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——— ——s Woman Is Shot APARTMENTS ARE NOT by Camp Sentry NEWPORT NEWS, Va., July 8. INVOLVED IN ‘DRY’ RAID Monday's Star stated the Mrs, Edward J, Shafer, of Williams ee oe burg, Va, wae slain by a shot from | Pid on the Parker apartments, 417 & sentry’s rif_e at Camp Alexander | 19 18th ave, N., six men and three é -enceare tema yoo > gata women were arrested Sunday and Served 1 infantry, the sentr: charges : n Sedan Mrs. Shafer, her husband, | *"® ™@nager of the apartments was and their two children, were in an | Creed with running a disorderly auto, which attempted to turn down | "CU The Parker apartments & street closed to visitors, accord.|W°re im no way involved. The ing to the sentry, and when they |Se@teh was of one apartment only failed to stop, at his order, he fired. | SUNDAY JULY 13 To HOOD CANAL Excursion of excursions —a wonder cruise of the most picturesque part of Pyget sound. S. S. WHATCOM Leaves —— at Tre Fare $1.50 Children, 5 to 12, 75c. Including War Tax Breoks’ Whangdoed! Entertainers ai Ja heat: The manager was not held. — COMING — i Ny) an Pays the Cost of a $100 Loan With Us You can pay it back in small monthly payments, reducing If the bed-rock in his claim creck had been rough instea® of smooth he would be many times a million- aire now, | But fate played with the dice load- ed and the cards stacked, so Hans Damm, six feet of brawn, with a vo: racious appetite for hard labor of the manual type landed in Seattle dead broke in the winter following the Nome gold rush, He worked for a while with the section gang that scraped the muck HE Fourth has been celebrated in fitting manner and everyone has had a much needed rest for three days. But now attention must revert to those things that make life an earnest matter. Health, strength and efficiency must be looked to. And in these things the teeth play the most important part. Without good teeth, health cannot be had and consequently efficiency suffers. : R. SIPES has practiced dentistry successfully in Seattle for the last 16 years and today is pro- ducing SATISFACTORY dentistry of the highest order. His methods have been imitated but none has produced the number of satisfied patients that he has. Modern Apparatus Every modern device for treating troubles of the teeth and gums will be found in use in this office. Tried and tested are all methods in practice here. There is no guesswork. Results are safe and sure. Painless dentistry in its highest development is one of the features of the service here. So sure is Dr. Sipes that you will feel no pain when he treats your teeth that he will extract teeth FREE when other work is ordered. If you have tooth troubles, don’t delay having them attended to. Come in today and have your teeth examined. It costs you nothing. {BOSTON DENTAL COMPANY 1420 Second Ave. (Opposite Bon Marche). for Seattie's car system, found that it didn’t suit his ideas of excitement, Joined the police force, and now, with 18 years of service behind him, he wears the shoulder straps of a captain. Captain Hans Damm he ts now, and one of the best liked men on the force. He is still six feet two inches in height, with a heft of 285 pounds, and he modestly admits to having the biggest feet in the galaxy | of large-footed policemen, Got $1.75 a Day | “T helped throw the first shovel fuls of earth so that folks could ride | on the cable cars up Yesler Way,” he admits. “I helped hang the counter balance for the old Jackson street [car line, I worked for a dollar and six bits a day. I slept fn a little, cold hall bedroom that cost me a dollar a week. Many a time I've awakened in the morning to climb into the same wet clothes I'd taken off the night before.” ‘Then Damm joined the force, For a while he pounded a beat on what waa then known as Upper Third ave. Where the post-office now stands was part of the university grounds. Maple shade trees grew along Third ave. Board walks lined a dirt road. What is now the busiest section of the city |was then quiet, peaceful and ex tremely rural. ‘shifted to Washington st, to the famous old “Skidroad,” “a wickeder stretch of board walk than the main street in Hell,” someone once de- scribed it. For seven yeurs he worked that beat. “We worked tn pairs,” he exptains, “and I've seen times when we were so busy that we didn’t have time all | night to snatch our coffee and crul- llers. Those were the days of Billy's Mug, Iron Car Pete, Billie Belond, | Pig Iron Kelly, the smuggler; the | hey-dey of Considine and the People’s ‘Theatre. Was Tough Street “AN the old-timers remember ther. Believe me, I have cause to. The Barbary Coast was a Sunday School picnic beside that stretch. It was }the roughest, toughest street tn the world.” Capt. Damm first came to this sec- tion of the country during 1898 rush. With four companions he traveled the Stikene river route in the search for the yellow metal. There he saw SOUR Isabelle Clark Swezy, cooking and Baking ex- pert has prepared for us a cook book devoted exclusively to sour milk. It contains fifty-seven splendid recipes for utilizing sour- milk that will at once appeal to every economical house- wife. Free Copies to Housewives ‘The edition is limited, Send us your grocer's receipt showing that you . have purchased a sack of FISHER’S BLEND FLOUR and we will mail \ you at once a copy of this valuable cook book. | Address Home Office: FISHER FLOURING MILLS CO. H West Waterway, Harbor Island | SEATTLE Capt. Damm Joined Force After Big Gold Rush and CAPTAIN HANS DAMM Then Damm was) KshKers BLEND Sour Milk Recipes DON’T THROW AWAY YOUR ||: THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1919. Woolly Times this 50-cent aluminum mold for it makes a tart, green salad jell. | uncooked vegetables this makes men in the throes of the gold lust~ weeping hysterically, screaming, cry ing; hanging and shooting themselves in the mad frenzy for gold He staked a claim in the Atlin | Riyer country, Up above him was the famous Nugget Point, where men scraped raw nuggets from the grass roots. But the bed rock of the jcreeks where they rushed over his | claim was smooth, What gold came from above was washed below, where it caught in the rougher rock of the | creek bed, and his more fortunate fel | low gold-seekers scooped It out in | double handfuls. That is why Capt. Damm is not a millionaire today, | “But I’m going back to that coun- |try some day,” he says. “And I'm | going to hunt and fish to my heart's |content. Wonderful country. ‘Ho- hum,’* he yawns, “The good old | days are gone.” Pint Mold, Style D, serves ! eae —the end lavor —and we'll send you this mold, roast lamb, American Army Sure Did Smoke Heap of Tobacco Bread, the staff of life? It may have been, back in Biblical times, but not now. * Figures just made public by the jarmy recruiting station here, show | that bread was only a very small incident in the doughboy overseas during the war. As a matter of fact, Col. Otho W. R. Farr, in command of the station, mld today, a great deal more to bacco was shipped the American Ex peditionary Forces than flour. Total tobacco shipments to the American Pint Mold — Stye—H Our New Star-Shaped Mold Use Lime Jiffy-Jell for salads. Each package contains a bottle of lime-fruit essence, sealed. Added to Jiffy-Jell Some serve it with the salad as a zestful mix the salad into the jell while cooling. A meat loaf is made by mixing in meat scraps. This gives you meat in aspic—an ideal summer cold dish. We Supply the Mold jit, -Jell with the salad or meat mixed in. It makes a flat | isi § with six indentations to mark six individual servings. Send us five end labels*from Jiffy-Jell labels naming Mint Jiffy-JeN contains a vial of mint. It makes a garnish jell, far better than mint sauce, to serve with cold meats or 50c Molds Free Get a Full Set if You Use Jiffy-Jell Pint Mold—Style—D * For a Siffy-Jell Salad or Meat Loot iffy-Jell is for salads as well as for desserts. And we offer use in making salads. ish. Some ith cooked or a salad loaf. a full package of Lime the aluminum Ten overseas forces between April 7, 1917, and May 1, 1919, came to a value of $79,£75,000, while only $50, 732,000 worth of flour was shipped in the same time. Upholds Conviction in Callaghan Case OLYMPIA, July 8—The supreme court has upheld the conviction of the King county superior court tn the case of James J, Callaghan. Callaghan, as commisstoner of public welfare for the county, was convict- ea of drawing orders for $130 worth of groceries on the county, thru Lester Gondalfo. The groceries, to go to fictitious persons, were never delivered. FITTINGS MATCH EYES LONDON, July 8.—Sybil Carlisle, the noted English actress, has start. ed a new fad. Tho furnishings of her new home are of a gray-bine color to match her eyes. The color scheme has been carried out even in her china. ‘The most tmportant meeting in convention in Bellingham, will be the meeting of the executive board of the federation tn the Mutual Life building Thursday morning, for a three-day session. Following this conference, the board will hold a joint meeting with the temporary organization commit: | tee of the “triple alliance,” the po Utieal union formed between the state federation, the farmers’ grange and the railwaymen's league. The principal work of the execu- tive board will be to provide ma- chinery for the referendum on the “One Big Union” plan. Upon the outcome of this vote, will depend whether the “One Big Union” idea will dominate the state federation in the future. The motion to submit the “One Big Union” plan to a ref- erendum was carried in the‘ closing hours of the Bellingham convention. General Strike Plan The “One Big Union” ts claimed by its advocates to be in effect in Eng: land and Australia. The two prin- cipal doctrines of the plan is the shop steward system and the general strike, The shop steward system provides that each craft in a plant shall have a representative on a board, which shall have an equal voice with the employer in determining working conditions. Under the general strike system, | when one craft walks out, the| others join the strike and tie up the| plant or industry affected complete | This is the plan which will be| voted on by the federation. Busi ness left unfinished by the conven- tion also will be handled by the ex- ecutive board. On Sunday, the triple alliance com- | mittee will meet in conjunction with | the executive board and ways will be considered to bring the triple alli-| ance into its fullest political | strength, To Organize Alliance Forrest L. Hudson, president of the Railwaymen’s league, is chair | man of the triple alliance committee. | He has been mentioned as a possible ad of the permanent triple alll- | ance political organization. For the position of secretary, C. B, Cottrell, of Kent; Charles Perry ‘Taylor, of Tacoma, and Lucy ft. Case, are the principal candidates, Vice president, treasurer and a head of the wom en's divisions will also be elected at the Sunday meeting. The object of the triple alliance will be to obtain remedial legislation thru political solidarity and elect public servants favorable to labor and the farmers. The status of the new labor party being formed by the Central Labor council also will be decided. Whether MILK! Important Labor Meeting Here Thursday; New Union Plan and Alliance Are Up | McCabe, of Seattle; Dan McCartey, | of Spokane; H. Sylvester, of Pasco; WANT PRICE OF | the local labor party will do the work of tho alliance in Seattle will be de- termined at the meeting, The triple alliance will inaugurate an organization which will enter into the political affairs of the whole state if effectively organized, will mv r the votes of more than 100,000 people. Will Seek Candidates Candidates for office will be dratt- ed on the theory that the office should seek the man, and not the man the office. The committee which will deal with the permanant organization of the triple alliance, consists of repre- | sentatives from the three interested organizations. The grange and other farmers’ or- ganizations will be represented by the following: C. B. Cottrell, of Kent; J. L. Freeman, of Spokane; Dr. W. W. Stewart, of Chelan; Fred Nelson, of Orillia; Fred Chamber- lain, of Puyallup, and Wm. Bouck, of Sedro-Woolley. The railwaymen will be represent- ed by Forrest L. Hfidson and James | E. C, Foreman, of Malden; Charles BE. Brower, of Everett, and James D. Smythe, of Tacoma, ‘The federation will have as rep- Tresentatives: J, BE. McCorkle, of Se attle; Fred W. Green, of Spokane; | Ina P. Williams, of Yakima; Chas. | W. Richmond, of Tacoma; E. A. Francois, of Everett; Fred B. Nor an, of Raymond, and J. E. Dyke, of Bellingham. | Follawing the important meetings | thie week, activities in the federa- tion are expected to slack up some- | what until the new executive board and officers of the federation take fice the first Monday in August. Bring Offices Here With Wm. L. Buck, Seattle bar- ber, as secretary of the federation, | all the affairs of that body wll be! administered from Seattle, and not} partly from Tacoma, as when Charles Perry Taylor was secre- tary. The office of the federation | president, secretary and the office | of the triple alliance will all be in one central location following the | installation of the new officers in August. The old headquarters of the federation in the Mutual Life building will be abandoned and new quarters, probably farther up town, | will be obtained. | President Short is already laying | plans for a vigorous campaign to/| bring into the federation a large | number of organizations not now} affiliated, | WHEAT KEPT UP Senators Disagree Over| Guarantee to Farmer | WASHINGTON, July 8.—(United | Press,)—There is a difference of opin- ion among senators from the g states today as to whether the per bushel guaranteed wheat price should be repealed. Altho Senator Gronna, North Da- kota, declared his constituents ted the law abolished, and he 4s| ning to introduce a bill to that ef: , Senators Hitchcok, Nebraska, and Curtis and Capper, Kansas, sald | their folks back home wanted the | guarantee to remain for the present. | Those opposing the repeal said banks had loaned heavily on the| strength of the guarantee, and if it This ects Uren’ — Jiffy-Jell. Flavors in Glase Vials Wie. ws. MAIL THIS * I enclose......end labels naming the flavor, for which send the molds I check. -Pint Mold, Style—H. wees. Pint Mold, Style—E. ~ Six Individual Molds. were done away with a financial | panic might result. All the employes of the Imperial| “he Will just begin to live.” Candy company, Western ave. and | WS after celebrating his 80th Columbia st., were given an hour off | 1y- Tuesday noon to have a community sing. It is proposed to|Camp Community service led the | new hat so angry as to have the state labor movement since the | raise a campaign fund of $100,000. singers. Individual Molds A Set of Six for Kéty-Jell Real-Frait Desserts is a 60-cent gift. These aluminum molds come of six, assorted styles, valued at 10 cents each. : Send us five end labels from Jiffy-Jell packages end labels naming the flavor—and we will send entire set. berry and Pineapple are two dessert which we particularly want you to try. They are fi which must be sealed to keep. So they were impo in old-style gelatine desserts. In Jiffy-Jell the fruit-juice essence comes in liquid in vials. with all fruit flavors. There is a J the real-fruit flavor, condensed from the fruit itself, Include Loganberry, Pineapple, Lime and Mint in you purchase of Jiffy-Jell. Learn the delights of these flavors. They have won millions of housewives Pint Dessert Molds Free 3 At the bottom we picture two mold¢ Each serves a full eof iy They are valued at 50 sees cane Send us five end labels from Jel ages—the end labels naming the we will send cither mold you want. prefer, send a grocer’s sales slip package purchase. Send them to us with the coupon the molds you want. Cut out the offer so you won't forget. JiffyJell, Waukesha, Wis. JOHN D. YOUTHFUL NEW YORK, July §&, Press.)—John D, Rockefeller expects to live to be 100, CANDYMAKERS SING + Francis Russell of the War; Nothing makes a woman | woman pass her without notie If your teeth are coming loose and your gums are tender and sore, do not neglect them but see us at once. Diseased teeth and gums cause GET OUR FIGURE ON YOUR DENTAL WORK! Have your dental work done the Prophylactic way—you’ll be money ahead. TEETH WITHOUT PLATES FALLING GUMS PYORRHEA PROPHYLAXIS, “The New Dentistry,” is the new painless way of restoring. broken down tissues and nerves without any great expense. DENTISTS 819 THIRD Opposite AVENUE Central Bldg.