Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ea $a 4 id Be ay EY PAYTON, 0, June 1-Thousands of ‘a q me li ART URED ~ STHOISAD + PAY TUTE ton Suspends Business and + Church Bells Toll During } Funeral of Aviator. 9 @Mizens of Dayton and hosts of persons F grem fir and near who felt in the { gehevements of Wilbur Wright, the noted aviator, paid final respects to his @emory to-day. The body of Wright state for three hours to-day at Presvyterian Church and vast Passed the bier. the hours of the funeral this ft was arranged that all car and steam road traffic in should be suspended for five Another tribute was the toll- church bells throughout the city the same period. ‘The funeral ceremonies were conduct~ Dy the Rev, Maurice Wilson, pastor the First Presbyterian Church, and pallbearers comprised several ef Mr. Wright since boyhood men identified with business and clubs with which he was con- i: Hi He emer ‘ ‘Wright buried by the side of matner ia. ® quiet on in “woodland » unadorned except by the of monuments. —_—_— y TRIBUTE IN CONGRESS TO WILBUR WRIGHT. nen tnt frame A THE EVENING WORLD, ‘ FIGGINBOTHAM HIT BY AUTO; MAY BE FATALLY INJURED Former Magistrate Walks in Front of Car in Brook- lyn Street. EX-MAGISTRATE WHO MAY DIE OF AUTOMOBILE HURTS | Suffering trom concussion of the brain, | & Possible fracture of the skull and in- ternal injuries received when an autos | mobile struck him, Gaston Higgin- | botham, former Brooklyn magistrate, Is hovering between life and death to-day in Seney Hospital. He left his home, No. 4 Fourth ave- nue, about 9 o'clock last night for a In crossing the street at Fla and Seventh avenu apparently in @ deep study, he wulked in front of an auto owned and driven by Stanley ‘W. Smith of No, 1701 Albemarle Road. ‘Tho former Magistrate was tossed high in the afr and hurled against the curbing ten feet away, where he lay unconscious and bleeding. Quickly stopping his car, Smith and some men who had witnessed the acct- dent carried the unconscious man to the Automobile and he was taken to Seney Hospital with all possible speed. Until he arrived at the hospital his identity was not known, Higginbotham has @ wife and several children. They have not been It with him in his Fourth avenue ho: for some tim U.S. COLLIER STRIKES: fn the House a resohitjon ¢x- ora the sorrow of that body over @eath ¢ Wilbur Wright, “who ren- his country incalculable service ecience of aeronautics.” ——— POOR OLD HORSES! AUTOS T0 STEAL EVEN THER ASHART Commissioner Edwards Has Plan to Test Six Motor- Driven Dump Vehicles. Bice isainnc? Edwards has his familiar old two-wheeled ash carte, y ‘use since Father Knick was a small bey, ts to go the way of the horsecar “Big the sum of 99,783.60 for a test Nth six ash trucks, begin- nd continuing until the rr, of Aldermen passed fa- Commiasioner’s request and Ils proposition now goes to the Board of Estimate. Ganitary Engineer EB. D. Very, ex- Plaining the scheme, sald the carting Gost at present is 76 cents a ton, With @ach of theso trucks carrying forty-five tons per day, the cost will figure 23 cents @ day. Three-ton and five-ton capacity trucks, with low loading chassises, are wought by the Department. “In the outlying disiricts, where the Very, “you F ‘Will see the need of fast-going motors nd travels capable of carrying five tons Ung nine miles an hour. T to reduce the unit of @on't mean to eliminate horse-drawn arte now, but the gradual wearing out @ the old rigs and horses will enable us to put motors in their places. The clty he will provided Tl | panies the carts ‘Within ten days after the test appropri- ation is passed. ae TO HONOR POLICE HEROES. ‘Will Ho! pecial Service for Dead Men To-Merrow. Memorial service. sur the dead heroes @f the Police Department will be held at @. Patrick's Cathedral at 4.30 o'clock to-morrow afternoon, and all members of the Department off duty } been # requested to attend in dress uniform, With white gloves and without belts or | Cardinal Farley will be present at the ceremonies, and Mar. Lavelle, rector of the Cathedral, will deliver the addi Potice Chal in Francis J, Sullivan will ‘West Forty-seventh street station will S ehief usher, assisted by twenty-five a hate OM SHIPPING NEWS. tt _|) PORT OF NEW Yorx. Gal ort INCOMING STEAMSHIPS, DUE TO-DAY, Aig Arthur Viiladelphia, ur Laurent, “Haine OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS. BAILED TO-DAY, ON BAAS BANKS FASHESS. 0.8. CAL Battleship Nebraska and Tugs Hurry From Key West to Aid of the Mars in Distress. KEY WEST, Fia., June 1.—The Go ernment collier Mars is ashore on the| Am Bahamas Banks and has sent wireless calls for assistance. Tho battleship Nebraska and two Government tugs have gone to her assistan VANIMAN'S BiG AIRSHIP PLUNGES (Continued from First Page.) ing carried swiftly up from the boat when Algar, another of the boat crew, the motor boat, Bell had his hands bad- ly burned by the ewiftly ascending line he bad been grasping. ‘Dhen it was that, with the Akron 500 feet in the air and partially crippled by the aplintered propeller, young Cal- vin Vaniman thrilled the crowd by his climb out into space. ———— ZEPPELIN SPEEDS HIS NEW DIRIGIBLE ON 450-MILE TRIP. AMBURG, Germany, June 1.—The new military airship, Zeppelin IIL, arrived here at 9.35 A. M. to-day, having covered the course from Friedrichshaven to Hamburg, approximately 40 miles, in 10 hours and 2% minutes, Count Zeype- Un piloted the dirigible on its maiden voyage, which lay over Basel, fort -on~ the - Main, Bremen, Making an average speed of about 43 ex- 1 Frank- Goettingen and miles an hour, the airship easily ceeded the requirements of specl- fications, which called for a speed of 8% miles an hour, It had been generally expected, however, that sh equal or exceed the record of the only other Zeppelin dirigibl military service, and which has accom. plished a speed of 43 miles, A third military alratip of the Zeppe- lin type has been ordered by the Gov- ernment. | COPS SIGN BANTAMS, Only on BI erweight Being Compla However, a Fi Two bantams who were accused of threatening to “do up" a featheweight if he didn’t pay them $2 landed in the Yorkville Court to-lay, where they were held in $1,600 ball vach on charges of extortion, The ban| (fighting name @ Edward Rosner Youngs Hosner") and John Brocker (nom de guerre “Sajlor Brocke Joseph Spaney, who hi coal cellar at 1472 Avenue A, is the featherweight, ‘The two bantains called | on Spaney a few days ago and told him, he sald, they would afrange to beat him to a pulp unless he had $25 for them last night. Spaney went to the West Thirty. seventh street stagion and told of the threat, Two detectives rigged a trap and the bantama fell into it, As they accepted $25 in marked money, said the detective Bank Reserve $25,101,600, The statement of Clearing House | banks for the week (five days) show | that the banks hold $28,191,600 reserve in excess of legal requirements. This INTO THE SE grabbed his heels and pulled him back to | \. E. GASTON HIGGINBOTHAM. Farly transactions in the stock mar- ket to-@ay strongly resisted a continua. tion of yesterday's heavy lquidation. Opening sales were uniformly higher, | although selling pressure was exerted st certain Issues. Reading, Union ific, Lehigh Valley and ‘Copper re- sponded to supporting order with ad- vances of about 1 point over last night's final range, Tho lat subsequently tomt some of its iniual strength when the buying de- 1, but, despite numerous the top, prices continued irm tone in the second to display a hour, The buying demand for Reading, 8| and Union Pacific quickened in the hour and the pronounced strength shown in these shares elevated the en- | tire Hat to the highest of day at closing time. Reading was over a point up at the finish while all other standard sécurities were considerably higher, The Closing Prices. Today's highest. lo 1d lant prices of stocks and of net changes ai pared with yesterday's final figures are as The che: ne a ug ++ | : Bh t 8) 8 + it ibe ~ 2 ak +2 ie i a8 =| ind t'2 1 iss 1; + wu 2 od Ris > $4 ae “wo Hh ft t H Hod 0% Tt Ye 164 ae aS | 26% (26 + ¥ 3 ie! any cot tS 56K OT YM UTS 117 + 2 eK 1K! TZ 13 hl OM pla’s Gi , He fi ard % 165! 106% + 1% Week taend: 3? 8 Ae RT R Hoek Intend "it at Ry Rt) s ac. . iS 108% 100% + ris aru 2% — 07 06 1 4 hie rang iy i sf oh 06 +1 Me 110 + mom on + 4 is = Rl &2 = %] United States Steel, fic, 17,200 Ls i} ley, 19,800 American Can, 2b,000 clates, aud’ Coppe shares. ares. 1 eee CITY IS NEW LANDLORD OF QUEENS COUNTY JAIL. To-day old Queen's County Jali in Long Island City, whose bars restrained many @ noted crook, and under whose tool official mis ment created many 4 scanda ne a city-owned and managed in nh. Kor two hun- dred and fifty since the organt- mation of the © y of Queens, the balliwick was propretor of its’ ow! prison, But Queens never was a suc. cess as a prison keeper, so the Legts- lature passed an act turning the old Juil over to the elty, and Incidentally thereby turning out a number of prison employees. At least twenty of the ter found themselves without jobs to- day, when the city took possession, but their leader declared they were going to fight in the courts to recover their places. Commissioner of Charities Patrick A. Whitney took over the prison in the name of the city, Warden Thomas N. Quinn made the deilvery in a neat lit- tle speech. He also gave over to the care of the Commissioner sixty-nine prisoners, ‘The prison Is capable of con- fining 200 Inmates, ‘commoda tion will relleve Blackwell's Island, whence @ large complement of prisoners fro" over-crowded cells will be transferred Warden H, Schleth will retain his Joo as head man in the old prison under ita city management. POPE US ON EVE OF 77TH BIRTHDAY. j BINFINE HEALTH, FROM THE CARDINAL , Pontiff Says He Feels Better! tmpressive Ceremony in Cathe- dral Witnessed by Hundreds; Than in Long Time and Ex- pects to Live Many Years. ROME, June 1. Pius X, will ce! seventh birthday His Holiness Pope to-morrow. friends who called to-day to congratu- late him the venerable Pontiff stated | he ,had been in the best of health for ‘nome time, and that he hoped to live H many yet I cellent hedlth spirits, and seemed to-day to have entirely shaken off his recent depression. The troops and the Vatican offictals to-day prepared for an imposing dem- fous. HEAD OF CONG AND FORTY THES N BRBERY TRAP (Continued from Firat Ps ) every feature of corruption that has ex- isted In the city and we are ready when the proper time comes to place it be- fore the Grand Jury and obtain indict- ment “The men named tre not the only ones! who took money. When Councilman Fhoebus comes to testity Le will swear he patd $300 each to Couciimen Harry J. Mulock, George W. Carmany and John Donnelly and af of 4t in marked bills, These men had been expected to come to Malta's place, but when they did not Franklyn and Harris calien upon Donnelly at the latter's place of busl- ness. He said that he would not take money from strangers. He suggested, however, that if we had confidence in Phoebus he could trust him too, and that the money could be paid through Phoebus. “I want to make ft plain,” said Burns taking up again the thread of his statc- ment, “that the people behind this movement are in deadiy earnem and they are going to wipe out all forms of corruption that exist in Atlantic City, They do not care who is responsitle for tt, either.” ‘The detectives “ectare that between thirty and forty officials are involved of the $1,500,000 boardwalk steal, For the graft campaign the Citizen's Committee has spent more than $100,000, including the purchase and operation of the Atlantic City Review, whose editor was instructed “to go after the hold-up men with @ double-barreled ‘The dictagraph, whic! important part in the exposury was used in the Continental Hotel, when Franklin, the W. J. Burns operative who exposed crooked. ness in the Ohio Legislature, and Har- ris, another detective, met Counc! Lane and Phoebus, and Palmer, the citi- zen go-between. The price then fixed for each vote was $5,000, with $600 as a first payment. Pee as #2: |WARRANT OUT FOR WATSON, FORMER POPULIST LEADER. Accused of Sending Printed Matter Through Mails Reflecting on Catholic Religion. MACON, Ga., June 1—A warrant for the arrest of Thomas E. Watson, once candidate for President on the Populist ticket, was issued to-day by United ‘Stat District - Attorney Alexander Akerman. The warrant charges Mr. | Watson with sending obscene matter |through the mails, Mr. Watson ds ex- pected to be arrested to-day at his home in Thomson, Ga., and taken be- fore the Federal Commissioner at Augusta. ‘The warrant is an outcome of an article In Mr, Watson's magazine al- leged to reflect on the Catholic religion. ————» An automabile which Dr. Harold ©, Parker of No, 1082 Elghth avenue, Brook- lyn, wae driving trough Saratoga avenue, Brooklyn, between Park place and Prospect Park, etruck and ran over Solomon Levine, five years old. |'The physician Jumped out, put the chila | im his car and drove to &t. Mary's Hospital, The little boy died in half an hour, Dr. Parker then went to the Brownsville potice station and reported the acoldent. Don After a dusty ride, wash ie an increase of $4,389,000 tn the pro- portionate cash reserve as compared with last wi ting that In hygienic Ts automobiling without Birts Head Wash your head with this ideal shampoo, It is so cleansing, refreshing and invigora- you will wonder how you ever did without it, tubes,.25¢.; jars, soc. At all:druggists, onstration to-morrow in honor of the|@fal to witness the ceremony. occasion, although, it being Sunday, | Ceremony, which began at § o'clock, did the observance will be mainly relig-|t conclude until close to 11 o'clock. service in the exposure started by investigation | %' SATURDAY, JUNE 1 SCORE OF PRIESTS RECEIVE ORDINATION Deacons Also Ordained. | Under the great arched nave and ty fore the high altar in St. Patrick's Ca- thedral this morning nineteen Youns peony Men wero ordained to the priesthoc and fifteen created deacons, Cardin: | the Cardinalate, created pri Pontifical low mass was the held. Cardinal Fartey was celebran He was assisted at the altar by Rev. | Dr. John Mahoney and Rev. Dr. Joh: Mitty of St. Josep)'s Seminary at Dun- Woodie. The Rev. Dr. John Brady an Rev. Dr. Robert Mulcaney were masters of ceremony and the Rev, Dr, John P. Joseph's The Rev. Dr. Chidwick was formerly chaplain of Chidwick, President of St. Seminary, was archdeacon. the battleship Maine. ‘The ordination of the fifteen dea followed the reading of The ordination of the priests was hei Just before the reading of the Gospe! ‘The nineteen young men were investe by the Cardinal with power to preach, to celebrate mass and to hear confes- sions. The conferring of these powers is known as the Sacrament of Holy Or- ders. The ceremony is a beautiful one, an: hundreds remained standing in th aisles throughout Graduated next ar, when they wi be raised to the priesthood, as wer their nineteen fellows to-day. The newly created priests will be as- | @igned to various churches within thi next two we They will be ai tors, The deacons who were raised t vy Cardinal Fariey the priesthood to-day are Andrew Doo- ley, James Cassidy, John Quinn, Mar- | tin Lydon, Walter Pallister, Stephen Connolly, Patric Daniel Fant, man, Michael Shea, Joseph Loghran and John Grady. Th majority of the new priests are from New York. William O'Gorman was or- James Whitfield was ordained for Nashville, dained for Springfield, Mass, Tenn. Joseph Loghran was ordaine for Los Angeles, Cal, and John Grad: for Trenton, N. J. The seminary students made deacon Curran, Anthony Burriesl, Joseph Biydy, Francis Christopher King, Aloyslus Karl, and David Petry. brothers, Selen—tilialinrintees TO GREET GERMAN SHIPS. Great Battleship come Kalse: Sell War Vessels. ‘The superdreadnaughte Utah and Flor- ida, the newest and biggest fighters of the United States Navy and pretty nearly the biggest in the world, sailed to sea to-day from, the Brooklyn Navy Windows of scores of sky- scrapers looking out on the East River were filled for a quarter of an hour Yard. with people enjoying the sight. ‘The battleships, which are built on al most exactly similar plans, of Germany. Monday, June srd '4 Carat Rings im the aria at ig pl ae Pabeatbeee ate, sit dev $1,000.00 Frege Toe Hrow'e Bandas Words CHARLES A. KEENE | 1SO ocvadviay, Yor Farley officiated at this, his firat cere- appeared in both @X-| mony of the sort aince his elevation to. trotting and dancing on akates by a The edifice was filed, uniquely di with friends and relatives of the newly | ®tore'’s Band, George May's Harmonists, and deacons and with|@nd the Trintdad Orchestra of West those who were attracted to the cathe-| Indians will enliven the Ice Carntval.| ¢, Tho cons | ¢, the Epistle. the three hours of the service. The fittcen seminary stu- dents who were created deacons will be | Thomas | iam MoDonald, Joseph Geis, | Edward Mahoney, Joha Delaney, Victor Bassi, Willlam O'Gor- James Whitfeld, John Kelly, Francis O'Neill. Jonn William | Burke, Emilius Molinelli, Francie smith, | Lesniewski, Jos- oph Casey, Aloystus Galli, Francis Petry | The latter two are | te Wel- are bound for Hampton Hoads, where they are to | take part in the reception to the visiting ahips of His Imperial Majesty William NINE | i te nat ‘Diamonds Saati , 1912. ‘3 ROOF GARDENS, “ONE WITHICE POND, TOOPEN NEXT WEEK HE roof garden ¢eason begins next I week with the opening on Monday: night of three airy places of amusement. Hammerstein's Roof, to be known for | @ summer as Le Gardin des Fleurs, will, it 1s announced, be “a mass of flowers” and every woman who goes to the gar- don will be given & rose, Old Farm hae transformed into an ice pond, = Wrong Hero," and “those three rubes,” Bowers, Walters and Crooker, STOCK COMPANY PLAYS. ‘The Wolf’ will be played by the stock company at the Manhattan Opera House, Corse Payton's company End Theatre will present Mouse.” The Bowery Burlesquers at the Co- jumbla Theatre will have as a special feature the Kight Original Texas Tommy Dancers, Over (9 musicians will participate to- morrow night at the Moulin Rouge, for- tmeriy the New York Theatre, in & memorlal band concert to the musicians of the Titanic. The organisations will include Arthur Pryor's Band, Gustav D'Aquin’s Band, Lacall ‘oncert Band, few York Letter Carrie ind, Soller and her mate band, United States Army bands from the forts near New York, United States Navy bands, Hebrew Or- the West ‘The Blue where an exhibition of fancy ting will be given by Grace H id Ea- die Bassett. There will also be turkey ed chorua. Music by Cre- The stage performance will “Visions D’Art,” Bello Blandhe, Fanny | Brice, Ben Welch, Ahearn's bicycle | troupe, Trovato, Bedin! and Arthur, | Norton and Lee, and Hickey’s Circus, At Madison Square Root Garden pleasure seekers will be offered an op- portunity to dine, dance and witness a cabaret show. A dancing pavilion hi been erected in the centre of the roof overlooking the refreshment tables, Be+ hind the pavilion rises the stage for the cabaret performers, All this area te open to the sky, but on rainy nights the | Performance will be given in the con- cert hall downstairs. The admission s will be twenty-five and fifty cents nd refreshments will be served at 1) popular price: i | There will be two sho t the Amer- jfean Roof Garden, Forty-second etreet | and Eighth avenue, one opening Mon- day and the other on Thursday night. For the first half of the week the biii will Include a French pantomime, “La Petite Go: 1 | comedian ¢ | Hadley in include it. Cl Marriage Fee," and Fennell and Tyson in a singing and | dancing number, Among other features of the bill for the last half of the week | will be Walsh and Lynoh in “Huckins ©) Run.” “La Petite Gosse,” May Folliers, singing comedienne; lo and Rolle, banjolsts, and Morris and Beasley, sing- ers and dancers Hale Hamilton In “The Come On,” a sketch of crook life by Grant Stewart: Belle Baker, Charles Hart and G, Rosa mond Johnson, Crouch and Welch, Mad. den and Fitzpatrick in “The Wander El Cola, xylophonist; Ed Morton, the Three Emersons, gymnasts, and Wood Brothers, Irish athletes, B. F. Keith will return to the policy of giving vaudeville performances at th 9 | Union Square Theatre on Monday after- noon. On the bill will be Gus Edwards in his “Song Revue of 191: Edmund Hayes in “The Piano Mover,” Howard's Ponies and Dogs, Isabel D’Armond and 4\ Frank Car’ Lyons and Yosco, Bert ly | Melrose, athlete, and the Flying Mar, tins. i Mabel Hite and her Clowns will head the bill at the Colonial. Others will be Mme. Besson in “Between Trains,” Conroy and Lemaine, the Primrose Four, the Six American Dancers, Barnes and Crawford in ‘The Fakir and the Lady” and the Sutcliffe band of Scotch bag- 10 i | pipers. ‘At the Alhambra will be Nat M. Wills, I< | sections. there.” It planning easy. | At the Fifth Avenue Theatre wil! be! ned as assistant pas- | phan Asylum bands and Catholic Pro- tectory bands. PARKS AND BEACHES. The bill at the New Brighton Theat Brighton Beach, will include Mme. Olga Petrova in mew gongs, Joseph E. How- ard and Mabel ‘MoC: in a hui oki been added to the attrac- iieades Amusement Park. Lana Park, with its many new fea- ‘Marte Russell and others. avenue, the Bronz, Grocery for = quart terday afternoon, and four ohildren hours afterward they were doctors had to be called, The ere seemed at 10 o'clock last night again. from Fordham Hospital. case DYSENTERY, DIARRHOEA, CHOLERA MORBUS, | Si aatbler “ot water ti an a in i ted ry Placed aret, ihe stomach Dr. Schaeffer was summone He said th one _of ptomatse polssming BOLD BY DRUGGISTS. require change in the will be issued to passengers. - + It is convenient for the N cou! duce transfer abuses. do if it were permit TRANSFERS It has become Uyak that the existing transfer methods interest of the convenience of the public as well as for the protection of the revenues of the Company. J mencing therefore on June 1, 1912, a new form of transfer ticket The advantages of the new transfer are as follows: passenger because it indicates all the possible ways of travelling between two Points for a single fare. . It relieves the passenger of the ieoiettl one transfer after another, as the single ns, obtained upon the payment of a cash fare, is all that is necessary to make the desired journey. It relieves the conductor of the necessity of issuing re-transfers. He will have more time to devote to the safety and convenience of passengers and to the Proper operation of the car. This system will afford to the passengers all transfer privileges to which they are entitled, and should re- of transfer if obtaini wit! FREE WITH Tomorrow WITH Tomorrow and girls’ camps. THE BROOKLYN EAGLE Summer Resort Directo K THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE — THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE A complete, comprehensive and accurate book of facts, includ- ing rates, about hotels, country boarding houses—in fact summer resorts of all kinds throughout this country’s leading resort Up-to-date maps and route directions that tell “how to get Detailed list of boys’ the book that answers questions and makes vacation } Edition is limited. Order from your newsdealer today ‘ a t POISONED BY BUTTERMILK: bat The extensive use of transfers and their great abuse have re duced the average fare per passenger to 3.41c. for the first four months since January 1, 1912, when the New York Railways Com- pany commenced operation. This does not leave sufficient margin to enable the Company to develop its property as it would desire to to enjoy greater prosperity. Motices explaining the new transfer ticket will be found in all of the cars and instructions for its use are printed upon the back of the ticket. The co-operation of the public is respectfully requested. New York Railways Company 166 BROADWAY A Handsome 68-Page Magazine