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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1945)
MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1045 PAGE THREE Australia ( .w.'.Tri ..w.... - ......... . . :. .T. " -. "! "? V . - - " fc , . i v - r w " V ii', A' En route to Australia are Mrs. Leonic Casteklon and son Richard, 11 months old, left above, and Mrs. Shirley Aitkin and daughter, Diane Jane. They arc among 120 Canadian and two American girls who will join Australian husbands they married in America. Baseball Owners Hope to 'Iky Off Happy Chandler CllK'ACO (U.R) Maji.r h amto la-ohali owners toiiay i t-pt tt-.llv j wort- preparing to '"buy t'f ' Son. A. K (Happy) (.'handler's seven year contract as baseball commis sioner to pave the wav for se lect ion of a new commissioner. Kepoits were rife at world se ries headquarters concerning the owners alleged di-sati.-faction with the manner in which Chandler has handled his commissioner duties One major league club owner told the 1'n it ed Tie's that ''there has been informal discussion on the matter, but nothing definite lias been arranged.'" 1'iesideiit Sam Kreadon f the St. T.ouis Cardinals said that "I have heard the report, but I know nothing about it. If it is true, I , will know about it bykinorrow." The report ran' line wildfire Athn !the thriuiuli the approximaiely )() irtsu lit ei s .'za'hered here ior lie I 1 m'i ics. The club owners, who named Chandler io siiccejd the late Kent-saw M. I.andi-- only last April at a meetintr in Cleveland, sup v posedly were j'.tte-nptiny to neRo- tiate wiih ('handle'" in an e in settle the contrail which i tort cans for a .$5u. (! annua! salary and gives Chandler powers eiiual to those enjoyed practically by Landis during his 23-year reign a game's fit ( commissioner. According to one baseball cial. -eveial club owners are the pro- voked bv : 1 ) Chandler's ing of world series Lusinc handl s. and io I act inai ne nas owi Men tis jurisdiction a- commis- . .i i i i pod siuiier and nieiicnen in swn.n. intra-league af faiin." The owners reportedly want to negotiate with Chandler in an ef fort to "buy oft"' the contract at something lesy than its written $,.r)0.l)Ul value, figured on seven vears at .."iO, (()( annually. Muscles react sound than to li the Encyclopedia is s Hv the l eport more quicklv to :ht. accordimr to Britannica. That of a pi.-dol starts the modern foot race one-twenty-fifth of a second faster than the old-time dropping of a handker chief. CASS ENGINEERING COMPANY Consulting Manufact Designing ing I RGtiERT M. MANN Phone 235-W Fistula Is A Serious Ailment LHcrestln- FREE BOOK of Latest Treatment Tells I NERVOUSNESS WfcART PALPITATION STOMACH LOW &. CONDITIONS j VITALITY! PACKACHk I PHYSICAL I LIVER O KIDNEY WEAKNESS DISTURBANCES COLON CONSTIPATION TROUBLES I PILES (I FISTULA U RECTAL ARTHRITIS IRHEUMATIV HEMOfHOI0) ABSCESS1 ANEMIA SCiAIIC WW' Mil HUM I . PROSTATIC SYMPTOMS) PAINS vn. tJ Any person suffering from Fis tula, Rectal Abscess, Piles or any other lecfal or colon disorder--may obtain a new 40-page FREE ROOK on these and associated chronic ailments. The book is .il lustrated with X-Ray pictures, charts and diagram. Write today a card will do to Thornton K Minor Clinic, Spite 104. t'26 Mc tiee, St., Kansas City, Mo. 'Bound For Cliicago Cubs c n i c a ; o. (u.p) 'harlev Crimm nut the Alaiiae.er world ser- ics Chii a i in 1 i-hamiiions! no hopes of the the afjin.n' ri.ht as ;eau .Alondav. aeo Cubs on of Claude i' his was the if a me the Cubs needed to stay in the runninjr for the Detroit Timers lead them, three jrames to two. ami a vic tory for the American League! champions this afternoon would hriniic the richest world series in history to a close. Manager Steve O'Neill of the ge i" Tigers nominated Virgil (Fire) Trucks fur his pitching chores with the confident rcmaik: "Virgil will wind this up for us today. Passeau can't get by us again.'' He was referring to the pitch ing materpiece which Mississippi farmer Passeau turned in to win the thi cl game for the Cubs. All Passeau did was permit one hit and allow one other Tiger to gel on base via a base on balls to turn back the Timers :) to 0. Grimm was gambling by com-' campus executives wlio on Jail ing ha: k with his llG-vear-old , uary ;10, l!)45. addressed an open right! ami r. With Passcaifs aim.; letter to the White House stating: i,..tl.t.,,.,l I.,- tin. cRb-ificiition of! "It is urged that the initiation I some bone chips in the ri rht el- 1 bow. Grimm v; as asking th.e vet Iciaa of 10 yeais of Major League pitchir.g warfare to start again I with only two full days of rest. ! And Passcaifs record for the en j tire season when he turned in i 17 victories was that he couldn't i win unless he had a m-nimum of I three h.ys rest between starting i assignments. ! As a result the oddsmakers j made the Tigers 2."5 to 21 favor ! iti s to wind up baseball's post j stason classic today. The cubs I were ipjoted under-dogs at 20 to 21. For the scries the Tigers still 'were favored at .'I'i to 1. Jimmy Hines Wins Tacoma Golf Open TACOMA, Wash. (U.R) With the Tacoma Open golf champion ship and $2,000 in war bonds stuffed yecurelv in his pocket, bushy browed Jimmy Hines to day packed up his clubs and headed for Seattle and another SI 0.000 match. Winning his first major tour nament since he took the New Yoik Metropolitan Open in l'j.'lO, the Chicago pro posted a 72 hole score of 2To one stroke under runner up Harold (Jug) McSpaden of Sanford. Hines clinched top money in Me. the SI 0,500 Tacoma match by card 71 in ing a one-over par the finale. 4-37 fri nf O J Cites. Lt. Gen. James H. Doolittle i iiree men ounicu 111 Mysterious Blast M IN AT A RE, Neb.. !U.R Three men were burned, two ser iously, when their clothing was set afire by a blast of unknown origin in the rear of the Gricr j Hardware and Lumber Co. fcat- urdav. Frank Ruff and RfL. Alkire suffered second and third degree j burns while Charles dough hadi superifical burns. j One of the men had lighted Sj match when the blast seared them.; P.iick veneer was blown off the! back wall of the building, and the glass in the front of the store was shattered by the blast. i THOMAS WALLING CO. ABSTRACTS of TITLE "Title Insurance" Congressmen Not Welcome Guests WASHINGTON flJ.R) Pals, your welcome is running out. I mean you congressmen who have been traipsing around the world. Your involuntary hosts are fed up, finished, and through with hauling out sirloin steaks for junketing lawmakers. I know one army post in a far coiner of the globe (name on re quest to congressmen with "travel j folders in their pockets) where the next senator or representative who shows up gets arsenic in his outmeal. That's a promise from the commander. "The-these people came here," he sputtered, "and you'd have thought we were running a sum mer resort. Work had to stop while we took 'em on personally escorted tours of the local stights. ' We had to help 'em buy sou venirs, feed 'em in de luxe style, pour 'em our whisky which is hard enough to come by in this hole iind we almost had to keep their noses wiped. All this wasn't so bad, though I still cannot un derstand what good they did by coming here. "So one of these gents, a fat one, tells me to call my boys to gether so he can make a speech. ''I lined up the post on the , pa rade grounds and this character stood on a box and began flailing his arms and yelling like he was making a campaign speech to his constituents. 'My boys,' he cried, thumping his chest, 'You can trust me, your friend. Congress- ..man Throttlebottom, to get you home to the good old U.S.A. with- ; in the next month.' I So of course the lad.-' cheered. Then this, this person gets on a'", airplane and that's the last we hear of him. And here I'm stuck with a post full of (!. I.'s who ; can't understand what happened ! to their travel orders. Some think ; I'm the villian. Morale has sunk to a new low and the next con- i gressman who sticks his nose in ' here so help me, gets that ar- ' senic." Professors Asked For Post War Views INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. U.R) - Twelve prominent university pres idents and a number of organiza- tions, who have been arguing that peacetime uiversal military train- j ing should not be enacted "under the tensions of war,'' have been : called upon by National Com- mander Edward N. Scheiberlin? ! of The American Legion for a restatement of their views on this legislation now that peace is ' here. i Heading the Ii 1 1 were the 12 ot the conscription debate be de-i layed at least until complete vie-; toiy over Gremany is achieved., A continuing program of publiej education as to the requirements ; of national defense is certainly in. order, but we challenge the ne-, cessky of urging the American people to act under the tensions; of war." j The 12 educators were: I Dr. James 13. Conant, president' of Harvard University; Dr. Harold; W. Dodds, president of Princeton! University; Dr. Robert M. Hutch-; j ins, president of the University j of Chicago; Dr. Oliver C. Car-j ; michael, president of Vanderbilt I University; Dr. Herman I. Wells, president of Indiana University; ' Dr. Edmund E. Day, president of j Cornell University; Dr. Rufus C. I Harris, president of Tulane Uni jversity; Dr. Robert G. Sproul, i president of the University of Cal lifornia; Dr. Donald P.. Tressider, : president of Lcland Stanford i University; Dr. Frederick A. Mid i dlebush, president of the Univer sity of Missouri: Dr. Deane W. ! Malott, chancellor of the Uni- versify of Kansas; and Dr. Henry ; M. Wriston, president of Brown ; University. Doolittle Says Air Power Is Essential HOLLYWOOD, OI.R) Air pow er should occupy a prime position in a modern, mobile national de fense system for the United Sta- Uai ud today. "We want peace but the only way we can be sure of a lasting peace is to be strong enough to impose our will upon any nation that doesn't want peace,'' the famed Tokyo raider said. "I advocate making every ef foit to establish a world organiza- l tion that w ill insure peace," he continued, but warned that Amer icas delcnses must include con tinued scientific research, a de partment of national defense, and outlying bases. Doolittle is here to spark a vic tory bond meeting of film stars and industry leaders. MILITARY TRIAL ROME, U.P. The first Ameri can military trial of an enemy general officer will open in Rome Oct. 8 when General Anton Dost ler, 54, comander of the German 75th army corps, will be tried for ordering the execution of 15 American prisoners. THB JOURNAL'S Daily Pattern i ivnit tne warm anil pretty cap: Knit the warm and pretty cap and mittens of bright red wool for your two, three or four-year old. Trim the set with a simple lacing of white wool yarn. Easy to make, it will be a warmly ap preciated gift when the ' snow flies. To obtain complete knitting instructions for the Winter Ber et and Mittens ((Pattern No. 5C47) send 15 cents in coin, plus 1 cent postage, your name, address and the PATTERN NUMBER to The Plattsmouth Da:ly Journal, TODAY'S PAT TERN, 530 S. WELLS ST., CHICAGO 7, ILL. Shutz-Wenninghoff Wedding Sept. 23 ! AVOCA (Special to the Daily ! !.-,,. .,i ii.i,., .r 'n;n.rUnft ! : u'jui new f 'uifiu.i .iuimui,nji, may nave an or one oi me rouow ; daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur j owing: Velva Fruit. Vanilla Ice ;j. Wenninghoff of Syracuse, and(7reanK Chocolate Drop cookies, ; Calvin W. Shutz, son of Mr. and j Colonia Custard, Gingerbread Up ' Mrs. Edward Shutz of Otoe, wereSide Down Cake. Honey orange i married September 2:3 at seven j sauce. In the coming weeks, list ; o'clock in the Lutheran Memorial; en f0 the Home Extension period 'church in Syracuse. Rev. F. Hef-jt0 hear of other recipes which will ijner read the marriage vows be-. lie made arailable. fore :;50 friends and relatives. Attendants of the bride were Dorothy Shutz, maid of honor, and Franceh Hefner and Betty Shutz, brides maids. Maynard Knichman was best man with Dale Hillman : and Fredrich Hefner as ushers. The bride's dress was tulle ap pliqued with pearl and satin leav es, and was made with a heart shaped neckline, leg of mutton sleeves and a train. Her double il lusion veil fell from a Juliet cap of orange blossoms and she car ried a white bible with a streamer of white rosebuds. The maid of honor wore yellow net, while the bridesmaids were gowned in pink and aqua tafeta and carried cor sages of gladioli. Music for the ceremony was furnished in a vocal solo by Fred rich Ilartlingwho sang "Because." There were two large baskets of asters in the chancel and small bunches of aster decorated each pew. After a short trip to Wayne, Nebr., Mr. and Mrs. Shutz will live on a farm north of Otoe, where they will be engaged in farming. 4City of Omaha Is Welcomed Home Sun. (Uy United Press Nebraska's B-28 bomber, the 'City of Omaha,'' received a rousing welcome from a crowd of several thousands when it roared into Omaha yesterday after a brief stop at Kearney army air field to pick up Gov. Dwight Griswold. Griswold made the trip in the bombadierV seat of the giant plane, the KWth to roll off the assembly lines at Martin-Nebraska. Griswold spoke to the Buffalo County Farm Bureau members Annual Picnic at Kear ney before he made the tri"p. ' Tfemendouis strides made scientifically have not been matched in the art of living, the governor said. The atomic bomb has brought home the fact that the human race is out of balance, and that people are no farther along socially in the ''art of getting along" than centuries ago. Entire nations and continents might be wiped out in another bomb, Griswold w a i n e d. We need, he said, to solve domestic problems and racial problems. Also there is a necessity for more social and political re search and the proper attitude toward ' religion.1 There's enough salt in the - ), oceans to equal .14', 2 times tne bulk of the entire continent of Europe above the 'high-water mark, according to the Encyclo pedia Britannica. That would equal 4,500,000 cubic miles of gait. Cass County Extension Service News Cass Co. Winnings at Ak-Sar-Ben Competing in the World's larg-i est 4-H Fat Stock show, 4-II mem bers from Cass County won their share of ribbons. Emerson Wiles and Robert Cole of Plattsmouth won a purple ribbon in the Cattle Grub Control demonstration. A wards in the baby beef classes were Norma Jean Schick, Elm wood, blue ribbon, liereford steer, Lyle Schafer, Nehawka blue rib bon, here ford heifer. Red ribbons on Hereford steers were awarded to Eugene Lindsey, Weening Wa ter, Eleanor Lindsey, Weeping Water, Norma Schafer, Nehawka, Betty Halmes, Plattsmouth, Rich ard Sack, Plattsmouth. Red a wards o shorthorn steers, Peter Halmes, Plattsmouth. Red awards on Angus steers were to Marilyn Schafer and Lyle Schafer. Red awards on beifpr wpre tn Xiivma Schafer on the Angus and Harold Zeirott on a Hereford. In the special group of 5 calves owned! by one individual, Lyle Schafer won a blue ribbon with red rib bons goin to Emerson Wiles and Ralph Hild of Plattsmouth. The Cass County group of 5 mixed steers were awarded a blue ribbon and the group of 5 Hereford steers a red ribbon. Swine Placings I DUROC lightweight - Alley! ! Waldo, Weeping Water, 2 blue, I '1 red; medium weight - Richard! Sack, Plattsmouth 2 blue, 1 red;! medium weight - Ralph Hild.i Plattsmouth, 1 red. " I CHESTER WHITE heavy; weight - lierald Hansen, weeping Water, 1 red; light weight - Jam es Pollard, Nehawka, two blue. HAMPSHIRE Ralph Hild, Plattsmouth, 1 red. The Cass County group of 5 swine were awarded a blue rib bon. Sugar Saver Recipes j The past six weeks when you j have listened to the Monday Home! Extension radio period over! K FA B at 1:10 the speaker has re-! f erred to a good Sugar-Saver re cipe. These recipes are on cards! and may be had for the asking, j Just address your request to Miss: Florence Atwood, State Home, Extension leader. College of Ag-I ricultui e, Lincoln. Nebraska. You! i it r At. . j- ii ! 4-H Calves Cass County 4-11 interested in baby beef projects for l'J4f are urged to get one or two ton qual ity calves during the next few- weeks lour County Extension Agent will assist in buying calves in the Ne.br. Sandhills area and on the Omaha market as in the past. A snecial 4-H feeder calf auc tion will be held at Omaha Stock Yards, Tuesday, Oct. ."30 starting at 12:00. Several Cass County club members and parents are ex-j pected to attend. Those desiring j assistance in locating calves this fall should inform this office as to the breed and number you desire. 4-H club enrollments THe following 4-H clubs have sent in their enrollments this week for th ecoming year: "Murdoch Tractor Club', Silas Schlaphof. Murdock, Tractor; Twyla Miller. Weeping Water. Learning to Sew; "Better Homes'' Mrs. Nels Thoren. Nehawka. Yd. Beautification ; "Sucessful Gard ening'', Mrs. Nels Thoren, Nehaw ka, Garden. School Lunches To be well fed, growing boys and girls need three nourishing meals it day, served at regular hours. Many boys and girls eat their niiddav meal at school, a meal that often leaves something to be desired from the standpoint of nutrition. An amazingly large number of boys and girls are not d'-inkig the milk or eating the fruit they need to build sound teeth and strong bones for their growing bodies. A survey of the food habits of rural school child ren was conducted in 1144 by the State Dept. of Public Instruction. i The full-day food consumption re- cords wer kept by approximeately 700 children in 70 rural schols in five widely separated Nebr. coun ties. The results showed that 1 out of 7 were eating in adequate supply of green and yellow veg etables, 1 out of 3 were eating enough citrus fruits or tomatoes. 1 out of 7 were getting the mini mum amount of five servings of all fruits and vegetables includ ing potatoes daily, 1 out of 10 were getting four servings of milk or milk products daily and 1 out of 2 reported two servin;s of meat, poultry fish, eggs or le gumes daily. Parents and rural teachers may encourage rural boys and girls to improve their eating habits by organizing a 4-H school lunch club. LSU PLANS PILOT PLANT BATON ROUGE, La. (U.FJ A $5(f,000 pilot plant to be wed by Louisiana State ifriiverVity .cherii eal engineers in finding new 'uses for Louisiana agricultural products will be built as a postwar project here. The engineers will seek to utilize such things as bagasse and si' gar cane tops, according to Dean J. G. Lee, of the LSU col lege of agriculture. rtAT'n TT mi OUT OUR WAY yj.n.wim.m. WW M Ilv i iiiiii liiilii!:! y"- '.t ' A DBS iN Notices 1 ! y fSX V? I fw, fi FFA Registered boar and gilt sale. 55 head Spots, Hampshire, Berkshire and Duroc. Sale to be held at the Carl Grundman farm, V mile south of Nebraska City on Highway 75. Write to How ard Yogel for catalogs. Service Station For Lease. Mo dern Service Station located at Eagle, Neb. on Highway 31, Four Pumns. Enclosed Grease Room with Lift. Doing good Bus iness. A fine opportunity far the right man to get into a busi ness of his Own. Trunkenbolz Oil Co. Eagle, Neb. (5-tfi Help Wanted Apprentice Wanted! We have an immediate open ing for a young man to learn the mechanical end of the news paper and job printing business. If you are young, and want to get set with a good trade for those days that are sure to come, this apprenticeship might interest you. It offers a good opportunity to learn while you earn. Apply in person to the Dailv Journal WANTED AT ONCE boys. Plattsmouth Daily Carrier Journal. l'.-tf EXPERIENCED power sewing machine operators on men's fine lounging robes. Steady work, good wages pleasant surround ings. Stylecraft, American Le gion Bldg. WAITRESS HOTEL PLATTS MOUTH COFFEE SHOP. -tf Articles for Sale 20 FOR SALE Good steel tray wheelbarrow Phone 350 5-2td MEN WANTED for county bridge work, steady employment at good wages. Transportation fur nished. See or call O. W. Fin ney, telephone 48 1G, Murray, Nebr. WANTED lG-year-old boy' for work in meat department after school and on Saturdays. No experience necessary. Apply in person. Joe's New Way. FOR SALE 10.32 Chevrolet coach. Good tires, fair motor, body in excellent shape. SI 20. Marion Schlieske, phone 4G7-W. Real Estate Fair Sale 30 FOR SALE 0 lots 5 room house lights and water, out buildings, chicken pen, berrjes.f ruit trees. $1,500. William Gochenour. 2-7td Wanted to Rent 50 Wanted To Rent 5 loom house! or larger by Telephone man. Call Tele, office 627. 5-4 rd WANTED TO RENT 5 or G room modern houie, or what have you? Telephone 73-J. Ace Fighter Pilot Will Teach School LOS ANGELES, (U.R) ('apt. John J. Voll of Goshen and Cin cinnati, Ohio, the army's sixth ranking fighter pilot ace, said to day lie plans to become a country school teacher and remain single. The 23-year-old flier who ar rived at the Los Angeles port of embarkation with 3562 other vet erans, downed 21 planes and three probables over Italy, Germany, France and the Balkans. Voll had 230 discharge points, said he plans to remain unmarried because "A' country school teach er doesn't make enough to sup port a wife with modern ideas." LOS ANGELES, fU.R) Yacov; Raphael Neachovitcb, who alsoj wears the name of Prof. Alfred! J. Newman, today told police he! would not eat until they allowed him to show the world he could cure Ii0 per cent of its diseased. The CO-year-old, i)0-nound ''chir opractor, Osteopath, Naturopath. Hydrotherapist, Electropathis and Neuropathist" is backing up his claim with a Hunger strike. He has" not eaten since confined to Lincoln heights jail Sept. 27. Bruning Drug Co. Prescription Pharmacists Formerly Mauzy BOXED CANDIES 10 j I WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY cy yj.yyy 1 1 MRS. JUNE KYLES. Correspondent The Deal A Deck club met Thursday afternoon met with Mrs. Dorthy Cameron. Miss Alice Boucher who was employed at the E. L. McDonald store has gone to keep house for her brother Warren on the farm. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kyles were in Lincoln last Tuesday. T-Sgt. Neal Adair was home I for a few days. He expects to re port to Leavenworth, Kans., for his discharge. Earl Iden's sale will be Wed nesday October 10, ladies of Me thodist church will serve lunch. Mrs. Matilda Anderson and Al vin moved into the W. M. Kelly property last Saturday. The stores will be closed on Sunday from now on. Staff Sgt. Harley Kirk of Greenwood and Estelle Smith of Lake Charles La. were married Sept. 8 at Lake Charles. They expect to make their Home in Lincoln Nebr. Staff Sgt. Kirk was honorably discharged Sept. 22 at Fort Leavenworth, Kans. after 45 months in service, 24 of which were spent in the southwest Pa cific. Rally Day will be at the Meth odist church Sunday Oct. 14, with a program and basket dinner. The Juniors and Seniors en tertained the high school and fac ulty at a party last Friday night. Mrs. Jake Witt Has been very sick the past week. Mrs. Roy Comstock spent Thursday afternoon wtih Mrs. Harry Shrodcr. Merril Stewart has opened a Texaco service station and lunch loom on highway G north edge of town. Commits Suicide After fatal Shooting SAN FRANCISCO. (U.R) The suit-id eof Dr. John II. Mansfeldt, quiet bespectacled society physi cian, left unanswered today the question that drove his wife to the fatal shoot in x of an attractive nurse she feared was Having an illicit romance with him. Mansfeldt's body was found early yesterday morning slumped on the front seat of a green se dan beside a lonely cliff at Pedro Point in San Mateo county. Geo rge Lewis, owner of a nearby re sort said the car had stood there since Thursday, a few hours after Mansfeldt was summoned to a San Francisco Hospital to learn that his wife Had just fatally shot Mrs. Vada Martin, a private nurse. Squirrel-in-One 1 KOKOMO, Ind. 'U.R) Don Bowman of Indianapolis found a j .--1- : 1 1 t : way 10 comoine squirrel nuiuuij; and golf. He whammed a golf ball into a tree at the American Leg ion course in Kokomo. Out tum bled a big fox squirrel dead. The shot was legal. Bowman had His hunting license in his pocket. J.HowardDavis Insurance Income Tax Service Advertisement - Bowel Cleaning Power of ERB-HELP One man recently took KRB HELP three days and said after ward that he never would have believed his body contained so much filthy substance. He says his stomach, intestines, bowels and whole system were so thoroughly cleansed that Hi,s constant head aches came to an end, several pimply skin eruptions on Hits face dried up overnight, and even the rheumatic pi,ins in his knee dis- i appeared. 'At' present he is an al- together different man, feeling tine in every way. ERB-HELP contains 12 Great j Herbs they cleanse bowels, clear gas from stomach, act on sluggieh ! liver and; kidneys. Miserable peo 'ple soon feel different all over. KILLED BY TRACTOR SCOTTSBLUFF, Nc., (U.PJ A man found dead beneath a trac tor has been tentatively identified as Frank Prohaska, 61, Kirk com munity farmer, Banner County Attorney W .II. Kirwin said today. It was beleived the man was crushed when the tractor had ov erturned. lr Had been pulling a combine with the tractor. Kirwin sai he believed the man Had been killed, last Wednesday. No inquest will be held, He said. More Discharge HARVARD, Neb., UR Two Hundred 74. officers and men uf the Harvard Army air field Have been ordered to separation bas es during the last week, Col. Will iam Lewis, Jr., station command er announced today. All person nel eligible for separation will have cleared the field within two weeks, he estimated. M-Sit. Leo nard M. Levernoch;, Hastings, and Cpl. Harold F. Villard, Columbus, who served their last tour of duty at HAAF, were among those sep arated from the service under the AAF stepped-up program. The Time Shop John Busing Prop. WATCH AND CLOCK REPAIR ENGRAVING PHONE 27 PLATTSMOUTH f Loris B. Long Real Estate and Insurance ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE Plattsmouth Phone 250 or 337W I GET YOUR OVERSEA BOXES 10c t Box FREE With Every $3.00 Worth Oversea Gifts FRUIT CAKE For Oversea Gift in Tin Box Ready for Mailing SCHREINER PHARMACY (Your Nyal Druggist ) Phone 121 NOTICE We are pleased to noti fy our customers that 5 tens of Pilot Brand OYSTER SHELLS have just arrived. This is the first time in 2 " years that we have been able to obtain OYSTER SHELLS. Many of you have been inquiring for oyster shells. so Lbs $1.00 WHEN IT IS AVAIL- ABLE, WE HAVE, IT Plattsmouth Creamery Home of "CASC0" butler