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oiF TS ON MEXICANS Drtiz Rubio and Party Leave —Capital After Four- “Day Visit. children laden with gifts from ent Hoover and his son Allan, P Ortiz Rublo, President-elect of Médxico, with a large entourage, left WaShington yesterday afternoon aboard 8 special car bound for Buffalo, N. Y., and a tour of the Midwest. A personal call Hoover, his aides and his son Allan was Teceived by Senor Ortiz Rubio shortl: after noon yesterday. This was the fina formal social function of the future | Mexican chief executive's stay in Wash. ington. President Hoover carried a gayly wrapped package containing glass | toys, one for each of the Ortiz Rubio children—Pascual, Ofelia and Eugenio— and one for each of the children of Manuel Tellez, Ambassador of Mexico. The President’s visit was brief. He apd his aldes remained at the Mexican embassy about 15 minutes, exchanging farewells with Senor and Senora Ortiz Rublo and their party. Expresses Gratitude for Courtesies. ust prior to boarding his special car the Union Station the President. llmt hlue statement expressing com- tion with his visit and g::ltude for the many courtesies shown during his four days in the Capital. “On leaving Washington,” he said, “I take with me the sentiments of such great cordiality that I cannot but feel confident that the future relationships of the governments and peoples of Mexico and the United States will be the source of a mutual co-operative un- derstanding beneficial to the world as- pirations for peace and harmony.” ‘With Senora de Ortiz Rublo, the three children who accompanied them here and members of his official party, the President-elect expects to remain in Buffalo several days. He will take ad- vantage of his stay there to visit Ni- agara Falls and its great electric gen- erating plants, which have interested his engineer’s mind keenly. Arthur Bliss Lane, chief of the division of Mexican affairs of the De- | g, partment of State, accompanied the arty to Buffalo. It was understood El would remain ‘with the President- elect throughout the rest of the tour 1t it could be arranged. Embassy officials were unable to an- nounce definite plans for the President- elect’s itinerary, but it was known that he hoped to visit Chicago, Detroit and perhaps San Francisco before returning to Mexico City. . Visits Lincoln Memorial. Senor Ortiz Rubio’s last day in Wash- ington was but a shade less active than the other three days of his visit. Accompanied by his children and wife, he visited the Lincoln Memorial in the morning. Here the three young children and Helen Beristain, small daughter of fthe embassy's assistant military attache, placed a basket of orchids and yellow roses bearing the “To the living memory from the children of Returning to the embassy, the Presi- dent-elect awaited Pluflde;!t ?wverlsl call, afterward of a farewel informal luncheon wit Ambassad Teilez and his staff. CIVIL WAR VETERAN, 104, DIES AT SALT LAKE CITY | ’lé"l of Maine Brought First Load of Coke Stoves to Utah in 1865. By the Assoclated Press. in n, Washington March 10 1825, but had Uuh since uns when he brough '.hg | coke load stoves from KnrnzyNehr wumsmemox in an interview before his, fluth. said he had voted & ht Re- nl.:llun ticket since the election of coln, with the exception of one bal- ot he cast for William Jennings Bryan. Sackett En Route to Havana. HAVANA, December 30 (#).—Senator Prederic M. Sackett of Kentucky, se- lected by President Hoover as American Ambassador to Germany, is a passen- ger on the liner Caronia, expected here today. ‘The birth rate for England and Wales for the quarter ending September 30, Just recorded, is the lowest ever record- ed for that period. Night Coughing Quickly Relieved ] Famous Prescription Gives ‘ Almost Instant Relief Night coughs, or ¢oughs caused by a cold or by an frritated throat are usually due to causes which cough ucfi and patent medicines do not But the very first swallow | of Thoxine is guaranteed to stop the most stubborn cough almost instant- ly. Thoxine is & doctor's preserip- tion, working on an entirely different ’pflndpll it goes direct to the in- cause. contains no harmiul is pleasant tasting and safe e whole family. Sold on a back guarantee to give better uicker relief for coughs or sore than anything you have ever Ask for Thoxine, put up ready | origse o 356, 60c wnd E100 poriy | Solfiby all druggists—Advertisement. urly Express Motor Coaches :43 A M, then 800 A. M. 1o . M., 9:30 P. M. and 6 Motor Coaches Diily to HILADELPHIA 8350 _ round @ oo i Gy NEW YORK 22 85350 _ roud $9§50 For timetables and i Telephone—Metrop 1512 Ticket Office and Waiting Room UNION BUS DEPOT 1336 New York Ave., N.W. (Also stop at Hotel Willard) MITTEN TO! (People’s Rapid Tramsit Owned by Pennsylvania Priladeiphia Rapid 1 rasiit Co fram President | FRANK DAVIS, JR. FORD COMPANY PLANS $30,000,000 OUTLAY Developments Will Include $20,- 000,000 for New Buildings and Additions, Edsel Announces. By the Assoclated Press. DETROIT, December 30.—The Ford Motor Co. will expend more than $30,000,000 during 1930 for plant de- velopments in the United States, Edsel B. Ford, president of the company, an- nounced yesterday. Twenty million dollars of the appro- priation will be used for new buildings and plant additions, and more than $10,000,000 will be expended for plant equipment. These expenditures will be made in various parts of the country and are exclusive of new outlays by affiliated plants in foreign countries. coasts will be expanded. Saturday the Ford company an- nounced introduction of a new body lesign. PRINCE MAY.VISIT PARIS. Dowager Queen Marie Reported Op- posed to Regent’s Plans. BUDAPEST, Hungary, December 30 (#)—An unconfirmed report from Bucharest yesterday said that Prince Nicholas, uncle of young King Michael and a member of the regency, had ex- pressed a desire to go to Paris, where his brother, the former Crown Prince Carol, is now living in exile. He was also reported to have said that a return go Rumania by Carol would be harm- ess. Plants on the Atlantic and Pacific| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, DOVER BESTOWS ILLNESS OF 10 DAYS FATAL TO LAWYER sistant Attorney General, Widely Known. Frank Davis, jr., 54 years oM, for- mer Assistant Attorney General in the Wilson administration and widely known in Washington and Ohio legal circles, died yesterday at Garfield Hos- pital after an iliness of 10 days. Following a legal educaticn at the Cincinnati Law School Mr. Dav; tive of Batavia, Ohio, and son of Frank Davis, former judge of the Ohio Com- reon Pleas Court, served three years as special counsel to the attorney general | of Columbus, Ohio., where he later fol- ‘lowed a private practice frem 1914 to } Appol.n'.ed Assistant Attorney Gen- eral in 1919, Mr. Davis served until ' 1921, when he terminated his Govern- menc services to become a member of | the law firm of Palmer, Davis & Scott, {of which A. Mitchell Palmer, former Attorney General, is the senior mem- ber. During his 'service with the De- partment of Justice he was highly garded by the bench, his last omcla] eliciting the personal commendation of the late Chief Justice White. Mr. Davis was a member of the Chevy Chase and Cosmos Clubs of Washington and the college fraternity, Beta Theta Phi, which he joined dur- ing his undergraduate work at Amherst College. The Davis residence is at 2101 New Hampshire avenue. Beside his father he is survived by his widow, Mrs. Nancy House Davis; a daughter, Mrs. Amy Dean McCoy of New York; a son, Robert Davis, and a sister, Mrs. P. M. Ashburn, wife of Col. Ashburn, Army. Medical Corps. Fu- neral services will be held tomorrow at t.h; home of the father in Batavia, Ohlo. FARM STRIKE PLANNED. Farmers’ Proposal for Wage Cut Refused by Workers. PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, December 30 (#).—A widespread agricultural strike is expected January 1. Farmers have proposed & 15 per cent reduction in wages because prices of agricultural products have dropped about 50 per cent recently, but their laborers have ret\lud to accept such a cut. t the same time Dr. Spina of Germm Agrarian party was reported be encouraging farmers to boycott in- dustrial goods in order to force the sw— ernment to increase duties on cereals. Furniture New and Sllghtly Used Orlental and e Specialty Co. Frank Davis, Jr., Former As-| Massacre,Macdonald appearance before the Supreme Oourt Brushes ditioning Holiday Dance Floors. Furniture Polishes. Paints, Lacquers, Enamels, Stains & 1334 N. Y. Ave. for recon- Varnishes Dowager Queen Marie was understood have advised against both ste) & Polishing 2447 mn i Keep That Gift | Table Good Looking | There’s a practical way to do it. Just have us fit it with a gleaming PLATE GLASS Top. 1 The cost is moderate, and the beauty and polish of your table are adequately protected from nicks, scratches, hot-dish blisters and other injury. Y We_utilize FINEST QUALITY PLATE GLASS WINDOW & AUTO GLASS for-table tops. FLOOR POLISHING BRUSHES HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS & GLASS Phone Natl. 1703 loE——[o|[———=[osE—=a|a[———|q] * A trip 1027 Connecticut Fés., Weshington, D. C. JEAN W. CH T TO ELIROPE is not an every-day event Choose your ship carefully. Make half the pleasure of your business trip or tour the voyage itself. These ocean flyers mirror the finest American living standards . . . up- to-the-minute toilet fixtures ... home-like roominess in staterooms o+ stewards who speak your own language...an American cuisine that isastudiedart...and everydiversion known to a sport-loving American. Mfleet&bmbnm-llmhmu Plymouth, Cherbourg, Hamburg PRESIDENT HARDING. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. 15, Feb. 12 ‘TWO 16 DAY WEST INDIES CRUISES Choose either Jan. 10 or Jan. 28.. . sail from Philadelphia through 4,317 miles of ue on the transatlangic vnnt Nassau, King- wvana. Only ll’IS/n uqu deldlnfnl shore excursions, o rite for literature and deck. pEn. Consult Your Local S'ocmhlp Aqon' o UNITED STATES LINES ILDRESS, General Agent .o Phone National 7563 Unusual Stories Of Year Detailed By A. P. Manager Gang it Pole Flight. Cooper Includes and Byrd’s By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, December 30.—Kent Cooper, general manager of the Asso- clated Press, in a radio talk last night named 10 unusual news stories for the year 1919. He explained to his au- dience that these stories might not refer to the most important events, be- cause history alone will have to recor® which events in the year were really the most important. The 10 which he named were, in chronological order: 1. The signing of the so-called lat- eran treaties between Italy and the Vatican. 2. The slaughter of seven individuals in a gang war in Chicago February 14. 3. The death of Marshal Foch on March 20. 4. The major catastrophe of the year, which was the fire and explosion in the clinic hospital at Cleveland on May 16. 5. The trip of the Graf Zeppelin around the world, from August 7 to August 29. 6. The wreck of the Transcontinental Air Transport air liner City of San Francisco on Mount Taylor on Sep- tember 3. 7. The visit of Ramsay Macdonald to President Hoover in October. 8. The outbreak in the Canon City, Colo,, prison on October 3. 9. "The collapse of prices on the New York Stock Exchange, which reached its climax on October 30. 10. Comdr. Byrd's flight over the South Pole. “Steln s If you have two or more pairs of shoes to be repaired, we will call for and deliver them. Phone Metropolitan 0800. D. C, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1929. TWO GREEK OFFICIALS RESIGN OVER LETTER| i Gen. Kondyles, Former Leader, Had Charged Political Anarchy to Venizelos Government. By the Associated Press. ATHENS, December 30.—Two Kondy- list members of the government resigned yesterday because of publication of a letter written by their leader, Gen. George Kondyles, resigned, charging the Venizelos government with leading the country into_political anarchy. They were Pericles A pmnm. minister of interior, and Dr. Gen. Kondylu leaped to Lhe Xm- ARTHRITIS! Any one afflicted with Arthritis knows how cult it is to over- come the pain, st larged joii a number of chronic patients brought splendid resul! Met. 1062. Mountain Valley Water From Hot Springs, Ark. 215 Dist. Natl. Bank Bldg. ditional information. > New Year Week Special 1 9c .utlac,led Also O'Sullivan and Hood Rubber Heels STEIN'S SHOE REPAIR CO., INC. 627 E St. N.W. \ Save a Little More —if ever so little—than you spend and you are 3 doors from 7th St. happy, economically, according to Franklin’s old philosophy. The Union Trust Company believes in the principle of that philosophy and devotes its efforts always to encouraging system- atic saving. It makes saving worth while by paying liberal compound interest and affording unquestioned safety for funds. 29 paid on Checking and 3% on Savings Accounts . SOUTHWEST CORNER FIFTEENTH AND H STREETS NORTHWEST EDWARDJ.STELLWAGEN PRESIDE NT As delightful to use as perfume ... yet it kills the germs of common colds BREATHE VAPEX ANY- WHERE—ANY TIME—FOR INSTANT RELIEF FROM COLDS B ea s RS SRS No oruer TREATMENT for colds is so delightfully refreshing as Va- pex. Certainly, none is swifter or more convenient. Just a drop on your handkerchief brings instant relief—all-day-long relief. Just a drop at each end of your pillow fights your cold while you sleep. With a few deep breaths your head clears, sniffling stops, all annoyance vanishes. Waking or sleeping, you breathe your cold away. ... Vapex is both powerful and effective largely because it is so very concentrated. A single appli- cation keeps its strength all day or all night long, and the Vapex vapor, for all it is so delightful to inhale, kills the germs of common colds. Tests in the foremost labora- tories have strikingly proved it. « .+ Actually Vapex costs only ac an application, for the $1 bottle contains fifty applications. Always ask your druggist for V-A-PEX in the trim white box with the green triangle. Don't expect the same results with cheaper imita- tions. . . . Distributed by E. Fougera & Co., Inc., New York. A drop on your handkerchief VAPEX Breathe vour cold away. B, U. 8. Pat. Q8. front of Greek polluu in August, 1926, Ihen he mnle coup d'etat against thén Fresident, of the Hellen:’ Pangalos hue was im- prisoned in the Cretan fortress of Iz- zeddin and subsequently in Athens. Kondyles assumed the premiership, but retired after holding an election as he promised when he took the reins of government. After leaving office he Jjoined the opposition forces against the new government. AR German Tennis Star Killed. BERLIN, December 30 (#).—Hans Moldenhauer, tennis star, was fatally hurt as his automobile skidded and struck a street car yesterday. He died in & hospital. Three other persons in the automobile suffered contusions. Stores Closed New Young Hens and Toms b 39¢ BANK HOLD-UPS CURBED BY TEXAS DEATH AWARD Marked Decrease Is Noted After Association Offers $5,000 for Dead Robbers. DALLAS, (#).—Bank robberies in| e Texas have shown such a marked de- crease since the Texas Bankers' Asso- siation offered a $5,000 reward for every “dead bank bandit” that the reward will be held open. ‘Texas had 38 daylight bank robberies in one year and 21 m the eight weeks before the reward was announced in November, 1927. Since then there have been only 9 daylight holdups, in which % ve robbers were mua and rewards insurance, when the reward was an- nounced. In the 24 imme- diately before the reward was offered, not a shot was fired, not & robber cap- tured, and not a cent of money recov- There are more than 1,600 banks in XS, SO Col. Samuel B. Burkhart, Jr., Dies. CHICAGO, December 30 (#).—Col. Samuel B. Burkhardt, jr., 64, graduate of West Point in 1 teran of In- dian wars, Spanish-American War and World War and commander of & regi- ment at Camp Sherman, Ohllllcothe, Ohio, after World ‘War, died toda Open Late the Night Before Health, Happiness and Prosperity For the New Year —is what the American Stores Business Family Wishes Every Family in the Land! In the Stores Where Quality Counts Your Money Goes Furthest! TURKEYS [SMOKED HAMS Small Sizes . 25¢ Plump Young Geese. . ...™ 32c|Prime Rib Roast. . . .....™ 35¢ Long Island Ducks. . 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