T E L L S HOW TO MIX IT. Directions To Prepare Simple. Yet Re­ markable Home Mixture. A That Fearful and Mystic Visita­ | tism tion of Olden Days. IT FOLLOWED IN WAR’S WAKE. In th « F o u rte e n th C e n tu r y It S w e p t the W h o le of E u ro p e , K illin g 25,000,000 In T h re e Y e a r s — T h e P e stile n ce In London. <3 t u o well known authority on Rheuma- gives the readers of a large New York daily paper the following valuable, yet simple and harmless prescription, which any one can easily prepare at home: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-halt ounce; compound Kargon, one ounce; Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three ounces. The plague or pestileuee, that myste­ Mix by shaking well in a bottle, and rious and fearful visitation which has take a teaspoonful after each meal and moved Its hosts in the walte of armies to slay more than war Itself, Is sup­ at bedtime. He states that the ingredients can posed to have tirst originated among the dense masses of i>eople who crowd­ be obtained from any good prescrip­ ed together In the great cities of Asia tion pharmacy at small cost, and, being uud Egypt or who formed the encamp­ of vegetable extraction, are harmless to ments of Xerxes, Cyrus and Tamer­ lane the Tartar. It probably sprang take. from the impurity which must have This pleasant mixture, if taken reg­ existed in the midst of such vast gath­ ularly for a few days is said to over­ erings and In part also from leaving the unburied dead upon the held of come almost any case of Rheumatism. battle. At any rate, the germs of this The pain and swelling, if any, dimin­ fearful human poison htve always ishes with each dose, until permanent been most active where conditions similar to those have prevailed. It results are obtained, and without injur­ has always been war and the march of ing the stomach. While there are armies that have spread It broadcast many so-called Rheumatism remedies, over the world from time to time, and patent medicines, e tc., some of which as war became less frequent and less worldwide the frequency und extent do give relief, few really give perma­ of these ravages have lessened also. nent results, and the above will, no The first recorded outbreak of the doubt, be greatly appreciated by many plague In Europe occurred in the six­ teenth century. It chme from lower sufferers here at this time. Egypt. This was the first lapping of Inquiry at the drug stores of this the wave that reached into the east neighborhood elicits the information again, there to stay Its movements, so far ns the west wns concerned, until that these drugs are harmless and can 544 A. I>.. when the returning legions be bought separately, or the drnggists of the Emperor Justinian brought it here will mix the prescription for our again Into the western world from the readers if asked to. battlefields of Persia. Constantinople wns the first place it attacked. Here In a single day as many as 10,000 per­ TALLOW SALVORS. sons are said to have fallen victims to It. But the plague did not stop with Constantinople. It had found a too The M e n W h o S k im G re a se O ff th» S e a at L a u n c h in g T im e . congenial soil In Europe, which was One of the most anxious moments for little else than one great battlefield at the time. It wns carried Into Gaul, battleship builders arrives when a new where it followed close In the wake of vessel Is launched. And, by the way of the Frankish armies, and from Gaul compensation, tills is the time when It moved into Italy, with the Lom­ the tallow salvors are joyous. The day fixed for the ceremony of bards, nnd so devastated the country as to leave It entirely at the mercy launching Is reached, and, ns usually happens when a battleship is to be of the Invaders. The various crusades, which extend­ launched, a big crowd assent bice. The ed over a space of about 200 years, no battleship rests on "slipways.’' down doubt did much to hold the pestileuee which she will glide from the dock in Europe, for they served to keep yard into the water. The only thing open the channels of intercourse be­ that prevents the ship from sliding in­ tween the east and the west. Periodic to the water before the projwr time is epidemics were common during their the “dog shores"—large pieces of wood continuance, und these seem to have that keep In position the era die upon culminated in the fourteenth century which the battleship rests. When the with what Is known in history as the cord that releases the dog shores Is black death. The black death was cut the battleship glides down the slip­ more fatal to human life than any ways into the water amid the cheers other single cause since the world be­ of the spectators and the playing of gan. The hutoc of war was nothing |iu> bund The slipways have to N* made ns in comparison to it. It swept the whole of Europe, leaving In its path smooth and as slippery as it is pos­ such misery and destitution as the sible to make them, so that nothing world had never known. It killed in shall prevent the battleship from gild­ three years some 25,000,000 people. ing into the water saJely. It is the Such figures stugger the comprehen­ greasy substance with which these sion, but the records of the time can­ slipways nre covered that calls forth not be doubted. The entire population the Joy of the tallow salvors. Since the slightest mishap at the of Europe is estimated to have been about 100,000,000, kept down as it was launching would almost certainly prove by the constant warfare, and of these to be a very costly inntter, no p.llns are spared to Insure that everything, at leust a fourth perished. The ravages of the plague in Italy, including the ship, goes smoothly, and where It came In the track of the war the greasing of the sllpwayu Is prop­ of the Guelphs and Ghlbelllnes, was erly regarded as an Important tusk. The material used In the process Is particularly disastrous to mankind. It raged with terrible fury In Naples, generally tallow mixed with linseed odl where 00,000 persons are said to have or soft soap, and this Is smeared on to died. It fell upon Pisa, and Beven out the ways to a thickness of about two of every ten perished. It utterly and Inches. Every Inch of the ways must forever destroyed the prosperity of be covered carefully, and a host of Siena. Florence also suffered severely, men are employed In the 'fork . First while 100.000 of the inhabitants of of all the tallow Is spread on with Venice were literally wiped off the trowels, so as to give a smooth and face of the earth. From Italy it moved flat surface, and then the soft soap Into France, where the mortality was or linseed oil is poured on top. Be­ almost as great. In Paris alone 50,000 tween one and one arid a half tons people died from I t One of the worst of the mixture is used In the case of features presented by the history of a battleship, and the cost of launch­ the black deuth was the cruel persecu­ ing amounts to a good sum, something tion It aroused against the Jews. They 1 like £800 or £1,000. were supposed to have infected the air The tallow salvors get ready to reap In some mysterious manner, and they j the harvest. were accused of having poisoned the I Crowding the water Just where the wells and springs. In Strassburg 2,000 ship is to be launched will be seen a of them were buried ailve in their own number of small rowing boats belong­ burial ground. ing to the tallow salvors. As the ves­ The order of the Flagellanto arose sel glides Into the water the tallow at this time, coming from the belief which has clung to the keel and bot­ that the sins of the world bad at last tom plates from the ways becomes brought down the wrath of heaven. It loosened and floats to the water's sur­ was the beginning of the so called face in great masses. hundred years' war that carried the Then the tallow salvors swarm black death Into England, where In around. Bared to the shoulder, they Ixmdon its victims numbered 100,000. reach over the sides of tl-«tr boat» IVhen at last the plague had worked and proceed to gather in as much oi* 1» ravages It doubled back over Its the floating tallow as they ctm. Some course to disappear in the east. Later of them even have small band nets on it appeared again in England, to help them, but In any case It Is only first among the soldiers of Richmond a question of a few minutes tiefors after the battle of Bosworth Field, the boats are covered, both Inside and and when the victorious army marched out, with the slippery, oily mixture, to London the plague went with them while In the center small ts-aps of to work Its havoc there. As long as It fat gradually arise. No ordinary per­ lasted the mortality was a s great as son could remain in the boats, but the that caused by the black death half a tallow salvors are not at all particular. eentury before. Five thousand people They row off with their loads and died in five weeks, and then the plague dispose of them to the local soa.o- left London as suddenly as it had ap­ makers. Sometimes as much as £2 < i two y e a rs, one co u n c ilm a n for term of one man this morning, in describing a remembered.—Loudon Strand. yt .r to fill v acan cy , a reco rd e r, a treasu rer and The board of equalization reduced tough boy. m arshal. Forgetful. polis w ill open n! 0 o 'c lo c k A. M. a r d close at 5 • * • this amount « 1 ,1 6 4 .0 0 5 , leaving the P e lls w ill rlo se at from I to 2 o ’clo ck w hile “Tommy,” said his nudltcr reproving­ 0 »> M , tion o ffic ia ls c o to lu n ch . Talk to any woman who has a son total valuation at « 16 , 5 92 , 774 . ly, "what did I say I'd do t.'> you If I Hv d ire ctio n ot the C ity C o u n c il, an o fficii 1 ballot w ill he used and nam es of n om inees to se cu re a p la c e on with naturally curly hais, and she will ever caught yon stealing Jam i.'gain?" •.aid ballot must he M ed with the city recorder on or Tommy thoughtfully scratch, xl ,liM I S u n d a y . January u , I « « , al 12 o ’clo ck nonn. tell of how she cried when her son’s , i ¡ 1 « conditions for h av in g a nam e placed on the bal ot head with his sticky Ungers. nre the svm e as are requ ired f« r p re c'n c t officers In a curls were cut off the first time. "Why, that's f anny, mu. that j ’0" r ,« rat < le c tio n , e x cep t as to tim e of M ing. • • * WALTER HOOK, should forgot It too. Hanged if I c, ■* ' 25 3 City Recorder. The wives of farmers say that two or remember." Everybody's. A Woman Finds All Her En­ three men travel with every threshing ergy and Ambition Slip­ c a * It outfit who do nothing but eat. pone flided wilhin ¡n la y .*he h« bee» o. He has l u w c r house lower n- chair n hair man of the last th b irr 13 . I ' e n u . i i | „hict , cqualntance gjve him »U nrllnrajU l of J» term I ur «• « ” r ■d WHEN HER BACKACHES ping Away * Forest Grove women know how the aches and pains that come when the kidneys fail make life a burden. Back­ ache, hip pains, headache, dizzy spells, distressing urinary troubles, all tell of sick kidneys an warn you of the steal­ thy approach of diabetes, dropsy and Bright's disease. Doan’s Kidney Pills permanently cure all these disorders. Here’s proof of it in a Forest Grove woman’s words: M rs. J . V an Donel^n. liv in g on P a c ific G rov e, O re ., say s: A ve., Forest “ i was g re a tly benefitted by the use o f D o an 's K id n ey P ills . I su ffered from th is com plaint for som e tim e and m y back fln aity becam e so weak and p ain fu l that 1 was s c a rc e ly able to do my household d uties. M y kidneys w ere disordered, the seretio ns very unnatural ca u sin g me great difficu lty and annoyance at tim es. * * Every man gets mad when he sneaks to the pantry just before bed time, and finds only cold potatoes. • • * If you are called up on the tele­ hone before 6 a. m., you can bet it is a farmer, who wants to talk to you before going ot to his woik. * * * There will always be people who will visit in a business office, the same as there will always be others who will talk loud when the baby is asleep. • • • It is not so easy to make a living as it is to make love. * • • I tried two or th re e d ifferen t kinds o f rem edies, Many attempts to benefit the people simply annoy the people. trouble has e n tire ly left me and I am now enjoying • • • good h ealth . I w ish all women su ffe rin g from kidney The more some women spend on com plaint to uae D oan's K idney P ills and they will be w ell satisfied with the results obtained ” their clothes the worse they look. * • • For sals by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. If you will hand a friend a lemon New York, sole agents let the United follow it with sugar and the squeezer. • • • States. t e l found no r e lie f u n til D oan’\ K idney P ills were brought to my atten tio n , and I procured a b o *. Remem ber the name— Doan’s take no other. T he and Possibly you are often a bore to po­ lite people when you do not show it. * Real Estate Bargains Twenty-two and three fourths acres, two miles west of fiatem, under good fence, 1000 cords good wood «2500. Forty six and 14-100 acres, 38 acres in cultivation, 4 miles north of Forest Grove, telephone, R. F. D. on milk route, good 8 room house, large barn, brick cellar, good out buildings, wood shed, wash room, good wells, at house and barn, orchard. Price 4300. 230 bushels of o"ts, 60 of wheat, barn full of hay, good team horses, cows, new hack, wagon, horses, mowing machine, and all tools necessary to run farm, wood shed full of wood. Everything «5000. Terms. Three hundred and fifteen a -res 1-2 mile of RaHston. 220 actes in cultivation. Balance pasture and timber fair house and bartv, running water, telephone, R. F . D. Price «27.50 per atre. Terms. ■ ■ ■ BÜH U S ' I ■ ■ Wright, Cornelius & £. EM I I M B I U Rpro,dr. n4 ^ — O. r e a m ,7 evening. '»sJnjevi- )ns regard^ ue enacted ided, were c i tol the fa- _ _ fifteen jn. 2 2 0 re,u,,f d « ¡Balance Goff; iec- ]use andrer, C B. PPhone-oting BSD per ay morn- I I BB ivfon 1 Itivation uth For- by the in pas , è mile“^ C®“ - ratered. * Piece farrr.nnin* « pronao bl¿ ,0 ,he that is _______ Ir. Todd >ad build- to. i Oregon P u re s t G ro v e ■ BH I ^ acr-e^ Two hundred and forty acres, dcs of Dallas 3 J of Mon- 4 140 acres in cultivation mouth, lice, balance in pas- all under i t , fair barn J mite ture and timb in , well watered. from railroad stai farm. grain Good stock and Reasonable Price «20 per acre terms. f M f t H E M i t CEf t f Try th- "ote in this cm o 'c lo c k w » . . . JJI k I ttaljot We a puc< , r ,Cf’rd? r °3|| f o ClOCft n r I n o . * officers HI g a m e iis ru a tn d at HO GF.. u S C U S S eU d l ' J • iti iii Christ • «accesa. yning ol the feature •on thtt iras cn- ib i ill