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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1929. TRADE BOARD PAYS HONOR T0 BRITON Official Representative Liverpool Is Guest at Di- rectors’ Luncheon. of Matthew _Anderson, official repre- sentative of Liverpool, England, visiting ‘Washington, is being honored today by the directors of the Washington Board of Trade with a luncheon at the Wil- lard Hotel, attended by more than 80 guests prominent in the business and civic life of the city. | Mr. Anderson is touring the United | States in the interest of the betterment | of commercial relations between his city and this count: on trade condition this country, stressing particularly their interrelation. Other speakers include Commissioner Proctor L. Dougherty, Edward L. Bacher, head of the foreign commerce department of the Chamber of Com- merce of the United States, and E. J. Murphy, president of the Board of| ‘Trade. A list of those who accepted invita- tions to attend the luncheon follows: Commissioner Sidney F. Taliaferro, Commissioner William B. Ladue; Lean- der McCormick-Goodhart and Arthur S. Pack, commercial secretarics of the British embassy; Edward F. Colladay, Republican national committeeman for the District of Columbia; George Plitt first_vice president, Washington Boaid of Trade; George W. Offutt, second vice president, Washington Board of “Trade; Samuel J. Prescott, chairman. executive committee, Republican State committee cf the District of Columbia: Edwin_Bacher, chief, Foreign Com- merce Department, United States Cham- ber of Commerce; Cuno H. Rudolpb, former Commissioner of the District of Columbia; Julius Garfinckel; John H. Hanna, president, Capital Traction Cq Willlam F. Ham, president, Wasi- ington Railway & Electric Co.; John Joy " Edson,” chairman of th- board, Washington . Loan & Trust Co.: Col. Robert N. Harper, presidént, District National Bank: E. C. Bran- denburg, general counsel, Washington Board of Trade; Ben T. Webster, secretary, Washington Board of Trade: | J. Harry Cunningham, treasurer, Wash- ington Board of Trade; Victor B. Dey- | ber, president, Second National Bank; | | | | Walter B. Clarkson, assistant to the president, C. & P. Telephone Co.; Dr. Charles F. Carusi, president, Board of | ITERIOR BUREALS FAEING EXPANSIN | Wilbur Lists Geological Sur- Education in Huge Plan. By the Associated Press. Stepping from the halls of Stanford Lyman Wilbur, famed diagnostician and educator, has'informed his old friend | President Hoover that a “changing em- phasis” is the need of the big and busy | Interior Department. Some of the great bureaus of the de- he said in his annual report ken the peak of their , whilé others have or completion. Em- administr | large tasks ahea be transferred from thcse whose duties are on the decrease to those showing " tantly increasing fields of ac- The Pension Bureau and the Gen- reaus the duties of which are on the decrease. The Geological Survey, the Bureau of Reclamation, the National Park service and the office of educa- tion were listed by the former univer- sity president as the branches of his department called upon to carry out a huge expansion program planned in' the reorganization of the department. The Indian service, troublesome for over a_hundred yi s presented in the following par “One activit Dl that of the Indian service, has unique goal—that of working itself out of a job. economic saving to the country by in- creasing present expenditures to enable the Indian population eventumVy to be- come self-supporting.” Administration of the public domain Dr. Wilbur reported to be of prime importance, with great emphasis needed on the necessity of conservation. “From Nebraska West, water, and water alone, is the key to our future,” he said. “Homestead thinking must be replaced with watershed thinking." The difficulty of understanding and controlling problems growing cut of the administration of the public domain has caused the appointment of a com- mission to study the possibility and feasibility of transferring public” lands to the public land States. This com- mission is now studying this question, involving more than 190,000,000 acres of public lands. Secretary Wilbur desires to see the Government participation end when Education; Dr. Frank W. Ballou, super- intendent,” public schools of the Dis- | trict of Columbia; Joshua Evans, jr. | executive vice president, District Na- | tional Bank; E. C. Graham, president, | National Eleciric Supply Co.; Thomas E. Jarrell, president, Washington Sav- | ings Bank; Arthur D. Marks, business | manager, Washington Post; E. D. Mer- rill, president, Washington Rapid Tran- sit Co.; Howard Moran, vice president, American Security & Trust Co.; H. L. Rust, president, H. L. Rust Co.; John Saul, secretary, B. F. Saul Co.; Walter S. Pratt, jr., secretary, Equitable Buil ing Association; Rudolph Jose, pre: dent, City Club; Gen. Anton Stephan, president, Merchants and Manufactur- | ers' Association; Harry K. Boss, pres dent, Boss & Phelps; Arthur J. May, president, Rotary Club; Grover Blacl stone,, general freight agent, Pennsy vanian Railroad Co.; Radford Moses, president, W. B. Moses & Sons; C. Melvin Sharpe, assistant to the presi- dent, Capital Traction Co.; William | P. Richards, District assessor; Charles ' T. Clagett, commercial manager, Chesa- peake & Potomac Telephone C: Harry Blake, president, Barber & Ross, Inc.; D. J. Callahan, William Knowies Cooper, C. Phillips Hill, presi- dent, Doubleday-Hill Electric Co.; F. P. H. Siddons, American Security & Trust Co.: Claude W. Owen, presidens, E. G. Schaefer Co.; M. A. Leese, president, M. A. Leese Optical Co.; Stephan E. Kramer, assistant superintendent of public schools; Odell S. Smith, secre- tary, Norfolk & Washington Steamboat Co.. Frank S. Hight, president, New Willard Hotel: Rufus S. Lusk, execu- tive secretary, Operative Builders’ As- sociation; H. H. McKee, president, Na- tional Capitai Bank; Dr. D. Percy Hickling, District alienist; Joseph A. | Burkart, lawyer; Jerome R. Bernard, lawyer; Jesse C. Adkins, lawyer; Paul B. Cromeiin, lawyer, A. K. Shipe, lawyer; Arthur Carr, advisory board, Riggs National Bank; George C. Shinn, lawyer; Capt. Chester Wells, Alexande: Woif, law, Supreme Court of the District of Co- lumbia; Willam R. Ellis, Robert F. Beresford, architect; Frank L. Averill, civil engineer; K. A. Brumback, Apple- ton P. Clark, jr., architect; Charles F. Consaul, George B. Farquhar, David M. Lea, Frank P. Leetch, Richard L. Lamb, president, Lamb Seal & Stencil Co.; Luther W. Linkins, vice president, George W. Linkins Co.. Charles W. Morris, George V. Graham, John L. Weaver, president, John L. Weaver Co.; Richard P. Schulze, Robert J. Cottrell, executive secretary, Washington Board of Trade; Carl E. Jarrel, E. M. Graham. | OU can go right on with your healthful, diet of luncheon salads with a wide variety of winter salad in- T; F. E. Cunningham, clerk, | reclamation projects have been com- pleted. The community affected, he said, should administer the completed work. This policy, he added, will be ef- fective as far as possible in the con- struction and administration of the Reclamation Bureau's greatest under- taking, Boulder Dam. Dr. Wilbur deplored the present methods of obtaining oil from the ground, characterizing it as “wasteful overproduction of a fast dwindling re- source.” Efforts of the department and Federal oil conservation board to bring about an oil conservation program were pointed out with satisfaction and with the statement that the “present con- servation policy will be continued.” ‘The President’s move<to stop pros- pecting for oil on the public domain was supported on the grounds that “until the present day of wasteful over- production is over the potential supply of oil in the public domain must be safeguarded.” Plans for the reorganization of the < i § 3 Thoreughly Cleaned D < $ and Glazed - ® THIS is a very fine special which we are offering now thru December 15th. Your fur coat is cleaned inside and out by & experienced men who know how S to treat every kind of fur and ® who are handling constantly furs ® of great value. b4 During. th 1: call for nor deliver fur ® Office. |® e |® ’0 ® : 6 Dupont Circle K3 F. W. MacKenzie, President slenderizing only Gold vey, Reclamation, Parks and | University into the cabinet, Dr. Ray phasis, therefore, he reasoned, should | eral Land Office were cited as two bu- | before it a definite and | Tts program calls for & large | | | | Fur Coats exceptional special we do not bring them, personally, directly to our Dupont The Tolman Dry Cléaning 9000000000000 00000000000000000000 grédiems. Of course you'll use Dressing—it’s long on flavor and short on oil—and so delicious! office of education have been compleced.! Dr. Wilbur reported, and are now in the process of execution, This office should | be a research organization, he said, rather than an administrative agency. An educator himself, Dr. Wilbur saw no place in the Federal Government for a department of education, maintaining that local government in education is the keystone of proper training for cit- izenship by universal public education. SIX KILLED BY BOMB. Mexican Merchant and Sons Vic-| tims of Unidentified Slayer. ! MEXICO CITY. December 2 ().—A | dispatch to El Universal from Tlaxcala | City yesterday said the merchant Seve- | riana Flores and his five sons were | killed by a bomb which an unidenti- | |fied man tossed into his store at Tepe- | | yanco, in the state of Tlaxcala. Several | other persons were injured. The dispatch said police had been unable to learn the reason for the bombing. The explosive was thrown by one of a group of men, who fled as it exploded. The family lives in the | store. CLAFLIN Opticicn—Optometrist 922 14th St. N.W. 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