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Y AGENTS SPUR ¥ 4yv # Ring Uncovered in Kansas City, at Large. P the Associated Press, May 30.—An an- ont by W. L. Vandeventer, dis- trict attorney, that th> “real leaders” of en alleged seven-State bootleg com- bine large, spurred Federal agents to new efTort here today. The prosecuti:n, designating the ring s a subsidiary of Al Capone, Chicago racketeer, said 200 persons were sought. He added that retailers were clisscd as customers, whom the Government has “no intent of prosecuting.” Customers' Lists Requested. Prospoctive State action agalnst the retailers, however, was seen in a request of Roland Boynton, zttorney general of Kansas, for customers’ lists seized by agents in a hotel raid here. Thirty persons, incluging John Lazia, North Side p-litician; sune Kathrens, truck fleet operator, and Rosemary vons, city del.nquent tax collector, and the alleged bookkeeper, have been ar- rest>d on Federal charges cf conspiracy to viclate the prohibition 1iw. Vandeventer said uncut Canadian tiquor was shipped by a Capone boat to New Orleans, small craft t> an_un- dresignated port on the Mississippi River and by trucks through Hot Springs, Ark., and Joplin, Mo., to Kansas City. He said the volume exceeded that of raw alco- hol received from the East, which he estimated at 24,000 gallons monthly. Alcohol $5 to $6 a Gallon, The district attorney repcrted that alcohol was quoted to retailers at $5 and %6 a gallon, and that tne Canadian proglucts brought from $65 to $75 a case. From this city, Vandeventer said, the liquor was moved in secret channels t5 points in Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado and perhaps Northern Texas. SHOOTS WIFE AND SELF Man Kills Woman, Then Battles Police and Tries Suicide. KANNAPOLIS, N. C, May 30 (P).— Pat~ Smith, 23 years old, a textile r today shot and killed his wife, v, 19 years old. He battled cflicers who souglit to arrest him and then shot and seriously wounded himself. Police were called to Smith’s home by neighbors, who said he was on “a drunken tear.” They were met by a volley of shot as they approached the hcuse, but no one was hit. As they crashed in the door they heard two shots. Smith was found with two bullet wounds in his body. His wife, dead from a bullet wound in the back, was lying nearby. R PRESIDENT ASKS COURAGE IN VALLEY FORGE OF TODAY (Continued From First Page) interrupted by applause and received an ovation as he concluded. Mr. Hoover entered Valley Forge Park from Philadelphia amid all the ccremony generally acccrded the Pres- ident. ‘The horses of his reared and plunged ahead as a 21-gun salute boomed from behind a nearby hill. Thousands of people lined the roads from the station at Betzwood, where the President detrained, to the | speaker’s stand. Mrs. Hoover Given Ovation. The crowd gave Mrs. Hoover an ova- | tion as she came to the edge of the | fter the President had concluded | stand his speech. Isaac R. Pennypacker, chairman of the Valley Forge Park Commissi 5 dent. Mr. Pennypacker referred to the Chief Executive as a “leader whose fame has come not from the waging of war, but from his work in restoring the ravages of war.” “President Hoover #pirit of a people wes anxious to know the peace and speed ment,” he said. ALL HOOVERS GONE. represents the ry of war 2nd to maintain industrial develop- tire Family Is First in Sixth Months. For the first time in six months the White House was without a member of the Hoover family today. President and Mrs. Hoover were in Valley Forge, Pa, and were to return to the Capital late today, after the Chief Executive delivers his Memorial day address. Shortly after thelr departure yes- terday, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoover, jr., and their three children left for Palo Alto, Calif., to spend the Sum- mer at the President’s home. They expect to arrive there next Tuesday. Young Hoover, who has completely rc- covered from his recent illness, plans to return to his home at $anta Bar- bara this Fall. The three children, Peggy Ann, Joan and Herbert, 3d, spent the Winter at the White House. __SPECIAL NOTICES. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DEBTS CON- tracted by any “one other than myself. CHARLES L. SATTERFIELD, 1808 M at. nee. FOR RENT_SECOND-FLOOR STORE OR office: désirable location: corner 10th & E sts. n.w.: opposite new bullding of Potomac Electric Power Co.: entire floor: attractive lease terms to good tenant. Call MR. MOTT., Met. 1844, & ALLIED VAN LINE SERVICE. Nation-Wide Long-Distance Moving. WANTED-RETURN LOADS From NEW YORK June 8th From PHILADELPHIA June 9t CAGO " une 5th ine 10th To BOSTON .. une 8th Regular weekiy service for part loads to and from Washington, Baltimore. Philadel- phia and New York. UNITED STATES STORAGE CO. 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The National Capital Press That's SEARCH FOR 200 Leaders of 7-State Bootleg uncovered Tuesday were still at | Cavalry escort | ke briefly in presenting the Presi- | | i i | 1 the boys were placing small flags boside The text of President Hoover's ad- dress at Valley Forge follows: | We are upon the eve of the celebra- tion of the 200th anniversary of the birth of George Washington. It is,| therefore, appropriate that our obs ance of Memorial day should this be at this place, so intimately associated with the moral grandeur of the Father of Our Country. scription; the events enacted here re- | quire no recounting to the American people. The very name, Valley Forge, swells within us a pride of nationality. These peaceful fields hold a glory pe- culiarly their own. The sufferings of Washington's Army in that dreadful Winter of privation have made this place famous amcng all men. It was not the glory of battle for which these fields are remembered. No great battle was fought here. It was not the pomy of victory, for no martial triumph was won here. It was not the scene where peace was signed by which independence of a great nation was won. It was not the tombs of courage- ous men who, facing the enemy, gave the supreme sacrifice for their country to which we bow in reverence. A thou- sand other ficlds mark th> courage, the glory, the valor the skill, the martial triumph of our race. Yet the instinct and the judgment of our people after the abrasion of the years has apprais>d this place as a foremost shrine in the War of Independence and in our Na- tion. It is a shrine to the things of the spirit and of the soul. Fortitude Saved Nation. It was the transcendent fortitude and steadfastness of these men who M ad- | versity and in suffering through the | darkest hour of our history held faith- ful to an ideal. Here men endured that a nation might live. | George Washington and his men at any moment could have accepted the {counsels of an easy path to an easy| end of their privations. They could have surrendered their ideals to the widespread spirit of despair and dis- | couragement. They could have aban- doned their claims to freedom. They could have deserted their hopes an forseken their faith. Instead. they chose the harder way of sieadfast forti- tude and for many of death. | Here Washington and his little band of hungry and almost naked patriots kept alive the spark of liberty in the lowest hours of the Revolution. They met the crisis with steadfast fortitude: resources: they seized the | opportunity, which, with the the tide of war, 1°d on to victor was a triumph of character and idealism and high intelligence over the counsels of despair, of prudence, and material comfort. ‘This was one of those moral victories that ar> the glory of the race. Without such victories the life of m: v descend to a sheer materialism ¢here there is no vision the people | perish.” Lacking th-se high inspira- tions mankind could claim no distine- tion higher then the beasts of the field, that sing no songs, dream no dreams, inspire no hope, and grasp no faith. | Tribute to Steadfast Heroes. | It is th's high spirit that we com- | memorate wh 1 we pay our yearly trib- | ute of reverence to those who in all wars have stood steadfast and those who have died in the service of our country. Our | citizens in every war have flocked to | arms at the call of country. They have | responded willingly, because in every | emergency they have had up before th'm an ideal of liberty and the free- dom of their country. Some wars in | history have been instigated by old and cynical men for cruel or seifish rea- | sors. Some wars have been fought for power and possessions. The ends of | some wars coulc have been more nobly | won and more wisely won by patience | and negotiation. But war for liberty has endowed the rac not alone with the most precious possessions of freedom but h2s inspired every succeeding gen- eration wich that idealism which is the outpouring of man’s spiritual naur. An ideal is an unselfish aspiration. | Its purpose is the general welfare not only of this but of future geperations. It is & thing of the spirit. It is a gon- erous and humane desire that all men may share equally in a common good. Our ideals are the cement which binds human soclety. They provide the main- | spring of progress. Idealism was forged | into the souls of the American people by | the fires of the Revolution. It is this | quality of spirit which has made pos- sible the success of our great d-mocratic | experiment. It has tempered our ac- quisitivenass, has, strengthened our sens: | of civic responsibility, and has made | service to fellow man a part of our na- | tional character. | Cites Present Stress. | ‘This p:culiar significance of Valley | Forge in our American annals should | strike us all with especial force in this particular moment of our national life. The American people are going through | another Valley Forge at this tim2. To | each and every one of us it is an hour of unusual stress and trial. You have each one your special cause for anxiety. So, too, have 1. Th: whole Nation is beset with difficulties incident to a world-wide depression. These tem- porary reverss in the march of progress | have been in part the penalty of ex- | ‘cesses of greed, of failure of crops, and | the malign inhcritances of the Great War and a storm of other world forces beyond our control. Their far-reaching effects have fallen heavily upon many who were in no wise conc:rned with their causes. Many have lost the sav- | ings .of a lifetime, many are unem- | ployed, all know the misgivings of doubt and grave conc rn for the future. | No one who reviews the past and | realizes the vast strength of our pecple can doubt that this, like a score of similar experiences in our history, is a passing trial. From it will ccme a greater knowledge of the weaknesses of our system, and from this knowledge must come the courage and wisdom to improve and strengthen us for the fu- ture. Numerous are the temptations under the distress of the day to turn aside from our true national purposes and from wise national{policies and THE EVENING the stones. STAR, Boy Scouts yesterday decorated all graves cf war veterans in Arlington Cemetery. This scene wezs snapped whi'e —Star Staft Photo. | Text of Presideni’s Speech Executive Urges Nation to Remember Fortitude of Patriots at Valley Forge in Facing Stress and Trials of Present Period. builded our Republic. Never was the | lure of the rosy path to every panacea | which our ancestors |and of easy ways to imagined security | fered, the truth whic] more tempting. For the energies of private initiative, individual freedcm of our American vidually a living rather than an oppor- tunity to earn a living, and the equally specious claim that hired representa- tives of a hundred million pesple can do better than the people themselv:s, in thinking and planning their daily life Fought to Retain Freedom. ‘The Revolution, of which Valley Forge was the derkest but perhaps the most glorious moment, was fcught not alone for naticnal independence, but to retain our freedom to continue un- hampered the most promising soclal ex- periment in all human history. Our American ideals had already been in process of development for a century when the War for Independence began. Our Government was an experiment in securing to a people the maximum of individual freedom. Amazing success has proved it is no longer an experi- ment. Under it has grown a social and economic system new in the world end distinetly our own. Human initiative has been inspired, human energies re- leased, local co-operation has solidly knit together communities into self- governing democracies, and the human | spirit_has blossomed in an atmosph: of a new independence and sIf-respect It brought America to & greatness un- paralleled In the history of the world. We must ever continue that fight Amid the scene of vastly growing com- plexity of our economic life we must | preserve the independence of the indi- vidual from the deadening restraints of government, vet by the strong arm of government’ equally protect his vidual freedom, assure his fair chance, his equality of opportunity encroachments of specia! p greed or domination by by group or class. _We are still fighting this war of in- epcndenc. We must not be misled by the claim that the source of all wis- dom is in the Government. We kn-w that the source of wisdom 1s in the peo- that the pocpl> can win anew the | vicfory. But that wisdom is not innate R ther is it born out of experience, and mcst of all out of precisely such experi- nce as is brought to us by the darkest moments—the ~ Valley Forges—of _our individual and national carecrs. It is in the meeting of such moments that are born new insights, new sympathies, new powers. new skills. That is precisely why the wisdom of the few instead (f tlie many fails to build ¢n enduring gov- ernment or an enduring people. Such baitles as we are in the midst cf today cantot be won by any single stroke, by any one strategy sprung from the mind <f any single ‘genius. The necessary multitude of individuals and group ad- Justments to new conditions is alto- gther too vast and too complex for that. Rather must we pin_our faith indi-" from the vileges and | | up=n the inventiveness, the resourceful ness, the initiative of every one of us. That cannot fail us if only we keep | the faith in ourselves and our future, and in the constant growth cf our in- | telligence and ability to co-cperate with one another, Common Scnse Tells Truth. Strens still sing the song of the easy | way for the moment cf difficulty, but the common sense cf the commen man, | the inherited tradition of an independ- | ent and self-reliant race, the historical | memory of Americans ‘who glory in | fundamental ideals of the men who | Valley Forge even as they glory in York- town—all these tell us the truth for ought and suf- echoes upward from this sofl of blood and tears, that | the way to the Nation's greatness is the | of independence and a high degree of | Path of self-reliance, independence, and | steadfastness in times cf trial and | system we are offered an alluring sub- | Stress. . | stitute in the specious claim that every- | This national shrine needs no de-|body collectively owes each of us indl- | to steadfastness in times and terms of Valley Forge met such a challenge war, Our test is to meet this chal- lenge in timos and terms of peace. It is the same challenge. It is the same test of steadfastness of will, of clarity of thought, of resoluti>n of character, of fixity of purpose, of loyalty to ideals | and of unshaken conviction that they | will prevail. We are enduring suffer- ings and we are assailed by tempta- ticns. We, too, are writing & new chapter in' American history. If we weaken, 2s Washington did not. we shall be writing the introduction to the decline of American character and the fall of American institutions. If we are firm and far-sighted, as were Washington end his men, we shall be writing the introduction to a yet m-re glorious cpoch in our Nation's progress. We have seen many precious fruits of the sturdy pioneering virtues that have made our ccuntry first free and then strong and now proudly in the fore- front of the world. If. by the grace of God, we stand steadfast in our great traditions through this time cf stress, we shall insure that we and our sons and daughters shall see these fruits increased many_fold. Valley Forg> has come Indeed to be a symbol in American life. It is more than the name for a place, more than the scene of a military episode. more than just a critical event in history. Freedom wss won here by fortitude, not by the flash of the sword. Valley | Forge is cur American synonym for the | trial of human character through pri- vation and suffering, and it is the symbol of the triumph of the Ameri- can soul. If those few thousand men and suffering, humiliated by the de- | of support save their own indomitable will, yet hold their countrymen to the faith, and of that holding held fast the freedom of America, what right have we to be of little faith? God grant that we may prove worthy of George Washington and his men of Valiey Forge. | SEINE ViCTIM IDENTIFIED Neapolitan Student at First Was ‘ Believed to Be American. MARLY - LE - ROI, Seine - et - Oise, | France, May 30 (#)—The body of a | young man, which police at first be- |lieved to be that of an American after |it was taken from the Seine near here last Sunday, yesterday was identified as that of Gustave Spera, 23, a Neapolitan student. The initials “J. D—U. S. A" pre- | viously had led to the belicf that he might be an American. WASHINGTON, endured that long Winter of privation | spair cf their countrymen, and deprived | D, UNION CLUB WINS | HOOVER'S PRAISE President, Accepting Por- trait, Says Reception Great- ly Encourages Him. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, May 30.—President Hoover told the Union League here last night that efter “two years of fever and tumult in Washington” the reception extended him would be an “undoubted end great encouragement” in the tasks ahead. Speaking extemporaneously in re- sponse to a speech by George Stuart Patterson, president of the club, Who presented the Chief Executive with portrait of himself, Mr. Hoover de- scribed the club as & “senctuary of the great tradition of loyalty to the Gov- |erment of the United States.” Likes Portrait of Seif. 1 ‘The Union League Club was formed | during the Civil War to combat or- ! ganized sympathy with the Southern States. Through its portals have walked all the Republican Presidents of the United States since that time with the single exception of President | Harding. He had accepted an invita- |tion for October, but died in August, | 1923. The portrait, painted by Philides Costa, a Greek artist, was characterized by Mr. Hoover as a representation of himself he “liked much more than the very lifelike pictures the photographers make.” In presenting the portrait, Patterson told the President that the clhb wished to “take the liberty of saying that you 2nd your associates have met the crisis of world-wide economic depression with courage and ability and in accordance with the principles upon which the Government was founded.” Receives 1,500 Members. In times of discouragement, he said, | the club wanted to “urge that there is | a vast amount of common sense hidden |away in the minds of the American | people and that common sense teaches them to have confidence in you." | A dinner was tendered the President | before the portrait presentation and he | afterward received more than 1,500 | members of the club. Sitting near the Chief Executive at the main table of the dinner group was Gov. Pinchot and practically every Re- publican leader in Pennsylvania. The Norris, governor of the Fecera] Re-| serve Bank for this district. Expresses His Appreclation. In accepting the portrait said: “I am deeply honored by vour cour- teous hcspitality. When your commit- tee came to me and meade the invita- tion extended to every President of the United States that I should come to your club, as your guest, I said that in ' these times of extra and heavy burdens thet I should prefer that I might be prepar-d, under easier circumstances, perhaps, to discuss public questions as my predecessors hzd done—as they had felt hcnored to do before this body. “They, however, extended to me & delicate consideration that brooked no refusal, the sruggestion that the club | would like to extend its hand of en- couragement by a reception, with no request for a public address. In these times when a large number cf our pop- | ulation are seeking relief. that was, in- deed, the greatest and most considerate relief ever extended to the President of the United States. “Your gen-rous reception has gone bevond even the frontiers of hospitality. You have presented to Mrs. Hoover and | myself a portrait by a skillful artist. It is difficult for me to express with | my natural modesty that it gives one pleasure to see one's self presented in a better fashion than the normal snap photographs, and perhaps a_justifiable admiration that it may serve as an antidote to some of the current portraits under which I suffer. Yet I would not criticize that phase of the gift: other- wise it would seem something like the old term about the ‘gift horse. “Sanctuary of Traditien.” “I have felt all evening that the club represents more than a comrad-ship. It jisithe sanctiary G @ sreat tadislon— [HARDWARE SCREE DOORS WIRE FRAMES Fries, Beall & Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. Hoover | | ‘only Democrat at the table was George | | Notice to Lot Owners of Glenwood Cemetery Typical Scene—Glenwood Cemetery in Cherry Blossom Time CLOSING OF GATE ANNUAL MEETING The gates of this cemetery will be Decoration day, Saturday, May 30th, Trustees. S closed to all vehicular traffic on 1931. By order of the Board of of lot owners will be held in the rooms of the Board of Trade, second floor of The Evenii Star Building, 11th St. and Pennsylvania Avenue, on Mon- day, June 1st, 1931, 7:30 p.m. Al lot owners are earnestly requestsd to be present. BOARD OF TRUSTEES: CHARLES W. MORRIS, President WASHINGTON TOPHAM WILLIAM E. WISE, Secretary CHARLES E. MARSH ODELL S. SMITH, Treasurer SATURDAY, MAY 30, 1931. Will Rogers BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. —A couple of years ago no business seemed to be up-to-date unless it had its “holding company.” The title “holding” seemed like you had some- thing so the suckers went for it, but now the stockhold. ers find out that all they were holding was the bag, 80 that's what's the matter with your Wall Street. You can’t go out now when your business aint doing so good and merge with something else that's doing worse and form a “holding_company” and issue more stock. What you got nowadays you got to “hold” yourself. The buyers are looking in the bag now before they hold it. RULERS ATTEND OPERA British King and Queen Hear Straus’ “Die Fledermaus.” ‘LONDON, May 30.—King George and Queen Mary attended the opera at Covent Garden last night, adding dis- | tinction to the assemblage gathered to | hear Straus’ “Die Fledermanus.” It was “Die Fledermaus” also that| the King heard on his visit to the opera | last year, last night marking his first | attendance of the present season. | Former King Manuel of Portugal was also present, accompanied by Queen | Augusta Victoria. | . the tradition of the preservation of our Union, and the preservation of the tra- dition of loyalty to our Government is the greatest of our trials. That service of the club—protection of the Union— finds its expression in every part of this building, and all those years the club has stood steadfast for patriotic solution of the recurring difficulties which have met the Republic. “Its membership has stood steadfast in times of publio stress with a confi- dence in the ultimate growth and se- curity that distinguishes all thinking men. After two yvears of fever and tumult in Washington, I assure you this is a gratifying occasion. In these quiet | halls there is restfulness and feeling of security—an inspiration of faith in one's country. “I shall remember this occasion al- ways_with aporeciation, not alone for the fine, encouragng words of _your chairman—and _even _public officials need encouragement—but for the op- portunity you have given me to meet many old friends. I hope to make new ones and to come in contact with that spirft of the living men who have to carry the responsibilities of our com munity and of our Nation as a whole." Strikers Are Dispersed. Mr. Hoover arrived in Philadelphia after a rapid trip from Washington and was given an enthusiastic welcome. Quick work by police, however. stop- ped a demonstration of striking hoslery workers. Several hundred of them ap- peared on Broad street. but they were dispesed_before the President came along. Six arrests were made, but it was sald no charges would be preferred. The President did not see the bar ners saying: “Mr. Hoover, we are Bel- glans—why don’t you feed us?” and “Mr. Hoover, where is your dinner pail?” At the same time the President was dining with the directors of the club Mrs. Hoover was invited to be the guest of the wives of club officials in another room. The two dinners were adjourned to the Lincoln assembly hall of the club, where the presentation of the portrait took place. A duplicate of the picture, for which the President sat_in Washington last Summer, will be hung in the club. | A9 P.-T. A. IN MONTGOMERY HEARS CHIEF OF HYGIENE Dr. J. H. M. Knox Chief Speaker at Semi-Annual Meeting in Rockville. Speclal Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md., May 30.—Dr. J. H. M. Knox, jr., of Baltimore, chief of the Bureau of Child Hygiene of the State Department of Health, spoke be- fore the semi-annual meeting of the Montgomery Council of Parent-Teacher Associations in the High School gym- nasium here yesterday afternoon. ‘The meeting was conducted by the president, Mrs. Willlam McBain of Galthersburg, and was well attended by members of the 42 constituent organi- zations. Reports were submitted by the secretary and treasurer, Mrs. J. Somer- vell Dawson, of Rockville, d other routine business was transacted. On_conclusion of the business ses- slon Mrs. McBain gave a talk on the recent White House Conference on Child Health and Protection and girls of the Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School sang several selections under direction of Miss Genevieve Bordeaux of the school faculty. Dr. Knox was introduced by Edwin W. Broome, county superintendent of schools. LUNCH, $1.00 AFTERNOON TEA DINNER, $1.25, $1.50 RESTAURANT Anq rage Cul Connecticut Ave. at Q St. ESTABLISHED 1906 A MOMENT OF CLEAR THINKING AND A VISIT TO THE FOREST SECTION OF CHEVY CHASE —will put real American dollars in your pocket. Otherwise—it's an old story—you will put off buying a home until everyone is doing it, then vou will pay many more dollars for the same thing. Not believing in America when prices are low is the most wasteful national habit. Homes of the Thirty Thousand Character for MUCH UNDER $20,000 WHY PUT OFF? To Inspect Drive out Conn. Ave. to Bradley Lane (Chevy Chase Club), turn left two squaras and follow our signs: In No Uncertain Manner Washington Approves the Innovations Introduced in Westchester's New Addition The topic of conversation seems to be Westchester's latest achievement in approaching perfection in apartment desirability. Washington seems delighted with the innovations that create a new standard of apartment living. Widespread is the comment and active is the demand for reserva- tions in this exclusive and yet convenient addition. Feawring Studio Apartments and the convenience of a Dining Room The new building brings to your notice an architectural designing that is most unusual; it it comprises beautiful apartments, varying in size; reflects in its atmosphere a refinemant that is so sought after and so sel- dom found; it assures a new sense of comfort and a quiet restfulness. And yet . . . with all these advantages, so characteristic of private home enjoyment . . Westchester is but ten minutes from downtown. Here at Westchester convenience as well as exclusiveness awaits the seeker of a higher and finer standard of habitat. Occupancy Oct., 1931 Reservations are Now Being Made Four suites from one room bath to seven rooms ard three W Heights and bordering on the park—Added to meet an in- created by Westchester's previous efforts. baths; overlooking sistent demand The Way to Westchester Drive out M chusetts Avenue te Wisconsin Avenue— here Cathedral Ave- nue also intersects. Continue straight on Cathedrel Avenue just two blocks. On the left is Westcher~ ter. You may érive out Wisconsin Avene to tre aeme cross avenues, hundred distinctive and esley TWESTCHESTER - CATHEDRAL AVE 391 STREET ~