Evening Star Newspaper, September 3, 1930, Page 3

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‘Turn now to Page C-7 and read a message that means some- thing to the women of this city! Sturtevant Blowers For Burning Buckwheat Coal Fries, Beall & Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. NA. 1964 1 Rhode Island— “Labor Day” Night by » SI’BCIAL NOTIC! . SUITABLE a1 un ebureh, sup o testivan s _parties, church suppers or festivals. from i8¢ to 30c day each: new chairs. per ne: 'ATES STORAGE CO.. 418 10th ot nw. l(eu’opouun 1844, 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts eontnr.(ed b; EHARLEE Gri CoSin st ¥t GOING? _WHER oo ang well move your furni- Tell b8 ture and cost. phone hd trouble: INC.. phone_National = FOR GROCERY STORE. expert mechanics to install. D r_1450._ Wil Save_mone: WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any one other than my- OSCAR RINGEISEN, Jr., 1113 Virvinia 5 iD PAINT YOUR or dirt: FRIGIDA] eafe. efc. catur 1 mucl:. heating systems [ROBEY HEATIN fi"éoFs REPAIRED' B ~—80 that they STAY repaired. Our bou hold in any s' experience. " Roofing 119 3rd St. 5.W JINOS company District 0933 GRAPES, APPLES AT QUAINT ACRES lle Pike, only § miles " Wanted—Return Loads n, New York City, Rochester. '"mum?i'- golumpns, | ohio! Asheville; rfol nd anwhere in Vermont e Hiompahire. Lony-distance ' moTin our specialty. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co,, 1313_You . North 3343 Peaches for Salc chance for Elberta T4t Sorse” Asheon, - Ma 3 Ope1_evenings Printing Craftsmen... are at your service for result-getting publicity ‘The National Capital Puss 1210-1212 D St N.W___Phone Nation; 19415, CITIES ABOVE 100,000 POPULATION Bay State Leads—Number So Classed Increased Over Previous Census. By the Associated Press. Official compilations by e Census Bureau today placed the .umber of American cities having 100,000 or more population under the 1930 census at 94. There were 68 citles of that class 10 years ago. Massachusetts led the list of States with 9 cities of more than 100,000. Ohio took second place with 8. 'Counting New York City as a single unit, the Empire State ranked third with 7. New szy rhced 6 cities in the class, while Pennsy v:mn. Indnm. Texas and Cali- ornn ach lation ol flie “cities, which_still is .u ject to revision in the final ofeial gount, was announced as follows by the ureau: 1930, Massachusetts— Boston 787,271 Increase. Springfield ‘Worcester 196,837 252,386 147,206 163,818 162,650 101,025 127,358 Providence ...... ‘Waterbury New York— Bronx Borough. Brooklyn Bor'gh. Manhattan B'gh 1,872,145 Queens Borough 1,079,357 Richmond B'gh. Rochester Syracuse Utica . Yonkers .....eeee New Jersey— Camden Elizabeth Jersey Cit; Newark P-m:on 135,123 117,172 114,557 315,642 442,842 138,267 122,610 115,922 1,964,430 669,742 110,289 143,428 253, 558 Phuldelphh Pittsburgh Readi) Scranton Gary Indianapolis Tllinois— Chicago Peoria Michigan— ' 673,624 28,667 580,307 64,823 31,016 115,410 2,508 84171 36,720 16,001 75,074 49,135 22,574 21,150 38,822 *3,536 71,927 49,208 13,191 11,216 69,751 38,251 | 80,943 49,726 1 572,557 101,417 464,753 271,418 1 142,469 13909,484 822,032 214,175 122,327 111,039 106,632 805,753 Dlnrlfl of Columbia— ington 486,869 'ashi ves Virginias .. 128,968 182883 Jmk.sonvuu Miami Tampa Hl‘ll 334 T THE JOHN EVENIN( Led Brother ¢z 1,000- Mole Horseback Trip at Adge of 14 Years. INSPECTED FIRST MINE/ Tyrned Down Better Payingf Job to Begin Career as Mining Engineer: BY J. V. FITZ GERALD. ‘The boys started on horseback from San Francisco to Oakland. Their aunt, with whom they were staying while to the trip. They took & small co pass, a shotgun, fishing tackle and $60 in money with them. Blankets were also in the extra equipment, for the lads planned on doing a bit of camping before and after they visited their friends in Oakland. John Hays Hammond, the two lads, was 14 years old. His brother was two years younger. They had been brought up in the California | of Civil War days and they were ac- complished riders and skilled in the ways of the great outdoors by the time most bovs of today are still playing with the older of toys. Their father, a graduate of West Point and an Army officer detailed to duty in California, had taught them self-reli- ance, a love for outdoor life, and instilled in them a spirit of adventure from the time they were able to whlk. So it wasn't unnatural that they should make up their minds to see something {of the world instead of merely taking the ride to Oakland and back to San | Francisco. Headed for Yosemite Valley. ‘They had heard much of the Y@em- ite Valley, then a comparative wil- derness, and they turned their horses’ | heads in that direction, seeking the ad- | venture that appealed so much to their venturesome dispositions. Occasionally they stopped at small hotels, but for the greater part they slept in the open. They shot their own | game, varied their diet with the fish that abounded in the mountain streams and thrived on their own eooking. By the time they reached the Yosemite they still had a substantial part of their money left. From there they into { | ventured | Nevada, and by the time their father returned from the East and traced | them through express company agents they had ridden approximately 1,000 miles on horseback. And all this in a | period of less than three months. While seeing the country young John | had an opportunity to inspect his first/ quartz mine. He spent several days watching the operations there. That experience was largely responsible for choice of mining engineering as a profession, a career in which he has gained world renown and great fortune. Visited All Parts of World. ‘The trail that started with the trip to the Yosemite carried him to practi- | cally all parts of the world, through dangers and hair-raising adventures in South America, Africa and elsewhere and to friendships ranging from lowly miners to crowned heads. John Hays Hammond was born in | 1855 in San Francisco, to which his | father, who had been a major in the Regular Army during the Mexican War, had been detailed. His mother was a | sister of Col. Jack Hays, famous as a | ‘Texas Ranger and later the first sheriff | of San Francisco. Young Hammond | spent much time at his uncle’s home. | His mother died when he was a little fellow. His father and uncle, between them, taught him to ride, to swim and to| hunt. He proved that he was an apt | pupil when he and his brother made | their 1,000-mile trip into the wilds, de- pending largely on their skill with rod and gun to live as they rode through the lonely and rugged country. ‘The younger was educated in the public schools of San Francisco. Later he went to a private preparatory school in New Haten to qualify for admission to Yale. He was enrolled in college at | the age of 17 and was graduated in | 1876. At Yale he was a classmate of | former President Taft. From Yale he went to Germany, where he spent three years in the Royal School of Mines at Freiberg. He | Kentucky— Louisville Tennessee— Chattanooga Knoxville . Memphis Nashville Alabama— Birmingham ..... 307,808 119,539 105,797 252,049 153,153 257,656 455,792 185,383 141,281 260,397 101,975 160,892 289,579 254,562 287,644 140,184 365,518 116,010 106,885 301,890 72,917 61 u«w 78,851 68,573 94,088 69,206 | 101,421 | 31,158 | 22,074 50,206 11,573 9,920 Portland 43,602 California— 637,212 130,536 se. - Pigures revised since State nouncement was issued. iThe population for the area known as the Municipality of Atlanta under Georgla legisiation of 1929 totals We would be without a lot of things, were it not for Salesmen. They mgke us realize our wants, men for 1w pres- our ' reoresentative? L Moving For 30 years President /and General Manag of Krieg's Express Co is NOW in business at 904 10th St. N.W.. Call District 9115 v FISED ( KRIEG| FURNITURE RENTING BAUM OFFICE FURNITURE Special ROUND TRIP Excursions September 6-7 812 to TOLEDO & DETROIT Lv. Washington Saturday 3:45 P. M. Returning Sun- day, Lv. Detroit 4:25 P. M,, Toledo 0 P. M. Tickets Coaches Only September 7 and 21 $4 ATLANTIC CITY Lv. Washington, 6:15 AM. Returning Lv. Atlantic City, 7:00 P.M., Philadelphia, 9:10 P.M., same day. to September 7 and 21 $5 NEW YORK Lv. Washington 12 Midnight Satuglay Returning Lv. New York, West 23d St, 5:47 PM. ™ Liberty Sb‘, 6:00 PM Sunday. to HOME LAUNDRY |Phone ATlantic 2300 Ak Tieket Aseot Srost htseeing Tours All Time Shown Standard Baltimore & Ohio their father was in the East, consenth‘ STAR, WASHINGTON; D. C., WEDNESDAY, HAYS HAMMOND'S LOVE FOR ADVENTURE INSTILLED BY HIS FATHER, AN ARMY OFFICER [ WENT TO WORK FOR SENATOR GEORGE HEARST OF CALIFORNIA AT $75 A MONTH | THRIVED au“’ THEIR OWN . COOKING. returned to the United States and went | to work for Senator George Hearst of California at $75 a month. His father wanted him to be a civil engineer, but the lure. of mining was too great and he turned down a better paying job with a railroad to begin his chosen career. He made progress enough to warrant him in going into business for himself. For a time he was too poor to pay an office boy and swept out his own office. He rode through the dangerous Apache | country on a business mission in 1882, ! later almost losing his life in trouble- some Mexico. He came into world-wide prominence when he went to South Africa to act as an expert for Barney Barnato and Cecil Rhodes at their vast diamond He was accused of being im- plicated in the Jameson raid on the Transvaal Republic and was sentenced But he was pardoned and went on to greater fame and fortune. holdings. to death. (Next: David Sarnoff.) (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- | _paper Alliance.) SEPTEMBER . 3, 1930. ONE DIES, SIX HURT 1 DAY'S TRAFFIG TOLL Guy Nelson, 18, of Leonard- town Expires After Blow- out Overturns Car. Traffic took a toll of one life and | .nlx}cuu-lmu in Washington and en-‘ virons yesterday. Guy Nelson, 18 years old, of Leonard- town, Md., died at Providence Hospital shortly after being injured in a mishap on the Leonardtown road. The youth was driving alone when a tire blew out and caused his car to overturn. Miss Anna A. Maul, 21 years old, of Buffalo, N. Y., was seriously injured { while three others suffered minor hurts, when a car driven by the young wom- an's {ather, Andrew Maul, 55, an in- structor in the McKinley Vocational | School at Buffalo, collided with a ma- chine operated by George P. Kimmell, 45, of 3118 Sixteenth street. Skull Is Fractured. | Miss Maul received a fracture of the skull, while two sisters, Hilda, 18, and Betty, 11, and_her father, escaped with slight cuts. Kimmell was unhurt. Four-year-old William E. Owings of 210 East Capitol street was seriously injured when an automobile ran him down as he was crossing the street in front of his home. The boy was taken to Casualty Hospital. Clarmont Willlams, 16 years old. of the 200 block Maryland avenue north- east, was arrested for investigation in connection with the accident and sent to the Recelving Home, but was later released. Willlams was driving the car which hit the boy, police say. Lieut. Ronald Austin Hicks, 30 years Will Rogers Says: TAHOE TAVERN, Calif.—Hurrah for the Frenchmen, they sure de- served it and the nation did, for they had made so many sacrifices, and during their well deserved plaudits, it seems rather a coinci- dence that they are bringing back to civilization Andree’s body. When you write your Nst of air heroes put that fellow at the top, not Dbecause his name begins with an A, but when he shoved off in that thing 33 years ago he knew that even if he got where he was going there was not going to be any cheering_crowds, or reporters, or Grover Whalens. He was the origi- nal chance taker in the air, and no man will ever take as big a one. § m—————— In the last fiscal year work to the ex- tent of $59,000,000 was undertaken or authorized for immediate m-uguntlon in the carrying out of Italy’s land provement_projects. ADVERTISING creates a greater demand for products which invariably re- duces the price. That is why Dr. Freiot believes in advertis- ing, uses it and recommends it. Advertising greatly increases our number of patients, which in turn greatly reduces our fees. FREE EXAMINATION SUCTION sucTion Be Arranged. DR. FREIOT Phone National 0019 407 7th St. N.W. Entrance Next to Kay's Jewelry Store You get one which engineers have proven to utilize these 4 rules for burning oil. OIL MUST BE: 1—Mechan- ically broken into tiny atoms. 2~—Mixed with the right amount of air. 3—Burned suspended in mid air. 4—Burned surrounded by IN- TENSE reflected heat. This accounts for OIL- O-MATIC’S high effi- ciency. And the Price is Low DOME/TIC WM.H 001' TL“.HW | sluggish feelgngag Put yourself right with nature by chewing Feen - a - mint. Works mildly | but effectively in small doses. Modern = safe — scientific. For the family. CHINESE 'TO BE DEPORTED ‘Wholesale Shipment of Illegal En- trants Planned by Mexico. MEXICO CITY, September 3 (#).— ‘Wholesale deportation of Chinese enter- ing Mexico illegally is planned by the President Ortiz Rublo has approved an arrangement whereby a steamer will be chartered to take them all back to their native country in one trip. Officers in various parts of the country will round up the offending Orientals, of whom there are many, and concentrate them at Man- Mexican government. zanillo for the deportation. . ‘The education building at the Uni- is to_be named versity of Texas soon Sutton Hall, in honor of Willlam S. Sutton, Texas educator. old, attached to Bolling Field, and Dr. Lawrence Dunn of New York City, es- caped unhurt when the car in which they were riding overturned at Twenty- sixth and K streets and pinned them beneath it affer a collision with a car operated by Charles Ross, colored, 31, 1045 Wisconsin avenue. Ross charged with reckless driving. Injured in Virginia, Robert W. Hamoney, 24, of Arllnlwl’ Va., was brought to Emergency Hospita! with serious injuries suffered under similar circumstances at Arlington ave- aue and Columbia pike, Arlington Coun- ty. He was pinned beneath his ecar after it was struck by another machine and overturned three times. Mahoney received a fractured skull, laceration of the lip and arm and bruises of the head and body, Mrs. Marion Porter of Arlington, drove the PRESIDENT SEES VETERANS PARADE Reviews Second Military Demonstration in Balti- more in a Year. By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, September 3.—For the second time in a year, President Hoover came to Baltimore to review a military parade and for two hours yesterday watched 15,000 or more veterans of the Nation’s wars, augmented by regular | forces, tramp before him. ‘ Under a sultry sky, the parade, the | feature of the thirty-first annual en- | campment of the Veterans of Forelgn | Wars, wound its way past the stand in which the President and civil and mili- tary dignitaries sat. ‘The President’s previous trip here was to review a parade of the veterans of the Rainbow Division of the Ameri- can Expeditionary Forces. Regular Army, National Guard, Ma- rine Corps and naval units led today's parade through streets deeply lined with spectators. After the military units marched the veterans, now civilians, who fought in Cuba, Mexico, the Philippines and the ‘World War, many straining the uni- forms which a few years ago fitted their younger bodies. One unit from Wisconsin dragged a little wagon in which rested a beer keg and several empty bottles and jugs, bringing applause from the throngs around the reviewing stand. A few sec- tions and a dozen bands later came a unit from Springfleld, Mass., which halted in front of the President to fire a salute from a toy cannon. Brilllantly uniformed drum and bugle corps composed of World War veterans furnished martial airs for the Reavier steps of the Spanish-American War veterans and those of other campaigns. ‘The President came to Baltimore at noon to be the guest at luncheon of Mayor W. F. Broening at the Maryland ‘was | Club, which was attended also by Gov. Albert C. Ritchie, Senator Phillips Leer Goldsborough, Maj. Gen. Smedley D. Butler of the Marine Corps, representa- tives of several foreign embassies and city offic! CLAFLIN Optician—Optometrist other vehicle involved in the erash, ac- cording to Arlington County Pollcemlnl John R. Burke. Drive ont M The Way to Westchester out Wisconsin \ l Apartments . . . At Rentals Commensurate inue_atraight ke, On The 1o/t ts Westonester: 922 14th St. N.W. Established 1889 More Than 100 Times Around the Wo:il The motor trucks of the American lee Company would probably take a prize from any travel club in the world—were mileage, alone, considered. During the past vear these trucks have traveled 2,842,875 miles—more than 100 times around the earth. And at each of their many stops they have left cool comfort and the promise of deliciously fresh The American Ice Company prides it- self upon the service that it is able to render its customers. Its great fleet of motor trucks is only one ilem of the uipment that makes the prompt daily delivery of ice a certainty, instead of a hope. “So regular is this service that many of our friends say they can set their watches by the arrival of the American Ice deliveryman. American ICE Company American Drivers " will take" your order for American Quality Conl. R o UNITED X STATES TORAG OMPANY Next to the question of where you are moving is the question of who is to move you.XWe can answer the latter to your complete satisfac- tion. Call Metropolitan 1843 for an estimate. )¢ %418 10th Street 4 Avenue venue to Wisconsin alse | intersects, Cathedral Avenue 'Just Tou may. drive Avenue to the same cross avemues. assachusetts Cas A o8 With Exclusiveness and Convenience . . . EXCLUSIVE Located at the entrance to Wesley Heights, bordering jon Glover Parkway, West- | chester assures a refinement and individuality that is un- usual . . . for an apartment. i ’ || TWESTT BEAUTIFUL Westchester is comprised of a 30-acre tract of woodland, artistically landscaped. A garden spot that makes living there a delight. Sample Apartment Furnished by W. & J. Sloane Suites From Two Rooms and Bath to Seven Rooms and Three Baths Every Apartment Decorated to Suit the Individual Taste CONVENIENT Just 10 minutes from the heart of the shopping district via beautiful Massachusetts Ave., Westchester is but a short drive from home to the office. STCHES Reservations Being Made for Immediate Occupancy ULTRA-MODERN Skillpd designing has created a room spaciousness that ap- peals at once, Perfect ventila- tion and altitude provide a most desirable liveability. b M, o CATHEDRAL AVE & 59™ STREET Westchester Development Comporation: & x i o5 Tower Building Nat ional 8333

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