Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“See here,” iays the Good Judge I want to remind you about that small chew of this good tobacco. It tastes better because it’s good tobacco. Its quality saves you part of your tobacco money. It goes further and lasts longer. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW Put up in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco ee Keep The Servants Satisfied ON’T ask them to do useless things that your neighbor does not require of her servants. Don’t ask your cook to bake bread. She knows that baking is a silly form of drudgery that qloes not result in better bread or in the saving “" PORTER'S AME | BREAD Keeps her smiling. It is good and no hot baking hours. Clean, crisp, wholesome. A new bread —not just a new name—makes children strong and healthy. Porter Baking Co. Seattle Seas It Isn’t Necessary - To Suffer Pain— Dentistry Today Is the Highest Perfected Specialty of All Science iE} DIAGNOSIS Is probably the most perplexing and difficult problem of any profession, and any degree of accuracy ts only acquired by » thorough knowl! edge of his Profession and tit i E , of these qualifications, disas- ter and failure will result. REPRODUCTION OF NA- TURE to the extent of doing nature's work, together with the biending of the features so that the work cannot be de tected from nature's own, in such a manner that it is clean and congenial to the tissues, at the same time perfectly com fortable to the individual, is a mastication thanges the entire expression. | WE MUST KNOW the ex act location of arteries, veins or the parts supplied by them, we having probably more to do with the nerves than any other tissue of the body, for pain by our modern dentists of today. Titfitting dental work is not only unsightly but Is unclean, giving cause to un- healthy conditions and disease, a loss of vitality and effi clency. pain or discomfort to the pa- tient. To do all of this we have accomplished only ® small part of our obligation. It Will Cost You Nothing to Have Your Teeth Examined. —_—_——— | ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS “LABORING PEOPLE’S DENTISTS” J. H. VAN AUKEN, Mer. Located for years at S. BE. Corner First and Pike. Phone Main 2555 RICAN-MAID Sensations of an Artist’s Model THE SEATTLE STAR--THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1919. \ \ ] j { 4 { THE LOVER In these chapters, Manya Radina, Rassian born New York artist's mod Jel, concludes the story of the View nese artist's love tragedy, and ends the series, “Sensations of an Artist's Model,” with inside stories of the life in New York's Bobemian art studios. BY MANYA RUDINA Famous Now Vork Artite’ Model The young artist seemed to be liv ing over again the terrible days he waa telling me about when he found | that his sweetheart was dead. I could not rest until T had found out the cause of her death,” he weot Jon. “I did recall her telling me about |4he countess who had stolen her lov ler from her, but I knew that she [had ceased to pose for this artist, }and it never occurred to me that he | could have had anything to do with the tragedy, I though€ my sweet heart had been murdered, and I could not tmagine who might have a| grievance against her. | “And #0, unable to work, T took to wandering about the city, and from | force of habit into the galleries and Jexhibition halls, It was more than a month afterward that I read tn the | [paper of a particular exhibit of paintings where many of my friends had canvases. I went, } “There were many beautiful pie tures there, but before ene in par | teular & crowd that never grew } less, At first I could not get near enough to get a clear view of the | painting, but gradually I worked my | way thru the crowd until I stood be | fore it, “It was the picture of a dead girl's | face!—the most wonderful piece of realistic painting I had ever seen, My eyes were riveted upon the face, | with the eyes closed in what one knew at once was not sleep, but [death The work made a tremen- | dous Impression upon me; the paint- ling had apparently been done hur- | riediy, one might say almost care- lesaly, but the impression of reality it conveyed was startling. It was |that which drew the crowd, They She Took Adler-i-ka | “My wife had what the doctors }oall catarrh of the stomach for 15 |years. Had to diet carefully and |muffered much, She haa now taken one bottle Adlerd-ka and feels per- |feetly well” (Signed) BF. Park- \er, Brock, Texas. Adler-t-ka expels ALL gas and | sournesa, stopping stomach distress }INSTANTLY. Empties BOTH up- per and lower bowel, Qushing ED | TIRE alimentary canal. Removes ALL foul matter which poisons | #¥stem. Often CURES constipa- tion. Prevents appendicitia We have sold Adier-i-ka many years. It t# @ mixture of buckthorn, cas |cara, glycerine and nine other sim- ple drugs. Parte! Drug Co., Drug Co, and leading druggists, BLISS#32 HERB TABLETS rundown RUNDOWN STWTEM ts like « jock. Unless tuned mp, it is of little use. overwork, don't If pou are rundown from © proved a wonderful and woman in maintain and vigor. George Grindstaft, ville, Tenn. because I am enjoying good health. Don't delay taking Miles Native Hort Tablets. stipation, liver and kidney tronbie, fick headache, rheumatiam or disor Gered stomath They simulate the ", purify the blood and tone up the #7stem; also Improve the appetite Get the genuine, Look for the t mark and money back guar- oo on every box Price tablets. by beading Grugsiats and loos agents everywhere If your gums sore, sloughing and bleeding you have Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ [As ease, which Is a menace to good health. We are the only Dentists in the Northwest who specialize in this dreaded disease. Examina tion and estimate free. Special care taken of children’s teeth. Reasonable discount to Union are men and their families, All work guaranteed 15 years. - United Painless Dentists 608 Third Ave, Cor. James St. Phone Elliott 3633. Hours: 8:30 a. m, to 6 p. m Bundays, 9 to 12. Most Corventent and Central SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES Location AU sizes, #4 & Year. Title Trust Co. Beeond at Columbia t ma STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS; SECIS ’S REVENGE |were asking themsetvea how any on could! paint from imagination a dead face in such a manner, I looked closely at it, and it seemed that I had seen that face bo- fore, All at onee it Mashed over me where I had seen it-IN THE MORGUE! I gave a cry and plunged thru the crowd to see the name of the painter of that picture, and when | T read it, | knew who was the man I wan seoking. I did not go Immediately to his studio, I went back to mine and thought things out. Also I made certain preparations; I got together what money I had and could borrow. “Then I went to the studio of that artist, whom my lost love had loved and who had spurned her for the rich young woman whom he waa about to marry, There is not much more to tell, From the man servant I forced a confeasion of what he knew. found that artist, and we had some talk together.” ‘The young man paused and looked into my face again. Then he turned away and was ailent, and I thought again he would not tell me any more, “There is not much more I can tell you,” he said, at last. “For that night I left Vienna and tn a fow days I was on the ocean, bound for Amer- toa.” “But the man who had broken her heart?’ I asked. “What about him? “They found him the next day,” he said, slowly, “It was to have been wedding day to the coun- tena heard afterward that her servant came to him with a note and when they entered the studio, they found him; he—was—dead!’ “Then you~" “There in nothing more to tell,” he sald. “It was on the night of July &S that I left Vienna,” be said. “Aus trian wae waiting for the answer to tts ultimatum to Serbia, Three days | later war was declared on Serbia And the police forgot about dead an tists, and I—I was on my way here,” ‘There was a long paune. “Now you kn w why I acted strangely when I first raw you,” he id “It was becaus you look so much lMke—her.” FRENCH U MEN LIKE YANKEES | Thousands of Soldiers Study in College XN. ¥. A. Special to The Star BORDEAUX, France, June 12-- | French students tn the universities |which have been thrown open to | Amertean soldiers welcome the Amer: |icans as brothers. There are many stadent organtea- |Uons im France, and the native | French students whe organized them Swift urge the Americans to become mem | bers. There are comfortable ctubrooms, reading rooms and restaurants, where the two nationalities meet daily and exchange ideas and con- verse in Pngliah and French. The American soldiers find them |selves invited to afternoon teas in | sorts along the sea coast. Bverywhere the French emphasize the wish that as many as possible of the Yankee soldiers stay and learn to know their arts and sciences, their families and hormes. On thelr own part the American | soldier students are introducing their | familiar college customs. These in |clude the publication in many of the universities of the well known type | | promotion of all kinds of athletic |eporta, notably baseball, basketball, boxing, tennis and the organization of debate clubs and music societies. The French students add a vart ety to these extra-curricula activi- ties by introducing chess tourneys, fencing contests, classical French | theatrical productions, and their own style of musical recitals and of deciamations. French Institutions | Quickly Filled But tho the doors of thirteen of er best institutions of learning— Lyons, Paris, Houlouse, Bor- deaux, Nancy, Grenoble, Cae Maree Besancon. Cc Farrand, Montpellier, Poitiers Rennes—have been opened to the | Yanks, it has been impossible to meet the demand for enrollment. | lable billeting space in s French homes was soon y the American govern n with the added assist ance of England—the Oxford and Cambridge of the University of Edinburgh, resources of and the use in Seotland, and Dublin University, Ire land, it has been impossible to ac ommodate the mumber of soldiers who were eager to study in a for jeign university, For the overflow, the American army university at Beaune, France, | is comprised of 14 colleges, the facul ties American college professors, At this, the largest known educational |institution in the world, American soldiers unable to enter foreign unt time by y in vernities, will at least sav | ment, and gain credit toward their college degrees Officers and Enlisted Men Study Together Officers and enlisted men are pur suing courses in law, medicine, let ters, sciences, and the fine arts here and in the universities. Primarily French institu tion students are Freneh in the urning to speak, read and write rench. They are being taught grammar, translation, prose com {tion and pronunctation, with the object of aiding them in the pursuit of some special branch of study More than this they are learning to understand the French mind, Lectures in French disclose to hem the highest in French thought nd modes of life and study. Sub cts are taken y from the rench life of the middle ages and ter times in the literature, sel ice, art, philosophy, law and gen- ral history, This course of lec ures, In conjunction with the iformer course in the French lan- And then I went back and! nearby villas, and to visit summer re | lof American goliege newspaper, the | receiving college and un ity struction of a high claas, at the] hands of the United States govern +* *« * More than 100,000,000 pounds of macaroni About seven million pounds of macaroni were sold in America in 1914, of which nearly two mil- lion pounds were imported. Fig- ured by families, this means about five ounces per year per family. Compare it with twenty-two pounds per family consumed in Italy in a normal year. Macaroni is no fad. Cooked with tomatoes or cheese or, served with meat gravy, it is an appetizing, satisfy- ing, delightful food. Children like it. No grown-up would object to eating a liberal serving once or twice a month. A consumption of six pounds of macaroni per year per family is easily possible—only half a pound a month. Why should we import two million pounds of macaroni in a year? Is it not practicable for Pacific Northwest manufacturers of macaroni to ob- tain their share of this hundred million pound trade? It is hardly in keeping with the traditions of American industry to sell five or six ounces of a product where six pounds may be sold. Families of the State of Washington alone could consume more than two mil- lion pounds a year. | ] | Zh Sy “es uk OR ei J UT, s MY fF) Sear laee qin (pall LLY ULL EYY, ES Cue ZZ Wal 08 ONS Wee OR te { | | | | ONAL BANK & Co Saving Union Trust JAMES Db. HOGE | JOS A. SWALWELL G. F. CLARK 1 E. EYMAN J. D. LOWMAN FORREST | GILL E. J. WHITTY JAMES I) FARMER » Bldg. Second Ave. at Cherry St. guage forms the background of the work, ‘This opportunity was made avail- able to both enlisted men and of- sire” Civ ficers, who had had at least two| OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, June years, or its equivalent, of college|12-—If Walker D. Hines, director work, before coming to France. A general of railroads, is responsible |They Never Even Showed Sympathy) This Man’s Brain Saves His Back nominal tuition fee is paid by each| for J. L. Wilkin's mile-and-e-half pense “oe = op Cl ag °x("4 | trouseriess progress thru. Oklahoma pense for him outaide of th very small cost of books, of which | City #treets, he won't admit it few are re 1 and extra labora- | The wh embarrassing controver- tory feos in the science ¢ *. | my was to be alred in district court | All the American soldiers x: | today Jempted from military ¢ and * # thelr other regular army duties| Wilkin, president of the Wilkin- |while in attendance at either the| Hale state bank here, asserts that | |¥rench and English universities, |while a Pullman passenger from —_ ance ad Fort Worth to Oklahoma City last A superstitious man is the one| January some conscienceless person who imagines that others think as|robbed his berth. Consequently, he much of him as he does of himself. | declares, receiving ni ssistance and s Pet little *ympathy from the conductor | When you meet a stranger get and porter, he was forced to depart get busy and tell your troubles first train much embarrassed from the Doctor Tells How to Detect Harmful Effects of Tobacco) Try These SIMPLE TESTS New York.—Dr. Connor, formerly |taking your usual smoke, walk up | ° thr filehts of stairs at a regular jot Johns Hopkins hospital, says: | DAtee fie etop. if you find. that | Many men who smoke, chew or snuff | P80" are out of breath, your heart |incesaantly, and who are seem! eat 1s forced, trembling or irregu- | |healthy, are suffering from pro-|lar, you may be @ victim of func- | Kreasive organic ailments. -|tional or organic heart trouble. If sands of ever have|you feel that you must smoke, chew been affl not been forlor snuff to aulet y nerves, you habit, and |the use of tobacco, and thousands |are a slave to the tobe would soon get well if they would|are positively p ¢ yourself only stop the use of tobacco. The| with the deadly drv otine, In chief habit forming to-|either case you have just two al- bacco is nicotine son|ternatives—keep on » the self. which, when absc m, | polso process, | ctive of slowly affects the the era, and suffer the conse- | branes, tissues and yital organs of | quences, or give up the habit and es- | the body. The harmful effect of to-|cape the dangers, You can overcome panco vari m-|the craving e habit ine with | very short tim the follow- urrh | ing inexpensiv Go to any | store and ask for Nicotol tab- « lets, take one tablet after each | mory, k of will|meal, and in a comparatively short | nfusion, ete. Others|time you will have no desire for to- art di bacco, the craving will have 1éft you, With the nicotine poison out of your system, your general health ‘will | quick Vacuum carpet cleaners make excellent potato bug exterminat tors, So Stanley C. Smith of Cincinnati has discovered. Last week Smith had even improve. tion known aa toba Note—When asked about Mesto! tab- use tobacco in any form, you can|lets, one of our leading drugetets wid:!q million or more potato bugs in his Victor: oa. ow Eee De 7 rm ec py |" is truly erful remedy for the! y garden, we nant easily detect the harm th Acronee BP lac ese Bil “ahoad of anything |@Ay- It formerly took him an hour to pick the bugs from ® dozen or Read al ne full pi from e We are authors | so potato plants, Now he can pick off several million in two hours, course of read He does it with his wife's vacuum carpet cleaner. ex He attaches a ° nsion feed wire to a lamp socket in the cellar of his home and cleaner to the backyard potato patch. STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS: 4 muffled and and indistinct are that your throat is af by catarrh, it may be the beginning of more serious trou-| guarantee by a | ble. Next, in the morning, before jtacluding Bartell an ne unions usual merit this elty under up. 4.