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About The Estacada news. (Estacada, Or.) 1904-1908 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1905)
You Hair Sick? JAPANESE ADMIRAL FOLLOWS DEWEY’ S MANILA TACTICS. h Rear Admiral Sotoklchl Urlu. who bore the brunt o f lighting in the great naval battle in the Straits o f Korea, followed about the same tactics Dewey employed at Manila. Admiral Uriu was In command of the division of Togo s fleet which bore In and attack- j ed the Russian ships under Nebogatoff, as a result of which the Russians were thrown Into terror and thoroughly routed. Admiral Uriu. the victor of Chemulpo, who is 47 years old, gradu ated from the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1881. He comes of a very old samurai family of Kaga, on the Japan Sea. His govern ment picked him out as one of the cleverest most daring students of the Japanese Naval Academy and sent him to this country to study. Before he became rear admiral he commanded That’s too bad! We had no ticed it was looking pretty thin and faded of late, but naturally did not like to speak of it. By the way, Ayer’s Hair Vigor is a regular hair grower, a perfect hair re storer. It keeps the scalp clean and healthy. “ I am well acquainted with Ayer’s Hair Vigor and I like It very much. I would espe cially recommend it as an excellent dressing for the hair, keeping it soft and smooth, ana preventing the hair from splitting at the ends.” — M i n n i b F r i t z , Veeduru, Mich. A tiers Made by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Maas. Also manufacturers o f y SARSAPARILLA. PILLS. CHERRY PECTORAL The Last Perry Expedition Survivor. The newspapers chronicle the death, June 22d, of two members of the Perry expedition to Japan, 1853-54. The July Century contains the personal re collections of this expedition of John 8. Sewall, who was a member of Com modore Perry’s party, and who is prob ably the last survivor of the’famoua expedition. K i l l . K i t i l » i r » v . »11 the flics and affords com fort to every hom e-in dining room, sleeping room and all places where flies are trouble- some. Clean, □eat and w ill not soil or injure anything. T r y them once and you w ill n e v e r be without them. J f not kept by dealers, sent prepaid for 20c. H a r o ld S o m e rs , 148 D eK alb A v e ., Brooklyn, N . Y(. Iowa Improved SEPARATOR LO W CAN r « - Waist High Skims Cold or Warm Milk IT ’S THE BEST EVER 8KND FOR CATALO G U E MITCHELL, LEWIS & STAYER CO. PORTLAND. OR COON B E A T ! LB S PO K A N E BOISE Dr. G. Gee Wo W o ilir fil flomi Treatment T b l * wonderful Chi nese doctor I d called great because he cure* people without opera tion that are given up to die. H e eurea with those wonderful Chi nese herbs, roots, buds, barks and vegetables that are entirely known ta medical ence In this harmless the action neys, etc.; has hundreds Charges moderate. Call and see out or the city write for blanks Send stamp. C O N S U L T A T IO N F R E E . ADDRESS Tks C. ( i l Wo Chinisi N td lc iis Co. 2$m-25J ALDER ST- PORTLAND, OREGON Mention paper sss r i T Q Perm anently Cured. N o ftteor nervousness i 1 1 0 after flrstd ay’ s u s e o fD r.K lin e ’ sG reat N e rv e Restorer. Send for F r e « * 8 2 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. R . H . K lin e, L td .,931 A rch St.. Philadelphia, Pa. A n s w e re d th e P u rp o se . The woman whistled at a car, It stopped with sudden jerk; Her whistle was a failure—but Her face got in irs work. j j Mothers w ill find Mrs. Winslow’s ¡Soothing Byrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teethiug period. j ' 1 i I STAMMER YVE CAN CURE YOU The Lewis Phono-Metric Institute and Rcliool for Stammerers o f Detroit, Michigan. KstaMished eleven years. Have cured thousamls. Gold Medal awarded W orld’s Fair. 8t. Louis. PJ04. Recommended by physic ians. educators, clergymen, and graduates everywhere. Tills Institution has a Western Branch a t Portland with a very large class o f pupils in attendance—men and women, girlsand boys—all ages, ten torixty. .Many have been cuied In three week«, but five to six weeks is tlie time usually required. W illclosein Portland on October J4th. W ill accept pupils until Septeml>er Ivt. A P O S IT IV E . A U t O L U l E C U R E G U A R A N T E E D . W rite at once fur particulars and terms. I f you mention this naper and send 6cents In stamps, to cover postage, 1 will send you our cloth hound.’¿00 page book. ’ The Origin and Treatment o f Stammering,” free ot charge. Address W I L L I A M T . L E W I S W e s te rn R ep resen ta tive A s s o c ia te P rin cip a l S. W . Cor. 18th and R a leieh Streets P O R T L A N D , O LE O G N N o t e —No pupils accepted at Portland after Kept. 1st. N o w T h e y D o n ’ t Spe"k. Helen— Jack declared last night that ! 1 the cruiser Matsushima and the first- one little word of mine had made him the ! ( happiest of men. 1 class battle-ship Yashlma, sunk a year Mildred— Indeed! Then you must have before. During the war with China said “ No” to his proposal. he was a naval attache at the Japanese embassy in Paris. Since his promotion he has been chief of the bureau of naval intelligence of the navy depart ment. a part of the general staff of ! the Japanese war office. It was he who planned the great naval war game ; o f 1903 which was reviewed by the Emperor at Kobe. Admiral Uriu’s w ife is a charming Japanese woman, a : graduate of Vassar, formerly Miss i Xagal. sister of one of the most promi- ! nent merchants of the empire. R E A R A D M IR A L S O T O K IC H I U R IU . C rit ic an d th e L a d y . Talleyrand, the noted Frenchman, possessed, w it of so high an order that It has stood well the test of time, and his Jokes are still good. The author of “ Juniper H all” gives two of hia say ings to Madame de Stael. He was a great admirer of Madame Recamier and Madame de Stael, the one for her beauty, the other for her wit. Madame de Stael asked him one day, if be found himself with both of them in the sea on a plank, and could ! only save one, which it would be, to | which he replied: “ Ah! Madame de 8tael knows so many things, doubtless she knows how to swim.” When “ Delphlne” appeared. It was said that Madame de Stael had de scribed herself as Delphine, and that I Talleyrand was the original of Ma- j dame de Vernon. Meeting the authoress soon after ward, Talleyrand remarked, In hia most gentle tone of voice: “ I hear that both you and I appear I in your book, but disguised as women.” , — The average parents are kept so • busy feeding and clothing the chil dren, getting them their meals, to bed I at night, and up In the morning, that they don’t have time to "bring them op- ______________________ It ’s hard for a lecturer to get the people out and bard to entertain them after he does tret them out P. li. u. No. 2 a — 1905 bunch o f girls generally doea the talking? H E N w r itin g to a d v e rtis e rs p lease I m en tion th is paper. I W iv in t i y o u Have Always Kouglit lias borne the signa ture of Chas. II. Fletcher, and lias been made under his personal supervision for over 3 0 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good ” are but Experiments, and endanger the health o f Children—Experience against Experiment. m e What is CASTORIA Cantoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is Us guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrho-a and W ind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Haye Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 3 0 Years. T u r e cN T A u n c o m p a n y , i CURE " * * * ® r m c T , N e w v e « » etrv. H orses o f W i*rm ,iyr ' 1’ ,nk B r t OT HEAVES, COUGH, * x rc*t blood runriEB akd con - DITIONEI and a sure cure fo r a ll a ilm en ts from which heaves arise. CURED 34 H O R S E *. I K - « < ■ » . I n . P m - I . n H . n f o m d r t . I k . p . « . l . h l m on th , .m l In th a t M m . h a „ CTimd I I horn *, o f M o * . . . 14 o f IHatnmpOT- and 9 o f C k ro ,le C ough T i n P r o m t « B am ndlo. U n . o r . a t ra p o u tl-m lo t , t . m rtln o S m a rt Hahm-ta. I n r t . * . Ever notice that the ugliest girl lo C O N S U M P T IO N IF YOU j T h e 50 Per Cent Cream TELLS IT S OWN STORY And tells it eloquently in the bright eve, the supple, elastic movement, the smooth, soft skin, glowing with health, a body sound and well, an active brain, good appetite and digestion, refreshing sleep, energy to per form the duties and capacity to enjoy the pleasures o f life. The blood is the most vital part of the body; every organ, muscle, tissue, nerve, sinew and bone is dependent on it for nourishment and strength, and as it circulates through the system, pure and strong, it furnishes to these different parts all the healthful qualities nature intended. When, from any cause, the blood becomes impure or diseased, it tells a different story, quite as forceful in its way. Itching, burning skin diseases, muddy, sallow complexions, disfiguring sores, boils, carbuncles, etc., show the presence, in the blood, of some foreign mattei or poison. Rheumatism, Catarrh, Contagious Blood Poison and Scrofula, are effects of a a deeply deeply poisoned poisoned blo< blood circulation. These may either be inherited or ac quired, but the seat of trouble is the same—the blood. S. S. S., a purely vegetable blood remedy, cleanses and purifies the circulation and makes it strong and clean. Under its purifying and tonic ef fects .all poisons and impurities are expelled from the blood, the general health is built up, all disfiguring eruptions and blem ishes disappear, the skin becomes soft and smooth and robust health blesses life. Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison and all dis eases of the blood are cured by S. S. S. Book on the blood and any medical advice, free of charge, s w iF T S P E C iF tC G O .. A T L A N T A . G A , R etort ('oarteooii. He— Girls are queer creatures— they marry the first fool who asks them, as a rule. I suppose you would do the same, wouldn’t you? She— Suppose you ask me aud find out. Platonic friendship often ends In an aisle.— The Twentieth Century Home. T H E 1>A 1 S V K I.Y GOOD BLOOD F tlll P S IC C l A T O l A L I R t , 5Or « V M A IL , «O r — l - g . t'.rm .r« H.nd Booh ru A T L A S U MIO «V. firUmmA. Up. O m M teak