Enjoy a Delightful Breahfaat, Luncheon, Dinner or Supper at 74th Year - d4mvmi4 Famous lUstavkant W lift Connecticut Aw, For Quiet Refined Home Living Convenient to our best clubs, store*, churches, schools and fi| movies, but off the noisy high- J ways, nothing quite equals tht Shannon and Luchs Forest Section of Chevy Chase, Md. Here we have taken the house that has ordinarily given four fair sized bedrooms and produced but three with two baths. But WHAT SIZABLE ROOMS AND WHAT COM FORT AFFORDED THE PERSONS WHO PAY FOR THE HOME HAS BEEN GAINED. A master bed suite as large as the remarkable living room. A third floor is available for additional space if required. Beautiful garden, yards, two car built-in garages. Exquisite finishing. WE CONFESS TO THEIR BEING QUITE LUXURI OUS AND APPEALING I MORE TO PERSONS HAY ING HAD EXPERIENCE IN CROWDED HOUSES. But Aren’t You Entitled to That Sort of Living? Easy Tfirms TO INSPECT Drive out Conn. Ave. to Chrw Chase Club, Bradley I.anr. TI'RN LEFT two squares to our sian i Red Arrow), follow RIGHT to property. Shannon&luchSl 1435 K St. NAt. 2343 k tat When your throat is sore, drop Mistol in your nose—let it run back. Use as gargle I Doctors approve it—all drug gists carry it. Soothing Mistol keeps its healing balms in contact with sore mem branes long enough to relieve inflammation and check in fection of nose and throat. Mistol naa.ua. sat, ore. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. BENJ. LEVIN ANNOUNCES OPENING OP a Banjo & Ukulele Btudlo at 1519 Conn. Ave. Phone Pot. 5950 for full particulars between 6 and 8 p.m. 15* SPECIAL NOTICES. Peonies—s 3 for si.oo—new varieties; suaranteed to bloom; large, strong roots; Ranted properly_free. 332 First s.e. •_ f*7SIRE TO PURCHASE CONGRESSIONAL CTub membership. Address Box 185-K, Star office. • PAPERHANGINO—ROOMS PAPERED. $2"00 and up II you have the paper. Experienced ■tic. Call Col. 3588. • _ , NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS han those contracted by myself. Bert iPld. Sargent rd ■ Brookland. D. C. 16* S AND PEARS. DIRECT FROM OR <-r,ard. 50c per bushel; oak and pine wood, guaranteed honest measure. sl2 to sls per cord, or $5 per small truck load: top soil. 25c bushel; dwarf English boxwood, remark ably well rooted, 6 to 8 Inch plants. sls per hundred. A. B. PRICE. Met. 4487. Ware house. rear 925 Virginia ave. s w. CHAIRS FOR RENT. SUITABLE FOR BRIDGE PARTIES, banquets, weddings and meetings. 10c up per day each; new chairs. Also invalid rolling chairs for rent or sale. UNITED STATES STORAGE CO.. 418 10tn at. n.w. Metropolitan 1844 WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD to or from New York. Richmond. Boston, Pittsburgh and all way points, special rates. NATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN.. INC.. 1317 N. Y, ave. Nat. 1480. Local moving also. FURNACES —Cleaned fincludlng smoke pipe) and paint ed tor $3 50; repairs, parts for every furnace, steam and hot-water heating. Leaking fur naces permanently repaired with AJax Quick Beal. All work guaranteed. Robey Heating Co.. Inc,. Lin. 1440. 1395 Fla, ave. n.e. 15* WANTED—LOADS TO CHARLOTTE. N. C OCT. 10 Co PITTSBURGH OCT. 10 TO BCtfON OCT. 15 Adu all points North and West. AGENT ALLIED VAN LINES We also pack and •hip by STEEL LIFT VANS anywhere. SMITH'S TRANSFER Sc STORAGE CO., 3313 You. Bt. N.W Phone North 3342-3348. ; ROOFS WILL LEAK— —plaster fall, decorations ruined. Just to long as you keep putting off those re • pairs Why not have us end your roof I worries? Feel safe! V'/V'YN.TQ ROOFING District COMPANY. 0933. iAN ENLARGED PRINTING PLANT —designed to meet modern business demands. May we serve you? |Thc National Capital Press FLA. AVF-. 3rd and N N.E. Line. fiOSO Painting and Papering KHl*h quality work, very low prices, free I tlmstes. 20 years at 1210 H at. n.w. New I cation. 901 Webster st. n.w. Edwin S. Rucker , Col. 4224. COLORADOANS SET | TO DEFEND FARMS Pioneers Who Bought Land 50 Years Ago to Fight U. S. Ouster. By the Associated Press. DENVER, October 15.—Pioneer Colo radoans prepared today to defend their farms against an influx of homestead ers who, the Federal Government has declared, are entitled to 20,000 acres of the richest soil in the West. The Government ruling sets forth that the Union Pacific Railroad, through one of its subsidiaries, was given 20,000 acres too much under the land grant act of 1867. The land Is, therefore, held to be open to settlement. Although the order was issued in June, it was not made public here until late yesterday, when William R. Eaton and Charles B. Timberlake, Represent atives in Congress, began a hurried ef fort to have it rescinded. Ready to Use Force. More than 200 pioneer families bought the land from the railroad and improved and farmed it for more than 50 years. Most of the disputed soil lies in Weld County, the center of Colorado's sugar beet industry. Under the Interior Department’s rul ing. the farmers who have occupied the land for half a century are barred from filing because first rights go to ex service men. Local officials said the department did not publish its action in newspapers as is the custom. Publication of an account of the ac tion bv Colorado papers brought an im mediate response from farmers, who declared they would not surrender their lands to ' land-jumpers” and would de fend their property with force if necessary. The Denver Land Office reported some claims have been filed, and more per sons are seeking legal description of homestead lands daily. Officials said they expected a rush to the former rail road holdings. Carry Plea to Washington. Attorneys said that they believed pres ent owners eventually will secure title to their property if the cases go to court, but that they will have difficulty in legally removing homesteaders in the meantime. Representative Eaton today prepared a request to the Interior Department to suspend the order at once. Represent ative Timberlake has left for Washing ton to seek immediate relief for the ' pioneers. PAGES OF HISTORY ARE TURNED BACK AT YORKTOWN FETE (Continued From First Page.) commanders of the Army and Navy, leaders of national patriotic organiza tions and members of the Senate and House will take active parts in the pro grams of the four days. A number of brilliant dinners and other functions in honor of the marshal of France and other notables will be given by the State Department, the Yorktown Commission, the Common wealth of Virginia and various patriotic organizations, beginning tomorrow with a banquet by the State Department and the commission in hdnor of Marshal Petaln and officials of the French em bassy Gen MacArthur will entertain at a banquet for the marshal and his staff Saturday at Old Point Comfort, with Gen. Pershing among the guests of honor. Work Late Into Night. Far Into last night workmen labored to complete the setting for the cele bration for which commissions of the State and Nation have planned for more than a year. At midnight, ex cept for policing the grounds, the stage was declared complete. After the early morning military ma neuvers there was to be a rehearsal of the colonial fair with its Jousting, plumed helmets, fair ladies and glitter ing lances, and the pageants depicting scenes from the histories of the colonies. The French cruisers steamed into Old Point Comfort at 8:22 a m. today. After running up the American flag beside the French tri-color the ships fired a salute of 21 guns in honor of their arrival at the American shore. Batteries of Fortress Monroe boomed out a welcoming reply over the sun lit waters of Hampton Roads. Without waiting for the French party to land, Warren D. Robbins, chief of the Protocol Division of the State De partment, and Army and Navy aides assigned to Marshal Petain during his visit, boarded the Duquesne from a launch to greet the distinguished vis itors. Mrs. Wilson Present. Gen. Pershing, Ambassador Claudel. Gov. Pollard, Gen. McArthur, Mai. Gen. Emlck, commander of Foft Monroe, and other high officials waited on shore for the Verdun hero. Others In the reception group were Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, Senator Swan- You Know This The Minute You See WRENWOOD at Rittenhouse St. & Broad Br. Rd. Chevy Chase, D. C. On top of Washington That the homes are dif erent. That the entire setting is quite unlike anything you have seen. That there is nothing cheap about the homes inside or out, and still they are in a price range from $13,450 to $14,200 You will admit upon in spection (and please take time to inspect thor oughly) that they are the most exquisite homes you have seen. The new ideas expressed axe fascinating. Either the new first floor service room or cel lar, as you wish. Do not put off. The unusual grouping forms a private park, a great protection to future values. Open day and evening. To imped: Right from Chew Chate Circle on Western Avenue 2 squares to Rittenhouse St., right 2 squares to Broad Branch Road. 1 IShannon&luchx| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D, C„ THURSDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1931 Final Rehearsals for Yorktown Pageants i —""" ■ 1 , UPPER left - Re-enactment of the historic surrender of Cornwallis. G?n. Lincoln is receiving Cornwallis’ sword from Gen O'Hara. This photograph was made at the final rehearsals yesterday. Upper right: An American battery in action in the final campaign of the War of the Revolution. I-est center: The American troops charge the British. Lower left: General view of maneuvers. Right, center: British troops firing across breastworks. Lower right: Gen. Washington on the battlefield. —Star Staff Photos. i ; son of Virginia and representatives of ; the Army and Navy. The French party, including a group j of descendants of George Washington's comrades in arms at the siege of York- j town 150 years ago, came ashore before | 1 noon. No special program was set up ' for the visitors today. \ The Duquesne and Suffren. escorted 1 by the three American cruisers which , ' greeted them at daybreak off the Vlr- ! 1 ginia capes, will steam up the York River to Yorktown this afternoon. Group Arrives by Train. ■ While the Duquesne and Suffren lay ; at anchor under an unusually warm October sun off Old Point Comfort, an other group of distinguished visitors to ' the Revolutionary War battle ceremony arrived by train from New York. In this party were the Due de Broglie. . descendant of Col. Prince de Broglie of Rochambeau’s army at Yorktown; Com : tesse Jean de Pagne, sister of the due: ! Marquis de Chambrun, descendant of i the Marquis de Lafayette and a mem ber of the French Parliament, and i ’ Marquise de Chambrum; Gen. Cuno von Steuben, who traces his name back to j i the German officer in the Continental \ ; Army, and Baroness von Steuben. Among those coming on the French j ' men-of-war were Marquis de Grasse, j the Marquise de Rochambeau. Gen. j D'Ollone, the Due de Noailles and M. j Savier de Rochambeau, all descendants ! jl TjjS 1 li Ik 1 L “ ! ♦ IT IS OUR PLEASURE ♦ 4 ♦ + TO ANNOUNCE TO OUR MANY ♦ PATRONS—THAT OUR + 1 'I ♦ MOTION PICTURE DEPARTMENT ♦ ♦ IS NOW IN CHARGE OF ♦ ♦ MR. THEODORE M. MERZ | X WHt) WILL GIVE EXPERT PERSONAL $ X ATTENTION TO EVERY AMATEUR MOTION ♦ PICTURE REQUIREMENT ♦ 1 * ! i COLUMBIA I ♦ PHOTO SUPPLY CO., Inc. ♦ ♦ 1424 New York Ave. N.W. NatT 0619 X \ ESTABLISHED SINCE 1900 X\ i | of valiant French officer* who aided ; Gen. Washington in his strategical i J i ictory on this Virginia peninsula in 1781. D. A. R. GROUP TO SAIL. 300 Will Leave Tomorrow on Steamer for Yorktown Celebration. Led by the president general, Mrs. Lowell Fletcher Hobart, representatives of the National Society of the Daugh ters of the American Revolution will leave Washington tomorrow afternoon aboard the steamer Southland, char tered for the occasion, to take part in the Sesquicentennial celebration of the surrender of Yorktown. The 300 women, descendants of men who fought in the Revolution, Include the national officers, who will officially represent the society at the dedication jgpn SLOAN’S I Liniment of the two tablets which are to be placed at the base of the Yorktown Monument. The dedicatory exercises will be held Monday morning, at 9:30 , o’clock, Just before President Hoover makes his address. Other speakers will include Mrs. Hobart and Mre. James T. ] Morris, chairman of the Yorktown Ses- : quicentennial Committee. The tablets will be unveiled by Hamilton Fish, Jr., j descendant of Col. Nicholas Fish, who | served on Washington's staff at York- j town. 236 Nantes Discovered. The tablet to the American soldiers ] bears 103 names, while' that to the Fiench has 133. The research work ; which has resulted in the rescuing j from oblivion the names of 236 men TP Netu-PeKfecr- Guaranteed L j\res spric& «/; IH|| | FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY To keep the factory 4 busy over the winter HOW YOU SAVE ...we are offering on I diini.ops other a limited quantity of I S|M jg~& rKt w7o tires...this special ■ *o x sv4 overall# $5.74 ij.ss and wonderful price. I iioxliso-it 4.;« i.»s Dnnlop makes but I isxloo-i* mS sis one, genuine first line, I rii iiiio top quality tire...no I 29x5.50-19 ".47 12.00 xernnHs nn rheaner I Duty (6-Ply) seconds. . .no cneaper ■ 29x4.50-20 «.l» 10.46 rrades. 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October ,15.—The Staunton Merchants and Business Men's Association has passed a resolution re questing the State Highway Commls-, sior. to route the Lee Highway into Staunton from the north over the Au gusta street route rather than over the Coalter street route. This resolution is In line with recent action of the Staunton Chamber of Commerce, which body also requested the commission to use the above en trance to the city. I Nature Gave Full Measure when she made Marlow’s Reading Anthracite! MORE HEAT in every ton of this super-pure hard coal —more con venience and economy! Marlow’s Read ing Anthracite is accurately sized for YOUR heating plant. Order what voti need NOW. Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. N.W. NAtional 0311 Dependable Coal Service Since 1858 \ It’s freez- I | I lng weather |l I outside, what a W II I pleasure to phone 11 I know your bln your M I CERTIFICATE order B J finest Pennsyl f sylvanla hard coal. 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And just rarin’ to go off again. How does he do it —living on trains —snatching hasty meals at railway station counters and small town restaurants? For ever on the jump. If you could see him pack his bag for a trip, you’d know. A bottle of Nujol always goes in. Nujol keeps body functions normal, even under abnormal reg’ime. Keeps hasty meals and indifferent food from upsetting you. Wards off the bad effects of change of water a»d climate. I For Nujol not only prevents any | excess of the body poisons (we ; all have them) from forming, but also aids in their removal. Whatever your job is—you need health and energy to ride it. Take a tip from this star sales man and take Nujol regularly. You’ll be amazed to find how much more clear-headed and all round efficient you feel. Keep up this treatment faithfully for 3 months and you’ll feel like a million dollars. And you will have taken the first step toward getting it. Hamburg rs it more aSdlLl cooking with GULDEN'S Mustard^ ! * ▼r! gLi im Star Salesman Isn’t Nujol worth trying? It was perfected by the famous Nujol Laboratories, 2 Park Avenue, New York City. It couldn’t possibly hurt you, anyway. (Nujol contains no drugs or medicine.) And if you’re like other people it will do you a world of good. Be sure you get the genuine. —Advertisement. - if A-3