The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 9, 1911, Page 5

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F SPECIAL INTEREST TO WOMEN SHE LOST 40 POUNDS IN EIGHT WEEKS--EASY, TOO '':.:"':;';: MERCIFUL HEAVENS!!—HOW??? YORK, Oct. 9.—Any Indy oe yout can readily under. why, when Miss Lydia Barry| on the stage of the Win- ter this fall looking quite ‘aml svelte, whereas at her stage appearance tn the spring | she was obviously corseted and, yes, fat—any lady of avoirdupois fam understand why there was a Soe rush of Mise Barry's still e sisters to find out how she did ‘Whereat a largé Idea popped into (Mies Barry's head “If I tell my secret freely they will be getting something for noth T wilt waste much time and be the richer,” she mused. “But $01 organise a cioss in banting and charge tuition I can kill all the | ged with one stone and It will be/ eight weeks. my profit.” | MISS LYDIA BARRY. Miss Barry reduced 40 pounds in “Very simple.” she sald. “Iron Which explains the group of 200-| three times a day, water whenever lors eaxerly hanging on Miss | you're ‘Ss words of wisdom each af-/ no fattening foods, and—the secre! With. Cyntha Grey STITUTE FOR SPANKING AN EXCELLENT 38) thirety.plenty of exercise, part of it We don't believe in spanking at our house, and we do not at all believe in putting children to bed or making them go without a meal maporarily and little person goes down fat the park when mother tells him to play in the yard, or forgets for about four evenings in suceesston to come home from Tommy's house when their memories fail them until 7 o'clock, when mother said 6, But, just to help little person's memory, to give tt a stimulus for Roper growth, something must be done. Therefore, for certain lapses of memory or like falls from mother gmc, we take away for a certain length of time, the periods graduating to fit the size of the offense, some favored toy or plaything thp bicycle ts locked up fm fts little stall for two days or perhaps the bat and balt rest on the living room high while, just as idle as can be. ‘be there isn't anything doing with the roller skates or bag Perhaps day mantel for Or the latest of marbies for a while, or the box of patuts is locked up tight in mother's The value of the treasures confiscated is made to correspond with the seriousness of the offense committed. “Make the punishment fit the crime, the punishment fit the crime!” This plan works beautifully at our house. Dear Miss Grey: @ i2yearcld girl! wear her (2) Give recipe for lemon ple. For angel-food —C. B. A. ff two braids, tied at crossed at the back and brought round the head and tied om the top a little at one side. (2) Beat the yolks of two eggs until light, add one cup of sugar, the juice and rind of one lemon and one hot er, and cook in double it begins to thicken, ad4 one tablespoon cornstarch which has been dissolved in a lit- tle cold water. When this is quite thick, pour into crust which has heen previously baked, cover with meringue made with the two t4 whites, a teaspoon pulverized @ (3) Beat one cup egg whites very stiff, fold in one cup granulated sugar which bas been sifted twice, one teaspoon almond flavoring and one-half tea- spoon vanilla. Beat in one cup flour, sifted with one tea- spoon cream of tartar 3 times. Pour into unbuttered angel-cake pan bake 40 minutes without moving ft, invert pan until cool, remove pan, and, cover with frosting, if Iked. Dear Miss Grey: I am 27 and in love with a woman of 45. She has grown-up children who are op posed to our marriage. Please ad- vise me whether to marry her under the circumstances.—Reader. A.: This woman way be all that fa admirable and lovable in woman kind, but she is not the woman for you to marry. Your affection for her is probably akin to the love you have had for your mother, for she {s old enough to be your moth- er. A marriage under such cir- cumstances is sure to end unhap- pily, and you would regret the step. Better wait. Before long the right girl will appear and you'll be thank | ful that you waited for her. Dear Miss Grey: Please advise me in my love affairs, as 1 have no one to whom I can go. From the time { was 16 1 went with a young man I loved very dearly. came to see me for two years and then began to go with others and finally told me he was not coming to see me any more. It nearly broke my heart, but I have been going with another young man whom my grandparents advise me to marry, Try as | may I can not put the other man out of my mind and | cannot care as much for this one as I do for the other, Ihave no parents and no home of my own, Would you advise me to marry or not?—Pearl. A.: Yours is a wad story, and T wish I could settle your troubles for you. cannot advise you to marry when you do not care for the man, and wher your heart be jongs to another. It would not be ,falr to the second man, unless you he He} Cynthia Grey’s Letters (1) How should tell him about it, and jet him de ir? cide. (1) Parted,, rolled at sides,/not care for me—who shows me ends, ortso little consideration? in not, Hittle flavoring. Stightly | eotully | | | | } Just pat this question to your self; “Do I want a man who does Could be happy with him, knowing he does not love me?” I'm sure your answer would be “No.” if you were to mary bim by some freak of fate some day, you never would be com. fortable a moment of your life, for he had so little regard for you in the past that he left you and he'd do it again, you may be sure. Before you decide to decline the second man’s proposal, be sure you do not love him. If you respect him and he ts worthy an honest girl's love (which the other man perhaps you can learn to Danziger Noted for Their bar all competition. Natural Red Fox Sets. Black Fox Sets Natural Racoo Hudson Seal Sets .. Black Marten Sets . Natural Mink Sets . Blue Wolf Sets ... Black Wolf Sets .... Several hundred hibited this week at reduced 1410 2d Ave. Made in Our Own Shop New, Fresh Fashions to meet the most exacting requirements, and at prices that "WE PLACE IN EVIDENCE - The following special values in Fur Sets and Coats: Black Russian Pony Coats ... Misses’ Black Russian Pony C Natural Hudson Bay Beaver Sets. beautiful Goods purchased now will be held until wanted. Danziger Fur CO. Repairing—Opp. Bon Marche—Remodeling THE STAR—-MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1911 THIS MAN INSPIRED SHERLOCK HOLME LONDON, Oct. 9.—Joseph + 1, an eminent Scottish sur. goon, who was the original of the character of Sherlock Holmes, died today. He was jlove him in time, You are still so young that I prophesy you'll forget you ever cared for the first man, ae, if you do remember, Whom. son wen | Born In Edinburgh in 1037 and think it ove wo was an instructor of onan | him ing It over some day in the] Be dasewas ie eeeee His hobby was the study of mysterious crimes, The professor of elocution wan tn. jryeting au anbistous young 4) BEATEN IN HORSE we TRADE; SUICIDES have finished your bow gracefully | form on tiptoe,”| LAPRER, Mich, Oct. 9—Be querted the am: | caune, it Is sald, he got the Worst of ta horse trading deal, Harry Cole- [man, an aged farmer, committed suleide by hanging. and loav Why on tip bitious young man. "So as not to wake she audience replied the professor LET ME MEET YOU FACE TO FACE - sibility” is now an old-fashioned word with a definition but not a meaning. Almost every The magic cities and the fairy kingdoms of your grandmother aren't half so wonderful as the world in which you live. The wizards, elves, pixies, gnomes and djinns of legend lumped together never did as much in all their historied years as Cleeland has recently accom- plished in the production of oil dream of the past is a reality today Department of Agriculture is Interested in Production of China Wood Oil. It was several years ago that one of the agricul- tural explorers of the department, turning ap new things in the vegetable line, discovered what looked like a promising substitute for Linseed Oil in China. It was oil pressed from the nut of a tree, known as “wood oil,” “tree oil” or “tong oil.” It was used for a paint oil and had all the good qualities of linseed oil and some others, as it forms a good dryer with paint and makes the paint particularly enduring The seeds of the tree were imported by the bureau of foreign plant introduction and the tree has been raised for about four years in the south. It bears a heavy crop of nuts about the size of goif balls. These, when cracked, have a smell that is a compro- mise between a Brazil nut and a thoroughly fertil- ized field. The tree in China grows to a good size, and the yield of nuts, and consequently of oil, in- creases with the age. It will be several years be- fore the tree can be introduced to any extent in this country, but the outlook for a new and valuable crop is encouraging ft in declared that the fences to some Chinese * back yards painted with this ol! as « bast stood unrepaired since the Manebu invasion, and it ts even intimated that some of the houses #0 painted have decayed be- fore the patut fet the touch of time, and that there are families still Hving in tenements built generations ago, and of which there is nothing left now but the original coat of paint Linseed Of} ts gotag up, and with it paint. as houscholders who had to do any painting re cently know to their cost This is due to two things, the restriction of arca that can be given to fiax seed raising, and a fun gus disease that makes the flax ground “sick.” Between the two, the sup- ply of linseed off in db minishing and the de mand for tt increasing Large Demand and Durability. Cleoland’s Paint Ol) has thoroughly demon. strated the fact that it tx by far better than Lin seed O11, or any other oll, for paint mixing pur. poses, as it has been sold in Britixh Columbia by the British-America Paint Co. for the fast four years, and the results have been that there in more of this oil in de- mand than the Linseed or ‘This paint off is sold at 85 cents per gallon in British Columbia, which is a few cents loan per gallon than Linseed Oi! Cleeiand’s Paint Oil Jf takes the paint more § durable and will not oxi- = dize; tt will maintain its gloss as long as the paint is not disturbed. You might possibly think this incredible, but did you ever stop to think that the genius who once in- vented romances of the future is now an industrial pro- moter, and the artist who flustrated bis yarns is drafting for the city's foremost architect and putting in his spare time at odd jobs for t% patent attorney on the floor be low? Even our Hbrarian has changed the classification of Jules V works, and has shifted “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea” and “A Trip to the Moon” from the fiction department to the technical book section, as we will undoubtedly shift from the expensive oils for painting pur- poses when we are face to face with Cleeland’s Paint Oil, nd from the use of which oll we are able to get a better ervice at a less cost than from the present Linseed Oil or other ofls. Will Not Oxidize or Disintegrate. The hundred years behind us are jammed and crammed with achievements that outbalance the sum total of prog- ress since the signing of the Magna Charta. The average painter of today enjoys luxuries that Midas, with all his wealth, could not command, and in order to enjoy these luxuries the painter must give the very best of service to be had, Every practical painter knows that the purest of Linseed Otis will oxidize and disintegrate in time, the length of which is dependable upon the thickness of the oil mixture, whereas Cleeland’s Paint Oil will not oxidize or disintegrate, as the basis of it is China Wood Oil, or O11 of Nuts and Soya Bean Oil, which oil is famous, far beyond the medieval ages, for its use by the Chinese Paint, Lacquer and Varnish artista, on account of its ability to hold its luster and gloss, and yet when you stop to think, a mere hundred years ago even the scientist thought that the atmosphere was simply space—that gas was only a smell. The first microbe hadn't disclosed its identity. And Metchnikoff's announcement of battling hosts in every drop of human blood would have earned him a padded cell, and {t {s hardly a month since the father of antiseptic sur- gery was gathered to his fathers. Operations weren't al- ways the cozy luxuries that they are at present. Limbs were amputated while the patient soreamed, and the stump was sealed with a dab of boiling pitch, Similar methods and improvements are applicable to all things, especially to Cleeland’s Paint Oil for its SUPERIORITY TO ALL OTHER PAINT OILS that have been and are at present being used, as Karl C. Cleeland & Co., Inc., the manufac. turers of Cleeland’s Paint Oil for the United Stattes, are pleased at all times to give a free demonstration or let any investigator try this ofl out to his own satisfaction, as FREE SAMPLBS are froely given for thorough tests, ba the Factory Branch of Bush & Lane Piano Co., and explain | in a straightforward, conscientious, plain facts manner, just why | I prefer to talk to you direct from factory to home, than through) | the middlemen dealers. I believe in more quality for less money, Let me prove my claim by facts, regardless of your intention to} | purchase. Yours for an absolute square déal, W. R. CASEY, Sales Manager Bush & Lane Piano Co. . 1315 Third Avenue Pun. Furs Reliability models are ex- prices. 1410 Than the Wizards of Old " Cleeland’s Oil Is a New Product, No Substitute; It Will Revolutionize the Oil Market The Best Oil on With such crude miscroscopes tory equipment as we possess, the conviction is still rapidly gaining strength that we know sphere, but nevertheless we mu Paint Oi! is the best ofl on the market for the painter and tho paint buying public, when you Oll for 75 cents per gallon in barr any of the paint pigments and lead, The very best Linseed O1 Gay will cost you 90 cents per gallon sideration the difference in cort place Cleeland’s Paint Ol) at the ofl on the market, and yet you m land's Paint Ol] was a vivid imagination, but you must not overlook the fact that in this m the course of rivers and upset all of Old Mother Natu pear to blossom where for ages monsters and the taunting mirage Greater Spread for Less Cost. We used to think that Jack Frost was some pumpkins until we went him one better at his own trade and make our ice in the bolling sun; and you that there was only one kind of Paint Oil, but we have given you one that is better than any you bave yet used, as you | may take the sam amount of pigment up 16 per cent more, oil being cheaper than pigments. point understood by painters. amount of pi COMING OIL We transmute t sands into golden granaries and command the apple and the and Cleeland’s Paint Ot! will take giving @ greater spread for less cost, the Market and test tubes and labora- mighty little about our ust admit that Cleeland’s 1 can buy Cleeland’s Paint 1 lots, it will not ver ap will not curdle the white il in the open market to- Now, taking into con- and service from otis will top of the list as the best night still think that Clee- odern century we change I the original calculations e arid, ghastly the only yield was Gila have undoubtedly thought aint of] against the same This is a very economical Over All Other Oils. We recognize no horl- * zon to our endeavors, We despair of no goal. Eman- cipated from superstition bigotry, with the wings of imagination to and bear us onward and up- ward, who dares place a limit upon the advan- tages of Cleeland’s Paint Oll over all other ofls, when right here in the city of Seattie one of the most repiftable advertis- ing firms of the Pacific Northwest, known as Foster & Klelser Sign Co., bave been for sev- eral months past using Cleeland’s Paint Oil, and are at this time using it in preference to all others? The Ear! C. Clee- land Co., Inc, Manufaec- turers of Cleeland’s Paint Oil, guarantee that this ol! does not contain any Rosin or Rosin Oil, Gums or Neutral Olls. Clee- land's Paint Oil can be used in any proportion with Linseed Oil, Turpen- tine and Dryers The China Wood OU has a more compact film and a surface that is more impervious to water and gases than Linseed Oli, because It resists the ele- ments to a greater de- gree, : | Mr. Earl C. Cleeland Mr. Earl C. Cleeland has been in the business of supplying the paint trade with raw material for the headquarters at 803 Post past three years, with street in this city, where he Previous to Mr. Cleeland’s city he was a professor at College, in Canton, China, where he has many influ- ential prominent Oriental friends, Mr. Cleeland for- merly migrated from the thriv’ to Canton, China. During his Cleeland was constantly in to! of the various prominent parts of the world, and after a very careful study and consideration as to what part of the world he would permanently locate in, came to the conclusion that Seattle was the most nt point of many localities that he had in y demonstrated to him that impor view, as it was thorough! the future of the city of than you can stretch your ima a than your own children can see or imagine. you stop to think, it is not many moons since this beautiful city of Seattle was the camping and former fishing grounds of American Indian, our and for a aunt paid “four bits” a bottle to the patent medicine faker who sold her kerosene many ilis as the printer could crowd on the label, but in this modern day the is an unknown factor; he has and Drug Laws.” of the World” recognize the it universe, and especially the ci been thoroughly proven that mail and shipments from the Orient to the East can make quicker time by six days via Seattle, which portant that it will make the c way of the important shipments of the world. Cleeland’s confidence in the fu city of Seattle is assured, and consequently he will always continue to maintain hi business and his home here. business career in this tence by the progressive strides of our “Pure Food Likewise will the “Progress is at present located, the Canton Christian ing city of Butler, Pa., stay in the Orient Mr. uch with the progress ttle would be greater gination, even greater When aborigines, the while your great- as a panacea for as patent medicine faker been driven out of ex- mportant points of the ity of Seattle, as it ha feature alone is so im- ity of Seattle the gate- Mr, y of the ture prosperi is headquarters for his

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