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* WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Bureau Fair today and™tomorrow; little change in_temperature. Tenmmre‘—"fl%;st.‘ yesterday; lowes! , &l terday. M'mmm A . No. 1,332—No. 31,561. Porecast.) 81, at 12 m. 8 am. yes- nd elass matter Entered as se Washington, D, ¢ Ppst office, WASHINGTON, D. C, WITH DAILY EVENING EDITION GOLF WORLD BOWS | [ vicron ao vavousuen ] TESTIFIES AMTORG S JONES REACHES LONG-SOUGHT GOAL Fourth Major Championship | Taken in Year Gives Georgian 13th Title. PLANS OF KING OF GAME ‘ ", FOR FUTURE INDEFINITE| Crowd Almost Overwhelms Bobby | After Last Match Is Settled | on 29th Hole. BY ALAN GOULD. MERION CRICKET CLUB, Ardmore, | & shock-haired youthful phenomenon | of 14 he first red in national championship competition, Robert Tyre | Jones, Jr., today completed the greatest | march of conquest in golf history. { By the one-sided margin of 8 up and to go, Jones brushed aside 22-yedr- Eugene Vanderpool lomans of | Englewood, N. J., to win the United | States amateur championship and score | his fourth straight national victory for | the year—the “grand slam” of golf. are no more golfing worlds | conquer for their 28-year-old -lawyer of Atlanta, Ga., who| cam] breeze com; ‘waged earlier to capture the British open, the British amateur and the 4 I & i i i ] I 2 o Bz ifig B v : B 58 : i 3 fi 1 i H : 2 F & g [ E z | ] | £ i E 5% g- | i % : i i } i g well green. by Marines, the contestants and officials pushed their way to the 5 Jones was 25 feet away from the cup and putted dead for his four. A hush fell over the tremendous crowd, She hills (Continued on Page 2, Column 1.) RELICS BROUGHT BACK 3: " FROM ARCTIC GRAVES Canadian First White Man to Visit Island Since Franklin ‘Venture 80 Years Ago. By the Associated Press. OTTAWA, Ontario, September 27.— Maj. L. T. Burwash, explorer of King | William Island, arrived today with | relics of the expedition of Sir John Franklin, after an epic flight over the area trod with steps of death by the survivors of that Arctic venture 80 years ago. With Pilot Gilbert of the Western | Canada Airways and Richard Finnie of | the nt of the Interior, Maj. Burwash was the first white man to cover that fateful territory since 1869. He found no documents relating to the expedition, but he brought back | with him bits of naval cloth, coal and Fope and the memory of lonely graves. Maj. Burwash sald concentrations of high-grade copper ores wee found at| Hunter Bay. These upon development, he sald, may prove to be the pings of large and valuable bodies. DROUGHT DISASTER The b e f the will be there | & large area of coun! not | évident until - |late gardens e outcrop- | C! BOBBY JONES AND GENE HOMANS, 10 FALLIN WINTER Chief Effect Yet to Be Felt! as States and U. S. Study - Relief Plans. ', BY THOMAS R. HENRY. The drought disaster is still ahead. real tragedy wrought by months | skies and burning sun over freezing weather when have their last HITS GRAIN BOARD ACTION ON WHEAT Former President §ays Body Is Being Used as “Cats- paw” by Government. By’ the Associated Press. CHICAGO, September 27.—A charge that the Board of Trade directors ex- ceedbd their authidrity and bowed to a Government motivated by political ex- pediency in banning foreign nations i from trading privileges was made to- president of the board. His statement presaged a possible schism among board members over the . action of the directors, who yesterday ds. | took -the staud that sales of grain fu- , such' as the Domini- has nfinite compli- to local conditions. There actual Hoover Starts The drought attracted Nation-wide attention late in July agd early in Au- gust President Hoover'gued & confer- ence of Governors of the drought- stricken States, and various relief meas- 1 lons, it was generally re- ported that the drought was broken, and the disaster threat seemed to have &:s:ppnred. But for much of the area actual relief was slight, and it is obvious to every one in the District of (Continued on Page 2, Column 4.) COUZENS’ MOTHER DIES Parent of Senator Wasg Native of England, but Moved Here in 1912. DETROIT, September 27 (&).—Mrs. Emma [Elizabeth Couzens, mother of Senator James Couzens, died at her home here tonight as the result of a stroke suffered this morning. She was 81 years old. Mrs. Couzens was a native of Eng- land, but spent most of her life in ‘hatham, Ontario. She moved here in 1912, joining her sons. COMPLETE FRENCH ARMY MAP OF WILLIAMSBURG, VA., IS FOUND| | Bishop at Bermuda on Way to Discovery Is Expected to Play Important Part in| Reconstruction Program. By Radio to The Star. PARIS, September 27—A complete French army map of Williamsburg, Va., together with other important docu- o ments bearing on the Revolyionary War, have been discovered in the archives of the Chateau de Thore, owned by Comte de Longvilliers, des- * cendant of Rochambeau. The find re- B sults from an appeal made by Warring- ton Dawson, special American embassy, to the descendants of the families which took part in Lafayette’s and Rochambeau’s' forces to search the family archives for docu- ments which might aid the Rockefeller Commission in its task of restoring the attache of the, Roc all parts historical interest. Among the many new records of the war discovered is a complete narrative of the march of Rochambeau's army from Providence, R. L. to participate in the triumphant closing engagements at Yorktown, which were also found in the chateau there. The old Virginia capital, which John D. ‘Rockefeller, jr., will restore, a peculiar interest for the French, as it was the headquarters for the expedition- ary forces both of Lafayette and re- was particularly insistent on revisiting Williamsburg, which, he said, epitomized his memories of the American Revolu- tion; no other place evoked so strong- of France, some of the highest | ! stopped. Wwas communicated to Hyde of the Department of Bunnell, given a new ht to in the worlamgnrken id down in Liverpool beca: n offerings s fellow players Wheat sol of Russia; low ~ records. final sales toda; found tember wheat going bonln: at 74 cents a bushel and December 2::31;::: a: 71'!’ —-lAn-n of 173 to 23, e day. nipeg w‘;s:e% B g it Win Wheat e drooping market that compared a few weeks ago :11:1"’1’:’1‘2 is nearing now the level of September, 1906, when wheat was gm ‘l':.flgm‘/u gnu and the American - y.y '€ more groceries than Charges Were Old. It was just a week ago that Secretas Hyde made his oharges that Sovicr Russia had e in short selling on the Chicago market to the extent of 7,500,000 bushels of wheat. Its atten- tion directed to the matter by the Gov- ernment, the Board of Trade directo- rate, after a conference in Wuhlngton with Government officials, annouficed l;uma.y that selling of grain futures foreign governments would be pre- vented, and that bear raids and price manipulation must stop. In the week’s interval since the dis- covery of the Russian short sales wheat has declined from 63 to 7% cents on this market, shearing about $58,660,000 from the value of the United States wheat crop of 1930—which totaled 838.- 000,000 bushels. This loss was increased today despite the bonrd'?b-n on foreign selling, despite drought’ reports from opposite hemispheres, despite the pre- diction of:George S, Milnor, manager of the “Grain Stabilization Corporation, that grain markets of the United States (Continued on Page 4, Column 1. « CANNON DUE NEXT WEEK U. 8. From Brazil. HAMILTON, Bermuda, September 27 (#P).—Bis] James Cannon, jr., return- ing from Brazil to the United States, where an investigation into his conduct Methodist Church authorities is nding. reached here today aboard the iner American Legion. He declined to comment on the charges brought against him by four ministers of the Methodist Church or to discuss the plans. The ship is due in New York next week. FLASHES from The Evening Star That exceptionally interesting radio news digest over station the it f Washington. ’;;i.'{.“'m.m;'fy“'&?m of the portance to officials WMAL, will be heard each evening, beginning next Mon- day, September 29, at 5:45 to 6 o'clock, instead of 6:15, as at present. ¢ day by Samuel P. Arnot, several times | th v | would continue its IGAVE U. 5. DEFENSE SECRETS T0 SOVIET Resigned Official Tei:s Fish Committee of Communica- tion by Code. DECLARES ALL EMPLOYES REHEARSED TESTIMONY Charges All Managers of Firm Have Been Closely Allied With Ogpu: By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 27.—Basil W. Delgass, resigned vice president of the Amtorg Trading Corporation, told the Fish Congressidgal Committee today that code communications concerning the Army and Navy defenses of the United: States had passed between Amtorg and the Soviet government. ‘This statement was not probed fur- ther by the committee, which is con- ducting a Nation - wide investigation into Communist activities. It was given in response to interrogation as to whether messages between the Rus- agency and Moscow contained anything of a political nature. Delgass in further testimony accused Peter “A. Bogdanov, chairman of the board of Amtorg, and other officials of perjurying themselves in previous ap- pearances before the committee. He said that prior to the hearings all Amtorg employes were rehearsed on the testimony they should offer. They were instructed to say that there were no Communists connected with the agency, he testified, and that Amtorg zn not involved in Communist activi- es. Charges Job Is Political. Delgass charged that the office of business manager of Amtorg was a po- litical job and that all its incumbents have been closely allied with the Ogpu, the Soviet secret police. Questioned as to the authenticity of m-?;l‘l’ed Wahlen documents, Delgass replied: “Whether or not they are forgeries, I don’t know. Some of the statements mace by Amtorg about them I know to be untrue.” J In answer to a further question he replied that if they had been authentic have been in code. policy govern- late 1929 by wh g n taki press E. V, Belitzky, vice president of All- nunh:‘ ‘Textile, also a Soviet agency. on y. e S BT ey rom ra rporation, also a Soviet group, of Hamburg, Ger- many, and “we decided we had a right to part of our wheat crop on the Board of Trade.” Queried as to whether his company ~selling opera- he had no further T guess the exchange took care of that,” sald Representative Hamilton Fish, jr., chairman of the committee. Representatives of thrce New York roke , Bache & Co., Wasch- man & Wassel and A. Norden & Co., testified to handling the all-Russian transactions in Chicago. They said the deals were not unusual, but admitted the sales had not been re| grain futures supervisor tions, the witness sal | MAW STRUCK BY CAR DIES OF INJURIES Driver of Auto Is Held by Police Pending Action on Accident by Coroner, ' Knocked down by an automqbile while crossing Sixth street at C street last night, Theodore G. Thomas, 65, of 302 C astreet, received injuries which resulted in his death at Emergency Hospital, Harry Grantell, 24, of 510 D street northeast, driver of the car, was being held by police of the sixth precinet pending action by the coroner. Grantell, who was driving an auto- mobile owned by Keane-Loffler, Inc., told police I was driving north on| Sixth street with the green traffic light when Thomas: stepped in front of his machine. The elderly man, he said, apparently became confused while try- ing to avold southbound traffic. omas was picked up by the seventh precinct patrol wagon, which happened to be passing the scene, and removed to Emergency Hospital. He was ad- mitted to the hospital at 7:15 o'clock and died two hours later. The cause |of his death was believed to have been & skull fracture. Cards found in the man's pocket directed that his wife, . M. A, Thomas of Houston, Tex., be notified in eveni of his death. EX-PRESIDENT IRIGOYEN REPORTED GRAVELY ILL Doctor Advises Transferring Him From Argentine Cruiser to Shore for Treatment. By the Assoclated Press. . BUENOS AIRES, September 27.— The newspaper La Razon today reports that former President Hipolito Irigoyen is gravely ill aboard the cruiser Gen. Belgrano, aboard which he has been confined by the provisional government that overthrew him this month. The .?Iber says Dr. Landa, who visited the fallen President this morning, ad- vised the government to have him brought ashore immediately for ade- quate treatment, ‘The nature of the sickness was not made public. When Irigoyen quit Buenos Aires for La Plata, after the successful coup of Gen. Jose Francisco Uriburu, he was sald already to be a sick man. Duri his confinement in the in- fantry barracks at La Plata, he was treated by his own physician.and by doctors sent the provisional govern- {ment. Since he was mwerzd barracks ‘to, Gen. Hite an boen. il of i d | the Senate this year, may lead emm-m1 the ublican national organization or I | e Hepublican Senstorial Commiv. | - | tee or to both. rted to the | 10 here. Zhe Swnday Stae. SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 28, 1930—122 PAGES. Sunda; ‘The 's National 5 “From Press to Home Within the Hour” ‘The Star is delivered every evening and mornjng to Washington homes by lusive carrier service. Phone to start immediate delivery. UP)_Means Associated Press. FIVE CENTS IN WASHINGTON AND SUBURBS |TEN CENTS ELSEWHERE NYE SEES NORRIS AFFAIRG.0.P. BLOW National Organization, Sena-" torial Committee, or Both, to Reap Results. BY G. GOULD LINCOLN. Repercussions from the case of Grocer Georg> W. Norris of Broken Bow, Nebr., | who filed' for the senatorial primary’ against his more widely known name- sake, Senator George W. Norris, mly{ rock the Republican organization, in | the opinion of Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota, chairman of the Sen- ate Slush-fund Committee, who Te- turned to Washington yesterday from | Nebraska. v ‘Without making any direct charges, Senator Nye strongly intimated that the trall of the backers of Grocer Norris, in the effort to force Senator Norris to run as an independent candidate for | | | ‘While Senator Fess, chairman of the | Republican National Committee, has denied flatly that he bas any knowl- edge of the activities of Victor Seymour in Nebraska, Senator Nye called atten- tion to the fact that the investigating | committee has now developed the fact that Seymour, who recently has been acting as assistant to the vice chairman of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, Senator Stelwer of Oregon, induced Grocer Norris to file his papers for the senatorial primary and provided funds for Grocer Norris. ‘Beyond this, he also mentioned that W. E. Murray, who was on the pay roll of the Repub- lican National Committee, went to Ne- braska to report on conditions there, and that he is said to have dictated such a report in the office of Seymour Lincoln, Deposits Are Checked. ‘The chairman of the investigating committee said that an inquiry into the banking account of Seymour in Ne- ka had revealed the faet that for seven months, beginning last January and ending in July, he had received and de, checks for drafts Yor & thousand dollars & month, which had g:m:! through Chicago and New York nks. “The committee,” said Senator Nye, “js going to find out where this money came from, who sent it to Seymour and whose money it was. We are going to sift the whole matter to the bbttom and I have no doubt we will now be able to get the real facts in this affair.” ‘The North Dakota Senator said that the testimony given by A. Paul John- son, attorney for Grocer Norris, had revealed the fact that Seymour, in his dealings with the grocer, had made use of a $500 Government bond and perhaps more than one. “I am wondering,” sald Senator Nye, (Continued TODAY’S STAR PART ONE—28 PAGES. General News—Local, National Foreign. Educational News—Pages C-2 and C-3. Fraternities—Page C-7. - PART TWO—8 PAGES. Editorial _Section—Editorials and Edi- torial Features. The Home Gardener—Page 5. Army and Navy News—Page 5. District of Columbia Naval Reserves and Sports Highlights Catholic_ University’s 54-to-7 defeat by Boston College was the only setback received by a local varsity team in the opening of the foot ball season yesterday, as Georgetown won from Mount St. Mary'’s, 14 to 6; Maryland swamp- ed Washington College, 60 to 6, and American University nosed out Shenandoah College, 14 to 12. Yale had an easy time with Maine, winning, 38 to 0, and Army vanquished Boston Uni- versity by a 39 to 0 count. In the realm of base ball the Nationals downed the Red Sox, 8 to 3; Philgdelphia’s American Leegue champlons dropped a 10- to-8 decision to the Yankees and St. Louis’ National League title winners took an 11-to-8 decision from the Pirates. SEEK T COMPEL METERS FOR GABS Public Utilities Commission- ers Try to Abolish Taxi- ,cab Zones. The Public - Utilifies ' Commission is making an effort to abolish taxicab zones and compel all cabs t#operate cn meters, it was learned yesterday. The Utilitles Commission has . re- quested the District Commissioners to enact a police regulation, compelling all | taxicabs to be equipped with meters. | The significance of this move is that such an order, if enacted, could be en- forced by the police force. Each cab driver operating a vehicle not equipped with a taximeter could be taken to court and fined not more than $40 or given 10 days in jail or both, this being the blanket penalty for violation of po- lice regulations. Under the present situation. the Utilitles Commission is vir- tually helpless about enforcing any regulation that a utility decides not to obey. It is limited to bringing a civil suit to recover a fine it imposes against the offending utility. It is not known whether any such fine has ever actu- ally been collected, but # it has, the in- stance cannot now be called to mind. ‘The last time it was tried was in the case of a bus concern which would not follew a route prescribed by the com- mission. The Municipal Court threw the suit out. The commission appealed, and the appeal is still pending. Opposition Is Raised. The Commissioners, it was learned, discussed the request of the Utilities Commission at the regular board meet- ing Priday, but came to no decision. It is understood that there is a strong possibility that the request will be denied. This is on the theory that it is not the duty of a policeman, as a peace officer, to inquire into such mechanical details as the presence or absence of taximeters in taxicabs. The city heads recently obliged their sister commission by adopting a police regula- tion to the effect that all taxicabs must have the name or trade name of the owner or owning organization, together with the number of the cab, painted on the body of the car. It is said that this went through on the theory that such a designation would assist the peace officers in the proper pursuit of their duties. In the present muddled taxi situation it is often extremely difficult to recognize a taxicab as such, and the painted signs were thought of Page 5. W, C. T. U, Activities—Page 6. Marine Corps Notes—Page 6. News of the Clubs—Page 7. PART THREE—12 PAGES. Soclety Section. serhlyslory, “Murder at High Tide"— Page 12. PART POUR~10 PAGES. Amusement Section—Theatér, Screen and Music. In the Motor World—Page 5. Aviation—Page 7. Veterans of the Great War—Page 8. Radio—Page 9. District National Guard—Page 10, - Y. W. C. A. Notes—Page 10. PART ".VE—‘ PAGES. Sports Section. PART SIX—14 PAGES. Financial News and- Classified Adver- | Originally tising. Organized Reserves—Page 13. s PART SEVEN—24 PAGES. zine Section. Reviews of the New Books—Page 18. Cross-word Puzzle—Page 22 GRAPHIC SECTION—12 PAGES. World Events in Pictures. COLOR SECTION—8 PAGES. (Continued on Page 2, Column 6.) HOOVER PLANS VISIT - TO SON AT RAPIDAN Cleveland Address Completed, He Will Motor to Camp This Morning. By the Assoclated Press. President Hoover plans to motor to his mountain camp this morning to visit his son, Herbert Hoover, jr., who is 1l there. ‘Mrs. Hoover went to the lodge yes- terday and will return with the Chief Executive late today. planning. to spend the end at the lodge, the President was forced to forego his trip yesterday by the pressure of work. He completed Iate in the day the address he will de- liver Thursday in Cleveland before the American Bar Association. It was sald at the White House that he expected to finish drafting the other three speeches he is to deliver early next month before he departs for Moon Mullins; Mutt and Jeff; Mr. and | Amx Mrs,; Little Orphan Annje; Brutus: The' Smythes: = Somehody’s Stenog. History, BAY STATE PARTIES *VOICE WET STANDS Republicans Indorse Law En- forcement, Democrats Want Repeal. | By the Associated Press. | BOSTON, September 27.—Both major | political parties of Massachusetts held their State Conventions here today and both, directly or indirectly, declared themselves on prohibition. The Republicans indorsed the party's 1928 declaration on law enforcement and at the same time reaffirmed the pronouncement of President Hoover that those who seek to amend the Con- stitution “are not subject to eriticism.” In this form the party wrote into its platform a plank on prohibition. l'l;l;e Derz:mg‘r:: ndoptl«l ’ol;guht a platform fave repeal of e eigh< teenth amendment, the Volstead mlfilfl the State prohibition act. Generous and abundent expressions of party unity for the campaign were also out- st‘:nd.ln. developments of their conven- tion, Little G. 0, P. Oppeosition. Less than half a dozen “nays” were heard from among the 1,600 Republican | delegates when Amos L. Taylor, per- { manent chairman of -the ' ednvention, put the question of adoption of the platform. There was no debate. Outstanding among the other G, 0. P. | plangs were: | A ‘pledge to continue economical i pollccln.s in State and in national govern- | ment. A demand for Federal legishation to make the hours of labor for women and children in all other States conform | to_the Massachusetts standard. Regarding the plank dealing with uni- form hours of labor, it has been as- serted that the Massachusetts law pro- hibiting the night time employment of | wecmen and minors in textile factories was driving the industry to Southern States where restrictions are fewer. Protection for Workman. “The new tariff, enacted by Republi- cans, is meant to give adequate pro- tection to our industries. means protection to both employer and work- man against the low wages made b ble in other lands, by low standards o living, and in other parts of our own land. We regret that in some States women and children work excessively long hours for unconscionably low wages. “To leave the regulation of industrial employment to the several States means no legislation at al] in some States. For fair flay to Massachusetts, for the general welfare, for the cause of hu- manity, we advocate such Federal legis- laticn” as may be practicable to make the hours of labor for women and chil- dren in all other States conform to the Massachusetts standard.” At the Democratic convention the only discussion of the platform on the floor dealt with the prohibition plank. Brief remarks ofe(rmwn against that plank were offered by Whitfield Tuck of Winchester. The platform was ac- cepted in its entirety, only the voices of Tuck and a few cthers being heard in_opposition. Declaring the balance between State and Nation had been impaired by the eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act, the plank asserted: “We, therefore, to preserve our dual sovereignties and to end the appalling (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) 2D LEAVE FOR WASHINGTON British Delegates to Rhodes Con- gress Set Sail at Southampton. SOUTHAMPTON, England, Septem- ber 27 (#).—The British delegations to the Sixth International Rhodes Con- gress at Washington sailed from South- ampton on the liner George Washing- ton today. One member, S. P. Stubbs, chief rail- way engineer of the Punjab govern- ment, motored 6,000 miles to board liner. He was 73 days m: journey from Lahore, India. aking the the | was financed by .a HOME WINE OR BEER [MMUNE IF UNSOLD, W0ODCOCK HOLDS | Prohibition Director Says Agents Can Intervene Only on Sale Evidence. INTOXICATION POINT Views of Representative Fort in Speech Last Spring Recalled by New Policy. The making and drinking of wine and beer in the home was yesterday de- clared by Prohibition’ Director Amos W, W. Woodeock to be immune from Fed- eral interference. The prohibition director made it clear that the national prohibition enforce- ment agencies can intervene only when evidence of a sale has been obtained. No search warrant for entering a pri- vate home can be issued without such evidence, he said. Mr. Woodcoak pointed out that under the law a maker of home brew is liable to punishment if his product is “in~ toxicating in fact,” a point which must | be determined by a jury. But as & | practical proposition, the home brewer 1s beyond the reach of the Federal au- thlcriueu unless there is evidence of & sale. The statement of the prohibition di- rector was interpreted as meaning that the Federal Government does not in- tend to interfere with the home brewer unless the home brewer sells his prod- uct. As long as wine and beer are made in the home merely for home consumption, the Federal Government Is not and cannot be interested. Fort Address Recalled. Last Spring Representative Franklin D. Fort of New Jersey, a close friend of President Hoover, delivered an ad- dress in the House on the prohibition situation, in which he said that the eighteenth amendment was | dec!] g that Mr. make every & bre! 3 that it would be far the present dry laws ;snunmu-e and sale verages. not, Mr. interpretation placed on his speech in the House, brew was to be a solution of the lquor problem in this country. But such was the view taken many of New Jersey feated by Dwight W. Morrow, who come out for repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. Designed Against Traffic. It is known, it has been pointed out, ke She view " that ‘the _prebibition e e lew e amendment to the Constitution was de- signed particularly to put an end to the (Continued on Page 4, Column 7.) |ARRESTS HELD BLOW AT HUGE RUM PLOT Two Wireless Operators Are Seized in Alleged $10,000,000 Syndicate Activities, By the Associated Press, YORK, September 27.—The af- rest of two radio operators led Federal agents to believe today they had once more laid their hands on a $10,000,000 rum-runn syndicate, which they believe had been functioning for years in metropolitan waters and Gulf of Mexico. The prisoners. booked as Cecil Moly~ neaux, 27, of Brookiyn, and Malcolm McMasters, 30, of Montreal, were seized last night as they sat at the key of & high-powered radio in a cellar in & lonely section of Coney Island. They were arraigned today on charges of violating the radio, tariff and ?mhlbl- tion laws and freed in ball of $7,500 each. Molyneaux was identified by Federal investigators as the wirless operator on the Canadian schooner I'm Alone, which was sunk by the Coast Guard off the Louisiana coast in 1929, with resulting international complications. McMas- ters was arrested during the raid on the Atlantic Highlands, N. J, base early this year and was released in $30,000 bail, H. J. Simmons, chief of the raiders, said the radio plant was discovered after long investigation. He sald he seized five (h-powered _transmission sets valued at $15,000, a code book and receipts for thousands of dollars of radlo equipment. Assistant United States Attornel Wil- liam T. Cowan said that the group of New Y financiers, and that “we e: to the heads of the ring next week.” Sunday has been virtually a field day for Washington's bootleggers in the past because of the inactivity of the police liquor enforcement squad, but those days are over nmow. In fact, Sunday in the lives of members of the liquor another 01 ‘bootleggers it’s going to mean restricted activities. r T. R. Bean, who recently took nd of ne > over command of the "{.“3;, bir~d liquor and vi . Rolice . BOOTLEGGERS’ SABBATH SPOILED BY NEW SUNDAY RAIDING PLANS | Police Liquor Squad Will Have No Day of Rest From Now on in Enforcing Law. uad from now on is going to be just | a "*And for the