Evening Star Newspaper, June 13, 1930, Page 24

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CITY OF CHICAGO PASSES 3 MILLION Metropolitan Area Popula- tion of 4,670,996 Is Re- corded in Census. By the Assoclated Press. | i CHICAGO, June 13.—Chicago's met- | Topolitan area, embracing six counties, including one in Indiana, has & popu- lation of 4,670,996, Federal census enumerators announced today. is a_gain of 1,199,198 over 1920 figures, or 34.5 per cent. Official pre- liminary figures for Cook Coum&wre 3,987,058, including the City of Chicago, with 3,373,753. for the city was 24.8. Estimates based on a preliminary study of census figures indicated the | city’s unemployed accounted for but 4 per cent, or 134,940, which was con- siderably fewer than predicted. A move- ment was started by Ralph L. Good- man of the census advisory committee to obtain an immediate and detailed survey of Chicago's working conditions based on the returns. “Such a survey would make it possi- ble for Chicago to get its unemployment information immediately instead of waiting a year for the Census Bureau in Washington to_publish its computa= tions,” he said. He planned to obtain permission to use the 1930 census books to study the length of the period of un- employment for each individual, the causes of unemployment and the indus- tries affected. Official figures for 100 of the 102 counties in the State and official esti- mates for the other two placed Iilinois’ population at 7,636,949, a gain of 1- 151.669. More than one-half the total popula- | tion of the State is in Cook County and | af the gain shown by the State more than 90 per cent took place in the met~ ropolitan area. The six counties of the metropoli- tan area are Cook, Lake, Du Page, Will and Kane in Illinois and Lake in In- diana. Next to Chicago the largest city in| the metropolitan area is Gary, Ind., :;1‘{.;:1 97,420 Cicero, with 65,176, is WOMAN SPEAKER TO TALK OF CONDITIONS IN INDIA Mme. Tatwardhan to Address Na- (§ tional Woman's Party at Tea Sunday Afternoon. Present conditions in India will be the subject of a discourse by Grimati Malati Tatwardhan, one of India’s most | | representative women, at a garden tea of the National Woman's Party Sun- day afternoon, June 22. Mme. Tatwardhan is secretary of the ‘Woman's Indian Association, an or- ganization with 70 branches through- ||| out India, whose object is to improve the conditions of the oppressed classes. She is a university graduate, editor of the magazine Stri-dharma (Women'’s| Duty), honorable presidency magistrate | of the city of Madras and sister-in-law of his highness the Chief of Sangli, an Indian state near Bombay. Exports of the United States in the | first quarter of this year totaled $1,-' 129,000,000. These Are Marvelous Values The percentage gain | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, €. ARTHUR BRUCE, Memphis lumberman, is a candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor | of Tennessee. ATHLETE WINS HIGHEST JUNIOR HONOR AT YALE Donald MtL:nnun. Jr., Foot Ball and Hockey Star, Named Fran- cis Gordon Brown Scholar. By the Associated Press. NEW HAVEN, Conn, June 13.— Donald R. McLennan, jr, of Lak Forest, I11, foot ball and hockey playe: |has been chosen Francis Gordon Brown scholar at Yale, it was an- nounced yesterday. This is considered | the highest honor that can be con- ferred upon a junior. McLennan, who has been a member of the student council and the under- ‘|rndulte chapel committee, won his “Y” in foot ball and hockey, is a mem- ber of the 1931 board of deacons, was captain for the university budget drive in 1928, and a member of his junior prom committee. He is a member of | Delta Kappa Epsilon and Scroll and Key. Before Closing Your Home Call Mr. Pyle for advice on cleansing and protect- ing your Floor Cover- ings from moths. Phone Nat. 3257-3291-2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Indiana Ave. —Assoclated Press Photo. | = DECLARES MOVIES DISTORT AFFAIRS Priest Hits American Indus- try for Causing Interna- tional_ Troubles. | By the Associated Press. BOSTON, June 13.—The picture was accused of distorting and misrepresenting American life, creating | hostility in foreign nations and af- | fecting international relations, by Rev | Frederic Siedenburg, S. J., of Loyola University, Chicago, speaking ' yester- day at a meeung on neighborhood and | community life in connection with the ‘nalmnll conference of social work. “Vice is made plPlslnt while it lasts,” he asserted. “Working girls are always the intended vietim of an em- ployer's greed or design; people rarely work unless they live in tenements and virtue is generally made to appear de- moving | rrfldn‘ Emphasis is placed on wealth, luxury and laziness.” International relations could be im- ved, he d, if the American mov- picture indusf were declared a public industry, subject to Government control, with a feral motion picture commissian o supervise production. “American films,” Father Siedenburg asserted, ‘“are exploited in foreign lands. And frequently those most in- decent and demoralizing which have been reject by State censorship boards are selected for sale lhro‘!d Turkey, he said, now has Parliament a proposed law to pramm children younger than 15 from attend- ing cinemas. “The infidel,” he commented, “seems to be proteeting himself from the moral ravages of the Christian.” He cited denunciations of American films recently made by Sir Philip Gibbs of Engiand and Sir James Paer, high commlssiuner of New Zealand. “Sir Ramsay Macdonald,” he said, “in 1927 deplored before the House of Com- mons the effect of depicting to Orien- tal races the Caucasian as & lewd per- son.” This, Father Seidenburg added, should bring the blush of shame to the most abandoned of men. Part of the resentment of foreign peoples against our pictures, he added, was due to the fact that Amerizan films portray villians and courtesans as for- eigners. A recent test, he said, con- ducted among Chicago high school stu- dents disclosed many false attitudes. to- ward foreigners derived hun the motion picture.” CERTIFICATES AWARDED Foreign-Born fiomen Complete Home Hygiene Cpurse Work. A class of foreign-born women, com- prising a student group from the Ameri- canization School, was awarded certifi- cates in home hygiene and care of the sick this afternoon at the Red Cross chapter house. Mrs. T. W. Richards presented the certificates. Gen. F. W. Keefer ad- dressed the class. Program arrange- ments were made by Comdr. Woodsill of the Jane Delano Post, No. 6. The_ class, under the supervision of Mrs. M. F. Conway, was financed by &m Jane Delano Post. The local An!rl- n Red Oross and the ladies of the {):nr:c; Ohapter Motpr Corps also eon- ributes OUR AWNINGS MAKE YOUR HOME COOL & COMFORTABLE It 18 such a comfort to know your home. during the hot Sum- mer months, Cornell Wall Paper Co. 714 13th St. ' Natl. 6708 Reefer’s NO-MOTH Makes your Clothes Year floor. Refills for vears, $1.50. As Pictured cushions, in tan with trim. DULIN Q MARTIN Connecticut Ave. ana 1" (HOUSEWARES SECTION—L STREET ENTRANCE) When Food and Ice Are Worth Saving USE AN EDDY Eddy Refrigerators have served Washing- tonians for 57 years at a minimum cost. satisfaction with one Various $1550. Top Icers, $28. Your guaranteed. illustrated ... doubly styles. Chests, As 533 .00 is Westinghouse FANS $5.00 The 8-inch Oscillating Fans which eliminate dangers of direct draft and reduce room tem. perature 10-15 degrees, Closet Safe for One ,$2.00 Hooks on the baseboard near subsequent. All-Weather Glider Green frame with 6 reversible green Other Gliders—$21.50 Up Come early for choice of 1115 F STREET N. W. Ready Saturday Morning at 9 @Clock Sharp Sport and Summer Hats Every hat originally made to sell for $5 Hats for Sport! Hats for Matrons! Hats for Dress! Hats for Street! We Dozens of leading N.Y.designershave contributed to this great event. made the rounds of the the best values* D. C, FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 1930. BOSTON POPULATION IS PUT AT 775,729 Revised Figures Are Expected to Boost Hub City’s Total at Least 5,000. By the Assoclated Pres BOSTON, June 13—A preliminary announcement from census headquar- ters here yesterday set Boston's 1930 population at 773,720. It was empha- sized, however, that revised figures would be available next week and these would set the population at over 780.000. ‘The figure announced yesterday showed a gain of 27,669 over the 1920 figures, but was slightly less than the total of the State census in 1925. The supervisors said the many names were being received at the wvxt-u'll! lm names added by Mont It was polnhd aul that the outlying | tion, districts which are politan Boston had population since 193 of this was due to moving into the suburbs. AWARD FOR HEROISM Sergt. Quick, U. 8. A., Receives Distinguished Service Cross. Charles A. Quick of Chicago, for- merly sergeant, 136th Infantry, 33d Division, has been awarded the Dis- tinguished Service Oross by the War Department for extraordinary heroism in action in the Argonne 3 Prance, October 11-16, 1918, and a part of m and that mest Boston residents E S 1 T P ST N 1) 5t e TS Sale! stock up! Regularly $1 warm weather. In jasmine, bath soap. Gold-trimmed leather cess. very lovely. the package. Let our doorman park your car while you shop—a Jelleft service. Fracy Bath Salts ~—that not only perfume your bath water but soften it at the same time. In a fine quality so refreshing for violet and rose jolifieur to match the only because of a slight change in b2 %hnwegu etro- 000 fin | Al Warren of PBMP& second lieutenant, 116 In« hncry, inl Division, & silver nu m-' try in m-u. Vitralite Enamel nrf MEtro. 0151 BUTLER-FLYNN 607-609 C St. Phone for Color Card A FA‘HION INSTITUTION NawYorh Summer Toiletries —at prices enabling you to put in a whele Summer’s supply without a strain on yeur pocketbook! Toiletries to. keep you fresh and ceol during the hot weather—bath salts, powder, soap—all in the usual fine Jelleff quality, but specially priced for this sale. For the savings are perfectly grand! So Make-Up Boxes Regularly $1.95 Silver stars 39¢ the rose, brighten up these boxes. compartments and large mirror om inside cover. boxes in wood with glass bettems, modernistic design on cover, and a Godey print With three Other make-up Regu- larly $5 New $2.50. case, D’Orsay’s Ganika Perfume, Regularly $5.50 In a glistening bottle of diamond cut crystal is this mysterious per- fume named for an Indian prin- You'll find it unusual and $2.75 Reduced in price Toiletries—Strest Eloor ‘Use this shopping list: Large size cleansing tissues, regularly 50c. Purse size Odorpacts (a deodorant) Zerodor (a liquid deodorant), regularly 75¢c. De Vilbis' Atomizers, regularly $1.50, $2 and $3.50 Fracy Velour Powder Puffs, regularly 20c Kamrapak compacts, that open like a camera, with rouge, powder and llpstnck‘ Regularly $2.50...... came dsbessenanessees NOWSLID Marques Elorza’s “Argentina,” $3 Regularly $10 A special for this event. A § ish perfume of charm and m: tery. blue flask with silver m--m Seldom can perfume of ‘this qual , ity be had at se lew a price. other ideal gift. In a handseme midnight An- Tonletrnes % Off' FASHION IN‘TITU'I'ION Washingtan J‘ Stocking runs re- woven in 24 heurs. Exclysive service by KNITBAC machine. Tomorrow! Sale of Fox Scarfs and a few blue and beige wolf $39 Regularly $49.50 and $59.50 NOW-—when this sale brings you scarfs of superior quality at a thrilling price— NOW—when your old fur scarf is uttering its Tomorrow! last gasps— NOW—when you're wearing your silk suits and eoats— NOW is the time to buy a fur searf! For they add dash and distinction to yeur ¢ostume, they're quite the smartest of smart! Each searf in this selection full length with thick, lustreus fur— not usually found at this special sale price. Red Fox Beige Fox Brown Fox Pointed Fox Beige Wolf Blue Wolf Pur Salon—Jourth Pleor 1 1,000 Pairs of Sorosis Summer Shoes Hats for Every Occasion! Both Large and Small Headsizes! Hundreds of styles in berets . . .. new tams . . . little brims , .. large brims . upturned brims with flaring backs. leading millinery designers of America . . . we pur. chased for “‘spot cash” all their new sample stock of sport and Summer hats at a fraction of the usual mars ket value . . . we group: all these hats into one great $7.50 Regularly $10 and $12.50 35 Styles! Sport shoes (active or spectator sports)! Street shoes! Afternoon shoes! Low heels! High heels! Medium heels! All Serosis styling which stands for both ultra smartness as well as comfort. Natural linen embroidered with brown or. blue dots in a Theo tie pattern—colored kidskins in beige, parchment, tan, brown, blue, green, black, gray, patent leather and black satin. Rubber and gristle soled sports shoes in brown, tan and brown, smoked elk and tan, white and black, white and brown, All at this special price! Think of the saving! The ideal sport shoe in smoked elk and tan with gristle sole. You'll like its sturdy eomfort. Turquoise blue leather sendal, with tee strap and blond trimming. Smart with pastel frocks. Graceful tie, with reptilian trim and- high heel. and brown—smart for street wear. Sale Starts SATURDAY Promptly at 9 AM. All Sales Final No Exchanges No Refunds No Layaways Every New Summer Color Every Wanted Style The Smartest of the New Materials Buy 2 or In tan 3 hats now for the Summer! Extra Space-Extra Salespeople-Extra Service High heeled, one-strap model with reptilian applique. No Mafl or Gracefully arched instep. Phone 01ders, Xo. C O L8 Shoe Shop—Strest Floor

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