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News of the World By Associated Press EbTABLISHED 1870 MURDER AND SUICIDE SEEN INDEATH OF MANAND TWO BOYS IN NEW HAVEN HOTEL Letter Indicates That Father Contemplated This — Presence of Poison Tends To Con- firm Theory. Victims Believed to Have Come From Providence —Had Been at Since Sunday. By The Assoclated Press. New Haven, July 28.—Two boys. and a man were found dead in a room at the I'lanagan hotel here to- day, after a door had been broken ' down to gain entrance to the room which they had occupled since Sun- day. They were last seen last night when the man went to a nearby store to buy some food. Bodles Are Found The man registered as Mike Se- prczupa, of Providence, R. L. % The boys were 7 and 12 years old re- spectively. They were found lying on the bed. fully clothed. The man was lylng on the floor, with his coat oft in a double up position as if he had suffered convulsions. Three glasses which had contain- ed ginger ale were found in room. Coroner Elf Mix and Medi- cal Examiner Kowalewskl were call- ed and began an investigation. larly last night the man was seen leaving the hotel and returning ghortly afterwards with the ginger ale and ham and bread for sand- wiches. When a maid attempted to rouse them this morning, no one answer- ed her knocks on the door. Charles Gibbons, the clerk, was informed. and he had the door broken in. The three were then found dead. The man was about 40 years old, Coroner Mix ordered the room searched carefully, and in it was found the first citizenship paper of Michael Senczuk, 39, Poland, present residence 126 Bur- lington street, Providence, R. T. The paper was dated May 3, 1924, In the clothing was found an un- finished letter, apparently in the Russlan language. Coroner Mix gave a preliminary opinion that the deaths were dué to, poison. Polson is Indicated The medical examiner after an analysis of the contents of the stom- ach of the older boy found a da brown fluid which he said indicated | which he | oison, the nature eould not tell. The police helleve the boye were sons of the man. The unfinished letter wae partly translated and it was found to be addressed to the man's mother. He said that he was (Continued on Page 15) MIX FILES FINDING ON DOUBLE AUTO TRAGEDY Blames Meriden Man for Death of Two Boston Women ot Cosmo Angeletti of 175 Lewis ave- nue, Meriden, is held criminally sponsible the death of William McCarthy and s, of Boston, Mass., the accident on the Berlin turn- pike near Silver Lake inn on July 8, according to the finding in the made public last night by Eli Mix of New Haven The coroner's opinion is that, while Agnes L. MecCartthy, operator of the machine containing other members of the M rthy mily did not proceed with necessary precaution, Angeletti responsi- bie for the accident. as he drove his machme out of the line of traffic and tried to cut in ahead The finding further stated that th operator of the motor truck Involved for Mrs her Coroner nty. f. was Place the | birth place, | NEW ENGLAND ELKS ARE IN NEW MEXICO WREO™ Albuquerque, N, (P —Several passe ported to have near Perea, New Mexico, (oda\ when a special traln Carr\lng a group of New England £ was wrecked. Reports sald the wreck was due to a washout. GOULD'S WIDOW 13 WED T0 BRITISHER {Former Stage Dancer Now Be comes Lady Dunsford | e | i FIGURED IN BIG SCANDAL Married to Financier Shortly After Death of First Wife—His Will Es- tablished Parentage of Her Chil- dren, Despite Family Protests, The Assoclated Press. New York, July 28—Mrs. Guine- | vere Gould, widow of George Gould, and heiress to a large part of the Gould fortune, wus married at Montreal today to Viscount Duns- | | ford, son and heir of the Earl of Middleton. They were married by the Rev. Dr. Hanson of the American Pres- byterfan church and it was announc- lod that they would make their home in London. Viscount Dunsford is 37 years old, was educated at Oxford and served with the British forces during the world war, being twice decorated for bravery. i The future Lady Dunsford came to the United States in 1913 as Miss Vere Sinclair with an English thea- trical company to produce “The Girl {On The Filin cording to o By ficial records filed in Trenton, N. J, she married George Jay Gould, 58 years old millionaire | widower, giving her own age at 20. Suit For Million | Following her husband’s death she Instituted a suit in chancery against {the trustees of his estate for a trust ifund of $1,000,000 elaimed to have ibeen set aside for her three chil- |dren, all of whom, she testified in the succeeding litigation, were off- spring of her intimacies with Gould. The marrage with Gould was per- {formed at Lakewood, N. J, May 1, {1922, or barely six months after the !sudden death of Mrs. Edith Kings- ton Gould, first wife of the financie on the golf links at Lakewood Acknowledged Children In the several court actions which have since ensued it was brought out that the second Mrs. Gould lived un- |der the name of Mrs. Guinevere Sin- iclalr on ‘an $800,000 estate at Ma- nursing Island, in Long Island Sound,, opposite Rye, N. Y. Other ihefrs refused to reccgnize the Sin- {clair-Gould offspring until the will of George Jay Gould was probated |June 4, 1923, In that document !Gould publicly acknowledged the three as his own, and placed them in the division of the estate with the |seven children horn to himselt ;\!rs Edith Kingden Gould, », | $30,000 ROBBERY | Two Armed Robbers Loot New York Garage, Taking Two Trucks Toad- | | ed with Rubber. ; New York, July 28 (A—Two arm- ol robbers who at first sald they were government agents looking for | ! contraband liquor early up and bound a night the West today held watchman in Commercial garage on West 35th street and escaped { with two trucks loaded with rub- ber worth about $30,000. The value of the trucks raised the estimated vaiue of the loot to $50.000 The watchman was alone in the | garage when the two men demand- | ed the privilege searching the place. They tied him to a truck and then worked methodically, moving | trucks and afitomobiles which were parked between the door and the | rubber laden trucks, and drove their loot away. of ' greaqy A8 Nine years later, ac- | in the collision Jid all he could tol avoid accident and was in no| NEW ARCHBISHOP OF QUERBEC P feesoni R | Rome. July 28 UP—The successor "m.‘f P,, e thatsthe J‘“f"" 1! o¢ Cardinal Tegin, archbishop of e Eeletty i, Dreferred 25ainel | Quebec, who died several days ago. SR ;”'M {1 will be Monsignor Paul Eugene Roy, il el o k | edhdjutor archbishop. of Quebec. be heard in the the NEW BRlTAIN CcO NEW YORK'S WHITE COLLAR WORKING ARMY NOW REVOLTS NNELTILUT 'IUI-A\D-‘\Y JULY 2R =y MAYOR OPENS FIRE ONZONING ENEMIEY BLOOD TRANSFUSION sz ) , ) OAVE LIFE n‘da(l k! \P\ mm;a\\ Dles Mrs. J ohn Loomis Today at General Hospital Blood last transfusions attempted as a resort to save the life of Mrs. John Loomis of Market street who for several days was in a criti- cal condition at the New Britain General hospltal falled to restore the neccssary strength to her body, and she dled this morning at §:15 o'clock, at the age of 32. Several blood transfers were made last week after physiclans decided there was a possibllity of | saving the woman's life in this way. | The entire personnel of central fire | headquarters volunteered for the | first operation and Joseph F. Farr, a substitute fireman was selected. This was followed by others, but in valn. | Mrs. Loomis Is survived by her husband, a son, John, Jr, three sis- ters, Misses Mary and Anna, and Mrs. Loretta Gagner, and t(wo brothers, Willilam and Walter Kelly. Funeral arrangements ae incom plete, BUILDING OPERATIONS (INELM CITY HALTED |Strike of Hod Carriers | Prevents Others From Working New Haven, July 28 (A —Building operations scemed to be tied up to- day by the strike and mason helpers although contrac- tors claimed that the industry is not lanywhere near the stoppage claim- ed by the union men, Masons could not work without their helpers but they claimed not to be on strike, also saying that they were not interested in the disagreement. everthéless, there seemed to be a few men of the build- ing trades at work on the Hadley building in Orange street, the Augus- ta Lewis Troup school, the Hopkins Grammar school, the Roger Sher- man theater, the Mack garage, the Security Insurance company's home office building, nd a number of lesser |eontracts. Vincent De allco, Mas first pre International Hod Carriers and La- borers unien who is in charge of the | strike claimed that the men want an Increase in wages from 65 cents to cents an hour, and plasterer tanders want 85 cents an hour. The claim {s made that these new fig- | | | | | | | | 1 i Ta vice ures were demanded two years ago and never granted. demands wera rejected. It is also | claimed that the contractors have refused to recognize the union. The only firms, according to De Fallco which refused to grant de- Imand are C. W. Murdock, Sperry and Treat Company, Larkin Cary | company, and J. N. Leonard com- ipany. Last spring the DISKPPOINTS AUDIENGE | Mrs. Barrymore Billed for Lead, Re- | | fuses, Then Consents to Act and Does Poor Job of It. Salem, Mass., July P—Mrs, John Barrymore, as a novelist | known as Michael Strange, disap- | pointed a fashionable Nerth Shore audience last evening which had crowded the Empire theater to see her take her first leading part on a stage. She was billed as one of the leading characters in | Wilde's “The Importance of Being Earnest.” Stating that she had missed two rehearsals last week because of ill- ness, Mrs. Barrymore informed the management just before the per- formance that she would be unable to take part. The show was de- 3 more than an hour, during which a majority of the audience left, before Mrs. Barrymore con- sented to act in a “dress rehearsal” of the play. She made use of the prompter frequently. Since joining the company of the American Theater, Inc.. which under the direction of Hamilton McFad- den is playing in the Empire theater here, Mrs. Barrymore has played only a minor part in ‘“Barbara Fretchie.” 28 ed Berlin town cou due Mies Agnes McCarthy is unable to| leave the Meriden hospital it will be continued for anoth two according to Berlin authorities. | Miss McCarthy is much improved, | but physicians she will be dis- figured for life, The finding of the as follows: “Having been motified on the day July, 1825, McCart white fem of age, late of Boston, Ma: come to a violent death Town of Meriden, New Haven coun- ty 1 at once made respecting on Page tonight. but to the fact nmt‘MAlMED WAR VET weeks, say X New York, Hassclberger for his forty July 28 (@ — was preparing today st operation in the last seven years. Amy surgcons de- nined to put Hasselberger to- gether again so that he looks and feels as he dig before he was torn almost to pleces in France seven years ago, will operate on him again at the Waiter Reed hospl in Washington next week Hasselberger enlisted iffthe regu- lar army and was one of the first men sent to France, On September 28, 1918, the sec- tion of trench in which he was sta- tioned was bombed by German air- planes and he was taken o a first ald station half blinded, uncen- sclous and apparently dead. There coroner read 3rd a years State of Connecticut all proper inquiry wed 10) WANDA HAWLEY WEDS Hollywood. Calif.. July 28 (P — Wanda Hawley motion plcture sctress, and J. Stuar{ Wilkinson, former automobile rading dri.er‘l were married here yesferda: > Frank BEING REBUILT BY SURGEONS, TO HAVE 41st OPERATION! was a plece of steel in almost every square inch of his body. The Walter Reed hospital sur- geons dccided to reconstruct what | was left of Hasselberger's body. They restored his sight completely and then devoted themseives to skin | plastic | grafting operations ang surgery on his body. It was neces- sary to do a little at a time, as the veteran was weak. Hence the forty operatlons over a period of seven years on all parts of his body. Hasselberger still can't get around very well, but he sees perfectly and | he has hobe. “After a couple of dozen more operations, sald figure they'll be able to start work in earnest on ma" he today, of hod carriers | Oscar | “they | Tells Ernest W, Christ C. of C. Is Not Running City (TALKS RIGHT 0UT IN MEETIN' Executive "\Iuniripal Engineers Or-| ganize— 3,500 Strong — To Fight for Improve- ment in Salary and Workin g Conditions, Belleves Manufacturers Are Not Co-operating as By Asso Yor Slrould—Assured Stanley Works Is New co! An import- S Néw York's great collar working army today the standard of revolt. municipal engineers, §,5 and representing the lar, aggregation of their profe sion in the world, outside of mili- tary establishments, completed an | organization which has for its ob- M ject improvement of ary and the executive's office this morning.| working conditions “comparable yr tolntsire “comparable with the dignity, train- 3 tions. Eh s whick t Other Workers : “{,Q,,‘ng S Although confined in its fincep- A concerning items that tion to the engineers, the movement 1y to come to the has aroused sympathetic interest ng commission cmong other professions whose by manufacturers. members, despite years of study and Not Running City practical preparation, rec: less compensation than the recently ar- river Immigrant “erdgineer” of a compressed alr drill or of a brick- hod * 'ing in the offices of the Chamber of Whether the flag of the engincers Commerce to discuss zoning, when m\l serve as a general rallying point the zoning maps were available in [for the long-sultering technical em- city hall and public hearings were | ployes is one of the several Interest- being held just for | ing potentialitis of the movement, | “It tends to give the impression the Demand Wage Increases | manufacturers are running the Casting aside the restrait of “pro- Chamber of Commerce. But the| cssional ethics” which has been Chamber of Commerce is not run- held to prevent dircct, concerted ac- Ning the city,” the mayor told Mr. tion, the engincers have formed the Christ. Assoclation of Engincers of New The factory York, which, at a meeting Mayor Paonessa that New Rritain representing every city de heing A manufacturing city, the approved the resubmittal to the city Manufacturing interests felt they authorities’ of their demand for a Should meet and determine what (Continued On white raised in Favor of Project, I ity there are manufacturers in the who rong single vement, Secretary irlst of the Stanley Works has yet he told Mayor A. Poanessa during a conference at Ernest ear of them, hrist ca Interested ve of appreci lded an expression dislike for the practice of manufacturers meet- h he of representative told e Five) (Continued on Page 15) MRS. LAFOLLETTE WILL NOT TRY FOR SENATE, | Charles F PIONEER GONTRAGTOR Johnson Was One of Swedish Set- i City's Earliest Plans to Complete Hus-| band’s Autobiography— Son May Be Candidate tlers, Coming in 1881, Charles F. Johns the first contractor in the city of New Brit- ain, died today at the New Britain neral hospital of Injuries sus- ineq flve weeks ago when he was struck by an automobile truck on Falrview and Dwight streets. * Mr. Johnsoi was riding a bieycle { street, | | Mrs. an- | Washington Robert M 28 P Follette July - Le formally today seat nounced the | made vacant | nusband In a statem en's organ her to muke the belief that she could pe greater ser prog cause by devoting heself to the task of writing her hushand's biography from 1812 to the time of his death, tfrom “a wealth and ma- prepared by the senator Mre. la Follette's statements made public here through is expected to clear the way for an early announcement by Gov. of a spe nnexpir independ s in Wis that e would not U. S senate death of her the by the tomobile truck was a heavy owned by the New Haven Dairy Co. Following the accident he was taken to the hospital where it nt addressed to wom- | chine race she ice for the of both legs and was internally in- inred tion had been regarded as critical. He was a natlve of Sweden and came to New Britain in 1881, Sur- viving are his wife and the following ighters: Mrs. Emil Hierpe, Mrs. L. G thelatter a resident of Brooklyn, N Y. Mr. Johnson was a member of the New England Order of Protection | and of the Swedish Rethany church. Funeral services will be hela at| o'clock Thursday at the church | and burial will be in Fairview cem- of notes terial” friends al election to fill out d term of the The re onsin are laying plans to nominate a candidate for the place and to wage a determine fight to recapture the state. Several | eqory, of the La Follette licutenants leader of th eular republi- are | | They are not behind the zoning | w.| the | the matters to| he mayor's response was a state- | that purpoee. | VIGTIM OF AUTO TRUCK af 147 Jubilee | . {truth the Bible account of man's | Swedish butiding |70 Of 3 it the time of the mishap. The au- | ma- | vas found he had suffered fractures| Nelson and Mrs. A, Dandercar, | 1925, -EIGHTEEN PAGES FUNERAL OF Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending 12,005 July 25th PRICE THREE CENTS BRYAN WILL BE HELD IN WASHINGTON FRIDAY AFTERNOON Snentlfic Version of Creati 28 (P address ennings | anti-evo Dayton, | Tennessee |pared by Willlam | defense of the |lution law which the la was prevented from deliver | Dayton trial because of termination of the case known to the world today | Bryan. “A sudden declsion of the defe to submit the c; argu- ment, and permit a v of guilty, prevented the delivery of |speech,” says an introductor Presents All Reason: “As It presents the issues involved and the reasons for the law prohibit- {ing the teaching in public schools |of hypothesis that makes man a descendant of any lower form of | life, it is printed for the information | of the general public.” July see | an early was made by Mrs. [that the case was no longer local. [hut that it “has assumed the pro- | | povtions -of a battle-royal between {unhelief that attempts to speak | through so-called science and the | defenders of Christian faith, speaking n\mugh the legislature of Tennessee.” “It is for the whether thjs att tian religion shall be permitted in {the public schools of Tennessee by | teachers employed by the state and | {pald out of the public treasury, was a conclusion drawn, No Rights Violated Asserting that “this law violate any rights guaranteed by any | constitution to amy individual, and {“was no Interterence with freedom of consclence, Mr. Bryan indicied evolution on five broad counts, the first of which “is that it digputes the jury to determine upon the Chris- does not creation and shakes faith In the Bible as the word of God." | “This tndictment we prove by comparing the processes described evolutionary with the text of Genesis,” he safd. Tt not only con- | tradicts the Mosafe record as to the beginning of human life but it dis putes the Rible doctrine of reproduc- tion according to kind—the greatest {sctentific principle known.” ( The Second Indictment “Our second indictment.” the od- dress wald, “is that the evolutionary hypothesis carried to its logical con- For several days his condi- |clusion disputes every vital truth of | [the Bible. Tts tendency, natural if {not Inevitable, is to lead those who | | really accept it, first to agnosticism and then to athelsm Here Charles Darwin w to ilustrate what was meant this charge. “1 did not in the | doubt the strict and literal truth of |every word in the Bible." Darwin was quoted as saying of the period from 1828 to 1831, Then, sald | Brvan. “the change Y\n\\v;:h' in his | (Darwin's) will be {found in a letter written to a Ger- religions views (Continued on I‘az- 16) known to have aspirations for the office While no announcement .M ! made, it is rather generally \"Hmfli\ | here that Robert M. La Follette | will offer himself for his nv\ure! eeat and that, of course, he will have | ment of Mrs. | Folletie in | satd st lized that her election | might pave , the way for other Wom- |en to be elected to the senate, but| ithat after giving careful thought to/ the special obligatio hich cir cumstances have pl i upen her 14 not bring herself to be-| that it S. AMBASSADOR AT TOKYO DIES SUDDENLY Tokyo, July 28 () — Edgar Addison Bancroft, American ambassador to Japan, died this (Wednesday) morning at Kar- uisawa Ambassador Bancroft taken {ll at Karuizawa a popu lar mountain resort in Central Japan, where he was spending the summer, about three weeks AgO. At first it was thought he was suffering from {ndigestion, but his trouble later dlag nosed as a small duodenal ulcer. \ she was lieve | field. “It would underta is her duty to enter the st nature for of asserted, onsibility in the his-| movement United States in number, but they responsibility st how la “This I8 a critical time tory the Progressives | senate are {are vested with and power. 1 nee vitally the choice lette's succe ot progressive in the Women'’s Woolen Wear Fabrics Prices Slashed New York, July 28 (M—The low- est prices in many years were quot ed on women's wear fabrics today by the American Woolen Co. in | autoblography opening Its lines for the spring of e O 0 thou-| 976 The reduction followed simi- | sands of men and women, Mrs. Ta |, pyce cuts announced yesterday | Foltette said it had been his Inten-|,; men's wear lines, based on lower tion soon to publish a second VOI-| woq) japor and other manufactur- {ume covering his experience and | o0 B Or B Qo er on { knowledge of the intervening Years. | women's fabrics was priced 17 1-2 “The writing of the record of that | FOFSS TS T8, BCC the taat ;prrmd including the world war, of-| (20 LT | ters a great opportunity for service {she added. “I undertake the W { humbly, but gladl i of Mr. ssor may affe cause.” Declarng that Mr tssued 3 inspiration to war Hl(-fl TIDE * Lineman Lives Despite Shock of 66,000 Volts! | Greenficld, Farl Lingma the New sustained a shock of §6.000 volts of electricity yesterday and will live, physicians at the Warren hospital here said today. Lingman, on an in- spection tour, climbed a high ten-| | sion tower and touched a circuit | whieh he thought was dead. His | clothing was burned off and his|| { body scorched from neck to KNees. % mmee—— Mass,, July | | i { | K . England nplove by Power Co., * THE WEATHER L Hartford, July 28—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity: Unsettled, possibly showers to- night: Wednesday fair. 2 | [aret, Prmce Henri and Wife Tour De Luxe FromBig City in Back of Moving Van| Harold Schwarm, Fair Child of New York's 400, Returns to Scenes for Vacation. ‘ ‘ [ | | \ Harold Schw sly {as Prince Henrl known de heir appar- rm varic 'h‘ de Chateroux urbon Bussigny |#nt to the throne of Russia, and as |the “dishrag prince” at tim ployed in local factories and taurants and at other times guest of honor of New York's soclal l¢ is again in his o arrived erday local and Berlin relatives The came up New York in a car he had chartered near the New York-( ecticut line and he bade his chauffeur at Hudson street, His car nas a heavy truck and his chauffe pro tem. Harry Farrel of this city driver of the truck. Harold and his wife, accompanied him. sat on a pile of burlap bags in the the truck and talked of t | cesstul business enterprise in | York ecity, the Checkerboard which Schwarm says he been conducting with great success | for some time. Thelr only baggage was a fishing tackle, or as Farrall puts it: ‘Har- 14 stood In the middle of his trunk: 11 he had to do was button his coat nd his trunk was locked." Schwarm told the truckman he | recently lost possession of an $50.- 000 hotel business in the west, but he has hopes of recouping his for- tune in New York city. The erstwhile bogus count spoke in terms of admiration of Mayor A M. Paoncssa and Chief of Police Willlam C. Hart. g s em- res- aders haunts. having ye for a visit wit adieu to Be lin ur ol al a 1 | X <o f Bryan s Undelwered Address In . Evolution Trial Given Qut For Publication By Widow Today “The | e commoner | Mr. Bryan declared in the adc lr-‘w; & sefetrad by b | Bucolic | h | . | Carl IServices In New York Avenue Preshyteriar Church But Hour i Not Yet Fixed—Cap- on Attacked On Five ‘\lajor lta' Clt}' Flags To Be | | Counts—Declared It Would Eliminate Love From At Half Mas | Life, Thwart Improvement i Man’s Condition and | | Kill Hope of Regeneration of the Individual. wTouching Tributes to Mem- - - ory of Great Commoner High Lights In Last | ‘ Paid by People of Ter ‘ Address by Bryan \ nessee. 3 | I = By The Associated Press. AN st has made of death a nar. | By The A"a’;!lud Press, row, star-lit strip between the| Davten, Tenn, July 28—Funer | championship of yesterday and the |S€rvices for William Jennings Bry. | reunion of tomorrow. Evolution |Will be held at Washington in t! strikes out the stars and deepens the | NeW York Avenue Presbyteri gloom that enshrouds the tomb.” qulmrc;; some time Friday afternoo: —_— | Mrs. Bryan announced today. “It may be a surprise to Your| The Rev. Wallace Radcliffe, pasto: Honor and to you gentlemen of the :‘: ;1‘12 Cl{;lml\ where the final sery jury, as it was to me, to learn that [!ces for Mr. Bryan will be held, ha~ Darwin spent three years at Cam- | Peen for many years a friend of ti bridge, studying for the ministry,” |Commoner and his family. \ ) ! The exact hour of the funeral wil “He (Darwin) drags man down,depend upon the time of the arriv: | to the brute lavel ang then, judging | Washington of William Jennings man by brute standards, he ques- [ Bryan, Jr., who with his sister, Mrs | tions whether man's mind can be | Grace Hargreaves, is en route fron trusted to deal with God and im- ‘“(‘L“""‘a to join the widowed { mortality,” ‘HlO er. =, | The announcement of the place “Do these evolutionists stop to|Where the services will be held came think of the crime they commit ”‘(”"&'1: “\‘[Ulag! C. Thompsen, sec- when they take faith out of the 'etary to Mr. Bryan and after con- Y sultation with Mrs, Ruth Owen, an- | hearts of men and women and lead | them out Into a starless night?” | other daughter of the Bryans, who arrived early today, No Dayton Services Mr. Thompson, who since his ar- rival last night has been spokesman for the widow, believes that services | will not be held in Dayton before {the funeral party departs tomorrow for Washington. The burial place already has been announced as Arlington natfonal cemetery, where Mr. Bryan, a colonel of volunteers {In the Spanish-American war, wil} {be 1ald to rest among the country’s The hodles of the people are so | Military notables. e e A Simple Tributes Peyil clans must be careful to properly | A% the body of Willlam Jennings [ label all polsons. Why not be care- | Bryan lay in simple state at the | ful to protect the spiritual life of [NOMe of & friend here today, sim. {our people from the poisons that | Ple People of America paid him sym i heas e | pathetic tribute I While others from among thel R ey hologlate o hiila unon vnim‘”" poured messages of condo. il F e e i el lence into the little white cottage man is nothing but a bundle MH(IvIch house the body of the eom- I e e G e bmml’r‘nnor uncounted thousands whose | ‘“Nflr{‘;: 1 fel sy |causes he had champloned mourned ancestors (a leader, silently, Of varying political views, he had found in them a common chord when he cama forward as a defender i | “What s the taking of a few dol- | | lars from one in day or in.night, | in comparlson with the erime of ! leading one away from God and one | away from Christ | e | “The soul is immortal and religlon deals with the soul: the logical ef- fect of the evolutionary hypothesis | {1s to undermine religion and thus affect the soul.” onary o more repuisive doctrine was | ever proclaimed by man. 1t all the | psychologists in the world teach this doctrine—as Mr. Darrow says they heavon defend the vouth of our land from thelr im- IN THEATER PRI]JECT dren be taught all the sciences, but New Building May Rise on hey do not want to lose sight of \Hw Rock of Ages while they study Masonic Temple Corp. Land (Continued on F‘uo Ten) do—then may on the age of the rocks; neither do the: | desire.them to become so absorbed ' | In measuring the distance between the stars that they will forget Him who holds the stars in His hands.” “The cry in the business world, in the industrial world, in the pro- fessional world, in the political world—even in the religlons world | —is for consecrated talents—for | | abiitty plus a passion for service 1t interests which are negotiating for the purchase of the Masonic Temple corporation land en West Main street, east of the post office, are successful in securing the prop- erty, a bullding combining a thea- | ter, stores and ofti. will be erected. It is sald that the cost of the entire project, including the purchase of tha land, will be $£000,000. P'ans suited to the site have ready been drawn, They include a theater with a seating capacity eof 2,000, The bullding will be four or f stories in height, While negotiations for the aite have b carried on by New Haven | men, it is thought that New York theater interests are behind them. A meeting of the directors of the Masonic Temple corporation was | held last night and it was declded to | grant an option for 90 days to the New Haven men, The directors were scheduled to meet again at § o'¢clock th afternoon with the ne. gotlators, when, it ix expected, all points in the option will be cleaned up. “Evolution, disputing the miracle | and ignoring the spiritual in 1life, has no place for the regeneration of the individual. It recognizes no| cry of repentance and scoffs at the doctrine that one can be born.” “A heart can be changed in the twinkling of an eye and a change in the life follows a change in the | heart. | “He (Darwin) wants us to belleve that evolution develops a human sympathy that finally becomes %0 tender that it repudiates the law that created it and thus invites a (Continued on Page Ten) 'ATRMAN IN COURT FOR SMASHING INTO HOUSE| Descombe Found Not Guilty As Ao- | Doubles Champions Are Saved as Rivals Default | 4 Seabright, N. I, July (P—Only a [ 3 ] Unavoldable sportsmanlike default by their op- | cident Was Considered (Special to the Herald.) ponents averted defeat today for Rristol, July 28.—The first avia-|Robert and Howard Kinsey, of San tion case In the history of the local | 'rancisco, mational doubles cham- police court was included in the plons, at the hands of Arneld Jones annals this morning when no erim.|2nd W. W, Ingraham, of Providence, inal negligence was found against [R. I, In the first round of the Sea- Descombe, whose airplzne |bright Invitation Tennis Tourna- crashed into the home of Pasquale |ment. The scores were 10-12, 6-1, Onofrio on Pine street on Sunday 32-5 default. | afternoon. Testimony of witnesses showed that Aviator Descombe had been operating his machine with all due rr(\rd for the safety of his passen- |gers and that his mishap was un- |avoldable. Descombe with his two assengers, Edward Scott and Frank Carl, both of this city, had been riding about the city for wseveral minutes, when the "plane twirled |into a tafl spin and because of the “flatness™ of the air, the aviator could not get the machine into full control before he struck the house. PETITION 1S ALLOWED Boston, July 28 (P—Judge Lowell in federal court today allowed the petition of Bartholomew A. Brickley, receiver for the brokerage firm ot C. P. Dow and company, which was petitioned into bankruptcy yester day, for permission to sell certaln securities owned by the firm. The recelver told the court that there were liens on some of the securities and that the creditors would suffer loss if they were not sold at a fave time..