Poultry Wanted * I want your poul try and will pay the highest market price $ Zimmerman & Son O’Neiil, Nebraska NOTES FROM THE NORTH EAST Miss Lena Cole, who has been seriously ill, is improving and will soon enjoy her usual health. Lysle and Artur Wertz returned home from Sidney, Nebraska, recently where they had employment; they a’so visitcd-Canada‘ making the trips with an auto. Politics appears to be in evidence in this part of the county, and am in clined to think that if the weather is favorable a large-vote will be polled; in fact larger than for several years. In conversation with one of the county officials he mentioned the good condition of the public highways in Willowdale township which is cer tainly encouraging to the resident tax payers who are instrumental and who advocate good roads. James Welch, of Knoxville, has the foundation completed for a new resi dence. This will be modern and when completed will be one of the up-to date farm residences in that part of the county. Floyd Wertz, of Page, has RE-ELECT JUDGE J. R. DEAN OF BROKEN BOW For Second Term from Sixth Supremo Court Judicial District as Judge of Supreme Court. Separate Non-Political Ballot. 8ldney Telegraph: “Judge Dean’s record as Supreme Judge shows opinion after opinion by him, es tablishing the constitutionality of, or repelling attacks upon laws for Woman Suffrage, Bank Guaranty, Rights of Freight Shippers, and tho like.’’ the contract for building. Feeding of calves seems to be gen eral and demand strong with attract ive prices. The existing conditions arc unusual, prices at par or nearly so with cows and heifers. Farmers that can and will hold or even buy more will be winner as these conditions will, no doubt, be the source of a shortage of cattle. Mr. and Mrs. Wadsworth were Sun day visitors at the Wertz home. He reports the bridges on the county line completed and the county line road in good condition. Mr. Richard Wads worth is overseer of highways in Road District No. 43, Willowdale township, and deserves credit for be ing instrumental in the improvement of the public highways in his district. We are informed new corn prices will be 50c per bushel. Old corn is in demand at still higher prices. We made the prophesy some months past, when thousands of bushels were being shipped out of the county, at prices under SOc, that inside of three years corn would be shipped into the county at much higher prices. We have not changed our mind relative to the matter. The local farmers lines that have not consumated a settlement relative to the connections between those two lines is the source of much dissatis faction among the subscribers of both of the lines. The Railway Commis sion advises us that they do not have jurisdiction and as it appears at this date, the subscribers, to get the service they demand, are willing to pay for and are justly entitled to, will be compelled to resort to other means. EMMET CORRESPONDENCE. (Mrs. R. E. Harris.) R. E. Harris and Carl Keiser were in O’Neill Tuesday on business. Mrs. Sam Noring spent Monday in Inman visiting with relatives. Jas. Graham and Rev. M. F. Byrne drove to Amelia Wednesday evening. Mrs. Guy Cole and Mrs. C. M. Cole were in O’Neill last Friday on busi ness. Phil Robertson, of Chambers, was in town Wednesday after a load of lum ber and cement. Jerrold Dusatko is building a new machine shed this week as an improve ment to his farm home. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Cole are moving from the Jas. O’Connell to the Nye Schneider residence this week. Miss Ruth Bupe gave a party at her home Tuesday evening for the members of the Emmet High school. Wm. Luben, Sr., and son, Lewis Luben, motored to Fairfax, South Da kota, last week. They returned home Sunday. Mrs. Chas. Dallegge and two daugh ters, spent the week end with Mrs. ANTLEE u i il liiihtifiH-ia-ftftffig .w>'' TfW; I, _ \ »l * It Cant Leak Because it's Made in One Piece Your money bdc\ if it leaks—a guarantee good at any Rexall Store. America’s best known Hot' Water Bag-the safest apd most economical to buy. Your home needs one. C. E. Stout, “The Rexall Store” o Pallegges brother, Roy Delay at Ver digree. R. E. Harris and D. E. Cole motored | to Spencer and Lynch Wednesday where Mr. Harris has a car of pota | toes for sale. Fred Tenborg and wife are here from Wisconsin visiting with brothers Wm. and Clarence Tenborg and a sis ter, Minnie Enbody. H. H. Lowery went down to Ewing last Saturday and remained over Sun day visiting with a brother, Jonas Lowery and other relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. J. I,. Bennett and children, of Norfolk, came up last. Saturday to spend some time visiting with Mrs. Bennett’s mother, Mrs. Wm. Shively. Mr. Henry and Misses Susie and Maiie Poasinger and a married sister, Mis. Louie Hughes, notored up from Omaha last week to spend a few days visiting at the G. 1). Janzing home. Miss Sadie Brion, of Ewing, came up from that place Thursday of last Week and remained until Sunday visit ing with her aunts, Mi’s. C. M. Cole and Mrs. D. C. Winship and other relatives. Mrs. George Dahms entertained last Tuesday night in honor of the Peas inger family who were guests of G. D. Janzing last week. Eleven guests were present. A very enjoyable time was had by all. PLEASANT VALLEY. Mrs. Roy Stewart is on the sick list this week. Percy Grass was in O'Neill on busi ness Saturday. A rain fell over Pleasant Valley last Sunday evening. Miss Velna Clark spent Sunday with Miss Veva Henderson. Oscar Mailer iS' husking corn for Roy Asker this winter. Prof. L. L. Leh, of Page, was a Pleasant Valley caller last Sunday. Carl Clark was a caller at the Stan ley Soukup home last Sunday evening. Miss Winifred Murray, of O’Neill, spent last Sunday at the Stanley Sou kup home.' Miss Constance Grass and Miss Veva Henderson were in Orchard last Fri dav afternoon. Mrs. Will Anderson and Miss Mary Lush attended the program in Page last Friday afternoon. P.Ir. and Mrs. Deen Streeter and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Soukup spent Sun day at Clyde Streeter’s. Mr. and Mrs. Will Anderson, John Hayne and Miss Carrie, the school teacher, were in O’Neill last Saturday. Mr. Duncan and son Arthur, Mrs. Mabel Hayne and daughter, Vivian, autoed to Oakdale last Sunday where they visited relatives. RECORDS SHOW WILSON HIMSELF URGED LIMIT ING FARM CREDITS Washington, Nov. 2.—The Demo cratic party is resorting to desperate means to escape the »odium of the policy of drastic deflation and restric tion of farm credits which it put into effect during the last 18 months of Wilson’s administration to the ruin of agriculture and the prostration of business and industry. Speakers have been ordered by the Democratic National Committee to deny Democratic responsibility for the policy of deflation. They have even gone sc far as to charge the Harding administration with having brought about deflation. Even so prominent a Democrat as William G. McAdoo de liberately falsified the records in a Speech he recently made in Montana, probably forgetful of the fact that he wrote an article in December, 1920, de nouncing the drastic policy of deflation which, he said, had by that time ruin ed the farmers and was causing col lossal losses in agricultural sections of the country. The Democrats have no (‘scape from their record. There can be no doubt but that the policy of restriction of agricultural credits was inaugurated by the Wilson administration. There can be no doubt but that it was delib erately inaugurated. There can be no doubt but that it was planned for the deliberate and express purpose of breaking agricultural prices. The proof of this is found in a message w'hich President Wilson sent to Con gress August 8, 1818, at a time when railroad labor was threatening to strike unless wages were increased. On that date, in that message refer ring to a reduction in cost of living to railroad labor. President Wilson said: “What we can do we should do at once, and there is a great deal we can do, provisional though it be. Wheat shipments and credits to faciliate the purchase of our wheat can and will be limited and controlled in such a way as not to raise, but rather to lower the price of flour. The government has a power within certain limits to regu late that.’’ The plan which the administration immediately put into effect was a re striction of credits so as to force a re duction in the price of all farm pro ducts. At that time the Federal Re serve Bank interest rates were 414 per cent. One of the first things the Fed eral Reserve Board did after Presi dent Wilson’s message to Congress, above quoted, was to increase the Federal Reserve rates. Its next step, which was taken in January, 1919, was to order loans to be radically reduced. If Mr. Wilson’s message were not sufficient to fasten the guilt of defla tion of farm prices upon the Demo cratic party, there is still other testi mony of even more recent origin. The New York Times, the leading Demo cartic paper of the country, in an edi torial on October 17, 1922, attempted to defend the policy of deflation which the Democratic party put into effect. For this it was taken to task in a com munication by John Skelton Williams under date of October 19, 1922. John Skelton Williams was Controller of the Currency during President Wilson’s administration. As such he was a member ex-officio of the Federal Re serve Board and he speaks with au thority and first-hand official knowl edge. In his communication, Mr. Wil liams said: “The board is composed of seven members, including the Secretary of the Treasury and the Controller of the Currency who are members of the I ' ■ «— mi ■_ i i -- «u-.. .„ 1 i ard ex-officio; and during the most R tructive months of deflation, while lthe s ystem was reducing credits about one thousand million dollars, the only member of the board who resisted and «PI>osed the board’s drastic deflation policies and their radical enforcement were two Democratic members—the Hon. Henry A. Moehlenpah, of Wis consin, and the Controller of Currency from Virginia.” At the time Mr. Moehlenpah was a member of the board there was no Re publican on tho board; it was solidly Democratic. The other members we re Charles Hamlin, of Massachusetts, a life-long Democrat and a follower of Woodrow Wilson; Adolph Miller, a Democrat of California; John Skelton Williams Controller of the Treasury; William P. G. Harding, Governor of the board, and a life-long Democrat of Alabama, and David S. Houston Sec jetary of the Treasury and Democrat hi rn in North Carolina, educated in Carolina and for a long term of years a college professor in Texas. This j was the membership of the Federal ] Reserve Board at the time Mr. Wil li mums characterizes “the most de structive months of deflation while the system was reducing credits about $1,000,000,000,” Continuing Mr. Williams states: “On January 28, 1920, I had called the attention of the hoard, by letter to the gross abuse and misuse of credit in the New York district, and I showed that the New York Reserve Bank at that time was lending an amount equal to six times its own capital—that is to say, six times the capital of the Federal Reserve Bank < f New York—to one member insti tution, notorious for its Speculative activities. I also showed thatthe money which the New York "Reserve Bank had loaned to one conspicuous banking institution which was speculating heavily on its own account and whose officials were also heavily steeped in speculation amounted to nearly twice as much as the aggregate amount of loans and discounts which the Federl Reserve Bank of Dallas was lending at that time to all ot its members, banks in that great district embracing the entire state of Texas and parts of Louisiana, Oklahoma and New Mex ;co and Arizona. I also showed the board that in order to make those huge leans to favored institutions the New York Reserve Bank was borrowing ever $118,000,000 from seven other banks. ‘ The unfair distribution of Federal Reserve funds during the deflation period is indicated in the official rec ords, which prove that as late as the autumn of 1920, when the demand for fluids from the farming interests and fr. .1 general business throughout the ( atry was particularly acute, the Federal Reserve system was found to be. lending to the national banks alone in New York City, in proportion to their total loans and discounts, three times as much money as the Federal Reserve System was lending at that, time to all of the 7,GOO ‘country’ na tioal banks scattered throughout the fcrty*-eight states of ihe Union. These records also show that in several states the Federal Reserve system was charging to its member banks under the so-called ‘progressive’ plan as to fbe 'o^gundiy (jpTM« A.i. M CO iF WASHING BY TELEPHONE You just gather up all the clothes and telephone. About fifteen minutes of your time and the work of washday is over. We’ll wash and finish your clothes in the way you like; and put new freshness and life into them. Begin this week to enjoy free dom from washday worries. Telephone and we will have our representative call immediately. O’Neill Sa.rvita.ry Lavirvdry high as 15, 20, 40„ 50-and CO per cent interest, and in one district actually as high as 87Ms per cent per annual in terest.” -o ZIMMER-RIMERS. (Inman Leader) Miss Edna Reimers, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Reimers, living southwest of town, was married last week in Pierce, Nebraska, where she has been employed as a school teacher for the past year, to Mr. Frank Zim mer. They expect to make their home on a farm near Pierce. LEE-LESLIE. Eugene Lee, of Norfolk, and Miss Hazel Leslie, were married at the home of the bride in Atkinson, Mon day evening, October 9th, at seven o’clock, by Rev. W. H. Guest. They will make their home in Norfolk where Mr. Lee is employed by the electric light company. Subscribe for The Frontier and keep posted upon the affairs of this great rourty of ours. FILLMORE-WATERFALL. William 0. Fillmore, secretary treasurer of the Atkinson Milling Co., and Miss Lillian Waterfall, of Red field, South Dakota, were married at Aberdeen, South Dakota, on Septem ber 26th. DANIEL I. TINDALL. Daniel I. Tindall died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. H. E. Pelcer, at Atkinson, Nebraska, at 4:30 o’clock Sunday afteronon, October 8th, at the ripe old age of 80 years, 5 months and 24 days. Mr. Tindall had been in his usual health up to the time of his death. Ila had retired for a nap in the after noon, and some time later the family found him dead in bed. He has made his home in Holt county most of the time since 1909. Funeral services were held at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Trobough, Tuesday afternoon, conducted by Rev. Peterson of the M. E. church. He leaves to mourn his death five children: C. A. Tindall, of Wahoo, Nebraska; Dell Tindall, of Geneva, Nebraska; Anna Babcock, Ada Tor bough and Ida Pelcer, of Atkinson. Where Real News Is Paramount In the country newspaper, sensations, scan dals—the recording of human misery—is al most taboo. At least it certainly is secondary to the printing of real news about people and things. For the province of the country paper—your Home Town Paper—is to give community in terests first place, printing the more or less sensational personal items only when neces sary to keep faith with subscribers who pay for ALL the news. • Therefore, your Home Town Paper can give you, in full measure and overfiowing, 100 per cent pure news about the people in whom you are most interested—your relatives and friends of the Old Home Town. Subscribe today for your Home Town Paper