The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 18, 1918, Page 6

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THE SEATTLE STAR 1307 Bevensh Ave. Near Union 90. P OF SCHIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NKWSrArERs || Telegraph News Service of the United Press Association ttle, Wash, Postoffice as Second-Clacs Matter of city, 400 3.50. r month; 8 montha $1.15: 4 montha $2.00 By carrier, clty, 0c @ month. j inte 608, Prt | REEDOM “SOR RL FOREVER. Y $ You can buy a thrift stamp from your mailman. | You can always get the full amount in cash for it. | Why not save your money with your government? wk —_—_——* d Give ' When a national army man drops into the Knighty of bus building over at Camp Lewis, no one asks his before extending the comforts and courtesies of the If he wants to write a letter home he is welcome to it there. R _If he wants to rest, or read, or meet a pal, the Knights ee is always open to him. 's the with the Y. M. C. A. No sectarian barriers are established. At the same the thousands of young Catholic men have a home of own in the K. of C. building, and the Protestants we a home of their own in the Y. M. C. A. All for one and one for all—that’s the spirit of these in the American national army. And they’re going /play an important part in crea‘ the right atmosphere, Ba nourishing the right kind of ting morale among | Men in olive drab. Gen. the oli hie J sstonegy Baer asked that the Knights of Columbus Young Men’s Christian Association expand their wk in France. _ It’s up to the here at home to furnish the funds. enough to have contributed to one of these agencies. Tust gladly give our dollars for every crying need of ~ Dont let sectarian ideas be an excuse for withholding Both the Y. M. C. A. and K. of C. will make further in spirit and funds to give until it hurts.| The dispatches from Copenhagen economist, on the income tax. —with the feeling that you are contributing : ane goal of world freedom. Seattle is getting just enough of winter weather make its inhabitants appreciate the average balmy » This Away From Her @ just cannot hold in the following remarks, but the the wisdom of keeping them of well men alw: ap- junday clothes” and is striving to “studied We hereby eyes! threatens through the cir- n this splendid rose. There are folks so infernally given to over-doing the styles, they are, that they may study the negli ew: in shoes and hat ce A to our “Sunday clothes” effect. Fire Baker, or somebody! Florida was sent more shovel tags than she needed. 's Politics, Also Trade ‘The United States Chamber of Commerce is taking a dum on a proposition to formally notify the business of Germany that American business men will not re- — relations ee rag i xinlees i a ernment it’s responsible to the people. United chamber announces that, in this propo- there is no thought of punishment or revenge but it ‘based upon the logic that only thru industrial inter- | with the United States can Germany get the sinews meeond world war.” i Proposition may be fine politics but it has at least large and visible holes in it. First, Germany seems to make war without any sinews dependent upon indus- relations with the United States whatever. Secortdly, mal times, our business men have a trade balance in ir favor, against Germany, of some $150,000,000 per » _We guess that, when peace comes, there'll be quite ee reaching oout for that trade balance, pretty re- of the United States chamber’s present “basis of We are going to muss up Germany’s sinews for a sec-| war, awfully, but not much thru our tradesmen’s disin-| tion to do business with anybody who has the legal | _ Another kink in the kaiser’s plans. Duthie Ship- ‘building plant sent an 8,800-ton ship down the ways Sunday. The Knights of Columbus need $15,000 to com- a Seatle’s quota of the $10,000,000 war camp fund. lave you done your bit toward sending Seattle over the top in this drive? the Blood of All Traces of Scrofula that Is always @ drawback to your perfect health. 8. 8. S., the time-tested blood puri- fier, has removed the last trace of Scrofula and other transmitted im- purities, and there is no case that it does not promptly reach, It will thoroughly cleanse and remove every disease germ that infests the blood, and give you new life and vigor. 8. 8. 3. is wold by druggista every- where, and you should begin its use today. Should you need medical ad- vice, write a complete history of your case, and our chief medical adviser been any impurity in blood of your ancestors, you will ea - : 2 HE doctors said STAR—MONDAY, FEB. 18, 1918. PAGE 6 " OST CEST his legs were paralytic, so he slithered and stumbled over rocks and ruts, half-way across a continent, to make his legs obey his will—that’s Ole Hauson, whose courage and determination carried him tht: a life-long service for those who toil—for humanity. ON FIRING LINE day a prairie “D AY after woh« Jumbered . , A Hewid an mat an old man mattress within the which was half filled household goods, two bables play ed or slept the with “There was something about thin schooner tha’ A stout pole stuck out behind. @ man dangled feet clear of the ground. The walked, helped by tackle, which passed under his arm-pite But he walked @ forking and buck! refused to with the determined brain Was trying to direct then It was, a comical sight—aq least, you would have thought It comical if you hap pen to be the sort of person who laugh when—well, for instance, when a stout man slips on a banana peel and falls. “Siithered and Jerked™ “For the man slithered and plunged and jerked and stumbled ever rocks and ruts, thru dust and thru mud puddles and was saved from falling, not once, but ten thousand times, by the tackle that held him and by a flercely indomitable will. “You see, the man was a para lytic. A railroad wreck had crushed and maimed him. The doctors had said he YUST DIK. He laughed at the doctore—AND LIVED. The doctors had said he could never walk again. And now he was proving the doctors mistaken by walking halfway across a continent! @ ~ “The woman driving the prairie schooner was the wife of the man who dangled at the end of the tackle behind. The old man was his father. “The babies In the wagon were the man's children. “The man's name was Ole man's were » they proy coordinate I suppose thing I admire mont about Om Alanson—and you would, too, if you knew him as intimately as 1 hin courage. Hanson was born in @ loe cabin in Wisconsin 40 years ago. iis parents re Norwegians of @ sturdy peasant stock, Poverty didn't frighten bim. It made him onad. “A Playless Boyhood” ie had a» playless boyhood. He was too mad—and too buay— to play, He chopped wood, plek ed fruit, tended cattle, did odd Jobs. He wanted an education; educations cost money; he had no money, So he earned it, worked mornings and nights and went to the district school He went on nalenmar Me children came. He thought he saw an opening in Texas, and took train for that great com monwealth The train was wrecked. ‘One of Hanson's children was killed. Man was paralyzed He was nent back to Racine, ‘to die,” the doctors said. Most men would have quit Put Hanson had scarcely He started West with his aged father and two chil the road as a married, and then begun wife, dren He told himaelf that, if he was bound and determined to walk, he would in time be able to walk easily and property. "His firet venture on reaching Seattle was a grocery store—a microscopic affair “Halr Is White” was his own crust, and join the ruling tribe. “The other kind—and they are rare —do not forget. Ole is that kind of a man. ‘If I could forget,’ he says, ‘T would be like the others, getting He wagon, ‘Ole and Mra. Hanson have today a family of seven as bonny sons and daughters as you ever laid eyes on. delivery FOR THE RIGH’ — “He tan't a millionaire with a mon ey barrel. He isn't « smooth ex judge, with special privilege alli- ances. He ts a man—e real two-fist- ed man, determined, unafraid, ag- Hane two me nine in The carn that have pamned only mac * of humanity great thene four years has come the world strug gles « of men and the © stirred to deptha ‘ © Hanson nome of the way of | relief to thone whe h he |had fought a } | | han been blewsed with there now being » fam ebildren | han » ir years the Opens Grocery Store A gifted orator, he contributed his eloquence to the cause of labor and Drogrensiveness, to the cause of in dustrial justice nd democracy ever noe he was @ mere youth. In Wisconsin and in Montana, as here, | he fought for those from whom he sprang—the sons and daughters of tol! | He opened his little grocery tore! on Beacon Hill some 16 years ago. x knew him here. He knew no| one. The first night the Hanson family «pent here in thelr own tent, | pitched on a vacant lot. Of worldly goods and money Hanson had mighty little, But he believed in Beattie, and he pitched his tent here, Uterally and figuratively As @ grocer on Beacon hill, b slaved and sweated, and worked long hours. Then came the realty boom, and Ole Hanson sold his grocery store, and opened a real estate of: fice. He prospered moderately. | AND HE MADE A RECORD THAT PERHAPR NO REALTY MAN IN SEATTLE HAS EQUALED— NAMELY, THAT IN 14 YEARS OF BUSINESS HERE, NO ONE HAS EVER BROUGHT SUIT AGAINST HIM © His Work in Legislature Playing square men is a part of Ole Hanson, just 8 the lifeblood in him. | ning a ioral option fight. Hanson well known then as he is ttle folke had not yet learned of his great fighting qualities for what was right Killed Race Track Gambling The dry forces naturally assumed that coming from #o wet a district, he jwould be against local option, They did not even bother to ask him. BUT OLE HANSON VOTED DRY. More tha , he introdue race track Meadows race use of the ruin of many in today out of business Hanson has stood for @ clean city and decency thruout the years He fought for and secured the passage in the house of an eight- hour law for women in the 1909 session—years before it finally became a law, for the 1909 sen- ate killed it. He secured passase of the eighthour law for n rs. Eight years before the failure of the Northern bank here, he fought for » bank guar- anty law to protect the deposits and savings of the public. For Double Platoon Hanson made speeches for the double-platoon system for firemen, because, a lover of humanity, he did not believe & was right for the city to require these men to stay away from their families 21 hours a day, He fought for the firemen’s and po icemen's pension bill. He cam paigned for the mothers’ pension Dill, for the minimum wage law. He stood squarely for the initiative, ret erendum, and other progressive measures. All his life he fought crooked poll- tics. He, of all the members of the house in 1909, violently protested was not now, Be fully young men. a rewult direct primary. Fighting square, acting “Hut bis hair is snow-white, “There are two kinds of successful | mine and letting the rest 0 to hetl.| remtve, square.” | a ; NOt go to hell. They are in hell. |T could not forget, and I would not| The above was written four years forget if I could. Therefore I am/| 60 by Fred L. Boalt, special writer what Iam. I do not hate men; aim. for The Star. men. One kind forget they once were | ply conditions. I want to make con- part of the unwieldy, half-knowing | ditions for all inen and women bet mass, break thru the centuries-old! ter.’ . &. D. K.’s.*. COLYUM may be all right, but we never read one without recalling that it was from Copenhagen that the Doc Cook news first came eee B. Freestone lives Mich. A peach, no doubt. And W. L. Drybread, of Nevada, | Ia. is a midshipman at Annapolis. And Professor ©. K. Boring, ef Ohio Wesleyan, is going to teach French at Camp Sheridan. cee Or ciothing, Or rubber, Is going up. Wo believe it. Is going up, We doubt it. . . Coleman DuPont has bought the Waldorf-Astoria. Stepping from the gun powder factory to the face pow: der headquarters, eee WHAT HAS What he meant to say to her: That he had never seen her looking sweeter than she does tonight. That, in some indefinable manner, she was his inspiration to work hard for suc: cess, That every moment he was away from her, he was in a torment of black despair. That every second he was with her he was in the ev enth heaven of bliss. might have to begin in a small way, but it would be only for a short time, That her family might not under stand him now, but that was only be. cause they didn't know him well enough yet. That he could make her happy. That he never thought of any other girl from the moment he first gazed into her eyes. That he simply couldn't live without her, “I_want you to be my wife!” But—what he did say to her: “Er—ah—ah—what would you, er—say, sweetheart, if ah—I should ask, er—you to, ah—er—go to a movie?——Whew!” eee We'll Say It Reached the Extremity All Right Enough That aristocratic dish, ox-tall soup, came into vogue in Paris during the French revolution, when the need for saving was reduced to the last extremity.—Cleveland, ©., Sunday Leader. Why Doesn't She Enlighten Him? is home for a holiday. faw the jack-knife which a Kenosha out » Address Swift Specific TNS man swallowed and knows all the will give you full instructions, with-| circumstances of the case. The knife was found in his stomach and he in't_ know how it got there— in Pangor,! | It describes Ole Hanson as he is | today, just as it pictured him then, lonty that, since it waa written, the In 1909, Hanson was elected to the Playing square with labor all his life, legislature from the 43rd distfict, Ol¢ Hanson was undoubtedly touch- which comprised the Second ward ©4 to the heart when he learned that and part of the Firat. It was to this 0D¢ oF two labor péliticians were at- district that the tenderloin had been | tempting to “job” him. And so he moved. Here gambling flourished,| Went to the Central Labor Council and saloons constituted the main | 0% Wednesday, night as staunch | business. The dry forces were plan-| friend IMANLY’S FOURTH ARTICLE GIVES GENERAL POINTS ON INCOME TAX |. Editer’s Note—This ts the last ef) dends are concerned, and need not |four articles by Basil M. Manly, moted/ be paid again by the stockholder. Hew to Deduct let's see how much your bereonal deductions amount to: First, there is interest on indebt ecnean lowed Now, The Star's | For the rest of the month 7,000,000 Americans will be scratching their heads and wearing out lead pencile| YOU Already deducted in connection trying to find the answer to the| with your business profits; but you |auestion of the hour: “How much | an deduct the interest on personal income tax have I got to pay?” debts. For examplg, deduct interest | Im order to answer this queation,|n the mortgage on your house, on which Uncle Sam requires from all| !oans made for personal expenses or single men with incomes over $1,000| for the purchase of property, except and all married men with incomes|for the purchase of tax-exempt se over $2,000 before March 1, you|CUrities, such as Liberty bonds, and must first know the amount of your | *4t, county and municipal bonds. net Becond, you can deduct the amount “How do figure my net income?”| Of any taxes, not already included, Flere’s a guide in words of one syl-/¢Z0ept federal income and excess lable. profits taxes and taxes on local im- Outlines Stx Potnts provements, grading, street repairs, Take a sheet of paper and write| etc. in return for which you are sup. Gown on it the answers to the fol-| DO"ed to have secured some direct lowing questions: advantage. 1—Flow much money did you re| Third, any lonses actually incurred celve during 1917 in the form of!" trade or business, not already de wages, salary, commissions, fees or | ¢Ucted, and not compensated for by benusse? insurance or otherwise. You cannot 2—How much profit aid you make| “duct losses of personal property, } 1917 in bustness or in the sale of | POF can you deduct loses from spec property, over and above necessary | Ulative transactions, except as an expenses, interest, taxes and allow-| Offset to profita already reported, ances for wear and tear? and to an amount not greater than 3—What did you receive from the|*¥eh profits. Losses due to bad lrental of property over and above | @¢>ts# can be deducted only when at- | cost of repairs and upkeep and al-| tempts to collect have been aban- lowance for wear and tear? | @oned. If you ever collect such a 4—How much did you recelvé as| bt you are expected to report it in rest on notes, mortgages, deeds |¥OUF return for the year in which of trust and similar securities, or as interest on bonds (except tax-free bonds), or on bank deposite? | ry { ce eas, acaet | Editor's Mail income from trustees or executors | of estates and truste? BY BASIL MANLY Keonomy Of course you are not al duplicate any interest thet| ¢—How much money came in as royalties from mines, off and gas wells, patents, copyrights or fram chines? Under each of these hends set down also any income received by your wife or dependent child from the same source. Now add the amounts which you have set down. The total in thé amount of your gross income, except for dividends, which are treated as a neparate iter, Write down the amount of any dividends you received during 1917, whether paid in cash, stock or serip, and add them to the gross income figure already found. If the total amounts to more than $5,000, #0 that you become liable for a supertax, you will want to mave this dividend figure; but if it is leas than $5,000, WHY THEY LEAVE THE FARM Editor Star: I think I know why there is a shortage of farm labor out here. I have been a farm worker. Most farm hands come from the not expected to tug a roll of blankets and were not told to find a bunk in the wood shed. It's pretty hard to keep men on farms unless conditions are bettered. Why wouldn't men be expected to come to the cities and work eight hours? On the farms | they put an alarm clock next to your jear. You get up at 4:30 and go to |work with a lantern, without any breakfast. for an hour or so. I do not like the city, but I'm too much of a free American citizen to work under average farm conditions. |They ought to be improved. | G. GREEN, Eaat or Middle West, where we are/ you can scratch the dividend figure | ‘That they | Miss Olive Hope, teacher at Salem, | Mins Hope | out and forget it. The point is that the so-called “normal tax,” a flat rate applied to the entire amount of your net income, ix collected directly from the corporations as far'@a divi- ‘OHIO MAN IS A MODERN WIZARD Corns stop hurting, then lift off with fingers. Drops of magic! bit! Apply a little Freezone on that | touchy corn, instantly that corn \stops hurting, then you lift it off with the fingers. No pain at all! ‘Try it! Why wait? Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and calluses, with- Out soreness or irritation. Freezone is the much talked of ether 7 C1 Doesn't hurt one | LOOK AT CHILD'S TONGUE IF SICK, CROSS, FEVERISH When constipated or bilious give “California Syrup of Figs.” Look at the tongue, mother! If ‘coated, it is a sure sign that your els need a gentle, thorough cleans- jing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, doesn’t eat or act naturally, or is feverish, stom- ach sour, breath bad; has stomach- ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of “Cali- fornia Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. You needn't coax sick children to take this harmless “fruit laxative”; they love its.delicious taste, and it always makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” whicn has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plain- ly on the bottle, Beware of coun- terfeits sold here. To be sure you prs the Sannin ask to seo that it made by “California Fig Syrup little one’s stomach, liver and bow- | you Inake the collection. What Can't Be You cannot maze any deductions for the following items: Living ex- | penses, rent, repaire and wear and | tear on your home, expenses of ed- ucating your children, or «ifta. Fourth, under the present revenue | bin, you are allowed to deduct any contributions which you have made during the year to religious, charit- | able, educational and scientific or | ganizations up to an amount equal ‘This was put in practically as a war measure in order that contributions to churches and charitable institu- tions should be maintained. Subtract the total of these allow- able deductions from your gross in- come and the amount that remains | is your net income. | Everyone Has Exemption You are not taxed on the total | amount of your net income, however, | tor the revenue bill allows @ personal exemption in every case. For un- married men, this personal exemp- | tion i# $1,000, while for married men land heads of families it is $2,000 | plus $200 for each dependent child | under 18,or over that age if incapa- | bie of selfeupport as a result of physical or mental infirmity. For a |inarried man with four dependent children the total amount exempt is 1 $2,800. | Subtract the amount of your per- |nonal exemption from your net in [come and you have the amount on which you are taxed. INCOME TAX PUZZLES The Star's “Income Taz” Editor Will Answer Your — Mail Them to ‘em. Q-—I am a married man, and my wages amounted to $1,176.46 for last year. I bought a $100 Liberty bond, and have $185 in the postal savings bank and a vacant lot in the East of a tax valuation of $280. Do I have to make a return? A.—The in- come tax is computed on your net |oarnings only. You did not have $2,000 net income for the year end- jng December $1, 1917, and therefore are not required to file a statement. Q.—My brother and I are support. ing my mother and two younger chil- dren, my father being dead. Togeth- er we made last year about $1,800. I am only 17 years of age, and I would like to ask you if I could be classed as a minor, and my brother ae a single or married man? Aliso would we have'to register? A.—Ap: parently neither of you had a net income of $1,000, If such is the case, no return required, | Q—I am single, Wages for 19 |$045. Property sold on contract, | $145. Paid $10 taxes on vacant lot |Is value of that taxable? ‘Total, $790, Sold property in Januafy, 1918; | no profit. Is the money in the bank axed? Have I to pay war taxes? A.—-As your net income for the 12 | months’ period ending December, 1917, was less than $1,000, no return required. JAPANESE MISSION |” DEPARTS FOR EAST | After being in Seattle Friday night and Saturday, the Japanese military mission, on its way to rep- resent Japan at an inter-allied con- ference in Europe, left Sunday for the East. It consists of Dr, P. Inaba, of the Tokyo military medical school; Commander 8, Oyamada, Lieut. Commander 8, Toyoshima. and Lieut, Commander M. Kasuya, all of the Japanese navy, | K. OF P. HOLD FAREWELL Queen City lodge No. 10, K. of P., will hold a farewell entertainment |for members only Monday evening. ‘This is the final get together gather |ine of its members before consoli- Beda oat cla aat to 15 per cent of your net income. | *———_—_______________» | ‘The number of men rejected for physical reasons when examined for j the new national army is surpris- ingly high when it im considered that men of draft age ought to be at the height of ! their vigor. The number of rejections, how- |ever, indicates that the public must | be made to realize that not only are the communicable diseases prevent- |able but also that the degenerative |diseases of adult life can be pre- vented or indefinitely postponed by Proper diet and life. Much already has been done among the rejected men by calling their attention to their physical dis-| > abilities, é ‘The great value of a complete an- nual physical examination of every person should be impressed not only| Get a small package ofHamburg upon these young men, but upon| Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Tad the whole population. Not only |atablespoonful of this Hamburg Ta should the soldiers, but every one,| put a cup of boiling water upon it, be impressed with the influence of| pour through a sieve and drink a tea- adequate daily exercise, regular|cupful at any time. It is the most hours and habits and proper food, | effective. way to break a cold and combined with strict military dis-|cure grip, as cipline, in vastly improving the gen-| lleving congestion. eral health and physique. bowels, thus breaking a cold at once. AN must learn that the body can-| It is inexpensive and entirely vege- not be exposed to continuous strain | table, therefore harmless. and abuse without ultimately show: ing serious effects. ¢ draft is having a far-reaching effect upon public health. It has turne# attention to the need of in-| | tensive work to relieve the phyaical | disabilities and to prevent the de-| generative influences of our modern 5 : Fosh and worry Iife. || Early showing of Spring | A meeting of the auxiliary to Com- || materials for Suits, Coats pany D, 101st U. §. infantry, will be| jheld at & p. m. Tuesday in the asf and One-Piece Dresses. 425 UNION STREET = ? ay 5oeeh ileal F & For that's the kind of a son is. He believed in playing game right out in the open. stoutly, honestly. He’ word has always been absolutely |membly room of the | | Commerce, Arctic building. AN per-| | sons interested in the welfare of the| | boys now serving In that company | are invited to attend. i This Invention for Rupture Sent on 60 Days Trial Won't Cost You a Cent if the Two Months’ Test Doesn’t Prove All Our Claims bone can't “knit unless con- together. Temember. the Ciuthe garanteed to hold—and won't cost you A cent if it falls, And tn addition, " 14d =e meer A Away With Worthless Trusses Like These It-to- You ean make a thorough prove- you test of this guaranteed rupture hold- er without having to risk @ sing! ‘We'll send it to you for 60 days’ trial— practically lend it to you that lone—just to let you see for yourself how it takes all the misery out of being ruptured. it cannot be made to keep your rulfats rom ‘coming out ‘or bothering any way—in spite of any work Jen do er nny other atraine—then tt won't cost you @ penny. The Only Thing Good Enough To Stand Such A Test try-on—like at a drug store— can't wosatiy prove whether a. truss or anything else for rupture is going to do any good. we: ‘ ither is Just a few days’ trinl a safe tent A" truss may seem all right the firat week or #0, and then prove utterly worthlem. Rut you can't posstoty make @ mistake €0 days’ trial. only one thing of any tong trial— * Omiy ‘one thing good eno such a long and thorough t ‘That 1s our guaranteed rupture holder— ous Cluthe. Made on New Principles ‘The Clutne #0 radically dtfter i of advising operation. ‘To Save You From Operation A rupture can't ly be relleved— even be of Oe erae ss: it provides the onty way ever discovered tor overcoming the weakness which is he real cause of rupture. It does th is of peo- to risk their lives under No Belt, No Leg-Straps, No Springs Ctuthe does away entire! with the curse of weartng belts, le straps and springs. 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Simply use the coupon below er say in a letter or postal, me your book" te, \-s from paying cA many dollars and save you from years of misery. THIS BRINGS IT Hox 9¢—CLUTHE BONS 198 Eest 23rd 8, New York City Send me your Free Beok and Trial é RaPTANT™ FRATRALA Tuff

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