Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Té JURY'S “GUOILTY” ALL DAYTON HAS LEFT Darrow Expects Revenge on Bryan in Higher Tribunal. BY ROBERT DAYTON, Te day early TALL. 18.—Dayton's is to be the tumult and the re bitter words in retirement of the k rendition of a July The verdict may Tuesday night, or it n ved until Wednesday. oy ia been notable for it delay I he end so far s D f T als to € c defense on rerely be | srmality of com on which the| » be based. v has been a chance for on here on le interpretation | of the optimists ight they were before Circuit Jud 1t he would be liberal s to before 1 without the | court. From n ted | epts State Idea. hat the Ten shall tea that rom a lower order of the nominal from a book | all living creat life cell, man along the animals. hear here the its contention ut one thing om a monkey | jury |most of the proceedings being argu- | ments not for the members’ ears. The 1 into the recory t > crook and turn. The v‘ i ted the State's idea v v 2s Bryan has preached we monke: have a: ilston heark led in 1 bilant over els he has The Tennessee ibuted to his ganda. Now that the | > strict let- | iration no person cory which denies the | of the creation of the Bible, Mr. Bryan is | eat ard has | the position | s not believe | h ir taken who d; Defense Lawyers Convicted. | The judge the ut the entire ense, that evolution Christian beligf 1 Clarence Darrow, Dud Garfield for poor by ears are the law- | of New never t of his own on evolution | ent of man | f of Scopes, there wa tate and count. t opening the court | vith fundamentalist | These men | t “lonely | the ocean” | 1 growing, | emerged from the | the land and by | nd women. These | id said the Bible light of reason scientific lze which come to the| the Good Book was Bryan Pleased With Success. ; | e Bible | a ural @ as the ould be in the | ionists ble has not s of creation to attempt to ex- | processes would to roffers and | n of the country n his great vic Raulston Clar great ecriminal | odern times,” has been r and evangelist s the her cou on t bits. Mr learned judgment of | 1 Dayton court will stand | \ntime is yet to come the neing of young ! The ma num nalty is a | )0. Judge Raulston already | ed Scopes’ crime as a| | there and se »meanor, =o the fine is npany with that con- Seven g at a golden wedding | o attended the couple’s | we PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturing. Assets Over $10,000,000 Surplus $950,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY......President JOSHUA W. CARR ..Secretary | despite s of this com- | T 1l is over. The | who have been set | break even a By the Associated Press. DAYON, Tenn., July General A. T. Stewart, representing the State of Tennessee in the prose cution of John T. Scopes, may tell the Stewarts of South Carolina about the Stewarts in Tennessee. Mr, tewart received today, through Dr. and Mrs H. B. Stewart, Fountain Inn, 8. C., an invitation to attend the annual r union of the Walter Stewart Clan at Fairview Presbyterian Church, Green- ville County, The reunion will be held August 27, and the attorney general sald today that he hoped to be able to attend 18.—Attorney The underworked jury in the Scopes case was having a full holi- ‘day toda Being a member of the jury has not interfered seriously with activities outside the courtroom. The has spent little time in court, witnesses testify for jury heard four the State, and Dr. Maynard M. Met calf give his biographical sketch. “I got here too late,” were sad words in Dayton today. Many per- sons, unaware of the recess over the week end motored into the city to be present as the case was tried in the Rhea County courtroom Deprived of an opportunity to hear 1 debate of opposing counsel, the vis} tors looked at the courtroom, visited the drug store “where it started,” and wondered if every passing bareheaded man was John Thomas Scopes, the|slopes around Dayton were visited to r;-’x;:‘!‘\lg:;“:;::w? .:1\\:«:',1;1:: defendant. : i | g2y by scores of court "»‘Sfi;‘fi?\“:s “‘;:'(I{‘Dlsuppmrnnce s coa Bullivan | b el Aot es apparently was not per-|have 00 clo: occupted by | ; Iped Jn h turbed by Judge Raulston's decision|trial for attention to the impressive | Still Unsolved. il b inse-Mpes g {0 keep scientific testimony out of | beauties of nature. A large part of f o =5 T siha ctater merd i the case. He did not change expres: | the corps of news reporters went into {1 Y of ‘the afsappeacance of| with fntimations that { sion as the judge read his decision,| Chattanooga for the week end or went | Miss Frances ~Sullivap, 18-year-old | colo by “chivalry fc and he was able to go swimming in|off to one of the many mountain re tern High School student, has not | sex A frernaon Scopes satd today that | Sgrts in adjacent countles »me took |been solved by the police of this city,| A ser he has made no plans after the “Scopes cas or his program ends Around the council tables in the SCOPES’ ATTORNEYS RUSH AFFIDAVITS FOR TRIAL RECORD _(Continued fr rst Page) T. Stewart torney Gene E n a glorious nounced the decisi for the State. The taking of testimony from the scientific witnesses proceeded far into last night as, under the direction of Mr. Darrow, a corps of court stenog. raphers busied then pre- paring the affidavi The Scopes trial has been a failure from the concessionnaire’s point of view. Dozens of stands were erected ong the streets of the city ir neighborhood of the courthouse, two of them rearing their brown tent roofs above the grass of the courthouse lawn. One of these, a barbecue stand, pro; victory nselves in man |behind which the beauty of the lawn | has been marred by a the preparation of the not lost money, the owners A few of the local concessions have lost nothing. Built cheaply, there not any great investment required r the construction of the stands, but the small expenditure, many of the men declare they have failed to earn enough vestment Hurt by Ruling. Ruling of Judge Raulston barring expert mony yesterday brought row to the concession men earnest desirg was that the trial ht be prolonged until they might they had- expected I paid rent for the ground upon which my stand Is built,” one of them said, and the building {tself the | to authorize the in-| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SCOPES SIDELIGHTS STATUS OF BELGIAN MISSION ANNOUNCED Members Named to Consider U. S. Debt Coming Without Des- ignated Leader. arena where the evolution is being ntested daily accummulations of stoffs of mail litter the floor. De- ense and prosecution lawyers and the defendant, Scopes, are receiving a con- stant stream of advice on the conduct of the case from supporters through- out the country One letter from ciated Pres: a would-be legal | BY the As the desks of the principal actors in | finance minister, and later Baron Car- the evolution test fase. 'All the send. | tier de Marchienne, the Belgian Am- ers hope to be “of some assistance” to | bassador to the United States, would head the mission, the representatives of one party or g ; the other. Deputy Piregard, Socialist, speaking | “In the custody of the court is a|in the chamber yesterday on the debt bundle of letters and circulars ad- | question, declared: “Those who know dome.” The vouthful musicians have | ftors amounting to about 1,100,000,000 given several concerts since the trial | gold francs. has been in progress. e e | he mountain routs and weegrown | GIRL’S CASE BAFFLING. | trip to | Montgome or relatives has been ‘men e County, Md of the missing girl. one week si es to her sister a extended sightseeing Smoky Mountains, leaving this morning, expecting to return tomor | row afternoon | depositea her clothing on CHURCH ADMITS DARROW. bank near Rock Spring, Md., a suicide ‘nuln pinned to the bundle Clarence Darrow yvesterday was elect. | InSpector Grant, chief of on the rough plank teats of the “alr- | repudiated debts due European cred:|en FINDS The above announcement brought | authorities | tions ce she wrote | Sponsoring t her home, | prejudic nth street northeast, and later | bands, keeping their identity discreetly the river | veiled, want to know Why taxicabs and busses give right of way to nobody but woman drivers? repair v ) detectives, | to D. O, SATURDAY, Institute of Government R The two most important tests speed with which the driver reacts to to danger and takes steps to avert it, and the consistency wi driver responds in are expected to h. A th which be the the such a situation, dressed to members of the jury the meaning of the words fair and un-|Were participated in by student groups - fair understand the surprise and bit- [selected from George Washington Music by the Dayton High School | terness of the Belgians over repudia-| University, special care being taken | Band, whose organization John T.|tlon of President Wilson's signature.” [that they averaged about the same | Scopes alded, floated up last night into | The deputy recalled the speech of |Previous experience in driving. | the judicial hall where the biology in- | the French Deputy Marin, in which it| “There is no basis for the assertion | tructor on trial. The band, which j was asserted that France and Belgium |that women are more liable to lose | includes both boys and girls, played | were perhaps creditors of their cred-|their heads,” the report says. “It is for an appreciative audience stretched | itor. M. Piregard remarked that 12 |largely a myth that society has fos- out on the courthouse lawn or seated | American States after the Civil War [tered by playing up the idea that wom- emotional. There is no physical reason why they | should be.” “‘Sideswiped Husbands"” Protest. & The asso Vhy fender and b Vhy P an automobile tort from jon of hich igned causti r the wea umper on an o the ide the find nment sily at the report w ki es of “poignant, pertinent ques was flung direct into the “hen It | pecked countenances” of the experts ‘statements so manifestly ation of hus- v in encouraging more women think | to drive automobiles? when a woman driver wishes e - Then came reports from various Fbeca ect in Denver Honors | sources that the missing student had |shops are willing to spend huge sums |been seen at different places garbed |of mon Scopes Defender. |in"a saflor costume, but polic DENVER, Colo, July 18 (). |they were mistaken in the identity. | pen ed to honorary membership in the|YeSterday issued another order to the | Liveral Church of Denver because of |PClice to make every effort to find| the part rrow has played in the MIiss Sullivan | defense of John Thomas Scopes. | In electing the Chicago lawyer, the | church went on record as “accepting” his “theory of Christianity.” The church alsq sent Mr. Darrow a letter | cpioe expressing hope that the Scopes trial & would succeed in bringing about “the enrly thoughts, now dormant in many | minds, that imbued the foundation of | Appointment of H. H. Hill, chief | | progress in the American conscience.” | petroleum engineer, as the head of | the petroleum division of the Bureau | ol = B' T l(; have supervision of all | is] . 3 i | pet nvestigations conducted | er Body Co. Buys Rival | here and in the field, was announced | DETROIT, July 18 UP).—The Fisher | today by the bureau. Mr. Hill has | Body Corporation yesterday announced | Served as assistant chief petroleum the purchase of the Fleetwood Metal | €ngineer for the past two years and HILL HEADS DIVISION. | | Petroleum Engineer in Charge of Investigations. | Body Co.. Fleetwood, Pa. No price | Previously was supervisor of oil and was announced. The shops will be|5as lease operations. i ATt na o Floeteaih | P. Kinney, assistant metallurgi- | | cal chemist, with headquarters at United States Envoy Improving. | Pittsburgh, has been named super | vising metallurgist of the bureau, and C. E. Sims, electro-metallurgist, has TOKIO, July 18 UP).—The condition | been named chief of the metallureical ar A. Bancroft, American Am-|Section at Pittsburgh. E. D. Gard- to Japan. who has been 11| ner will become acting superintend. | |of bassador |at Karuizawa for some days, showed | €Nt Of the southwest experiment sta- improvement ! tion of the bureau, at 1on_August | slight Tucson, Ariz., vesterday. | cost ahout the same amount of money. A man’s got I;ki‘ Hotel llll'l to take in money f; |if he breaks even on a thing Phone Main 8108-8109, - th i < . W entertain | i 604-610 9th St. N.W thousands came by | 4,37 rooma. 80 weekly: $10.50 rooms. 18 | hundreds. « more. Rooms like Mcther s e town prepared to and the crowds Of Impurities With Cuticura Soap , Ointment. Talcum sold everywhere | HAT pleases us most is th retain our very is—we oldest customers from year to year. There mustbe a reason for th is that should appeal to you. Send us your o rders Founded 1864 HIRES TURNER GLASS COMPANY BERNHARD W Rosslyn) SPIL E, Manager inzton Reduced Rates! Rent a WE LEAD Ford Sedans 10c Per Car! Mile Drive It Yourself! WE LEAD Ford Coupes 10c Per Mile 100 Brand NEW CARS to Choose From! A Car for Every Purpose All PRIVATE APPEARING, With Balloon Tires! OPEN CARS Studebakers ...... Buicks, 5-pass. ... Hertz Touring ... Buick, 7-pass. .... FORD TOURINGS 8c PER MILE ....13c per mile Buick Sedan ....13¢ per mile ....15¢ per mile ....18¢c per mile Hertz Sedan Absolutely No Charge For Time WHY? CLOSED CARS ....16¢ per mile Willys-Knight Sedan..16c per mile .18c per mile Ford Sedan ..........10c per mile RENT AN OLD DILAPIDATED CAR WHEN YOU CAN RENT A BRAND NEW PRIVATE APPEARING CAR FROM 2¢ TO 4c PER MILE LESS THAN ELSEWHERE Under the Hertz Driveurself System you are covered for $10,000 liability and $1,000 property damage whenever you rent one of our cars. who do not cover you with this insurance. 'MAIN OFFICE 1319-1321 L Fr. 9736 GLASSMAN RENT A CAR CO. St. N. W. Fr. 8041 UPTOWN BRANCH 2101-2103 14th St. N. W. North 7800-7801 Don’t take chances with rent-a-car companies JULY WOMAN AUTO DRIVERS . EQUAL TO MALE OPERATORS “Just as Competent, If Not More So,” Is the Judg ment of American Automobile Association. It ““Sideswiped Husbands” Protest. behind, in shift with thinks she will not do? Why is it a woman cannot learn to gears without | in low speed at 15 miles an hour, in second at 25 and then goes into third nofse that so 18, 1925. threw an anvil Why is it the ring gear, the rear end and the universal joint always happen to break when “my wife was driving”? What has primary use for traffic policemen?” Why are women insanity among | the greatest con with a woman-controlled automobile at in: | neer, | counselon to the young school teacher | BRUSSELS, July 18.—Foreign Min.| Woman automobile drivers are just|road, she blows the horn until the tersections where he wants cross inst the Jasci | announced that if the defendant would | Ister Vandervelde announced that all |as competent, if not more 86, than|driver of the car in front, thinking | traffic to come to a complete stop? 3 ’..rownv to Judge Raulston the inclosed | the members of the mission which is|, ., the fire engines are coming, moves| Why do Inspector Brown's perm | “motion” the court would “immedi.|soon to leave for the United States to| ™" - n over to the diteh. And then says,| examiners have @ hunted look in their ately release him and end the trial.” [ negotiate a settlement of the Belglan his statement is made by the|“Oh, I can’t pass him, “honey, you |eyes Pamphlets, booklets, leaflets and |war debt will be on an equal footing.|American Automobile Association af-|drive no | The assocation concludes its state folders discoursing on many phases | It previously had been understood that | ter a series of tests conducted by the| WhY 18 it a woman driving a car|ment with the suggestion that, grant of legal and economic subjects flood |M. Theunis, former premier and always will do exactly what everybody | ing, for the sake of the argument that woman drivers have less trouble negotiating trafic th perhaps it is bec cally and spontane safety when the familiar a woman driver, with tilted bonnet and | fic ! grim countenance, heaves into view were n front and abreast of her driving the car nds like some ie into steam | S| ANDER OF FASCISTS CHARGED T0 ENGINEER been found to bhe the | Befused to Shake Hands With Of- ficial ¢f Government After Street Fight. buto; to the municipal fund for | broken lampposts? By Sk o Why s Traffic Director Eldridge | Shntha said to be considering the installation | Ported the pub of full lifelike decoys resemblin ly cha al charges of See Sunday’s Papers for Particulars! “The Busy 4 9 Corner” ON NEW OAKLAND CARS Between Now and JULY 22d From this date until July 22d we offer a limited number of New OAKLAND SIX Cars at $300 under our regular delivered prices. You will never again be able to equal this opportu- nity of such a value for such a price. 4-Door Sedan, $1,195.00 Delivered Coaches, $1,075.00 Delivered Terms May Be Arranged ADAMS MOTOR C 1612 14th Street N.W. Service Department—1701 Kalorama Road N.W. Penn Ave., 8th and D