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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1929 her patience further thanm I had ,” he thought. THE EVENING STORY ||nieriFsh mar ne Michigan, were recovered after a cruise | recovered eight bodies. Other graves up the Dvina and Vaga Rivers. These | were located in the crude cemeteries soldiers were killed m ambush by | of eight different villages. attacking Bolsheviks in 1918. The bodies have been placed in cas- . Bearchers in the Lake Onega area, |k d will be returned to the United Announcmg Dr. Tutt’s Pills FOR CONSTIPATION BILIOUSNESS AND INDIGESTION QUICK—SURE RELIEF CLAFLIN Optician—Optometrist 922 14th St. N.W. Established 1889 The New Bamn. “Well, Hattie, is breakfast ready? I've got to get a start to town to look at that tractor and bring out paint for the barn,” and Sam Hale sat down at the table where he could see window the fine building just completed and ready to be painted. “You'll bring enough extra paint for the house, won't you?” said his wife as she put the bacon and eggs and fried potatoes before him. “Since you've de- cided on white for the barn, we could have jt for the house, too.” “T can't afford tc buy it now, Haitie. The white costs & lot more than red barn paint,” her husband answered shortly and applied himself to his breakfast. An impatient exclamation burst from Mrs. Hale's lips and a flush spread over her usually pleasant face as she stopped in the Kkitchen doorway and a:nred at her husband with exaspera- tion. “Yes, you can have everything the best for your live stock and your crops, while your family lives in this wretched tumbledown old house,” she exclaimed. “It's a disgrace.” “Well, I'd like to know where you'd be if I didn't have those barns. Living in a worse place than this,” retorted Mr. Hale, “Yes, and what will everybody think to see the finest stables in the country and the poorest house? I've stood this humiliation about long enough. Keep- {ing this place decent and clean is a woman-killing job, and now you refuse even to make it look respectable on the outside.” And she turned into the kitchen and shut the door. Sam Hale left for the city without saying good-by to his wife. As he drove his_new truck carefully through the trafic his thoughts wavered between the pleasure of seeing his barns beauti- | fully painted white and the uncomfort- able sense of his wife's hurt feelings. Back Home EXCURSION October 5, 1929 v low_round-trip excursion fares Ve o Washinston to points in The Carolinas Georgia Alabama Florida Tickets good on all trains and in Pullman Cars On Payment mecessary harges. CNATEEinal Limit, October 25th Stop-overs allowe New Limited train. leaving Wash- ington 17:36 P.M. Eff. Sept. 20th. Wew 'improved schedule Havana Bpecial 3'2 hours quicker to Ha- Jane. Leave ” Washingion 1110 AM eepers open oc fo%0 . "Ef. Bept. Sotn: For information or tickets phone or call on F. E. Masi, DPA 1418 H Street N.W. Phone Nat. 7835 ATLANTIC COAST LINE “‘Hattie’s as unreasonable as any other woman once in a while,” he muttered. | “Here I am doing my best for her, and what thanks do I get? Only married 10 years and plenty of time ahead for a 'new house. She's comfortable as she is, as far as I can see. It's just a sort of jealousy that's alling her.” He felt unfairly injured this morning. His wife's anger had almost spoiled the long-anticipated pleasure of this day's business. “She’'s bothered me about that house till I'm tired of it,” he thought stub- bornly as he watched the cans of paint being loaded into the truck. Toward noon he had finished a careful inspec- tion of the new tractor and placed his order for immediate delivery. Then he hunted up the the restaurant popular with the farmers from his county and ate a hearty meal in company with one handsomely constructed barn, the up- clous silo attached. Mr. Hale stated that the paint was to be white, and that Ed and Joe Barnard were helping him put it on the next day. “Fine place you'll have, Sam. Go- ing to paint the house, too, while you are at it, I suppose,” remarked his neighbor. Mr. Hale was on the point of reply- ing, “No, I can't afford it.” when he paused al ald instead, “I'm calculat- ing on that.” Then he wondered why he had said what he had not intended saying two minutes before. “I've got to do it now, I sup e muttered to himself as he climbed into the truck. “I've said I'm going to and I can’t very well get out of it and save my face.” But on the way home Mr. Hale’s heart was singularly light and a warm smile occasionally upturned his thin lips as he remembered the extra paint in the truck and looked forward to the moment when he should surprise Hat- tie with it. How pleased she would be. After his refusal this morning she would not have the least hope of. it. choose the fin- est tea of most delicate flavor OOLONG TEA DAINTIEST OF TEAS In the FaLL make new lawns, turned to a warm glow of pride. The paint had cost more than he had in- protect old ones o~ Read Simple Directions » DWN seed germinates quickly in the fall. And young grass is not both- ered by weeds. That’s. why experienced gardeners make new lawns in the fall. And in the fall, too, they feed old lawns, to with- stand winter killing. Feed your lawn—whether new or old ~with Vigoro! Use the simple method shown here. As easy as 1-2-3! Vigoro supplies essential food ele~ ments lacking in the soil. It quickens growth, makes strong, healthy root systems, increases humus. Vigoro is the largest-selling plant food. It is complete, scientific, prop- erly balanced. Clean and odorless, pleasant to handle, easy to apply. And inexpensive! Costs only 10c to 20c for every 100 square feet. Your dealer in lawn and garden sup- plies has Vigoro. Order from him today. Swift & Company Thoroughly Get Vigoro where youbuyLawnand Garden Supplies. Vigoro comes in 100, 50, and 25 1b. bags, andin51b. packages. For real results be sure toorder enough! VA product of Swift & Company Complete plant food for lawns, gardzm,flowéra, shrubs, trees the | driveway and ran the truck into the of his neighbors. The talk was of his| to-date wing for the cattle, the capa- | All the morning's dissatisfaction was| worth 1t to make Hattie smile led, to make his he fine as his barns. He was feeling very proud and satisfled with himself when, well after dusk, he turned into his tended paying, but it was “h‘u':pl‘l'; ome garage. He had walked up the path nearly to the kitchen door when he stopped, startled. The house was completely dark, not an oil lamp gleamed in its usual welcome. His heart ski] a beat as he opened the door and siepped into the gloomy kitchen. In the dusk ‘ne saw tha; the room was partially empty, the oil stove was gone, as well as the table and chairs, What could this mean? He called “Hattle!” but his volee seemed too small to be He ran through the house. It was H not & child, not his wife, not a sound. Sam’s heart was pounding and his mouth was dry. A dreadful fear clutched him as he stumbled back through the empty kitchen out onto the back porch. There he paused, not sure what to do next. Instinctively, he turned toward the new stables, as he did_when he came out of the house. “What!” he exclaimed with a fresh start. “Is that a light out there? Who has gotten in? Or—it may be on fire?” In a driving rush of terror he broke into a run along the familiar path to his_beloved building, his pride above all his essions. Was he to be robbed of all he had at one stroke? What a dreadful, horrible day! The lights through ‘the windows were brilliant, the door tight shut. With one great shove he thrust aside the sliding door and | stood stupefied on the threshold. He brushed one hand slowly and heavily across his eyes, down his cheek and cll:tchzd his chin and blinked repeat- edly. There in the flood of electric light that he had just had installed sat his wife and three children about the kitchen table, busily eating their sup- per. The pleasing odor of a stew arose from a kettle simmering on the oil stove near by. “Hello, daddy!” the boys shouted as they always did, as though nothing was out of the usual state of things. His wife’s smile was calm and welcoming. “Come and sit down, father. You are later than I had expected, so we didn’t wait for you.” Mr. Hale's fright was slowly turn- |ing to anger. “What's all this non- sense?” he demanded. “Only, father, that we've found the new barn so much more comfortable and finer than that poor old house that we all decided to move out and stay here instead” sald Mrs. Hale sweetly. Mr. Hale bit his lips and stared at her silently. This was so different from the homecoming that he had been look- | ing forward to so happlly. His first anger | died down. “Poor Hattle! I had driven .| send me off an ; | thing for you and all of us. Don't you cry 3 Then he came up to )‘:&‘wfl: and slowly reached out for her hand. “I'm sorry, Hattle,” he began, “that I drove you to this. I've been thi about you a8 | all day and—well, there's enough paint for :he house waiting out there in the truck.” “Sam, you don't mean it. You've got it, after the way I acted to you?” asked Mrs. Hale tremulously. Holding his hand in both hers, the téars welled up and lllpged one by one down her cheeks an her lips, where a quaint smile embled. ere was more joy than remorse in those tears—the joy of her long felt, seemingly hopeless wish so unexpectedly come true. But his was a triumphant relieved, thoroughly whole-hearted smile that knew no tears or regrets. “You were right, Hattie, all right to make me do the right a tear. Let's forget this day—shall we? Il have the boys start painting the house first tomorrow. And one day be- fore long we'll bulld a fine new house, Hattle, finer even than the stables.” ‘Then he saw the aeppy smile that he had been looking forward to all the way home brighten ier face, and he could scarcely realize the great sense of satisfaction that came over him. “Come,” he said, “let's take these things back to the old house and have our supper. I'm starving hungry.” (Copyright, 1929.) BODIES OF U. S. DEAD IN RUSSIA LOCATED 81 of 128 Buried in Unidentified Graves Recovered by Vet- eran Commission. By the Associated Pres KANSAS CITY, —Eighty-one of 128 can World War dead buried in uni- dentified graves in the Archangel area of North Russia have been recovered by & commission of the Veterans of Forelgn Wars. Notification of the partial success of the commission was received here today at national headquarters of the vet- erans’ organization from Capt. Edwin 8. Bettelheim, jr., Washington, D. C., chairman of the group of Americans which has been in North Russia since early in August. ‘The commission has been working under great difficulty, due to the ex- treme cold and lack of definite in- formation concerning the graves. Seventeen bodies of former members of the 339th Infantry, recruited in ., September 26. ies of Ameri- headed by Walter Dundon, Detroit, have | St: “gjl—fl/ work while you sleep” ‘What do you do when a slug- gish system ‘tells you the bowels need a little help? ‘The best thing yet discovered for the purpose is still the little candy Cascaret! Take one when- ever the liver and bowels are not functioning as they should. Casgarets are pleasing to the palate, and pleasant in their ac- tion. You eat them just like candy. They work while you sleep. Gentle, but thorough. Cas- carets don’t stir-up the stomach or upset the system. But they cleanse the entire thirty fect of bowels in one comfortable, thor- ough action that leaves the sys+ tem clean and sweet; Jeaves you . 3 X CaSéara is Good for the System with an untainted breath, une coated tongue, and clear head. Cascarets are made of cascara —1long regarded one of the most beneficial Jaxatives known to med- ical science. They are sweetened with pure cane sugar and flav- ored with real licorice. {hildren love ghem. So do most grown- ups! Why dake anything harsh when constipation threatens? Whenpever a dull headache, las- situde, pr sick stomach with loss -of appetite warns you of poor elimination, a {"ascaret .or two is the most harmless form of help Yyou could give a lagging system. Take a candy Cascaret tonight and ste how fine you'll feel in the: morning—and for days after. TH Y wopk wHILE YOU St Opening Date Wednesday, Sept. 25 2todP. M. Continuing Monday Wednesday Friday During the Fall and Winter months until further notice. Come Out on Wednesday and Enroll for the Complete Course! Interesting! Instructive! A cordial invitation is extended to you to attend this series of cooking classes which will continue throughout the Fall and Winter and will embody many subjects of interest to the ladies of Washington, in our Modern Kitchen Now Located In Our Downstairs Showrooms 419 Tenth Street Under the Supervision of Mrs. Winifred Tharlow—Director Home Service Bureau Washington Gas Light Co. New Business Department “Come and Bring a Friend With Youl” --Hair Rats Are Gone! | ANCIENT PREJUDICE S BEEN REMOVED Modern woman, freed of the restraint of long tresses, realizes the comfort and sanitation of the bobbed head. The shears in the hands of AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE have severed the bonds of another archaic dogma. ast ing did it’’ Gone is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes—Progress has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irri- tants) from the tobaccos. EARS ago, when gigarettes were made without the aid of modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against all cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, properly aged and skillfully blended—“It’s Toasted.” “TOASTING,” the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are present in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTING”—LUCKY STRIKE'S extra secret process—removes harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient prejudice against cigarette smoking by men and by women. “It’s toasted” No Throat Irritation-No Cough. TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coast-to-coast network of the N. B. €, © 1929, The American Tebacco Co., Mirs. & “It's Toasted”—the phrase that describes the extra “toasting” process applied in the manufacture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop—are scientifically subjected to penetrating heat at minimum, 260°—maximum, 300°, Fahrenheit. The exact, expert regulation of such high temperatures removes impurities. More than a slogan,“It’s Toasted” isrecognized by millions as the most modern step in cigarette manufacture,