Evening Star Newspaper, February 11, 1933, Page 3

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GOVERNMENT FILLY | BROADENING FIELD Rapid Growth Makes Greater | Efficiency Imperative, ™" Dr. Ogburn Holds. This is the fourth article in a serics in which Prof. William Field- ing Ogburn of the University of Chicago discusses what he considers the 10 Dbiggest problems facing America. BY WILLIAM FIELDING OGBURN, vs Committee on (Wriiten for the Assnt{lted Press.) The Government should run its busi- | mees well. It is a large business, em- ploying probably around 3,500,000 per- sons with about 800,000 elected officials and with more than 200,000 different units. During the last decade it has required approximately one-eighth of the total income, and a much larger percentage during the depression. It concerns itself with police and military protection, safeguards health, cares for the sick, fights crime, helps trade, encourages science, provides money, furnishes recreation, teaches our children, aids transportation, forecasts weather, provides insurance, furnishes relief, alds employment, administers Justice, makes roads, protects our for- ests—in fact, no other business touches our lives at so many points or aids us in so many ways. Moreover, these activities have grown rapidly, in good times and in bad. There is every reason to think this growth may continue in the future. Efficiency Wanted. . Management and technology have won brilliant victories in private in- ldustry. particularly during the past decade Waste has decreased. The :‘h 'm of production s almost solved. e Government should be quick to import the most modern devices of fefiiciency in organization and tech- higque. Indeed, its recent record it ft, corruption and inefficiency has n ‘encouraging. But enormqus gains #re still possible. ‘The problem is to make government hange more easily and rapidly, instead of clinging to the forms and precedents of the earlier rulers of a by-gone agri- cultural era. No farmer today would be content to use Thomas Jefferson’s plough, but we do not seem to want change his governmental ideas. Europe Changes Quicker. It is probably true that the govern- ments of Europe have changed much more rapidly than in the United States. Should government and business be- come more close in the future, and NEW LIQUOR DRIVE THE EVENING STAR, W Government Work Mounts ALL GOVERNMENT COSTS US. (FEDERAL, STATE.COUNTY. LOCAL) PUBLIC PAY /1 1933 _3500.000 | tures in United States. W.C.T.U. TOLAUNGH First Major Move to Be Huge Meeting of Church Leaders in D. C. March 7-8. By the Associated Press. . CHICAGO, February 11— Wom- an’s Christian Temperance jon is calling for a new ogisade against liquor, this time to prevent repeal of national prohibition and State liquor laws, its presfid.ent, Mrs. Ella A. Boole, said yes- should the issues which governmen deal with touch the lives of mdivlduals and the interest of business more inti- gmately, much more attention wlll be ®iven to its affairs. How well the public business is ‘run s not wholly a matter of tools. also a matter of the representation of o interests. Governmental action is greatly speed- ed up when interests are represented and when there is unity of purpose. ‘Witness the astounding speed of govern- mental action in wartime. But when interests conflict and are not represent- ed, action is slowed down. Basis of Representation. Georgraphy was a good basis of rep- fTesentation when farmers made up the bulk of the Nation and when commu- nication was slow. But now geographi~ cal interests have dwindled while occu- g:mnul and industrial interests have e diversified. But they are not represented well except by dists, lobbyists and special interest groups outside the govemment et SP e, 0st unbelievably large, und how the Government rumyltsm ’B.Iturmd to be a big problem of the e, Tomorrow: “Man’s Struggle With Modern Life” One in 20 of boys and girls of high school age are placed in n insane asylum sometime in the eourse of their lives in the two States which figures are available. Siz- major crimes are committed each yenr per 1,000 in our urban popula- tion. Certain parts of our society are Bhe foci of stresses which could be re- Jorganized and lead to a much better justment between biological man nd his_society. One of these, says Prof. Ogburn in his next article, is the way in which we spend our leisure gime. KCopyright, 1933, by the Associated Press.) | e { O’CALLAGHAN HONORED Matthew O'Callaghan was chosen esident of the St. Stephen’s Holy ame Society at its meeting and smok- g in the St. Stephen’s School audi- rium Thursday night. Other officers elected included L. P. e;n Fellipo, vice president; Richard Ish, secretary and treasurer; Thomas | B. Stanton, marshal, and Felix J. Mur- phy, choir director. Delegates to the wguarterly conventions were named in ichael E. Buckley, Charles M. Leckey, | aurice Gamey, Bernard Saffell and | niel M. Stanton. Rev. Henry J. Sank spiritual director of the society. | The society will receive holy com- | union at the 8 o'clock mass tomorrow. opagan- SPECIAL NOTICES. N YOU NEED AN ELECTRICIAN. CALL e Electric Shop on Wheels, I weddings and er day each; new chairs. ing_chairs for Tent or sale. S STORAGE CO.. 418 10th Metropolitan 1544, KE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW FOR | indow seats to view the inaugural parade, 4th_and Pa. ave. nw.: steam neated. ali | nveniences.” Apply 509 14th st. n.w. 16% 0 N NEY YO 1 eetings, 10c uj 1so invalid rolli NITED ST. R0 FITTS: SPER & STORAGE 0O, 1915 ORK. FEB. 13 reh 14; to Providence, NPT’ Trak ou st. N.W. WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ts contracted by any one other than my- . Mrs. Katherine Kerper, 006 Sth ne. NG DISTANGE MOVING BETWEEN AL stern points. “Service since 1896.” Da- s Transter & Storage Co. 1117 H ._Nat. 096! WILL NOT BE mpossxsu FOR _ANY bis “other ihan contracted my mysell AUL_ALLISON BISHOP. gl L 200FS REPAIRED —s0 that they STAY REPAIRED. Thor- Quen, sincere work by practical roofers. We'll gla tima ORIS roo 933 V 5t. D BIDS IN TRIPLICATE WILL BE ceived by the Constructing Quartermaster, rmy Medical Center, Washington. til 2 pm. March 2,’ 1933, ly_opened, for the co mmissioned officers’ apartments and -the uilities thereto. Information and specifi- lons may be obtained upon applicatiol ‘Wbove offce.” Deposit of. $66.00. (eertic Check) ‘required for plans. SURY DEPARTMENT OFFICE OP THE rvising Architect, Washington, C. —Seale dug"c:le 6, 1933 d ‘bids 10 ect to ‘the conditions contained be Publicly opened in this office T ined flscretion of u 1s | adopted. - | thoroughly wet and it is time that the G | pallbearers and as an escort of honor 3| Mrs. Earnest H. Daniel, Mrs. Nina E. ¢ | Allender, Miss Mabel Van Dyke, Mrs. ; | Luers. --m’!m onheeflmwmlzenst.rm rouse in temperance acivocates the mgh plwh of enthusiasm which carried them to victory in 1918, when the eighteenth amendment was [ “Very few temperance advocates have h-nged their adherence in the last 14 Mrs. Boole said, “and we have t.hwn.nda of new adherents. Once the great need of today is recognized, I am in that all our sympathizers will acdn manifest the white-hot fervor of the ’teen decade. And, when their tremendous influence is once unified and positively asserted, it is something | prop], that no representative in Congress or Legislature can afford to disregard.” w-u-.n on Congress. ‘The pi t Congress, most drys say they beueve, will not do anything im- portant about prohibition. They are, nevertheless, keeping close watch on it. If the succe change. Faced by this possibility, Mrs. Boole was asked to outline the dry Ppolicy. First, she sald, the constant educa- tional effort of the W. C. T. U. is being intensified. In churches and schools, especlally, the dry position—that the election November 8 was not an anti- dry mandate and that prohibition must be retained—is being hammered home in every form. ‘The drys consider the “mandate” claim a principal factor in the wet str!ncth but they insist it is unjusti- "Ib was not a mandate,” Mrs. Boole explained. “The drys had no chance | to speak. At the National conventions | ?L’Iu both pam‘ee, the ;vand ::;:t care- | ly greased or repeal an e was curtaffed Roosevelt Not Dry Choice. ‘The dry!" she said, “held that it to participate important, The bastie against depression, SR larly since both parties went wet, and consequently held to one or the other major candidates, rather than for the one-issue dry candidate. “In voting for Roosevelt, however, they were voting for relief from the depression, not repeal of prohibition.” The first major move in the drive to retain prohibition, she said, was the calling by the churches of a huge meet- ing of church leaders in Washington | §| for March 7 and 8. She said that more than 1,000 have already accepted invitations. ‘The object will be to rally the churches in support of prohibition. Next, the W. C. T. U. has set March 27 as “Anti-Repeal day”; is on all its 10,500 local unions to hold anti- liquor rallies and demonstrations. “All the propaganda of recent months,” Mrs. Boole said, “has been | fact of the existence of a powerful dry element throughout the country be forcefully brpught to the attention of legislators of all ranks.” LEAVE_ T0 ATTEND BELMONT FUNERAL | Delegation From National Wom- an’s Party to Attend Rites for Leader in New York Tomorrow. A delegation from the National Wom- an's Party left Washington this morn- ing for New York, where they will at- tend the funeral tomorrow of Mrs, Ol- iver H. P. Belmont, who was president | of the Woman's Party at the time of her death in Paris January 26. Mrs. Belmont had requested that | women conduct her funeral services, and at tomorrow's rites in St. Thomas’ Church, women will act as honorary | in which all States of the Union will be represented. Among those in the party which left y were Rebekah Greathouse, Mrs. Edwin Lublin, chairman of the District branch; Burnita Shelton Matthews, Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, Mrs. Abble Scott Baker, Mrs. Marie Forrest Moore, Paul Linebarger and Miss Margaret Alice Paul, founder of the party, and Mrs. Florence Bayard Hilles, chairman of the National Council, were included in the escort which met the liner bringing ervising Architect by any satistactory Brovided s , Jepogit Set willbe Tirnined commerce 3 pt return. One fiders' exchanges, chambers of other ‘organizations who Wil gusteise make them svailable for anysubcon: ictor or material flm lmtnned \nd. H" surveyors, ided deposit o! Ill!fl! to mure H-I Bl’ml return. dey t be made lum be accepted. . Rcting Supervising Architecs. Mrs. Belmont's body home, Air Fleet Reaches Zone. 1915 1929 $11,452,200.000 I PER CAPITA COSTS (ALL GOVERNMENTS U.S.) TOTAL NUMBER ON ROLLS IN US. CAPROXIMATE) [ swongoo: | The way governments—Federal, State and local—run their business is a | big problem of the future, says Prof. William Fielding Ogburn, noted sociologist. | The sketch and charts above show how governments have expanded their busi- ness, hired increasingly large numbers of persons and increased their expendi- DRYS HIT STUDY BY ROCKEFELLER Hold World Survey Plan Will Reveal Nothing New and Suggest Inquiry in U. S. By the Associated Press. ‘The investigation announced yester- dly by John D. Rockefeller, jr., into foreign liquor systems will reveal “tha nowhere in the world is there now, has there been, a system, which, other things being equal, reduces the evils of alcohol as effectively as prohibition,” it was declared in a mumem given out for publication wdny by the Anti- Saloon e. Investigation by a committee for Rockefeller was announced in New York-with word that it was to be made “on the assumption that the eighteenth amendment will be ultimately repealed, and that the problem of control of the liquor traffic will be one upon which fullest accurate information will be of value.” The Anti-Saloon statement, signed by P. Scott McBride, general superin- tendent, said the committee will learn “a number of things that are already well known by students of the liquor One of these, he sald, was “that liquor interests in every other country” have opposed regulation and restriction. “The most valuable study of the llq\lor prablun ever ma yvhere on " said McBride, during the 25 yeln preceding th! eighteenth Fied every possible Kind. of. regviation tried every le on or control and contrasted the results with prohibition under the operation of State and local dry laws. There was an overwhelming verdict of the voters that prohibition was preferable to any other system ever tried. “The Rockefeller committee would do far better to stay in this country and investigate the sources of and reasons for the political and propaganda cam- paign that has obscured the benefits of the eighteenth amendment, inter- fered with its effective enforcement and encouraged its violation.” _— INUTE Dr. Pordney is professor of criminology at a famous university. His advice is often sought by the police of many cities when Snironted with particularly ng cases. This problem has rom his case- ken book wvmnl hun redn ol criminal investi- wits on it! It takes but ONE read! Every fact and every Sl “mecessary to. 1ts- solution” arecin fhe story {tself—and there is only one answer. How good a detective are you? Class Day. BY H. A. RIPLEY. 14 OME of you fellows complained that the problem involving a photograph from an airplane was a bit far-fetched. You might be interested in know- |ing that the late Ronald Amundsen's plane was discovered by exactly that means. Photographs taken from the Graf Zeppelin, on being developed and enlarged, showed an airplane wing which could not possibly have been seen from the dirig- ible with the naked eye. Microscopic examination reveal- ed the number of Amundsen’s plane lying in the little- known section of A Vova Zembla, “Now, here’s an- other deductive problem taken from an actual case. Ttiere is only one | possible solution ! and if you chaps' hope to become eriminal investigators you'll have to learn to think—to reason—to deduce. “One of the Royal Northwest Moun- tles tracked a desperado to a northern outpost and there lost trace of him. Upon inquiry, a rather shifty char- acter informed him, that the man he sought had gone off in a northerly di- Tection. Though a bit skeptical, he dared not discount the information, so he set out over the snow on the blind, cold trail. “Five hours later his keen intuitive sense told him that some one was fol- lowing him. Just a hunch, but the impression grew as he proceeded. Being a really smart young officer, he gave no sign of his feeling, but realizing the importance of definitely ascertain- ing whether or not he was correct, he nmrudwlslmplenuethntlns!e" hours confirmed his icion. —He learned, without once stopping, or look- ing around, seeing or hearing any one that he was being followed. Quickly now!” DO? ‘The above problem was submitted to the pro(egm' by Ray Rocco of Wash- BALBOA, Canal Zone, February 11 |ington, D. () —Twelve pursuit airplanes, three bombers and two observation ships ar- rived y from Brownsville, Tex. Maj. J. w.Jnnumtnr,omndmd Ph ou have one ‘would er.u’ mhl.l"::“ll.-n lo.lendntommlnuno!thupl and he will be delighted to see what the planes were handled by crews of 8 officers M and men, his students make of it. Solution on Page A-Bd 1 ROOSEVELT HELD STUDYING CUBA May Land There Before Re- turning From Fishing Cruise Off Florida. By the Associrted Press. MIAMI, Fla, February 11—Presi- dent-elect Roosevelt is taking a good look at the neighboring islands of the United States while he fishes and swims in the Southern waters and he is be- lieved ready to deal with the compli- cated questions that involve these shores. His latest message from the yacht Nourmahal reported a catch of 30 small fish and the loss of one “as big as a whale,” but behind these radio com- munications there is the feeling here that the next President is making a good inventory of the islands that lie off the coast of this country. ’ Cuban Rumor is Vague. ‘Vagrant reports that come back here from Cuba indicate the word has been sent down there in a very off-hand way that the government must show a firm establishment. But all of this, like most other things connected with the approaching administration, is cloaked in uncertainty, for Mr. Roose- velt is holding his nre for the opening of his term March 4. Meanwhile, James A. Farley, national chairman, is talking things over at the Miami Biltmore Hotel with party mflles" ‘purel ta. as he says, is ly - tenta- tive, but 1t Includes the names %( those who helped in the nomination and elec- tion of Franklin D. Roosevelt. A visit yesterday by Farley to James M. Cox, 1920 Democratic presidential nominee, and the publisher of the Miami Daily News and Ohlo newspa- pers, stirred speculation about Cox for Secretary of War or Ambassador to London, Were Running Mates. Mr. Cox and Roosevelt were running mates in 1920. Of course, there is a friendly feeling between the two. ‘Whether Mr. Cox wants anything or whether he is in the picture of the Roosevelt administration is unknown. Mr. Roosevelt is keeping his own coun- sel and this applies particularly to the cabinet. Farley is preparing a list of names of those who deserve tion in the new administration. ‘ Mr. Roosevelt will have the final uv when he returns next week from his cruise. Reports have been received here that Roosevelt will land in Cuba before he sets foot again on the soil of the United States. However, these reports also are regarded as very uncertain. GEN. E. T. COLLINS BURIED IN ARLINGTON High Army Officials Attend Serv- ices for Assistant Chief of Staff. With high oflch ey G!gia Amy h nthndhu Chief of Staff, wbo dled yuurdny .t Wllm tal after a was - bariey Witk ful %ury hnnm- today in Arlington National servleufotthahhchmdopenp tions an lucted in the Fort uyercxu Ihycol Julhn! Yl'u. Chle! of Chaplains of the Army. announced the p-u be-rm as followd: Gen. Douglas Mchrth‘l’u' Cgld of Bt?zfly 2‘(:} Gen. George Van jorn Mose] Robert E. Callan, Maj. Gen. John W. Gulick, Brig. Gen. Andrew Moses, Col. Duncan E. Major, Col. Edgar A. Myer and Col. Resolve P. Palmer. Gen. Collins, who had & distinguished service of 40 years in the Army, had been on detail at the War Department since 1930. He was a widower and is survived by two brothers, Herman Col- lins of Philadelphia and Emerson Col- l.lml of Williamsport, Pa., and two , Mrs, Allison J. Barrett, wife of Csm " Barrett of Fort Leavenworth, Kans, and Mrs. Prederick Viehe Armi- stead 'of Miami, Fla. EARLY CONSTRUCTION OF LIBRARY ANNEX URGED Senator Fess Makes Plea, Citing Many Services Institution Renders, A plea for early construction of the proposed Library of Congress Annex, east of the present building, was made in the.Senate yesterday by Senator Fess mittee, as the climax of a speech in which he described the rapid growth of the Library and the many services it is rendering as a fountain of research and mvestigation. He pointed out the site has been acquired and the plans drawn, and de- clared there is every justification for erecting the building even in view of the present polid) of Congress on public works. While new projects are being discouraged, he contended this is not in that clas! Postponem!nt of the Library project last year was ducnbed by the Senator as unfortunate. i — AUTOIST FINED $115' Charged with speeding, passing stop signs and red lights, going the wrong way up one-way streets and other traffic violations, John T. Gray, colored, of 77 DeFrees street, was fined a total of $115 on 15 counts in Traffic Court yesterday. Gray was arrested by Officers L. E. Phone NAt. 0836 Reduced Fares RT. R IUBI-L INES Terminal Ave. N.W. Norfolk, Va. PENIN sm HE SN ER Bituminous—Smokeless COAL 8L i 2,240 Pounds TERMINAL ICE and FUEL CO. Bridge and Dancing Rather Than Home Arts Stir Jobless By the Associated Press. NORWOOD, Mass, February B Tacine taneer wad s ot unger col they will be accomplished socially. ‘The 300 jobless wexe“oflered in gardeni p? king and gardening, sewing, cool an the like were passed up last night for the rumba and the exac sclence of coptract bridge, for 134 men and women between the ages of 24 and 48 asked to be taught modern dancing, 91 elected to regain their youthful figures by reducing exercises and 42 chose to be instructed when to lead trumps. A professional dancing in- structor, Mrs. Lucile Bodon of Brockton, has been engaged to teach the victims of the depres- sion the latest modern steps. MRS. HENRY MACATEE DIES AT HOME HERE Funera®Services for Wife of Well- Enown Physician Will Be Held Monday Morning. Mrs. Catherine Saville Macatee, wife of Dr. Henry C. Macatee, well known ‘Washington physician, died yesterday at_her residence, 2324 California street. Funeral services will be held at the home at 10.30 a.m. Monday and in- Arlington Ty, In addition to her hushlnd. Mrs. Macatee is survived by two daughters, Miss Mary Macatee of Washington, and Mrs. Rmdolnh Buuer of Sso Puulo Brazil; a bro T. Hudson, and a mm:-. Mrs. Fulton Dewh of Washing- e e POLING SEES HOOVER —_— Paying a visit yesterday to President Hoover, Daniel Poling, church and dry leader, said afterward he had felicitated the Chief Executive on his ding anniversary and also had discussed the possibilities of a fllhlu trip some time in the Cascades in streams with which he is familiar. Dr. Poling said prohibition was not touched on. The output of British coal mines is increasing. OB SN o e ] | AFTER HARDSHPS Mother, Girl and Eight Men Fight Hunger and Cold for 36 Hours. By the Associated Press. WESTPORT, Conn., February 11.— The nwry of how a mother, & young girl and eight men fought a 36-hour battle with hunger, terrific cold and terrifying gales in schoon: lward Connolly, 19, had returned n.(eb from the sound after she set out t® find him Wednesday ! ’%vmence‘ of the hardships through which thz party passed were the frozen hands of Skipper John Mulhaley of schooner Saugatuck. o, g, el o T B augl , 18, who was in a of Cflllum Salvatore Gilbertie, “rescus oyster steamer landed them ‘at mmmx last night. ;lljhg‘;ulmehmhdwtheir homes sea. rising, the: vain to repair it, and their plllhb be- came more serious when the engine re_m nt:nt m&‘:{hmt e “and warmth they had enjoyed since Wednesday were given them at the light house. There Hauser learned that her son, who usohad!mdnfunm-mhthmue 'was'safe at home. DR. FLOYD M. SOULE. Pased. || |EUT. STEHMAN BURIED IN ARLINGTON CEMETERY Veteran of A. E. F. Had Been €on- fined to Service Hospitals Since War. Lieut. Cameron Stehman, 54, who died Wednesday at the Army Hospital in Perryville, Md, from a wound suf- ,leredlnwummnmee.wumrled National Cemetery yes- full military honors. Lieut. Washington, had been ice hmpluh &c‘n‘ the World War. arers were Godfrey L. Mm ‘Washington attorney and friend of Lieut Stehman’s family; Hor- ace T. Jones, chief nwnwy of Y.hl: Veterans' Administration, Kochli and James A. Sheehan, mumnl rehabilitations officers, Veterans of For- eign Wars. . Lieut. Stehman was wounded ~while ing | serving with the Infentry of the war- time 1st Division. TRRE S ROy Repeal Lost in. Oklahoma. OKLAHOMA CITY, February 11 (). ;Bylv&teoffl!m'::‘zbeomom [ouse Represen! ves killed a resolution to mbm!tm" voters a_constitutional amendment for repeal of the State prohibition las DR. SOULE LEAVES ON ICE PATROL 108 Carnegie Soientist, at 33, Is Named Senior Physical Oceanographer. Dr. Floyd M. Soule of the Carnegie Institution, who has had a distinguished career as a sclentist on exploring ex- peditions, has been appointed “senior physical oceanographer” in the U. 8. Coast \Guard and has left his home here to) take up his new duties on the mum onal Ice Patrol in mid-Atlantic. At age of 33 Dr. Soule, who re- ;l.d‘u ltpl!l mn‘.y-m street, lhld! came&: numunm 's famous ow ldn Ripon, Wis., received his degree of bachelor of sci- ence in electrical e g at Geofi: ‘Washington University in 1927, and degn-e of doctor of philosophy at Ripon College. He was a junior physicist at tbe. ureau of Standards in 1927 and 192 He will board the ice patrol ship General Green at Boston, and go out into the Atlantic to make scientific ob- fiuum‘oa!m conditions ’Lhen. pre= ary e sailing the jer cutf of the (g\.urd whol”:m up the ice utml His duties 'm keep] him constantly at sea during th ice patrol season. old Carnegie. non-metallic ship on which he once sailed, blew up Novem« ber 29, 1929, in Apia, Western Samoa. BAR HEAD WILL SPEAK d | Martin’s Address Over Hook-up to Launch Broadcast Series. Clarence E. Martin, recendly elected president of the Amenun Bar Associa- tion, will speak on “The American Bar, Its Past Leaders and Its Present Aims, over a Nation-wide hook-up of the Co- “:mahll Broadcasting System tomorrow af pm. This will be the first of a series of 15 broadcasts under the -uspieu of the National Advhory cil on Radio in Education. 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