Evening Star Newspaper, May 22, 1931, Page 3

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HODVER PRAISES RED GROSS WORK| Emphasizes * Fact Society Has Lived Up to Principles of Clara Barton. As the principal speaker last night at & notable banquet in the ball room of the Willard Hotel, marking the fiftieth anniversary of the American Red Cross, President Hoover emphasized the fact that the soclety, in carrying on its splendid, humane work, had lived up to the principle established by founder, Clara Barton, by not looking to governments for financial support. ‘Governments are always too slow and frequently too short-sighted to meet the sudden, sharp demands of critical emer- gencies in human suffering,” Mr. Hoover said in this connection. “This gave her the flexibility and freedom of private initiative in her work.” Mr. Hoover's commendation of this principle of the Red Cross was accepted s another direct reference to his own victorious fight with the Senate last ‘Winter in the latter's insistence upon appropriating $25,000,000 or more from the leral Treasury to finance the drought relief work of that society. It ‘was brought out, during that fight that the Red ' governing board could mnot accept public funds and that the later preferred to be left alone to raise a $10,000,000 fund from private sub- scriptions. Pays Tribute to Traditions. ‘The President spoke last night as the head of the American Red Cross and he was frequently applauded as he paid tribute to the noble. traditions of the soclety and to the men and women who ‘were responsible for its establishment and its successful existence. The gathering was a brilliant one. More than 750 persons were present. There ‘was & most distinguished array of na- 'Jon.ll and internationally prominent Among _these latter were delenws from mor® than 50 Red Cross societies throughout the world. Among these representatives were the ranking heads of the diplomatic missions of those countries in the United States. At the same time more than half of the 3,500 Red Cross chapters in this country were holding similar festivities 10 celebrate the golden anniversary of society. These gatherings were lmked with the one at the Willard Hotel by means of the radio which made it possible for the words of Presi. dent Hoover and the others who dressed the dinner to be followed throughout the land. Other Notables Speak. The other speakers were Charles F. Hughu, Chief Justice of tbe United States Judge the Supreme Court; Huber of Switzerland, prestdent of International Red Cross Committee; Jud]e John Barton Ply‘ne. ch‘lrgun of -y red is secure because it will 50 i “Cla s0. He ara had the inspiration for.found- u!.nc' :h‘emmetylrr?m the hont‘l’: she of mercy on te uenelds of the Civil Wll’y o “It is difficult to understand,” Chief Justice Hughes said, “how such an organization as the .Red Cross, organ- ized for such beneficient purposes, cuold have been so long delayed in the face of obvious and most urgent needs. The Red Cross represents the united vol- untary effort of the American pecple SPECIAL r;mcu. TO CREDITO! owner of lunch room at s selling’ eaid Junch room utms il persons having claims against the said Marion Brown should mre S00f, them to Albert W. Jacobson. ‘attorney $halem Bust Bulidine. on or ‘e May 26, is notice is given umm the, bu and sales act of the District of Col - OF THE ’nocx- PPLICAT: ' JOBEPH H. HAN- Tein. {radive Congressional Tours. to ate eduumm.l Sishtseeing tours from hingtor Alexandria and M. o 1s set Yo & in the court room of The commuuon, mcnmond, Virginia, o June_1st. 1931, _OR JAD York. Riehmong. 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Olev. 0619 lumbrr M its | the pubiic since | 3 | Cross .THE EVENI Text of President’s Address People in Development | ; Into Unique Nat The text of President Hoover's ad- dress at the fiftieth anniversary cele- bration cf the Red Cross today follows: ‘The Red Cross is one of the most beautiful flowers of the American spirit and the American democracy. It rep- resents our ple in their most gen- erous, unselfish end spontanecusly warm-hearted character. And it rep- resents them in the most effective ex- ercise of their powers of organization and self-government. Supported wholly by the voluntary gifts of the pecple, it is managed by the voluntary service of | high-minded private citizens. And yet it occupies a unique position in the public mind as a truly national insti- tution, a living organism of the people, vitalized by their affection, fed by their gladly given money, and firmly rooted in their trust. Through the loftiest of all spiritual qualities~charity—it has become the guardian of the people from suffering in times of dissster. It has commanded the récognition of | governments, its charters are conferred | by special act, its position in jnterna- | tional activities is guarant:ed by treaty. By its very purpose it compels the respect for its own flag and its | own passports. | Praises Clara Barton. ‘The 50 years of the life of the Red Cross, which the American people cele- brate today, have been years of evo- lution of an impulse and an idea and a method to produe this greatest in- stitution in alleviation of human suf- fering that we have ever known. Its beginnings were small, and it grew | because it expressed the humanity amfl the generosity and the practical help- | fulness natural to our people. And, like to many of the benign social agencies that bless our democracy, it | sprang from the mind and the heart of a woman. Clara Barton was ‘in her own person and her own life all that the Red Cross has since become. She in turn gainéd much of her in- spifation from another great woman— Florence Nightingale. The magnificent structure of today grew un around Miss Barton’s passionate pity for the sick and the distressed and her practical genius and energy in thelr relief. She was the ministering angel cf the bat- | tleflelds and hospitals of the Civil War. When peace returned she still lived like a soldier, with her field tent and equipment always packed and ready to respond instantly to the call of duty. The Johnstown flood found her ready, and within an hour after it was re- ported she was on her way to the stricken ‘city. She responded o a thousand such calls, but sher service on the battlefield and her service at Johnstown _ especially captured . the | public imagination, and it is these two things that have largely directed the development of the character of the | American Red Cross. It has evolved | into an agency for the nursing of the wounded in war and for the relief of | the victims of disaster in time of peace. Executives Pay Tribute to Charity Ideal of American of Mercy Organization ional Institution. Clara Barton did not look to Gov- ernment for support for her work. Gov- ernments are always too slow, fre- quently too short-sighted, to meet the sudden, sharp demands of critical emer- gencles in human suffering. She de- pended upon the instant response of the individual human heart to finance the instant need. This gave her the flexibility and freedom of private initi- ative in her work. The Red Cross has grown in this tradition. Hundreds of ; times it has appealed to the American | people for funds to meet an immediate situation and invariably the American | people have immediately responded. It has raised millions in a week when millions were needed. No finer illus- tration has ever been given of the twe- mendous practical power of pure and unselfish emotion than these outbursts of American generosity to finance relief of suffering caused by conflagration, flood, earthquake and drought. No finer illustration has ever been given of the tremendous practical capacity of an or- ganized free citizenry than the skill and efficiency with which the Red Cross has administered this relief. This combi- nation of the warm heart and the cool head in action is a perpetual source of just pride to the American people, for it represents them at their best. Mabel Boardman Honored. A woman founded the Red Cross and a woman has enlarged its usefulness. Miss Mabel Boardman enjoys a de- served national honor for her tireless and effective work in the enlargement of its powers. The men of America, too, have had their indispensable part in its growth. Judge John Barton Payne has earned equal honor for his long years of devoted leadership across a score of disasters and for his steadfastness in | Folding the organization to its national ideal as a non-governmental agency for the free expression of the private gen- erosity and humanity of the people. His wisdom and courage and zeal are beyond praise. But the greater glory of the Red Cross belongs to the people themselves. It is a living embodiment of their heart and soul. It has lived and grown be- cause it is a natural ourgrowth of their spiritual impulse. Its sap is drawn from the soil of their spirit, its leaves are colored with their thought and its flow- ers are fragrant of their sweetest emo- tion. It is as truly theirs as the flag or the public school. They wished it and they willed it into being. It grows with their growth. They support it as spontanecusly as they support the church or the lodge. They control it as simply and as naturally as they con- trol the operations of the district school. They will thus support it and control it so long as it comtinues what i is—the natural repository of their generosity, the eflective, practical in- strument of their eager wish to relieve human suffering. It will remain, as it has been and is, a chitf glory and pride of the American democracy. in the ministry of mercy. It is the finest and most effective expression of the American heart. It knows no partisanship. In the perfection of its co-operation, there is no blemish of distinction by reason of race or creed. “We Are United People. | “However we may differ in all thlnls | else,” Mr. Hughes continued, “in the | activities of the Red Cross we are a| united people. None of our lnduzmll enterprises surpass it in efficiency. ‘ moves with the precision and the dhcl- pline of an army to achieve the noblest | | of human aims.” Chief Justice Hughes, in introducing | President Hoover, stated that the latter by his record of humane achievements | was pre-eminent in qualifications to be | the head of this soclety. is more than qualified, he is an inspira- tion,” Justice Hughes said. This was President Hcover's second | eddress to the Red Cross within the last | month. He said that in 50 years the Red Cross had developed into "lhev greatest instituticn in alleviation of | human suffering that we have ever| known.” He praised it for having risen to every emergency that has confronted it and ‘praised the American people for having responded to every appeal for funds to meet an immediate situation. Welcomes Foreign Delegates. Mr. Hoover prefaced his scheduled | address by warmly welcoming the dele- | gates from other countrfes, in which he said “Between the Red Cross societies of the world, there never has been war end there never will be war and there will always be peace and affection be- tween them.” Virtually the same thought was ex- pressed by Judge Huber of Switzerland, | who spoke ‘as the president of the In- ternational Red Cross Committee. He went further than Mr. Hoover in this connecticn, however, when he envision- | ed the Red Cross soceties of the world 85 a tremendous force for securing a -\ permanent peace of the world. “At this point we touch the possi- | bility for the Red Cross to work for social and for international peace,” he | said. “The Red Cross is essentially non- political, it is humanitarian. It cannot act directly on political issues, but it can and it must devilop that spirit which makes for peace-in educating its members, in educating youth for dis- interested service for others and for bringing together all men in common * | relief work beyond the dividing lines of classes, parties, races and nations. “Must Be Rooted in Hearts.” “Indeed, peace, in order to bz lasting | Judge Huber continued, “must not only be anchored in treaties but it must be rcoted in the hearts of men and women. The vigor and steadiness of the tree | depends on how widely and deeply it pushes its roots into solid and fertile | ground. That applies also to the Red It depends for its strength, its moral prestige before all, on its hational societies, cn their local branches, on | the thousands and millions of their | members, aduits and juniors. The in- ternational organization of the Red | Cross will do its best to co-ordinate the efforts of the national societies, to help them, to communicate ideas and means | and to take charge of common action. ! But the real forces must always come | from the national societies themselves, | which, though bound together by .‘ common ideal and marching, under the | same emblem of the red cross on the | | white field, must be real exponcnts of the best and specific qualities of each [nation if they are to give their full | measure “Now what could be more inspiring for the friends of the Red Cross, what could give them more confidence in the future than to be the witnesses of | the vigorous growth of nutlonal - so- | cleties? The achievements of the American Red Cross during its first 50 years have benefited not only thos | to whom rellel was brought, but have also added greatly to the moral weight of the Red Cross at laige; they sic a goal of noble emulation for us all and they strengthen the confidence of all of us in what the Red Cross in future is to be.” i Trace Growth of Society. [ Both Judge Payne, as chairman, and | Miss Boardman, as secretary, traced | the growth and recounted the achiev ments of the Red Cross. Each rs-| ferred to the Red Cross opposition t5 | the attempt by the Senatc last Winter | to appropriate $25,000,000 to the or- | ganization for drought relief work. | Miss Boardman, in this coanection, | said: “Only recently the Red Cross | has weathered the denger of becoming subsidized Government agency.” “In turning back-the pages of history | meny c:me to mind who have gone | before—bcth outsianding figures in Red | Cress service and those who worked as | fallthfully in the ranks” she declared. | “Within little more than & year ‘*hree | of these whom we have loved and los: | have gone—William Howard Tait, Elizabeth Mills Reid and Robert W. De Forest. Saw Dreams Come True. “I have dreamed dreams and seen them ccme true. I have built castles in the air and beheld them come down to rest in marble on.the earth. I im old ltke ‘Father William,' but not too | 0ld to lose the vision nor to look with confident faith toward the future. ‘Where thefe is no vision, the people | perish.’ “We are such stuff as drea made of and our little life is rcunded with a sleep, yet we live and are cternal in what we may accomplish. And o, casting our mantle upon your shoulders, we challenge you of the younger gen- erztion t> carry on as we have carricd on, to bulld a better and a grenier Red Cross than ever we have done, to | weave its spirit into the very fabric of our Nation, that our people may know and believe ‘it is more blessed to give than to receive.’ Among the hcnor guests at the head table were Mrs. Hoover, of France, the Ambassador of Chniie, Mme. Filipowicz, Senora Malbran, the Ambassador of Turksy, the Ambassador of Japan, Mrs. Hughes, Mrs, Henry P. | Davison of New York, the Ambassad:r of Poland, the Ambassador of Great | Britain, Mrs. August Belmont of New York, the Ambasador of Beigium, the Ambassador of the Argentine, Mrs, Henry P. Rea of Pittsburgh, Bishop McDowell and the Ambassadcr of Brazil Invocation and benediction w. said by Bishop William F. McDowell of the Methodist Episcopal Chureh. The music during the evening was furnished by the United States Marine Band. DOG ATTACKS DETECTWE Messer Kills Animnl Which Bit Him on Arm. A. dog which attacked him for no apparent reason was shot and killed | yesterday by Detective Sergt. William | Messer as the detective was walking near the intersection of John Marshall place and C street. The rnimal, a large police dog, sank his teeth in the detective’s left arm. The dog will be examined for rables, Sergt. WE PLAN AND PLANT We offer a complete landscaping service. {rom the designing to actusl planting will “aiso maintain hroughout the SBummer NURSERYMEN ottage City Nursery and Flower Shop. Baitiore “Boulesard you to guard against cloudy- magnesia Fresh Citrate of Magnesia I8 clear, bright, sparkling Everfresh, in nirtight boltles, nealed sterilizea retains its original strength and pleasant iaste al. most indefinitely, 250 In New Bottles Eve--here | Appeals Senora De | Davila, Mme, Debuchl, the Ambassader | § FORT EUSTIS MAY BE PRISON GAMP Army Post Scheduled for, Abandonment Would Care for Federal Overflow. In connection with plans for abandon- | ment of unnecessary ‘Army posts as a matter of economy, it was learned to- | day that Fort Eustis, Va. an occupied | post now scheduled for disposal, may be | turned over to the Justice Department | as a site for a prison camp. Fort Eustis, 18 miles northwest of Newport News, is believed to be ideally | located for such a purpose. The plan to turn it over to the Justice Depart- ment, it is understood, is to help relieve | existing crowded conditions in most of | the Federal penitentiaries. Fort Eustis | is used in the Summer as a Citizens | Military Training camp. | A return to the American Government | of $100,000,000 over a 10-year period | through’ direct sales of Army property, | transfers to other departments of need- ed lands, and minor savings is expected | by War Department officlals to result | from the proposed program for the dis- posal of 53 posts. 300,000 Acres Disposed of. | Since 1919, the War Department has | disposed of some 300,000 acres. A total | of $12,643,269 was turned over to the | Treasury through direct sales while | 245,111 acres with an appraised value | of $88,422,032 werc transferred to other | departments, eliminating th necessity | for congressional appropriations to meet | their needs. | High department officials said they | expected a similar turnover during the | next 10 years. Two of the largest items upon which officials expect direct sales returns for the Treasury are the Negark, N. J.‘i Army base, estimated to have a sales value of $5,000,000, and Fort Wayne, | Mich., with an estimated sales value of $4,000,000. War Department officlals sald the $22,000,000 appraised value of the 53/ posts was considerably under the actual value. Saving at Omaha. One recent instance of @ saving through use of Army property by other departments was at Omaha, where the Army turned over its ite for the ron- struction of a general Federal building. | Direct annual savings would result | from the employment in the ranks of soldiers now used as caretakers on | many posts and whose services are not | available for military purposes; trans- portation costs for supplies and per- sonnel to remote posts such as Fort Lincoln, N. Dak.; maintenance costs of unoccupled buildings, such as faint, storm damage and general dc/eriora- tion. These minor direct savings alone | | were estimated unofficially over a 10- | year period to total probably $10,000,- | 000. ‘ SEVEN FREED IN BAIL | in Dry Plot Case Pend. Two Begin Terms. Pending disposition of their nmmal.«1 to the Court of Appeals from convic- tions of conspiracy to violate the na-, ticnal prohibition act, Alfred Mendel- son, Roy Beasley, Jack Baum, Roy Ahearn, Andrew Lebolo, Thomas Mc- Nichols and Corbin Shields were re- leased on bail late yesterday afternoon by Justice Oscar R. Luhring. The men | were sentenced last Friday. Jacob Lerner and Harry Kushner, convicted with them, were released on ball a few days ago. Edward T. Crog- han and Frank E. Baker abandoned | their appeals and have started to sorve their sentences. 3 BIG SPECIALS 3-Year-Old Potted Everblooming Bush Roses 12 for $7.00 Pernet, Ophelia, But- terfly, Pink and Red Radiance, Columbia, Briarcliff, Rapture, Rose Landis. Ready door Right Hardy French 65c Each { Hydrangeas 6 for $3.75 ¢ 50c and 75¢ planting. fr own nursery. NG _STAR. WASHINGTOX, D. €. FRIDAY., MAY '22. 1931.° Barred by firltam i “TEXAS" GUINAN ON ALIEN BLACKLIST. “TEXAS” GUINAN. - By the Associated Prees. ONDON, May 22—The London | Daily Express said last night that Scotland Yard detectives will meet the French steamer is at Plymouth to see that suinan does not land in Eng- Will Rogers Says: Texas BEVERLY HILLS, Calif—Los Angeles used to be ccnsidered by her critics as just a great, big, over- grown county town with none of ths big city business methods like Chicago and New York, but they can't say it anymore, We are important in a modern ay now. We attracted Amer- ica's greatest and biggest in- dustry. We got racketeers, too. We got big enough that the “on the ' and the “take 'em for a ride are - not -just 1sing - the old Pueblo as a wh'stling post. No more importing high-priced m:n from Chicago ia help supervise a gangster picture. Just use the ones that are working here. We are a modern American city at last. Newton explanatict tides for SATURDAY Blooming Potted Roses 35¢ Each or 3 for $1 Young, hardy, ever- blocming plants in these varietics. Talisman, Joanna Hill, Pernet, Rapture for out- cm our For sale also at our nursery above Rockville on Frederick Pike. GUDE’S GARDEN SHOP A. GUDE SONS CoO. 747 14th St. N.-W. District 5784 U./. ROYAL TIRES ON YOUR OWN TERM/ CASH or Lowest Prices. CREDIT Immediate Installation Your new Royals mounted while you wait. . no red tape or waiting for credit . K. in Ten Years U. S. PEERLESS 4.50-20 (29x%4.50) , 4,50-21 (30x4.50) , 4.75-19 (28x4.75) , ...$5.60 vees 570 .. 6.65 | 5.00-19 (29x5.00) , 5.25-21 (31x5.25) , 6.00-20 (32x6.00) , Other Sizes Proportionately as Low Prest OLfte BATTERIES FREE - Mounting 624 Pa. Ave. S. E. 1234 14th St. N. W. 2250 Sherman Ave. N. W. - 3228 Ga. Ave. N. W. U./. ROYAL TIRES ON YOUR OWN TERM/ {land on hcr way to France from New York. The New York night club hostess is definitely on Great Britain's list of barred aliens, the Express said, and immigration officers in every port have been instructed to turn her back if she attempts to enter the country. | FLYER FALLS TO DEATH | _RIVERSIDE, Calif, May 22 (#).— | Second Lieut. Ralph A. Murphy of | Kansas City, Army Air Corps instructor at March Fleld, near here, was killed, and Cadet Lawrence Welch, student | pilot, seriously injured in the crash of | an Army training plane today. | _Welch's home is East Chicago, Ind. | During a training flight the wings of another plane tcuched Murphy's ship | and fl nose-{ dhed 500 feet to ennh as the first to give a general | of the phenomenon of the | A 100% INDEPENDENT WASHINGTON INDUSTRY EX-OFFICIAL HELD INKILLING OF TWO |Former Deputy Prosecutor in Los Angéles to Undergo Sanity Test. By the Assoclated Press. LOS ANGELES, May 22.—David H.| | Clark, candidate for municipal judge |and former deputy district attorney, | held on suspicion of double murder, was transferred today to the County Jail Hospital for an examination into | his sanity. | He surrendered at the Hall of Justice shortly before midnight, ending a 30- hour hunt for the killer of Charles H. Crawford, millionaire political boss, and | Herbert F. Spencer, magazine editor, | shot to death late Wednesday in Craw- ford’s Hollywood office. | “Let's mot talk about that” Clark told reporters this morning when they lquemoned him about the slayings. | “I'm accused of this and I know | from long experience as a prosecutor | where I won my cases because the ac- | | cused talked too much,” that speech | | doesn't pay. So I have nothing to say.” 1 For eight years the 33-year-old at-| |torney and athlete served as deputy | district atforney here. He resigned on request of District Attorney Buron Pitts last February and later became a can- didate for muncipal judge. Investigators announced they had| found his bank account to be over- drawn $97 and that Tuesday he pur- chased a pistol for which he gave a| worthless check. His wife had reported him missing and sought police aid in locating him. | The district attorney said that four persons had identified Clark as the man who was in conference with Crawford and Spencer when two bullets ended | their lives. | The sanity test is made by the State | | |in many criminal cases to enable the prosecution to fight possible defense pleas of lnunuy Commom Must Pay. LONDON (#)—The House of Com- mons is getting a dose of its own talk about economy. Free matches have been abolished by the house restau- rant, but the empty holders remain as a reminder of more prosperous day: wex A3 70 % - = AC.UTE ]NDI?ESTION *me Night! (when drug stores are closed.) 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