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ae em eh ana ene o set a sumabioneaapnainae ce mmeetl THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1919. 1 Giant Dirigibles to Carry Passengers Across | Country-N. Y. to Pacific) to The Star by N. EH Al | Mvoradie weather, and 60 que an KRON, Ohio, June 7.—Within hour In windy weather wil open . on | Gully service between Alin and ie hk miles, ‘ eo for New ‘york, Cntcage| This, howeveris but the (tral) iive i Canada, Florida, Texas and|*#Frvice. If thia proves succe:tstul | sustment ‘Coast. the service will be extended, Fire |” pho sea of marital troubles Is the AE these Mights are succees-|t0 Now York and Chicago, and} regi of a 9 -word clause in the the monetary returns are|then thruout the United States. | war rixk insurance aot which gives work will start upon | DOCK AT ROOFS lan ex@ieted man the right claim even larger than the OF TALL BUILDINGS \exempdion from ‘he compulsory al papable of crossing the) Landing places will be obtained ‘lotmerd, provided his wife ia not) Bad & regular passenger! in the very heart off these citins, | Worthy of such support. It is aim-/ GS Will be established betwoen | probably on the roofssof the tallest | Me for tip married soldier or ‘ and London. hotels Unlike airplanes, wirich| tot fit oul an exemption blank, re not dreams. They are need a large landing place, the-air.|!t Ys not Always eo simple to prove of veterans of air navi-|ships need but a small platfarm | that the wife iv unworthy | men who have spent years| upon which to dock dkny soldders returning from over alloons, airships and alr-| This was demonstrated recentty| seas are Ailing these exmmption | backed by a corporation|;when a O-foot army dirigible| claim with the board. The women been making dirigibies| from the naval station at Wingfoot| they tmartied, shortly before sailing | Lake, Akron, lanxfod two passeng-| for Mr ynce have been untrue to them ers on a @0-foot platform on the | @uring ¢heir absence, they my, and root of the Hotel Statler, Cleve-| they with to get back the money | land. that was \Jopped from their pay, and 7S miles an hour in ‘The first of this fleet of atr lim-| Paid to tRoir wives, This ts impor ere will carry 12 passengers sible whee the money has been 7” PAGEANT | It is now under construction at| steadily neeived by the wife, but 7 }the plant of the Goodyear Tire &| any money \that has failed to reach ~~ [Now a Lot of War Grooms Want to Get Money Back They Alloted New Brides BY CAROLYN VANCE BELL EXEMPRON BOARD=>y eae — WASHINGTON, D.C. June 1 : ADs WAR RISKC INSURANCE BUREAU Pe. fy, 79,108 matrimonial equa | “ Diew rm ‘ he event poard/of the war tisk ‘insurances inade up of lawyers. awall ad au Iaand more cas Ser1L20 74,108 FOURTH NEAR. PIKE HAR RVONIAL SQUARNEES-77, aie a wv x ” Here Tonight, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, is the biggest mystery story Seattle has seen in 6 months “THE ible 300 feet Jong, capable Made from the sensational SATURDAY EVENING Rubber Co., pioneers in the manu-| ber is hei wp until the charges | |facture of airships and makers of) 4re wubstan tA sted or <iaproved. & large percentage of the ‘diimps'| Many men claim in their enlist and dirigibies that were used by| Ment papers frat they do not know the United States during the world | the addrens or wheresbouts of their war. wives, This involves the board in Many secrets of the government, | 0 investigritian that sometimes lpertected during the war, have|Tange from San Frantieco to New Been placed at the disposal of the | York reaver firm. The exemption boar? has often more sucenam in flirting a wife than | PROMOTERS LONG IN the man who cikims he has em |AIR FLIGHT GAME ployed the most strenucti efforts, The promoters of the airship Often it hag Beep found that oom - manding offieers are so touched by passenger line are Ralph H. Upson, ) \for years aeronautical engineer at the tale of some enJinted. man about hie wife that they yetuw to cheek the Goodyear plant, holder of the| jig pay, saying the “woman iun't James Gordon Rennett balloon| gay a and don't. deserve the lerephy io 2914, and W. Young, eleran balloon nav gut ' money.” ‘This summary act om the part of H They are being gten both finan- make | cla! and mechanical support by the the officer ls likely te get him in trouble with the exemrdjen board ‘and | Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. ‘The dirigibies will be from 300 ‘The usual admixture of comedy, | tragedy, and serdidness a divorce “4 to 900 feet in length, They will learry from 12 to 100 passengers. court or court of relationa | fs contained in the pape filed in |The express airships will carry labout 100 tons of exprees. the exemption section. It is eatimated that the trip to Sensations of an Artist’s Model A VIENNESE LOVE STORY CHAPTER XX Manze Nudina, Nussian- born. te telling in The Star of ber jencos as a model in New ‘orks Latin quarter, in the ¢ r. }did not work rapidty. he would stop and simply look at me |for minutes at a time, I did not know what to make of it. Finally I asked him why it was he stared at! | me no, | Many times| "| San Francisco, | New York, about 600 miles, could be made im eight hours. ltakes about 16 hours. A trip to over 2,000 miles, and now taking four days, could be accomplished in abont 60 hours. Rates, it is estimated, will be “about three times the railroad fare. ’ ing held in Seattle high | this week and nest. At r districts are organised signed for parts. Every Ue is eligible. there will be Besides the fleet of air liners, the company has aise under course of construction a sport model dirt- |xible. Its cont will be but $8,000, It will be about 90 feet long, con- |taining 5,000 cubic feet of gaa, \The motor will be able to go a | maximum of 70 mfiles an hour, but | the average speed will be 60 miles | it will seat but two persons. more than one man in the pescwed to get each allotment. Many charges | ot crueity are made ugaimR wives) by husbands who were soinctd to) Uck the Hun, j ‘The reason that such a large pre- portion of married men tn the army had to resort ta the exemption board ia undoubtedty because they entered the service to escape marital trow | Dies. Morale i¢ thearetically protected | from impairment by giving a man | the right to claim exemption trom | support where much suppart had not | the service. |servies in ether shall net prevent etrangest and most mysteriouw Painter that I have ever known. ! had been told that be was a “curious | Ttiwas at @ little restaurant on Shers Ge sq,, and I was with « party of verted (o bim thie man turned his been contributed privr to entry Into) ay uonn me and all the color went . loutpt bis face Toe board also protects the #004 | 14 wenothered an exclamation name of the army aod navy #0 that | coke) frightened “Tt bs because you remind me of— BY MANYA RUDINA did not y any ore Famous New York Artist's Model |, listen” he sald 1t was at this time I met the rey you a story ng to tell you ook fo much like I have been want her.” rt of fellow nd stood looking mi ‘I met him before T pewed for him. | then to neon we Out of the window Then Me came back f came fore the o: he aid i And as he maid em » came When it came my turn to be pre on Reemed to surge thra him. Whe started back lie i tell you Vienna. “Tin is Manya Rudina.” my he answered, slowly, and laying down his “Lam going to} Tt i because you | He walked away to the other end of the studio | Amoricn the week be ak of the great war,”)| from Vienna.” Vienna” seme strong And after pause: “I am going to| about how I came to leave “The name I have now is not my Went Seattle high ‘ mute high ecnoot: | IRON CROSS 1S SOLD at Ballard high | have been already ¥ own, I wae an artist in Vienna. ‘There was a girl—it is he that you remind me of—#ehe was a model, too, and ahe had posed for me. 1 loved her!’ Tere he topped and I thought | he would not go on with the ry. | But he ain { “Bho good to me: she was a true friend, but—she did not love me. She loved another agrtiit, tor whom | she also posed. He was rich and) Well known-—te painted portraite— | portraite of rich women mostly When I told her of my love, she was sorry, but #he told me that she! loved this man and I put the thought! of her eut of my life as much as al could. But it was very hard, "She had posed for this artist for | years, She gave him tnsptration for his work. Tecause of her he created | many Denutiful paintings, and be| came famous. At last he received! an order to paint the portrait of a| wornkn—she was @ countess, a young | woman of great beauty and very | rich. Thin woman came to pose for! her portrait. One day, the model | performance of:cloar legal and moral bend was maying, The artist stared FOR BAR OF SOAP} °e!stonr, wae jat motor a long time without speak : | LOS ANGELES, June 7.—With) ing other districts, and pre-| 3, crosswof the kalser’s vinta BLOWS OFF HEAD | \"T beg your pardon.” he maid } arganization perfected. The | PORTLAND, Ore. June 7.—~| family. Me did not apeak Pinglixh ‘are te be in districts, the |in his pocket, which he purchasedi procding over business troubles, | vary well, “I am forgetting myself “rehearsals taking place |for one bar of soap, Lieut Walter) Arthur Lange, 22, blew off his head he went on. “Mut you reminded me acatiqns of he | Maater of the U. 8 8. Waunajwith o snoteen Jatt night Lanaias 6 dee set Sates I know. that 18 wisi heene wan discharged from the navy re- ff now,” he # . color ana | retu Win; Betew leantty. | ‘The next day I received a card re. Ban. terday. . } —. from him asking ne to pose for He states that the tron crosses j crowded Nim. Hoe told me he wanted tg paint are eagerly offered for soap in Buy a Flecher me. I went the following week, Hamburg and that the best of war our car. I flownd there was something Fifth | rang about him. He treated ma with the utmost courtesy, And he Hetels in Now Here— the tremendous Do you believe a wife can be deceived by a man impersonating her own husband? Rupert sania ta tay oem eh ee Oe Julian, a fine actor. does it in this remarkable ing. She told me that she had dis drama covered that the man she loved eared " Se a nae! Cmte ts ee PARRY Love, marriage, duty—See what they mean to a girl sold to a faithless husband. See this story of a young wife's heart, the greatest woman drama ever shown on the screen, It gives to woman a soul of her own, MALOTTE on the Wurlitzer Dagger Dance and Habanera from “Natomas.” Pathetique, “Till We Moot Again.” Concert 1:30 Bunday Another Sweetie Hanging Round.” Until 620 P. M-—General admission 22c, children 10c, loges 43c—plus war tax. After 6:20 P. M.—Lower floor 31¢, balcony 22c, children 16¢c, lower floor loges 5@o—plus war tax. j Meszanine loge seats, 68¢ pins war tax, may be reserved "by phone. Elliott 23, not for her, but was making love to/ the countess.” Groom Wrathy; His Bride | Stolen After Wedding BRIDPGEWATER, Mass., June 7.! It’s a terrific, sustained story that will be the talk of the town in another 24 hours—don’t put off seeing it—this theatre only holds just so many SYMBHONY ORCHESTRA COLISEUM’S NEWS SERVICE s aine |_chartes Brownell of this town waa the victim of 4n “‘unpraeticat’ HJoke, in his opinion, when friends the young man kidnaped his bride following the ceremony, her to the home bf one of the | young women conspirators, and held jher a prisoner until the following | morning. ot novel, read by millions and now made into a 6-act™ special photoplay production picturing the evils of the modern divorce laws as they affect women. \Liberty Loving } BY FRANK 4. TAYLOR | (United Press Staff Correspondent) | PARIS, June The chaos in Rus sia cannot be charged entirely to the Rolsheviki, who have merely com | pleted the job of tearing down the | wuperficial social, economic and po- luca! structure which the old regime had fostered The breakdown {a the natural ro sult of the abuses practiced by the former privileged classes of Russia. l-Phe revotution furnished the oppor tunity for the Bolshevik agitators to seize control of the country thru violence, tho they unfortunately drove out the Intellectuals and train- ed professionals needed for rebuild | ing the country Leaders “Know All” | people who would embrice Bolshe vism and sudden rewise their ideals and customs as did the Russians, who naturally run to extremes, It lig the extremes which make discus: | sion regarding Russia diffieult. ‘The Bolsheviks claim they are defending the revolution, which is supposed to | give the Russians liberty and oppor | tunity, yet they forcibly apply com- munism, wiping out both liberty and “Wee BB | opportunity for the individual, | It is impossible in Russia to dis | agree, v ly or in thelr interest, with Bolshevism, ag its ledders fig }ure they have a copyright on all | good ideas, and hence are destined to reform Russia, whether she likes it or not. Some Bolsheviki — unwinkingly apeak of Lenine as a “second Christ.” | Without doubt, Lenine ia RBolshe Vir strong mn, but Russia thus far has shown no signs of the magic touch of genius. The concessions the Bolshoyiki are making in thetr prin took | There is probably no other great | HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY Nations Won't Have Bolshevism, Says Writer ciples and the readjustments of their aims are indicative that their ob: Jectives were not divinely inspired Abolish Liberty —_— | “Tne Bolshoviki have awakened the tuasian people intellectually and |have taught an enormous number to | in order to spread read and write, their propaganda, They have sep- | arated the state from the church and | | eliminated attendant abuses. On the other band, they have set up a politieal dictatorship which abolishes liberty and tells the Russian what he must think, paternally regulating every phase of every day life until individuality is practically extin. guished, Bolshevik Russia is misunderstood In the outside world Reports of atrocities, originating usually from its enemies entire villages and nationalization of | women—are untrue and unfair. Bol sheviam, without exaggeration, is |eufficiently intolerable for liberty | fill out, Contest Committers Roora 30! Crary Bldg. Seattle persons! ‘ such as annihilation of | OFFICIAL BALLOT Dote for your favorite Screen Star’ |leara. “SKIN and genius er gou would like to see in person at the | THE SCREEN BALL HIPPODROME-ARENA-JULY 18 @ ERNEST P. RUSSELL Playing Little Girt, Don’t Cry” the Wurlitzer BRAY PICTOGRAPH “Don't Cry, on | loving peoples to render it impossible in nations enjoying healthy eocial, economic and political life, OFFICER, WAS SUSPICIOUS NEW YORK, June man Devery 7.—Police- a willing the shoes the park, but laborer started on the interfered, suspecting the ot acquainted, watched worker as a the he removed from sleeper tn when coat pair he =— Horlick’s I) Malted Milk | For Twenty-Five Years By EDWIN J. BROWN Geattle’s Leading Dentigg 106 Columbia ‘Street I have been studying crows bridgework for a quarter ofa tury, and have worked faithfully ts | master a system that ts safe, sani. | tary and satisfactory. Other den. work and re acq by experience and arduous Inbor, | My system of bridgework is simple j and inexpensive made with a view to durability and utility, A tooth-brush will easily peach and cleanse every wnarten of my sanitary bridgework; it ts cleaner | than the average natural tooth, No charge for consulta my work is guaranteed. ede. I do not operate on people's peck. | etbooks. I have elevated ‘cnn tandard, to a professional business We Coakiog A Nutritious Diet for All Ages | Quick Lunch; Home or Office. OTHERS are IMITATIONS mame and mail to