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About Intermountain tribune and Linn County agriculturalist. (Sweet Home, Linn County, Or.) 1913-1914 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 25, 1913)
aoicsonoiioio ’ An Ideal Christmas Gift for he Home Ì ■is an- Edison Phonograph 'V Come in and let us show them to you or write and let us send you a catalog 5 g Kerr & Rowland Drug Co. ; Lebanon, Oregon ij Phone Main 144 OOOOIOHOHOHOaOHOfiOfRlOiOHOHOHOHOliOiiOiO«» SAY, MR. OREGON FARMER, WE HAVE A HEART PALPITATION. (Continued from page 1) ---- ------------------- (j-------------------- - plished only through government ownership. . “The successful operation of the parcel Dost has demonstrated the capacity of the government to con duct the public utilities ' which fall property within the postal provision of the constitution.” The government ownership of telephone and telegraph lines is not She- Mrs. Grouch says she’ll give us just six months to live together.. a new proposition, except that it He Dear old optimistic soul!— New now comes from an official source. York Globe. People have talked of it as a remote possibility and few have believed Notice of Hearing of Foal Account that it would ever become a reality.. It will take considerable agitation Notice is hereby griven that the final account of and years of educating to get such Oliver McClure as Executor and of Nora Coleman Executrix respectively of the last will and legislation enacted, as was the case as testament and of the estate of Andrew J. McClure with the I parcel post and more deceased, has been filed in the County Court of County, State of Oregon, and that .the 19t A recently the currency. Members of Linn day of January, 1914, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. congress are hard-headed old gentle m. has been duly appointed by said Court for the hearing of objections to said final account and the men, and they must hear from the settlement thereof, at which time any person people “back home” in a substantial interested in said estate may appear and t file thereto in writing and contest the manner before they will agree to objections same. take any radical action. Hbwever, Dated December 13, 1913. Oliver McClure, Executor and Nora Coleman. the fight is now on and it remains Executrix of the above named estate. Amor A. Tussing, to be seen how diligent it will be Attv. for Exr. and Exrx. carried to a conclusion. The people will first have to be convinced that it will riot take the telephone and telegraph systems under govern ment ownership as long to become divided producers as it has taken the postoffice department. When that is done it will not be hard to get the people to act.—Eugene Guard As a Rule, It Is Caused by Nervous or Digestive Trouble. It is rarely, if ever, that palpitation is due to any disease or weakness of tl: •_ heart. It is almost invariably the result of nervous or digestive trouble. The beat of the heart arises within it self. There are nerves in the muscles of the heart, and they regulate its beating, although the speed or rate of the beating is not of their choosing. If they were not held in check they would set a rate about double that which is actually maintained. The heart is supplied from the brain with two pairs of regulating nerves. One pair, the cardio-motor nerves, act only to spur up the heart to quicker action. They are usually Inactive, Waiting the occasion for applying the spur. The other pair, the cardio-lnhib- itory nerves, are always in action. It has been said that the heart runs In a pair of tightly held reins, and the simile is true, for these nerves check the speed. Fear, worry, disorder of the stomach or nervous system, cause these cardio-inhibltory nerves to relax; then the heart begins to race. There is nothing thA matter with the heart itself, and no one meed be alarm ed about that organ just because it boats too rapidly. Its palpitation is dub to a psychological or a physical cause, something that has caqsed the relaxation of the reins and allowed the eardio-mo<or nerves to apply the spur. CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR HOLIDAY AT HOME Large Department Store AT HOLLEY, OREGON, As to Government Ownership EMBRACING Low Round Trip Fares Dry Goods Department, Grocery Department Furnishing Goods Department and TWO EARLY BIRDS. Hardware Department VIA THE One of Them, Though. Was a Safe Lap Ahead of the Other. t King George and the Duchess of Fife aye both keen anglers, and they have long been rivals at the sport. One autumn when the court was at Balmoral both had fished patiently for ■some days in a pool of the river Dee, trying to catch a particularly big salm The Highest Market Price Paid for Produce on that Was reported to be lurking there. Each was anxious to beat the other, so very early one morning King George hurried off toward the pool in the hope of catching the salmon before his niece was up. To his surprise he found the princess OREGON HOLLEY strolling beside the river, and she im KNNMBXaMhv mediately began to cross examine him as to what he was doing there so early with his fishing tackle. In the end the king had to admit rather shamefaced ly that he had intended to steal a march on her and try to catch the elu sive salmon before she was up. X v * * The princess read him a very severe lecture on what she called his un sportsmanlike behavior and extracted from him an admission that he was sorry. Then, with a smile of triumph, she showed him her own fishing tackle and the big salmon lying behind a rock X on the bank. She had been up just a little before her uncle, had caught the salmon and had hidden it when she «•» saw him coming.—London Tit-Bits. In fact, we carry everything usually required on the farm and at prices as reasonable as can be obtained at Crawfordsville or Brownsville W/Tsu N SET fftOËNhSHASUl ÌROUTESJ The Exposition Line 1915 MRS. M. E. HAMILTON Between all points in Oregon, also from points in Oregon to Califorhia, Washington and Idaho : ^Farmers Attention ■SALE DATES AND LIMITS- Christmas Holidays:— Between all points in Oregon, also from | We pay the Highest Market Prices for | I I " "" 1 ■ I Live Hogs, Calves, Sheep and Cattle X & Country Produce of all kitids ♦ i A Romance of Finance. X i i i 1 Telephone , , : or write . our . ■ buyer, J. D. r Densmore, ; ; Salem, Or. i • y Box 35, or telephone 1041. Shipping dates for live ¿tock can be learned by phoning Produce Houses at L ■ 4i LEBANON, SCIO, S TA Y ION | STAYTON I |THE UNION MEAT COMPANY! -----------Meat-------- — DR. I. B. WILSON and Produce Market W. B. Thompson & Son Props. Physician and Surgeon Calls promptly attended «Hfó» The best of fresh and cured Meats, Lard. Poultry, Etc., con stantly on hand, for which we will pay the highest Market \---------- Price-------- - SWEET HOME - OREGON day or night The present high value of shares in the New River company—opened just 300 years ago--formed one of the most romahtic stories in .the history I of fijiance. James I. advanced Hugh Myd- delton part pf the capital for’his proj ect tn consideration of an allotment of one-half the shares—which numbered seventy-two. For twenty-five years no dividends were paid, and the shares- ■‘king’s” and ‘‘adventurer’s” alike— were worth £5 apiece, and Charles 1. thought he had done well when he In duced the company to take over his holding in consideration of a fixed settlement of £500 a year. Twenty j-ears ago an undivided “adventurer’s” share was sold in the open market.for £94.900.—London Chronicle. ( Southern Pacific points to points in Washington and Idaho Dec. 18 to 24 inclusive. Between Oregon and. California points Dec, 20 tb 25. Return limit all points Jan. 5, 1914. New Year Holidays:— Dec. 27 to Jan. 1, with finl return limit Jan. 5, 1914. The new Yea;r Fares apply only between points in Oregon and between Oregon and California. SUPERIOR TRAIN SERVICE Observation Gars, Dining Cars anc big, warm all-steel coaches. All trains solidly vebtibuled Call on nearest Southern Pacific Agent for full particu lar train schedules, pacific fares, etc. JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon WE HA VE A COMPLETE LINE --------- —----------------- ------- o f - . — .. They Had Studied English. The editor at one of the experiment stations, desiring a complete reference library of his- state, sent a circular let ter to the horticultural, dairying and other agricultural organizations of Wisconsin asking for copies of their “last report." Most of them came, all right, but one organization wrote. “Our last report, we hope, is not yet published, but we take pleasure in sending under sepa rate cover a copy of our latest report” Holiday Goods How It Struck Him. The steward, showing the new Amer ican father-in-law over his son-in- S weet H ome O regon law’s ancestral halls, “Th’ west wing is ’aunted. sir. Th’ ghost of his lud- MWHSI ship’s sainted grite-grandmother walks Intermouutain Tribune $1.25 th’ ’alls every night Nobody hever thinks of goln’ there awfter dark, air.” per year. The American father-in-law. rubbing his hands: “Fine. The very place for Agates ground and polished, at a quiet game of draw when tb’ boys come over!”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Stacys, Lebanon. If You want your pick, you must come early A. SCHOLL, Sweet Home SXUHMXKß I I