Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TGE-CREAM Battle-Ship Missouri Has a Big Freezer and Jackies Get Strawberry Blocks, . Very Often Send Out to the Mess for Meals,” Says Ad- cause of No Champagne? ‘Seated in his cabin in the handsome few battle-ship Maine as It lay off } Insyille to-day Admiral Evans, | "Fighting Bob,’ dircussed the Inter sting phases of life on his squad- © Fon, With particular reference to the menus that Jackio puts under ‘ie belt when Uncle Sam is catering. miral was annoyed by the false 5 spread around by deserters that ‘Poor food had been served them, and ay ‘€0 prove they wero lies he produced the ON"THE ICE C on two ships, and these hi ale Grouse Eeccponahs Was done by the Iilinvis, and Massachusetts, The made wore by tuecky with a five-inch minute's firing, one gunn 13 times out of 14 shots, out of 18 and. the ochor two ‘ards, the target being 21 by “FIGHTING BOB” four men of gun the seconu 1¥ This was done {n one minute at 1,600 AND (Oy MIGHT FIND WHO'D SAY IsTore His SCENES REAR ADMIRAL ROBLEY EVANS. REAM SHIR,” ad reason- Meh work Kentucky est. scores the Ken- in ‘one hitting During the target practice the battle- phips used successfully the new smc expeller, whioh Is ‘a compr mechanism which throws the gases out with the discharge In toe face of the heaviest winds. Tf this device had been installed on the Missour! at the time of the fatal flareback a year ago experts believe the accident have happened, wy 12 out of 16 feet, © bilis-of-fare for a month. ¥ t Jack Does Not Go Hungry. > Let any who pictures poor Jack gnaw- ‘1 fing on rotten food and bones spare his \ tears, for tho day of starvation for the Pghting men afloat is no more and the “Messes are now served with all the modern inconveniences, At present the y kets on the battleship Missouri ‘fe cutting frequently into strawberry bce cream. Yeu, ice cream, made on board the Hattie-ship in a big freezer stirred by /@lectric machinery, Tho Missourl boys @re “showed” so often that their ship ‘is known as the “Ice Cream Ship." _ Rear Admiral Evans's own disposing ‘ef the deserters who spread the poor food rumors js characteristic of the probably most popularly regarded ad- wiral. “If you take the word of any fellow fwho gets loaded up avhore and tails fo @et aboard you can get most any @ocusation ageinst a man. Very likely you can find a man who, if he thought Mt would be printed and would injure ‘Me, would tell you that I stood him on Qs head and took his watch away trom him, “The tood served in tho messes is excellent, I very often send out to ithe mess for food for our meals and pe it very good, Just the other night ing Officer Crossley and I had some excellent sour krout from fmeaa, and it went fine.” Battle-Ship’s Menus, Admiral vans then sent for recoras of the menus, and a few appetizing ones Welected at random are here given as a of what Jack Tar gets to ttle-ship Missouri, Sunday, May 14.— Dinner—Ronst pork, gravy, Moshed por eicoet, canned peas, asparagus, straw- Derry ice cream, bread, butter, cocoa. Baturday, 20, erabs, atrawbe May rads creamed notatoa q milk and sugar, broad, butter, t Battle-ship Maine, May 1: Breakfast Oatmeal and milk, boiled eggs, bread butter, coffee and cream. inner Roast loin of beef, brown ee apple sauce, balled potatoes, butter, coffee and cream. ig eros, elocd Boloena: mustard : cheese, rice pudding, i Batters tea. Pi iB hot biscuits here is an appetizing Iayout for any iy tar who ever sailed the bound: i biNow, and dt must have been that the conwplaining deserters heard that | Fired lan fleet was loaded with cases AMpAENe, marine, an ensign, and a flag officer wave the same view as Admiral ) that the mess was not only but very good. The mess temlay was in charge of sheen, leeney and there did not scem to be ¥ sign of nausea among the crew, German Government's draft o on the proposed commercial t in July, of the German Chambers of The Duesseldorff Chamber, phalian manufactuning dist these fundamental principles two men's | own: extended binding force for the United “Becond—If that treaty be it must be replaced by a countries. Among other thin treaty must regulate general , @nd commerce between them, a the way for an extension u/ ‘ postal intercoune, “Third—A tariff treaty United States must be sough one concession shall be balan Section 4 calls attention to of the Dingle, and expresses doubt as to wi United States Government ts GERMANY’S NEW TRADE TREATY | IS DRAFTED Plain Demands Made Paper to Be Submitted to Washington, BPRLIN, June 10-L2 P, M.—The the United States is in course of prep- aration for submission to Washington It 1s based upon the reports and other commercial authorities, most influential {n the Rhenish West- Prince yon Buelow a memorial in which Cancel Old Treaty. “First—The old Prussian treaty of 1828 | must elther be formally cancelled or | to the German Empire with comity and navigation between the two | nights of the citizens of one country while stopping in the other nd prepare arrangements and the promotion of Must Balance Trade, other fully or approximately equalling permitting revl- procity concessions for only two years, in f its views Teaty with Organization of Vigilant Wives’ Association in Buffalo Adds New Interest to Current Dis- cussion by Women Readers of The Evening World, Commerce one of the rict, sent were laid From Buffalo comes the news that strenuous measures have been taken in the reform of husbands with the all- night club habit. | States, cancelled | Jeorning the ol jroaty ot | pemung: ie lib oa home has been taken up in a foretble and practionl manner in the city of “put me oft’ fame. Worthy housewlyes of that place have nized « vigilant society, and husbands who dally tn the primros» path of pleasure after the hour when they should be by thor hearthstonos are dealt with severely, The Vigilant Wives’ Association ts the name of the Buftalo society to pro- tect the interests of the home, and the organization has just had an interest- |ing illustration of tts principles through. | the action of its president, Mrs, An- drew Letka, a woman past sixty Mr, Betka stayed at his club (morning for so many nights that Section 4| president of the Vi«ilants determined to make an example of fim. She |awalted her spouse and haled him to the police court, Justice Vannater suspended sentence when the wayward es such a. navigation | define the copyright with =the t in which ced by an- until hether the In a posi- Mo were tucking away Kencrous con, | {00 t© make a treaty at all without |husband promisd to etay at home ments af beet, potatocs and eravy | further legislation, and whether the | nigris. strong food for fighting men, ates Government could get | ip ve. been co! ttle Buttercup with a bumboat had | from Congress the right to CONGIA RK The letters which have been coming @ cargo of ples over the rail ist Defure mess, but if there had been sposed of the 'men showed no sign, 9," the goat mascot of the Main righted startling signs of hostility, and At fs possible he may have known some- WME about the disappearance of the Kinsville #inkers, The Speed of the Maine. Breaking of the sped conditions ot entre, about which much of an LJ much treaty for a longer period years, and then demands th the treaty negotiations lead ¢ tleal result the general Germa be applied to imports from States, ‘tion to the export s States’ continul duties on German vided for by the to which Germany woul the ‘uncon ntary chinacter has been ted, Adiniral tevane. walt “Ap originally built the Malne mads too smoke, and tubes were cut 13 for combustion, larger treaty rates t Continue Lower Rates. Section 5 suggests that some allevia. busines of i country could be secured by the. United the lower rates goods in the list pro- Tatoga agreement, answ equivalent compensations, but net With | to the to The Evening World rela Mra, Alfred Thornton Baker suit for divorce against her husabnd, the well- known iubman who neglected his home for club life, has taken on # new Interest than five at In case Ono prace an custome | the Unite |since the Buffalo women banded to- |gether to correct a social evil. The following letters ‘nave been re- ceived on the subject: Approves the Vigilante, To the Editor of The Evening World: I have been deeply Interested In the of were cuit out to equal | Other countrien, eTOUe 8@ conceded to | discussion which has arisen In your Iniwands” “ine | Section 8 reada: paper over this Baker divorce sult. ave, Been restored and ine drei], nateer, arrangement te mado| For years T have borne in silence the ave learned to propirly fire an y! 6 for supplyini Ay roome the AMoKG diMculty and ag'a| free of cost {ntormation about tarif | Newlect and desertion caused by my it. I expect and predict that on the| matters, for the publication of official | Husband's fondness for his club, He is Lent ip Maing’ wil] coe “up to | Hats of goods with rogular Pupplements| scarcely ever at home nights, and as ie heat ie 4 a 18) oh ee by, Rephment of tari differ | nis business keeps him downtown all je Malne ja all right a] ‘The treaty must also vi day I might almost as ‘well be a ne vehipy not ma apeedy™ ak ie Dts: | contesting. tant decisions. througit dice WideW, bo tar ee cornpeinonantp|ia-cont Pattie tot ft Breedeau citi tb Tomato channela and for the free clt- | cenyed, pat sR) id el practice culation of sampl | cerned, heen Delt | countey, must Hedge’ feck” ans ench Pledge itself the findings of the sclentific the other state as to the a of food products,” did while on the Nort ound the admiral sald that all Foved the target record of 1904 mi Memorlal to Rossa. Honor American Minister, |No Liquor, Says Hoch. LONDON, JUNE 10—The United] COPENHAGEN, JUNE 10--Lourito 8. | TOPEKA, JUNE 10.—Goy, Hoch to-day | | Irish League of Great Britain at its/ Swenson, the retiring American Min-| was asked if he would object to the ‘ Jannual meeting hero to-day, under the| Wer to Denmark, and Mry, Swenson, \use of wine in christening the battle: | Examine them eure ully, | Presidency of 1 P, O'Connor, passed! who will sail for the United States |ehip Kansas when it ts launched In| Select one with care, {® resolution to organize a National|June 14, have been accorded an unysual| September, He sald: “If I am cone ‘Rest assured it will net you jmemorlal 0 O'Donovan Rossa honor by Crown Prince Frederick, who jsulted T shall recommend and advise | Profits quite rare. | = = valled at their residence and | con- |uhai the ship be ehelatened with some veyed the thanks of King Christian |fuld er than an intoxleant, ‘This To Lecture at Berlin, and) hin the services! of Mr. {recommendation will resect the sentl- * "| ¥ ment and the laws of Kansas." BERLIN, JUNB 10.—Pr awronce| SW enson Incas to Denmark BARGAINS LANBHIR Be Che CUM FELT eC lee | whilo: the: Fepresontntive of the Uniteal| eo SACRIFICES has been invited to deliver a course of | St&es THATS chat teed atl CONCESSIONS PLWVDREEATOIU, GRO Basics ott ee pveritody who te anybody tn the BOMECROMALS TRAY coke Coal a Wentleil Assembly isirict ts pre ; | Sconce next winter, Rai eget tte!) Samar Rebel Killed. poring Ww attend tw, annual summer To-Morrow's | maintains clogs “reith D the! MANILA, JUNE 10,—Inrique Dagu- | Ase nse Of athe, Rammany Central i Prussian Ministry of. Education, the : Sak LUMA ONO Te aan National Zeitung, which reports the in-| 20% leader of t PROMEEC ate cn Vitation, aadumes that It constitutes | movement in the Island of Samar, was |) 1M), Miiriy tle leader of the dis. part of Emperor William's plan for the | killed, together with thirtyenine of his | hin pro Enoge AAU WIN ReAURE. orlaes United ngs Ao! fA iccoe li Bs tween the, followers, on June 4, accoyding to ad- leo the young woman who wears. the to accept| In yestamlay's World I noticed @ de- bodies of spatch from Buffalo which stated that omposition |the women of that tow formed 4 Vigilant soclety to prevent sedeair navil) Cod whilo lying at could not | The Maine learned of the Norway- «bout the det | The Aiscussion which has arisen con- | destroyer of the | counteract the overpowering attraction 2 eats he takes hie din- | | | ] Sweden break b: Inost of the ne It kept tn easy (stance of 2 whieh Admiral E est wireless ayst wire! miles wit ns m in “| oFTEN SEND To THE MEN's Mess” ship's wireless took meswiges from Cape n Admiral Evans |many strange staying out nights, thia may seem No Ww. Dr L4 nitive how. much better ft rv] is SMALL CONCER ‘MISS GORTELYOU CHARGED WITH ~ TAKING JEWELS Woman Who Claims to Be, Niece of Postmaster Gen- eral Under Arrest, Charged with the larceny of over | $4,000 worth of jewelry from the wife lof an old pertner of the late "Cuesar" | Young, for whoso murder Nan Patter- n owas tried, a handsome young , Who gives the name of An- ' te Cortelyou and she Is a e of Postmaster-General George B, Cortelyou, was a prisoner In the West Side Court to-day, She was arrested late last night after a dinner and the- atre par nd placed in a cell In the | West Sixty-eight street station, She didn't stay there long, however, for } doth Bhe and her maid, who was are rested with her, were balled out by "rhomas Healey, the restaurant-keeper, Magistrate Mayo hurrying to the sta- tlon-house in person to take the bonds, The complainant against Misa Cor ‘ou is Mrs, Dorothy Auerbach, the wife of Adolph Auerbach, a race-track bookmaker, who was once an employee and afterward a partner of “Caesar? | a |Young, Tho story that sho tells of the less, as well as)time that Russian gentleman went robbery is as follows Ss daring lis run north, [swimming off Japan, but the Admiral | A Boolal Call communication up t> a} denies all these stories, | 4 h the Maryland, | There was only one thing I sald,and| “T have known Miss Cortelyou for ava has the M-|that was before the Met.” he declared. | ave years, and formerly lived with her the navy. This|"T sald if Rojestvensky attempted to go Raa Hae FPA through the Corean Straits he would|at No. 68 West Sixty-sixth street, Newport News, stay there," TARA ent home, esterday afternoon IT as quoted as saying | The Maine will go to the Navy-Yard) gay A Sotehan b NORIO CALENOL and picturesque things tto-day for docking Detore. sailing for | Started from ny ana Bet) oy aaa at of Rojestvenskty at the Pertsmouth for the summer. 69 West Ninety-third street to sell som! ———— an _ — oo extra jewelry that I had and also to all on my doctor, The Jewelry I took with me consisted of eight diamond | rings and a lot of pins and brooches | set with diamonds, pearls, turquotses and sapphires. I placed them in a hand satchel and on my way downtown | decided to call on Miss Cortelyou, | There was no one In the apartment when T got there save Miss Cortelyou and her colored maid, Ruth Bundy, Af- aay ror a CM teen te hho n |ter chatting with Miss Cortelyou for a y piish dread of publicity and | her I would have to run strike for justice and decency, Too ited | time 1 told hi TORY Wamene bear te niwities in (Contest for Control of United) rrong. sne asked me where I was go- ailenee, dre Do husbands hesitate t oO throw al ling to bring notoriety Into that most sacred of circles, the home. n evil shadow on the home when they allow | thetr Ucally ehildren no. to grow knowledge dom, with no fe can A home be a home without a father? the higher 1 wish life, women social in in circles a up wit of thelr nd in h tather, when they lead a life of absolute free: ing of home tles? How | Prac | walks of exclusive sets who have suffered by neglect would organize some check to this the rights of the hom Mre. Baker has taker step in the matter, but plan tha flagrant le some way to protect the hor out foreing wives into dl Mrs, at ne n by an. would usurpation the individual put a bn ot club, there ought to Law Should Step In. To the Editor of The E Will you to expr ject of Home? Any woman humiliation that nswer in the ubsolutely disrupts aman nigat i 8 it ness. in ven ne “Wy 1 hg the 1 have tried my husband in back of club life. My lunohes at the chub, hu who has aflirmatt ine W. nts on t 1b ay home. every but sband d yw me space In your Destroy w with- c, undergone the could Club only life When n begins to stay away night after and to carouse with his club fe is the knell of a Wife's nappt ‘ay to T cannot his ners there and he comes home whenever he feels like tt Tin my turn would be charged with the grossest infidelity if [ were to be abse of his irregular and Why are men allowed home and then neglect aws in New York to breaches of faith, w! tect the home from the fro destroy the home A Serious Menace to Society, he Evening World To the Mr woman Who Is negl uUnnier, beer they ities me any degree » many tn 9 » gO tO th done It ia one of t f domestic life and Men rt m. to it? q club? Mrs, A. per ne way Not 3aki ome ay to Th dlvertin clety more seriously than most realize, M. en establish ‘There are punish other yo not one to pros | T would be glad to see some movement started by New York women to puta stop to | the growing tendencies of clith life to M women 4 on 8, marry upen a home Hfe, but Aa soon to | thelr clubs disposition ts grow xtent In Ameriea, me tes with care for thelr saddest stat menacing so. | i ul EDWIN GOULD AS HOST OF CHILDREN, | | He Entertaina Over 200 Youngsters from the Home of the Friendle: Over two hundred little children from Woody- the Home for the Frie: crest avenue and One Sixty-first street, are to-day the guests et Edwin Gould at the old Ogden estate, just east of the Washington Bridge. The little folks, thelr faces shining with expectation, were taken estate by thelr caretakers and turned to enjoy themselves, sandwiches, — strawberrl good things’ were provided, husbands | Gould acted as host. ndless, Hundred vices just received, Prettiest dress and to to Ice-cream, Important Foreign and Telegraphic News Aome on ‘any uncertain vists. a ' Le the meet i have clubs reaple J. and the \ and Mr, tory States Bankers’ Corporation to Be Made at Annual Meet- ing Next Week. At the annual meeting of the United ing, and T sald I had to see my doctor for a moment “Oh hone him,’ she said, and 1 went to her telephone, leaving my bag in the fr ontained all the jews being Wor ed tol phoning while and then I mnt away, Discovered Loss on Car, 1 1 $4,000, A fte chatted again fc States Bankers’ Corporation, to be held | F | Hi oy alan't discover my lose until I ge next Tuesday at Kittery, Me. there In| oy! UM iiterdam avene car | Bed to be a hot fight for control of the} opened the Lah rcKet book company to be mado against John G, | when tid not Delleve that t Rat Carlisle, Cleveland's Seeretary fof the it or iat 1 had been taken. from Treasury; J. W. A. Brackett, former | 188° jt Miss Cortelyou's Gover Massachusetts; Walter L. | inake eortalns T went rig : Badge: be vther men | it by any chance there, It whose ‘names 4 1. Trevor | was, not hom rertaln that wis, of No. 108 VILE i Was in the bag w to the ident of the company von. | telephone at Miss Cortelyou's. at test with Mr, Curlisie, the president, Auerbach told th Seng hot only for the control, bat against | on, of tha West Sixty-eight we adoption of a p si ‘co fon, ane nt Detectives the United States Bankers’ Corporation axter out to x ‘ore |Into the Bankers’ Finance Corporation, ; (lvou hey went to her se and a concern now In process of formation, ed for over two hours, but she | fathered by the statesmen named. n't put In an appearar Later in The Unite es Bankers’ ora«| the evening they went back, and while t nited States Bankers’ Corpora tion was organized about three yours Standing in front of the house of Miss ago to exploit a new and novel system Cortelyou met ber coming home, she of banking Invented a man named admitied her identity and was at once Taylor, which was to revolution! es: placed under arrest. She was very in ent banking systems, Taylor was given! dignant at being arrested, and positive 00 his patent and a firm of Bos-| ly denied her guilt. ton lawyers got an equal amount for “Magistrate Pool held Miss Cortelyou commission, “The rest of the, $69,000 1n’ $1,000 bail for further examination. to- rent. went in salaries to Carlisle, morrow. The youtig woman. refused to hursto:, Brackett and the others in discuss the case in court, The station- xpenaes, No business has ever been house ball for both he and the maid done. | Was continued until to-morrow. (THIN CAMP WITH Dons the New Olive Drab Khaki —First Time the Regiment to Camp Wearing Anything but Gray. H The Seventh Regiment at 1 stron Sixty to the Grand Central Depot, where it| took camp. 1S NEW TGS ON as Ever Gone went to camp to-day, The regiment, 90 d from its armory at street and Park avenue eekskill gs, ma seventh two Col special trains to the State Dantel Appleton was in command. The khak| iula. mare than ‘The regiment will remain at the camp | for a K Ont fiftec shoot Aa Quee wil wore the new olive drab being adopted by the mil- men i, now This was thi of the iment that it hed to camp in any other uniform its well-known gray. next Saturday, the return the team of en expert marksmen, selected to inst a similar team of the n'y Westminster Rifles in England, sall on the St, Louis. ——————_ we returning he day’ of HORSE KNOCKS DOWN Boy. While wal ambu boy wher ous. on, playing Jn front of No, 339 One, Hundred and, Fifteenth street Tony Masserella, eleven years run down by a horse’ and taining internal injuries, An nce was called, and the Injured onyeyed to the ‘Harlem Hospital, e his condition tx sald to be ser! His home ts at No. 819 Hast One Hundred _and_Thirtcenth atreet dancer. Shoes in the City. Prices range Shoes for Men. Sixth Avenue, Pyar ais airst time In the his- | has | Alexander Largest and most varied stock of Men’s Fine No Branch Store, ———————— GLICK FREE 0 ON HS Couple United in Court by Their Three-Year-Old Boy, Whom Father Had Been Charged with Kidnapping. U, @ Glick, the Western mining and railroad promoter, who was arrested Thursday at the Fifth Avenue Hotel on complaint of his wife, who charged him with Kidnapping thelr three-year ‘ld boy from the home of his unc a brother of Glick, in Erin, Pa, was arradgned to-day in Jefferson Market | Court on a short affidavit Detective Sergt, Riley, who mad the arrest, told Magistrate Finn there was jno charge agatast the prisoner here, and that the Erle complaint had been withdrawn, He therefore asked that Ghek be discharged from custody, This was done, After his release Mr. Glick was wel- comed buck to liberty by a number of | friends who had come to the court tn ‘anticipation of his discharge. Mr, Glick before leaving the court-room sald ihe [did not know the present whereabout | of his wife, who had come on from Ei |to cause his arrest, but who deca reconciled to her husband on the da: the first hearing in Jefferson 0. Market Court, but that he expected to joln her before the day was ove Mra, Glick has the boy In her posses ton, Black, White or Tan. $3.00 to $9.00. 19th Street, | GIRL BRIDE Little Lena Stark “Never Gave ‘The mother of Lena Stark, the little kin] who sets up claim to the position of wife of wealthy Jacop Finellte, fears that he has gone Into hiding to ayold the proceedings Instituted in the courts to compel him to support Lena, But members of the Finelite family assert that Jacob will be on hand next Wednes- day whert the case comes up for trial in Jefferson Market Court. Although Mrs, Stark continues to in- sist that Lena 18 only eleven yeu of ago. The Evening World received infor mation to-day Indicating that the girl {8 fourteen, This was not gleaned trom direct admissions, however, “Lena,” declared Mrs, Stark, “is one year older than her brother Isidor,” Isidor was discovered playing on the | sidewalk {n front of the house, The re- | | porter asked him how old he was. | “T am thirteen years old," replied | Isidor, “Tena is one year older than | me, Her birthday was last month." | Girl's Story Never Varies, The boy looks to be all of thirteen yeara old, although Lena might be taken for a child as young as her! mother says she 1s, The lttle girl, | from repeated recitals of her alleged ons with Pinellte, has arranged the In ci © form, and never varies | the telling of it, Why should a big man want to marry such a ttle girl as you?” she)! was asked, “He sald," replied Tana, “that he had TELLS HOW SHE WAS WED eet, een Says Jacob Finelite Told Her He Wanted a Wife Who Would Be Afraid to Leave the House— Me Money.” by — been married three times before and alt his other wives went out and left him’ alone in the house, He wanted a little girl for a wife so she would be afraid to be out running around and he could keep her In the house all the time, “The last wife he had before me got a divorce, He used to tell me all about her and sald she got away with halk @ milllon dollars of his money." Why She Went to Court. The child explained to-day for the first time why she and her mother went into court to establish the marriage with nelite. She aeserts that Fine- lite’s fathe who Is sald to be over eighty years of age, is mainly respons ible for the legal proceedings, “My husband's father,” she relates, “was vot pleased when my husband He sald I was such a Nt~ So my husband told’ me that we would have to be d+ Vvoreed a couple of years, He sald surely “his father couldn't liye more than a couple of years longer, We could be divorced, and ‘ne could tell his father that we were divorced) and show him the papers, Then when his father ded We could be married again, “Lo said all right, thinking that We would get our divorce, but that ne woull Keep on supporting me while 1 was ving at home, But he never &uve me any money, and so we had to Bo to the ‘Inalite his married me, tle girl to be his wife. could not he found at me, No. Si Lexington avenug, to- y.' We owns the house at tiat hum- and lives in two rooms in the pasemen The rest of the house ts ed un, If he Was at home to-day he refused to answer Knocks on the door, SUBWAY WORKMAN BURNED BY TOUCHING THIRD RAIL. rled Twenty Feet in Atr by Cur! rent, but Hefuned to Go to | Honpital, Louls Grassi, thirty years old, of | | No. 176 Hester a laborer em- street, ployed in the Subway, will be laid up for several weeks with a badly burned | arm aa the result of touching the thied | rei] in the tunnel at Fourteenth street, early to-day, Grassi was workin the express tracks when he accidentally allowed the steel bar he was using to touch the charged third mall, carry ing a current of many thousand volts. | Blue flames lighted wp the tunnel, as, with a roar and enmekle, the current | leaped out and the man went hurtling through the air about twenty feet over to the other side of the express tracks After a minute or two, as his fellow: with a gang on By | | hours and 32 minutes, stead of 2. instead of 9.45, | 9,30 next morning, years, viz., 440 miles in eight ho for the New York Central Lines world, 4% days, "Exposition Flyer” between New In 1891 the New York Central New York to Hast Buffalo, 436% and cities, THEY WOR ia) Regular Summer Change ofTime New YorkCentral Lines © The summer schedule of the New York Central Lines will take effect at 12.01 A. M, Sunday, June 18th, 1905, Some of the changes will be as follows: The Fast Mail will reach New York at 9,17 instead of 10,00 A.M, | The Second Hmpire will leave New York at 1.57 instead of 2.30 P. M. The Southwestern Limited will leave New York at 2.04 instead of 1.00 P. M., reaching St, Louis at 6.00 P, M, next day, saving 2 The Twentieth Century Limited*will leave New York at 3.30 In- P. M., arriving in Chicago at 8,30 the next morning Returning, this train will leave Chicago at 2.30 instead of 12.30 P. M., and reach New York the same as now, at Making the Time Between New York and Chicago 18 HOURS : This is simply applying on the Lake Shore, between Buffalo and Chicago, the time the Empire State Express has been making from New York to Buffalo on the New York Central for fourteen The Twentieth Century Limited will enable its patrons to reach Milwaukee in 20% hours, St, Paul in 81% hours and Minne- apolis in 32 hours from New York. By the New York Central Lines and their connections the time from New York to Denver will be 624g hour cisco, Los Angeles, Portland or Tacoma, 4 days, and to Senttle It may be interesting to note that the running of fast traing by the New York Central Lines {is quite an old story now. In 1893, twelve years ago, the New York Central and Lake Shore, for the 180 days of the World's Fair at Chicago, ran their and for the past three years the Twentieth Century Limited has performed the same service to the country, saving for our busy men practically a day in the journey between the two of the continent; and for fourteen years the New York had in service its Bmpire State Express, the most famous passen- ger train in the world, and the fastest train for its distance, time included 4 stops and 28 slowdowns running through towns laborers were gathered about him specu. lating about Ma funeral, ¢ fat up and asked, with a pugz “What's the snatter?” The hers told him, and a Bellevue Hospital ambulance, with Dr. Drury tn charge, was called,” ‘The doctor found Grass suffering from burns on his right arm and wanted to take him to the hospital, Dut the man refused and was curried to his home laohieeeee EE NEW HAMBURG LINER HERE. The new Hamburg-American line steamer Rhaetia arrived here to-day from Hamburg on her maiden voyag She will enter the South American ser vice, for which she was designed, later in the season, but for the present will run on the Hamburg-New York Mne because of the heavy west-bound immi- grant rush, The Rhactla was built at Vi Jeane. Bhe has accommodations for 12 oabin and 9% steerage passengers and Is fitted with all modern appliances, 8 eee the urs and 15 minutes and retains the long-distance record of the to San Fran- York and Chicago in 20 hours, ‘ent cities ‘entral has ran an experimental train from miles, in 425% minutes. This Lt