THE FRONTIER O'Neill Nebraska CARROLL W. STEWART Editor and Publisher Entered the Postoffice at O’Neill Holt County, Nebraska, as sec ond-class mail matter under the Act of March 3, 18T9. This news paper is a member of the Nebia.s ka Press Associatioa and the Na tional Editorial Association. Published Each Thursday Established in 1880 Terms of Subscription: In Holt and adjoining counties. $2 per year; ckevfccre $2.50 per year. PROMOTED TO CAPTAIN CHAMBERS—Mr and Mrs. J. W. Walter received word that their son, Floyd, has received a promotion from fir^ lieutenant to captain. He is with the med ical corps at Sacramento, Calif , attached to the air forces. BRING OUT THE BEST! Is your radio reception and tone as clear as it should be? If not bring it here for expert repair service. . . and our prices are right. GILLESPIE'S “Home Appliance Headquarters” TWO-DAY AUCTIONS At The Atkinson Livestock Market Starting Monday, September 29th and Tuesday, September 30th • We will cell calves and yearlings every Monday and all other cattle on Tuesdays, starting on Monday, Septem ber 29th. For our Monday sales, calves and yearlings will be sold as listed. Firs! listed, first sold, so list them in advance and assure yourself a good position in the auc tion. Calves will be sold right off the trucks ONLY on Monday, so have them in on that day. • Hogs will be sold every Tuesday — starting at 11 a- m. from now on. Any hogs arriving after 12:30 will not be sold until after all cattle have been sold_so please have them in in the morning. • Regular Tuesday catile auctions start at 12:30 noon for the next three months. No cattle sold off the trucks on Tuesdays froai now on. Monday is the day we sell calves and yearlings off the trucks. • From Monday. September 29th to Monday, November 10th we hold two auctions a week—calves and yearlings on Mondays. aH other cattle on Tuesdays. Please tell your friends. It Will Pay You To List Your Cattle Early. ATKINSON LIVESTOCK MARKET Phone 89, Atkinson ATKINSON. NEBR. REDBIRD NEWS Betty Mellor is visiting at Spencer this week. Dale Spencer and family vis ted at Hals Hull’s Sunday. Chancie Hull is at Norfolk this week visiting relatives. Dale Bessert and Harry Truax I were to O’Neill September 9 on business. Mr. and Mrs. Art Bessert and Mrs. John Stewart drove to j Butte September 9 to attend the ! cattle safe. Herman Schollmeyer had his ■ car fixed at Redbird garage : September 10. Mr and Mrs. Schuyler Rey nolds called on friends at Red ! bird September 10. Will Hartland visited at Mike j Hull’s September 10. Schuyler Reynolds left for Kansas City, Kans., last Thurs I day for several weeks’ visit with his mother. Mrs. Bill Wilson, of Lynch, visited at Ray Wilson’s last Thursday. Mrs. Rollie Truax called at Peter More’s Thursday. Will Conard and Lloyd Phelps drove to Lynch Friday. Harvey Krugman drove to Lynch Friday to have his tractor discs sharpened. Elmer Luedtke finished cut ting his cane and sudan Satur day and sold his binder to a Mr. Townsend, of near Page. Mr. and Mrs. Hals Hull auto ed to Lynch Saturday Claude Pickering called at Lawrence Hoy’s in Lynch Sat urday. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hiscocks visited relatives in Lynch Sun- j day. Mrs. John Stewart Honoree at Shower— UEDBIRD — A shower was held Friday tvening for Mrs. John Stewart at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Art Besseit. Many friends and neighbors gathered for the occasion, and Mrs. Stewart was the recipient of numerous gifts. Refreshments were served. Mrs Stewart will depart Sun- „ day for her new home at Ra venna, S. D. I William W. Griffin ATTORNEY Ftrit National Bank Bldg. O'NEILL New Formula ^HOMEGUARD INSULATION » New Fire-Resistant Qualities > Cuts Fuel Costs Up to % ► Maintains Even, Comfortabli Temperatures * Feathery Light; Puts No Strain on Building * Ask For Free Estimate; No Obligation | pRAIRIELAND ... TALK By ROMAINE SAUNDERS LINCOLN — At the north west extremity of the court house grounds that form the center piece of a charming little city in the ;ich dairy district of southern Wisconsin, where it was appointed that I should be born, stands a monument to the soldiers of the Union' army in the war of the 1860s. On the tablet I read the chisled inscription that Capt. B. M. Frees had donated the memorial to O. F. Pinney Post No. 102 GAR, composed of members of Com pany H, 38th Wisconsin Vol unteers of which Capt. Frees was in command, my father serving in the same company as a non-commissioned officer. All of this would be of no interest to Frontier readers were it not for southern Wis consin's contribution to the development of Holt county. Capt. Frees was of the firm of Barnett & Frees, which had the first lumber yard in O'Neill. It was located where Archie Bowen has found it necessary to occupy lumber yard space with his Ben Franklin layout. That lum ber yard has changed hands a few times, grown and ex panded and occupies ample giounds facing upper Four th street. Lapt. r ices was not the first southern Wisconsin pro duct in Holt county. E. H. Thompson, the county’s first | treasurer, the MeEvony and Hoxie families and several others in the settlement down the river were from the Bad ger state. W. D Mathews, lounder of The Frontier, was ; from Monroe, Wis, the claim ing little city I have mention ed. John McDonough, editor of the old ONeill Tribune, came from eastern Wisconsin, went from O’Neill to the Oma ha Herald and then to the New York Sun and was sent back out here to get the sto.y for the Sun of Sitting Bull and the Battle of Wounded Knee up on the Pine Ridge. Apparently a confirmed bache lor, John was said to have succumbed to. the charms of a French actress. J. P. Mann, the O’Neill mer chant, his father, brothers and sisters, the late Ed F. Galla gher, father of Edward Gal lagher of the First National bank, and Edward’s mother, Mamie Mann before her mar tiage, Tom Birmingham, fath er of Hugh and long owner of a lumber yard, and P. J. Mc Manus were all from the same community in southwest Wis consin, as was also Henry Tomlinson. O’Neill profited largely from the men and women of ability coming here from the Badger For a Good Time VISIT THE OLD PLANTATION CLUB Elgin Nebr. • Fine Food • Dancing • Entertainment Members and their guests are Invited to visit the Old Plantation Club. state. And those people back there, cordial, contented in their mateiial abundance, tell you their dairy and cheese business surpasses anything in America. I did a little boosting, too, by drawing word pictures of the best beef cattle and grasslands anywher4 in the country right out here in Holt county, and the Monroe Evening Times gave my stor ies a column with spread head lines to boot. The late John Green’s fath er, Charley Green, an early settler in Madison county, claimed descent from the fam ily for which Green county, of which Monroe is the county seat, was named. The county treasurer told me they have no delinquent tax list. Taxpayers told me their taxes are plenty high. The city maintains five school buildings and a fine library Teachers out in the rural dis tricts are paid as much as $250 a month. Street patrol men are Beau Brummels in attire, friendly as neighbors at a Sunday-schcol picnic. Hotel rates and living costs are lower than I have found elsewhere. Two peaches in a food store cost me four cents. From that community, from Iowa, from Illinois, from Mich igan, from Pennsylvania and other states beyond the Mis sis. ippi came youthful vigor with vision and daring, set tled an empire, hung horse thieves, brought outlaws to justice, tamed wild men and subdued evil passions. And here it is — HoR county, touched with a bit of Eden heauty, born out of travail and toil, out of com mon sacrifices and common sufferings, a heritage of those who have come after. • • • The radical proposal for a new world calendar was stricken from the agenda of the economic and social coun cil of the United Nations through the influence of the United States representative on the council. The state de partment was back of the gov ernment representative and still back of the department was sweeping pressure groups of citizens who opposed the calendar change because it set floating from date-to-date va rious days which have religi ous significance. Embodied in H.R. 1345, now dormant in committee, may be revived the measure the state department has froWhed upon when con gress convenes in January, 1948. Certain business and cultural groups sponsor the calendar change and are find ing strong opposition from nearly all churches. In Lincoln the friends of the late Mr. Bryan have his memory monument where they wanted it at the north appro ach to our architectual clas sic, the Nebraska statehouse! Before unveiling September 1, the synthetic commoner was enshrouded with a white cloth. There had been vigoious pro test against this supposed de secration of fine architectual arrangement embodied in the capitol building. How it adds anything to or detracts from the scene is not noticeable to the everyday passerby. Mr. Bryan stood out as the Demos thenes of Nebraska, but finally met defeat down south there at that Bible trial at the hands of none other than a shrewd Chicago lawyer. While Mr. Bryan stood out as the dean of orators out this way, Bill Greene, Jim Whitehead, Matt Dourthy and even that watermelon farmer, O. M. Kem, had a bit of the silver coating on their tongues. * * * The boiling caldron at the state pen had subsided when up comes an inmate with a law suit. The new board of control and their warden have no dull moments. The typ ical figure characterizing the convict, stripes and pickax, is no longer to the point. Give him a brief case as a member * of the bar association headed for the judicial precincts Please route your freight O'NEILL TRANSFER. An O'Neill firm. 4 — TRIPS WEEKLY — 4 Mondays Tuesdays Thursdays Fridays O’NEILL TRANSFER JOHN TURNER, Prop. O’NEILL—Phone 241J OMAHA—Phone JA3727 "Your Patronage Appreciated" Project Club to Mae! Tuesday— PAGE—The Page Project club will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Jennie Holloway. Mrs. A. L. Dorr and Miss Rose Vro man will be leaders of the les son “Success with House Plants." Assisting hostesses will be Mrs. H. L. Banta and Mrs Mel vin Smtih. Sunday visitors at the home of Mrs. John Carr were Mr. and Mrs. John Walker, of Ewing, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Re gan, of Inman. "Enjoy tht Good Old Flavor of tht Good Old Dap! “Let's Stop for Premium Quality FALSTAFF!’’ 1947 MISTAFf RfftWING CORP. « ST IQUIS . OMAHA • NEW OBUANS 4 NOW Is the Time To Order TREES for 1948 Order Before Sept. 30 HOLT SOIL 4 CONSERVATION DISTRICT i Courthouse Annex There’s a new look about this elegant greatcoat with its graceful fullness and flowing black satin tie at the neck. Masterfully cut from Veldora Velour in Cherry Red, Cadet Blue, Cocoa or Forest Green. Betty Rose’s “Inside Story” as sures quality workmanship in every seam. SIZES 10 TO 18 Mssc,1 Wonderful Doesheen Gabardine superbly tailored to rate special attention for its whistle slick m lines. Young as your heart, its fresh charm is fashion-right from dawn ’till midnight. Clove brown, Bell Blue, Glade Green, Gull Grey. SIZES 9 TO 15