & BLOOD A NOTED. WOMAN. COUSIN OF LATE U. S, PRESI- DENT ZACHARY TAYLOR. 76 Years of Age, Recommends Vino! for Old People. Winurow, of 423 W. Erie moer of vue vf the mort les 11 the country, cous of Zac joy, 12th President of the U. S., and grasidoiece of Alexander Hamil- ton, who signed the Declaration of Inde pendence, writes: “Vinol is aK 7H years old, but thanks to Vino! Mra. sarah 4 St, Chicago, a 1 ain ML tos ot end to vid people. feel active and the vitaliging effects 1. ¥ appetite is all that could be desired I sleep well, and my mind is clear, and 1 am interested in the affairs of life as was fifty years ago. “When I was young cod liver oll was dis ensed in a greasy, unpalatable form, an it fairly gagged me to get it down. Vin is so different, palatuble and nourishing to impoverished blood. “TL feel so much stronger, and physically, Vinol that F feel it my duty, a pleasure. t¢ recommend Vinol as the finest tonic I eve used fn my life"? both mentally MRS. SARAH J. WI Such words of praise from a n of such high standing must be accepted as Unquestionable proof of the superiority of ‘nol Do you wonder that our Vinol has such & strong hold upon the esteem of doctors and patients? We know of nothing else that will accomplish such wonderful resul and, remember, Vinol ts not tent madi clne. There are hundreds of old people in this vieinity who need. just such a@ strength. maker and tssue-bullder as Vinol. Their blood ts thin and sluggish—Vinol will en- rich and quicken the blood and bulld up the system. It is so much better than whickey and strong stimulants, which al- Ways have a bad after effect and weaken tnd break down, There ts nothing in the world so good for the weak, the aged or ihe run-down systein and to'cure a hang- ing on cold or hacking cough as Vinol, and because we know so well what {t will do we are always ready to refund every cent bald us for it if it falls to do what wo y it on our guarantee, a Riker's Drug Stor 6th Av. and 2384 St. NOTE—For the conventence of people im other localities the Riker Co. bas arranged to have VINOL sold at the drug stores of J. Jungman, 1020 3d Ay, and 429 Columbus Ay.. also at Kinsman's Drug Stores, cor. 125th St. and &th Av. and G01 Sth Ay Wash Goods and Flannels, Special Attractions. We are showing in our Wash Goods Department many attractive novelties at exceptionally low prices. 850 pieces Batiste and Dimtties in flower designs, polka dots and stripes; special value, 12% cts, a yd. Flannel Defi. The balance of 1,100 pieces Fine Washable Flannel, at 23 cts. a yd., present value 4goc. to 50c,ayd Lord & T. aylor, Broadway and Twentieth Stree: and Fifth Avenue. New kintrance on 19th Street, Lost, Found and Rewards. ‘