OurTEea-therMaa.
FAIR AND COOLER
Consolidation of The Evening Newt fend
The Roseburg Review
tDOUGtlAS COUNTY p
An Independent Newspaper, Published for
the Bast Interests of tht People.
ASSOCIATED PRESS tEASEO WISE
SERVICE WORLD'S NEWS TOCAY
VOL. XXVI NO. 197 OF ROSF 'RG REVIEW
ROSEBURG. OREGON. FRIDAY. JULY 10. 1925.
VOL. XIII NO. OF THE EVENING NEWS
mil
EARTHDUAKE
MONTANA TODA
y
IS NOT SERIQUS
Several Sections Tremble
Under Shocks Which
Occurred Today.
TEMPERATURE 4
: The thermometer at 2:30
today stood at 94 degrees. e
i practically the same as yes. e
J e terday at the same hour. e
when, the mercury reached 98 e
degrees during the late part
of the ufteruoon. A hither
humidity caused the beat to-
day to be felt more keenly,
being conducive to excessive
perspiration. The hourly tem-
perutures for the day were as
follows:
5 a. m 60 10 a. m 80
6 m 61 11 a. m 85
7 a. m 66 12 noon 87
8 a. m 72 1 p. m 1
8 a. m 77 2 p. m 93
2:30 p. m 94
PARTY PLANS TO
INSPECT ROAD
UP N.
UMPQUA
LITTLE DAMAGE DONE
Only Destruction Is Brick
Walla Loosened in Shocks
of Two Weeks Ago
Lasts 1 0 Seconds.
fAMoclited Vnm Uiwd Wirt.)
IIKLENA. Mont.. July 10. Old
mother earth became uneasy again
this morning. Breaking ill shea In
ntose Montana towns in the belt
shocked two weeks ago trembled
und"r quiver recorded at 7:48 this
morning.
The shock as recorded by the
Helena weather bureau lasted
about 10 seconds.
There was no damage In any sec
tion, so far as can be' learned.- At
Manhattan and Three Forks, where
the greatest force of the shake
was felt June 27. loose bricks
tumbled again from the shattered
wa'ls. but that was all.
While there Is no definite record
of others during the night, reports
tell of slight shocks about mid
night, about 5 o'clock and about 6
O'clock. The accorded shock, the
weather bureau said, began with
a slight tremor which Increased in
strength and violence with, a north
and south movement.
A Miff shock was reported at
Trident, lasting possibly 30 sec
ends, but without damage. Boze
man, Livingston. Willow Creek,
Great Falls, Billings, Butte and
Logan also felt the shock, but
without alarm -or damage.
Yellowstone Park was not af
fected, Superintendent Albright
said.
HELENA, Mont.. July 10.
Tarts cf Montana again to
day was disturbed by earthquakes
that were felt her", at Great Falls,
Three Forks, Manhattan and Bil
lines. No widespread damage
was reported.
The quake was most pronounced
at Three Forks, where it lasted for
two minutes. People rushed to the
streets. Aside from the toppling
of bricks from chimneys and ruins
left by former shakes, there was
no damage. Similar conditions
prevailed at Manhattan. There
was no damage and no alarm. At
Helena the slight shocks lasted a
few seconds
At Billings many Inhabitants
were unaware that the city had
been visited by .quakes, workmen
on buildings being the first to re
port the earth's inward convul
sions. Iluttt also was rocked by a tem
blor or nhort duration at 7:4b
o'clock. No damage, however, was
reported. I
IIKYI.H.HT ItOltHFHS
KSTAPK1 WITH HA IT
(Aswvialn! Vrrm Lfturd Wire ) 4
NEW YORK, July 10. 4
Two men held up the office
of Barnett. Koldnson & Com
pany in Fifth Avenue at For-
ty-fifth street today and es- 4
caped with diamonds and
other gems valued ut (20,-
000. Police believed the rob-
bers were the men who shot
and killed a jeweler in the
same building several years
ago.
STAY OF DEATH
Chamber of Commerce and
Highway Officials Will
Survey Route.
'
KVOM'TIOX DKIIATK.
WON' 11Y riiriirHMKX
WILL GO HORSEBACK
County-Court, Forest Serv
ice and Delegations from
Neighboring City Will
Also Be Included.
TO CO-SLAYERS
GREAT FALLS. Mont, July 10 ;
Great Fal s was rocked at 7:44 this i
morning by a short but pronounc-1
?d earthquake whose Intensity was
comparable to that felt here on
June 27. The tremors lasted about
three seconds. !
LOG FREIGHT RATE
CAUSES DISCUSSION
SEATTLE, July 10 Four
trans-continental railroads, which
it was announced Wednesday,
would not be represented in a con
ference here Tuesday on logging
freight rates will attend, but wilt
announce that discussion is use
less, it was stated today. j
The railroads. It was learned, '
will suggest to lor shippers at the j
conference that shippers and ear !
rfersmeet July 21, not under state ;
auspices, to talk over their differ- (
enres. i
(Ar(atrd Prm letwanj Win.)
SAN FRANCISCO, July 10.
The state supreme court today
d'enied a petition for a writ of
error Intended to stay the execu
tion at San Quentin prison today
of Thomas Bulley and Lewis Per
ry for -the murder 6f Glenn Bond,
a Los Angeles policeman. The
court understood that the men
would be hanged at 11 a. m.
SAN Qt'ENTIN Cal.. July 10.
A reprieve of an hour was grant
ed to Thomas Bailey and Lewis
Perry, sentenced to halig at the
state prison here today for the
murder of a Los Angeles police
man. The reprieve was to await
the outcome of court proceedings
In behalf of the men In San
Francisco.
The execution Is now set for
11 a. m.
SACRAMENTO, Cal.. July 10. A
last minute attempt to save Edward
Montijo, aged 21, murderer of a
Los Angeles policeman, from the
gallows at Folsom prison, failed in
the superior court today when
Judge C. O. Buslck denied the pe
tition of Montljo's parents. Mr. and
Mrs. George Montijo, for a writ of
habeaus corpus.
The hangings had been delayed
for an hour to permit of a final ap
peal to the state supreme court in
San Francisco for a writ of error,
which would have allowed of a
review of the cases m of the two
men by the United Staler supreme
court The court however, decid
ed not to Intervene, it being its
second decision of this nature with
in two days. Word was sent here
and the men were thereupon sent I
to their death on the gallows.
Policeman Bond was shot and
killed on February 20, 1924, while
trying to prevent a holdup of the l
Merchants National Bank Agency j
at Sixth and Hoover streets, Los
Angp.es. Bafley, Perry and Ed-j
ward Montijo were captured short-
ly thereafter and were convicted
and sentenced to hang. Their ap
peal to the state supreme court
wss lost
Montijo was sentenced to hang at
Folsom prison today.
In order to attain a greater
knowledge of the North Umpqua
road project, and to secure more
Interest in the completion of that
important road, the Chamber of
Commerce and forest service are
arranging a trip to start on Sat
urday. July 18, finishing oa
Thursday, July 23. It is planned
to have a party of from ten to
fifteen men go over the proposed
route from Roseburg to Diamond
lake and return inspecting the
work already done, and looking
over the land necessary to be tra
versed In connecting up the road.
Investigations have been ex
tended to Bandon, Coos Bay and
Reedsport Chamber of Commerce
to send delegates to make up the
party, as the Umpqua highway,
when eventually completed, will
form an important link bet woe u
these coast points and Eastern
Oregon. So far none of these
communities have accepted the
Invitation except Reedsport, which
has agreed to send a man to re
present that city on the trip.
Other points, however, are expect
ed to respond before the date of
departure.
Included in the party will be
the mem Iters of the road com
mittee of the Chamber of Com
merce, the county court, a repre
sentatative of The California Ore
gon Power Company, photograp
her, one or more members of the
state highway organization, two
or more forest service officii),
a newspaper representative, and
(Continued on Page 8)
(AMortatfd Piwx Lun Wirt.)
Elf U F.N E, Ore., July 10.
Fundamentalism was voted
the winner over evolution Hi
a debute held here last even
ing between W. B. Hilcy, ex
ecutive secretary of the
Worlds Christian Fundamen
talist Association, and Ed
ward Adams Cantrell, field
secret at ry of the Science
League of America. The de
cision was awarded by pop
ular vote of the audience.
The armory, where the de
bate was held, was packed
for the occasion. Applause
which greeted the two spea
kers as they first took up
their cases, showed that fun
damentalists were In the ma
jority in the audience.
Jammed Courtroom Furore
of Applause as Principals
of Case Enter.
A BRYAN GETS OVATION
MINERS REFUSE
1TRAT
f AMrwiatt Pfrw f-rm Wire.)
September 1. whether
has been signed or not.
The miners' sub-committee of ,
six reached this decision at
morning meeting in advance of ,
I IS KM. '
i -
f rr oi j.j Ti Mil
I Al e OLUTLtU It ..Tilt
j CROWD SIHS
I COURT TO HEAR "
jjT RIAL -OPENED
mm
Darrow Goes Into Fight in
Shirt Sleeves New Name
in List of Defense
Counsel Very Hot.
(AmnrlttH rrm luml Wir..)
DAYTON, Tenn.. July 10. Sn?c-
tatnrs beean to find seats In the
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. July i '"" a county court room two hours
10. Anthracite miners will not 1 me scopes evo.utlon trial
listen at this time to propolis j01'1-
of operators to agree upon arll- By 8:20 o'clock, the room which
tration In event of deadlock in; will seat approximately 800 per
the coming scale negotiation or ; sons, contained .100 men with a
to aeree to remain at work after 1 scattering of women.
contract
The lawn and walks outside
were thronged with visitors who
Included mountaineers and khaki
clad tourists. .Motion pictures cam-
the opening of actual conferences (nts , ... , pr,ndlaIl. in
this afternoon. ni nu .. tt... .,,,..h.i ih.
scene.
A hum of tense conversation fill
ed the court room and above this
FOUND IN ROGUE -unil''1 the cluttBr of reporters'
.Ml "nutn 1WIU wie UIUIMVU I'llCK.
GOLD NUGGET IS
John t.
Scopes
of telegraph instruments,
j Judge Haultffon entered nt 8:30
t followed by his wife and two
daughters and mother-in-law. The
judge's family took seats within
MEOFORD, Ore., July 10. A
miniature gold rush to Rogm
river is not Improbable as the re
suit of the announcement In tht the railing.
village of Rogue River toduy that 1 The Judge was busy shaking
Truemnn Scott, a visitor from , hands with friends.
Iowa, yesterday panned out a O. H. West brought In a bunch
four-ounce gold nugget which he of flowers and placed them on
values at $85. Mr. Scott has tfie Judge's desk. They were rho
been a frequent visitor to Rome dodendrons. sent by friends from
River in the summer and has per- Laurel Falls.
sistently argued there are grent At 8:45 fw seats remained tin
stores of free gold in the gravel taken and the entrance and stair
of the famous trout stream. He way wore crowded. The attorneys
claims to have made wages b- and defendant were slow in arrlv-
fore, but today's find was the ffrt . Ing. Rules were lacking for con-
one of sensational proportions. 4 (Continued on ik 6.)
THE THINKER
103 A TMEDFORO
MEDFORD. Ore.. July 10. Yes
terday was the hottest day of the
month here when the mercury
reached 103. The maximum tem
perature of the summer was
rearhed In June when the mercury
iouchd 10S. The local weather
buri-au predicts the thermometer
niil pass 100 today.
F'tik Tinnev. Blackface Comedian,
Who Eloped With Folly Favorite, Is
Welcomed Back by Forgiving Spouse
NEW YORK. July 10 The New
York American says today that
Frank Tinncy. black fare come
dian, who recent 'y fled to tondnn
(m h' fo-xlvln wife after an
e.capsde wlUi Imoaene Wilson,
former follies lirl. is homesick,
broke and ready to come back, and
that his wife will take him bark.
"Whr shouldn't t take him bark
my Perk's Had Bnyr she is
quoted as tain(. ''There are
I worse men than Frank. It takes
more than liquor to ruin him. He's i
been punished." j
( Imoiene broke Into print when
! Tinney wss arrested for hitting
en the (aw the rirl that Florens
Zlcrfleld g'orlfled. The grttnd Jury
tilled to Indict the comedian. To
the surprise of all 1 fled to Lon-
'don. Imogene fled after him.
I Now the paper says Tinney has
' lost Imogens.
Evolution Trial Facts
(AMorlalnl rrt tal Wirr.)
The defendant: John T. Scopes, 24, formerly science teacher
In the Rhea county (Tennessee) schools, his first position after
being graduated from the University of Kentucky.
The charge: Violation of the Tennessee law which pro
hibits the teaching of the theory of evolution In the publie
schools.
The scene: Rhea county circuit cpurt at Dayton, Tenn, a
town of 2,000 population.
The judge: Judge John T. Raulston. N
Probable duration: Estimated at from two weeks to a month.
The prosecution: Walter White, superintendent of Rhea
county schools and official prosecutor, A. T. Stewart, attorney
general of the eighteenth Tennessee judicial district; William
Jennings Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, Jr.. Sue K. Hicks. J. Q.
McKenzie, Wallace A. Haggard, Herbert E. Hicks.
The defense: Judge John R. Neal, chief of staff; Clarence
Darrow, Dudley Field Malone, Arthur Garfield Hays, Balnbridge
Colhy, John L. Godsey. Mr. Colby will not be present at the
trial.
The witnesses: Prominent churchmen and scientists.
The cause: The anti-evolution law fathered by Representa
tive John W. Butler, of Macon county, passed by the last ses
sion of tha Tennessee legislature, signed by Governor Austin
Peay, March 21.
Previous action: Scopes arrested, charged with explaining
evolution theory to his biology class; held to grand jury in
bond of $1,000 at preliminary hearing May 9; released on own
recognizance and indicted by special grand jury. Defense de
nied injunction to halt trial last Monday.
Inception of case: At Dayton drug store, at suggestion of
Dr. George W. Rapplcyea, evolution enthusiast
SCOPES JURY
CHOSEN TIIIS
AFTERNOON
Selection of Jury Begad
ThU Afternoon Panel
Soon Completed.
RETURN INDICTMENT
Second Charge Is Brought
Back by Grand Jury
Preliminaries of Trial '
Move Rapidly.
APPEAL IS FILED JUDICIAL COUNCIL
FOR CHAS. FORBES i TO HOLD MEETING
miCAGO. July 10 Appenlsln
behalf of riiarlcs R. Forties, for
mer dirertnr of the veterans bu
reau and .1. V. Thompson, weal
thy St. Louis contractor, convlrtnd
last February of conspiracy to de
fraud th' govern men t t hrotrzh
hospital contracts were filed to
duy lu the I'niled Slates Circuit
Court of Appcdls.
The plwi contains ten thousnnd
printed jiiigiM and Is the longest
In the lilnlory of the court here.
Ninety-five errors In tlin pro
ceedings ami flndlnir.4 at the ori
ginal trial court ore enumerated.
Grave. suliHtantial and prejudi
cial errors In t he trial are held
by the defendant to have brourht
about the conviction.
Forbes and Thorn punn are froo
on bonds pi-ndlng ii 'clninn on the
aplieal. They were sentenced lo
two yenr In fhn penitentiary and
fin.-d $lo.nii0.
The optM-al probably will be
heard In October.
I INJURED LOGGING
j OPERATOR DIES
M A RSITFIKLD, Or July 10.
I,e Weekly, fio, logging operator of
the Rridgp district, inturrd yester-
day when a log at the unloading
1 dump rrunhed him, breaking an
, arm. a ler, dislocating one leg at
the hip and causing internal In-
lurles. died late nf night at the
Msnt hospital In Myrtle 1'ntnt. Mr.
Weekly had been a resident of the
I dU'rlrt for many j n. H had
' be-n engaged in various Pursuits,
but of lale years followed w hite
cedar logging.
SALKM. Ore., July 10. The
state Judicial council, which was
created by the legislature of 19L'5(
will meet at the stHte supreme
court building on Friday, Julv 24.
Judicial procedure as practiced n
Oregon, will tfs dim-umed, perhaps
modified in some respects, and
ways and means will be discus
sed whereby the courts may re
commend legixliitlon. Members of
the council urn Chief Justice Mr
lirlde and Justice Rand of tho
Supreme Court, Circuit Judges C.
M. Thomas of Medford, Fred W.
WilKon of The Dalles and Walter
H. Kvans of Portland and Albert
It. Kidgewuy of the Htatn lfar As
sociation. All circuit Judges nf
th state are considered ei-offlclo
members.
DELEGATERRIVE
fOR ELKS MEETING
VORTLAM). Ore., July 10.
Th Jackson. Mich., delegation
arrived today to attend the annu
al national convention of the Men
woieiil Protective Order of Klks.
This i the first delegation to ar
rive as a group. The delegation
hand serenaded the city at It o'
clock this morning. Hy tomorrow
night a great number of delega
tions mill have arrived as th-e
convention opens Monday, Larg
delegation left Michigan th lodge
fornla cities by motor. They are
due tomorrow.
Off). tuls of the Jackson lodge
said mriay that Jtitt beons tho
delegation let Michigan the lodge
virtually doubled Us intembershlp,
initialing 1,194 new members.
(Aanclattd Prm Wire.)
DAYTON, Term.. Juhr
1 0. A jury to try John T.
Scopes for teaching evolu
tion in the Tennessee pub
lie schools was selected this
afternoon. It was composed
of nine farmers, one school
teacher and farmer, ona
fruit grower and one ship
ping clerk.
DAYTON, T.nn., July 10 A new
Indictment, based upon the evi
dence responsible for the old docu
ment was returned against John
Thomas Scopes by a Rhea county
I (rand Jury here today. The Indict
ment chanted violation of the re
! cently enacted Tennessee law pro
hibiting the teaching of evolution
theories In the public schools.
The technicality Involved was
the question of elapsed time be
tween the summoning of the spe
cial grand jury in special session,
and the meeting of the body. Thir
ty daya should have separated tha
two. Re-lndlctment today remed
ied this defect, it was 'Bald by at
torneys. On motion of the attorney-ten-era
I, the former indictment against
Socpes waa quashed .having been
superceded by the second official
document in the case. '
The indictment alleged that
Scopes' "did unlawfully and wl! tal
ly teach in Tennessee schools, cer
tain theories that deny the story
of the divine creation of man aa
told in the Bible." It charged,
that he taught that man waa des
cended from a lower order of .ani
mals. This alleged teaching -the
accusation set forth, was "against
the peace and dignity" of the state.
Clarence Darrow, speaking for
the defense, told the court that bis,
side hsd a number of scientists It
expected to call to teatify and it
would like to get an Indication
when It might be possible to call
them as they were busy men and
it waa hoped that they would ,bo
able to testify with a minimum ot
effort "
Competence Science Questions!
Judge Raulston .inquired of the
state how long It waa like to tak.
to get a Jury and the attorney-general
suggested that it would re
quire a abort time. - . -
.Mr. Darrow said he expected It
mlsht take some time. He added
that he considered aclentlata com
petent within the case. Judge
Itaulston Indicated that he woulu
1 go into thn matter when a Jury
I was sworn.
Judge Raulston made another
sugtestlon, that the state advise
! If It was ready for the trial and
I then the statemnt would be In
order from the defense. A confer
ence of atlorneys for the prosecu
tion and defense followed.
8tags Short Skirmish.
This preliminary skirmish wss
regarded as a possible effort by
the defense to ascertain It the
state would admit the competency
of scientific testimony.
(Continued on page t.)
TheVeather
Highest temp,
yesterday tt
Lowest temj.
last night SO
Fair and cooler
tonight and Sat
urday. 0, ,
i .p. ill a very pleasant summer
lii Bwitterland
."HerneT"
"No, 1 almost troiet"
o
t