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His pen is like a magic wand. He has made the world his inkwell. He is a dreamer whose dreams come true. He has lived with the big and the little people of the world. He makes you believe in him. HE MAKES YOU BELIEVE IN YOUR- ra eet = He writes of realities, of places, of men and = women, of crowds of the upper and the = lower world. He writes of work, of hope, of faith, achievement and success. He writes of YOU and he writes to YOU. This is Herbert Kaufman, who will write a page each week for e Sunday Post-Intelligencer Beginning ‘Apel 2 earrys ment where we have GROWS CONFIDENTIAL since we were married.” friends are certainly sweet Last evening I had a reg- party. Eliene and Harry, Bill janey and Donna Jim Edie and book concerns have started up and we have to fight harder. “I have not found any one yet among our fore: will fill my place satisfactorily as Will talk about it again. sales manager. “I want to make you comfort able and also feel it my duty to make Mrs. Selwin happy. She ts as fond of us as she would be of her own children. “Don't let me persuade you if that is the place for you. ize what this ful physical | Dever loved the other y one but you. ttractions alone, but I think you would gain ten the moment they were over. your health sooner in that beaut!- -| called ‘Paradise.’ ” That is the first time in years, means to & man. Ute the carved words [ had put over man. | I burst into tears, .| “Here, here, Margie,” Dick |room for themselves. claimed, “I did not mean to make fn busine’ you ery.” ‘ “Dick, I can’t help tt r two new think of leaving that little apart- “You wot Monday and Tuesday A Vitagraph Big 4 Featare Thies production is an American play of the good old South, filied with heart throb and love interest. A veritable film- poem. | endorse it as a most pleasing Antonio Moreno “KENNEDY SQUARE” ADDED ATTRACTION—Pathe Weekly IMPORTANT—Coming Wednesday—NOTICE “THE HAVOC” New York’s Greatest Stage Success. Played an Unbroken Engagement of Two Years Phone Phone Eiliott Elliott 3092 3092 For Daily For Daily Schedule Schedule lived ever “But, Margie. we will live at the that I am sure | other place. Think it over aod we! i you) | will be happier tn the apartment, I re jactivity and pain mean to you, but I want you to know I love you, -lyou think you would be happler Only momentary interests, forgot “I don't think, Margie, that any ful place than fn our little place Woman has ever understood just | what life—life out tn the world— " My dear, it is a|” book, Dick has referred to band to hand fight with every other) If you are on salary, you the mantel of our little apartment. have a hundred or two trying to pull you down that they may make i you are for yourself, you munt remember always there are thou when I| sands of others In the same line. i} sighing for || TELL US ABOUT Star yesterday "Tell us Star only wants to hear your neighbor rhe Star would like to spirit of good fellowship, other—-the spirit SPIRIT—and hopes its reg vitation for letters about y Don’t call your neighbe is to be selected by Prof University of Washington, judge. ‘SEATTLE LEADS Shows Best Record in U. S. in Fight Against Typhoid SECOND IN THE WORLD } | } lin, Vienna, Hamburg, London, Paris and Glasgow, and The Hague te the only city In the world that has a lower rate than Seattle. Computations arranged by the city health department show that 1 per cent of every 100,000 population in The Hague die annually from typhold. The typhold death rate in Seattle, the secon althiest city in the world, le 2.72 per cent per 100,000. Health department physicians ex amined 7,000 employes during 1915, |to stamp out Insanitary conditions lin food shops, department figures show, The city spends on an average of | $2 a day to treat each of its tuber- [cular patients, but the cost will be reduced to $1.50 when new pa villons are constructed The cost would be cut down to 75 cents a day if the Kent bill, mandardizing treatment and pro- viding federal ald, ts amended to recognize city work, and passed, says Health Commissioner Bride. He wants Seattle people to write tors and congressmen and their support for the bill's what you call equality-—-you do not All| t t have been | *20¥ you are asking not for # righ! jto earn your living, but the chance to fight—fight until at last you are conquered by death {ti “I never see a woman efiter buat- ness life but I am constrained to ty her. “Men will forget, If she fs suc- cessful, that she is a woman and | will stand up to her In the same hand to hand conflict. Some of them will knife her in the back They will lie about her; steal from her. They will doubly resent her entrance Into the conflict because back in the head of every man ts the conviction that home is the place for a woman jut Dick, don't fairly? em, my dear, If they can, but unfairly if they must. The trend of business {s to ‘get there.’ | “Do you blame us, dear, when sometimes after the hard fight we atch at anything for the moment to forget? | “History tells of the terrible jaftermath of battle. Man ts but ‘human. He says ‘Let me forget,’ and |does not care very much what It ts [that brings him the blessed anes- thesia.” | Just then the folks were an- nounced. I wished they had not |come, for I loved to hear Dick talk To Be Continued) men fight In J marriages the bride al- ways stands at the right hand of the groom. about your neighbor!” And a better idea still when you understand that The which is, Me-| 3 YOUR NEIGHBOR! What do you think of the contest announced by The Good idea, isn’t it? the GOOD “THINGS about see a general revival of the and boost, and help-one-an in fact, the SEATTLE aders will respond to this in our neighbor yw by name, and don't say anything about him if you can’t say something good Those are the rules——-those, and one other—that your letter must be kept within 150 words in length A prize of $10 will be given for the best letter, which Edmond S. Meany of the who has consented to act as ‘BUY NO MACHINE ~INTYPHUS RATE GUNS IN 3 YEARS Su | Hay Bill Debate Shows More | Unpreparedness Evidence | MONEY IS FURNISHED | | BY GILSON GARONER | WASHINGTON, March 25.— No machine gune have been bought by the, United States army in three years. The number now in the pos- session of the army is 1060. “Many of these are antiquat- ed and unsatisfactory In their operation, reserve. More even than the rifle, the machine gup has been shown in Europe to be important in modern warfare Not to be equipped with a large }number of such guna of late de |sign is to be signally unprepared. |. The machine gun situation was brought to light in course of the | |debate on the army bill | The facts were stated by Repre- [sentative chairman of the }military affairs committee. | The remarkable fact was [ brought out that the failure to pur. |ehase machine guns was not due! | to the lack of an appropriation for this purpose. | Every year for three years an appropriation of $50,000 has been | made for the purchase of machine une When asked by the military af- fairs committee why machine gun) had not been bought with th [money provided for that purpose. |the ebief of the bur of ord nance replied that the partment | had not been able to decide on a/ type of gun which promised to be satisfactory. A few more questions brought out the fact that an officer in the United States artillery service, | Col. I. N, Lewis, had invented a quick-firing machine gun and sev eral years ago offered it to the government. Tho bureau of ordnance conduct- ed experiments and rejected it. Col. Lewis thereupon took his invention abroad and sold it to England, Holland, Switzerland, | and Germany. It ia the Lewis gun which tn now reported to be doing the most satisfactory work abroad. WASHINGTON WINS IN A DOUBLE DEBATE) While one University of Wash- jington debating team was dofeat |ing Oregon untversity in Seattle jby contending that the “United States should maintain its navy above third rank in fighting ef- fictency,” another local team took the opposite side of the argument. and won from Stanford at Palo) Alto, ‘The double victory gave Wash jington the triangular Coast cham | plonship. Stanford defeated Oregon Eugene. There are none in |_@ FIRST AT PIKE " "SRE ‘CHAUNCEY SETS | "EM UP TO JURY There town Saturday wish Cha’ into trouble more often. Chauncey was yanked up before a jury in leourt Friday | Prosecutor Patterson for running | |a lottery, and promptly acquitted. Chauncey admitted he had raf- fled off a Electric tickets, hi purchased Fourth ave. Worre than that—he gave away handfuls of ‘em didn't buy more than a couple of doughnuts The jury went out. They were SUNDAY 3 Marsh The little sister of “The Birth of a Nation” in her first Triangle fea- ture—the tale of a 20th century b. W. Griffith himself Cinderella. assisted in producing BARRISCALE DAYS ONLY in steak. are several people in mean enough to That uncey Wright would get Police Judge Gordon's panned by Deputy n electric stove during week. He gave away e said, with every meal in his restaurant on| |modeled on Princeton | TAKES to people who in his bakery. gone something less than five minutes and returned with a ver- dict | propriations, “Not guilty!” yodled the clerk. At this juncture, Chauncey “t/ knocked the slats out of Old Tra- and Austere Formality by inviting the judge, jury, prosecutor Pear-\ and every dition the court Judge Gordon had a previous en- Ragement Chauncey | not. body else connected with| “By 1935,” out to dine. jnot in less couldn't the and took but to RO, jury Monday Evenin April 10 ARENA Seattle Auditorium Co. | project might be made possible, but make a navy. important consideratio: his new restaurant fn the Smith building and filled | NEW HAVEN, Conn. March 26. | par’ F Fe sd — boring team, | Fearing that she would be sent holding the resolution, “Resolved, | to the United States should! the penitentiary for cashing a |adopt a compulsory military ser- vice, modeled after that of Switzer. jJand,” was given a unanimous de- |ciston over Yale. PRINCETON WINS, TOO CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 25.— Harvard was defeated in a debate jagainst compulsory military service the Swiss plan by t night. A LONG TIME TO BUILD UP NAVY WASHINGTON, March 25.—Can jthe United States, by ffictent ap build a yesterday, said said the admiral, “the time, Ships do not Men are the most vy to equal | ‘that of any other nation by 1925?/ Rear Admiral Bradley A. Fiske, in a statement before the house naval committee, BULLETS AND BROWN EYES a” Matinees 7pm 10c|?tas |Evenings ;ts. 15c © CONTINUOUS 11 A. M. TO 11 P.M. @ se ee ee ‘em up on) | ) | | jtron Nan Atkinson ee BeBe eee eee SEBSS PF feos cee se as 8 8 ping GIRL TRIES TO DIE IN HER CELL | spurious check for $30, Florence McKinnon, 4 22-year-old girl, tried to commit suicide in the city jail Friday afternoon. She had been in her cell only 20 minutes when Mi smelled gas and found the aperture in the door stuffed with the girl's gloves. The door was forced open and the girl found lying across her bed. She had reached a hi hung gas Jet, guarded by netting, and turned it on. The rescue was — accomplished before the gas made her unconscious. ? “7 PARIS, March 25—French offs — clal communications issued ast night give graphic descriptions of the fighting about the woods of Malancourt and Avocourt. The action has been confined almost exclusively to the big guns of the opposing forces, the only infantry | SEATTLE’ Automobile Show engagement taking place at the Argonne forest.