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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1946)
ate ft 9JS VOL. NO. 40 PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA MON AY, FEBRUARY 11, 1946 No. 117 i2r 1 n New Paint and Wallpaper Store To Open Friday A new pair.t and wallpaper store will be opened in Platts mouth Friday at 530 Main street, according to David R. Busick, owner of the new establishment. Busick will conduct his business ns an associate store of the Davis Paint, Co.. Kansas City. The store will handle the Davis line of paints, vavnishes and wallpaper a well as a varied selection of pi ft items and household necessities. The store building has been completely remodelled, with new fixtures and new fluorescent ! - ' v ;'fX DAVID R. BUSICK lighting. One side of the store will be used for displaying wall paper and the other side is to be devoted to stocks of paints and varnihes. The center aisles and side displays will be used to show gifts and household items. Busick has been in the retail business for several years. After deciding to go into business for themselves, he and Mrs. Busick checked numerous locations in Kansas and Nebraska before fin ally selecting Plattsmouth for their location. "We fee! this community is the kind of place we want to make our home and establish our business," Busick sa'd. Mrs. Busick will assits her hus band in the operation of the store. Red Cross Driv JO Coming in March The American Red Cross fund enmpaign will take nlace during March, according to County Judge Paul E. Fauquet, chairman in charge of the fund camnaign for Cass countv. Mrs. Viola Norris. of Weeninsr Water, is the Cass coun ty chanter chairman. The goal for Cas county this year is ?3.2"0 as compared with ?10.f,00 last year. The national goal will he $100. 000. ono this year as compared with S200.000.000 for last year. Coal Is Lower The Cas county goal." .Tudee Fauquet explained, "is well under of half of what it was last year because the county lias over-subscribed its goals in past years and a county fund has been built up. "The various town chairmen have not yet been selected," Fau quet said, "nor have the quotas for the various towns been estab lished. This will probably be done within th next connla of weeks.'' Red Crott Slogan The sloean of the Red Cross drive thi vear will he "Your Red Cross Must Carry On." Fauquet pointed out that even though the war is over the job of the Red "nss continues. The hosoita! load and the home service load are as great now as ever and will continue so for a number of years. There is still much to be done for wounded men. "For them" Fau.pjet said, "the war will never be over." . Complaint i Filed A complaint was filed in the county court Monday aerainst Ray . Rezao, charging him with breaking 'and entering in connection with the robbery of a storehouse owned by William Gollner, of Avoea, on January 22.' Call Me Mister! Seven men reported their dis charges from the armed forces on Saturday to the Cass county se lective service office, it was re pcited Monday. From the army: Dr. Ilerman Wonhman, Louisville;- Richard Blessing, Murdock; and Paul Paul Vaughn, Hiawatha, Kansas. From the navy: James Brown and Edgar Coghill, both of Platts mouth; Richard Keckler, Weep ii.g Water; and Richard Brown of Wtbash. .. .. Boy Scouts Honored In Church Services Held Here Sunday Recognition was made of mem bers of the Eoy Scouts and of the Cab Scouts in church services held Sunday in observance of Boy Scout week. Fourteen Boy Scouts and two Cub Scouts were present in uni form at the Christian church at the regular Sunday morning ser vice. Ray Tincher, senior scout of Troop 367, introduced the boys to the audience and each scout gave a law and in unison gave the scout oath. Rev. Taenzler, pastor of the church, preached a sermon based on the story of the Good Sama ritan. Six scouts in uniform were pres ent at the Presbyterian church and were recognized and introduced during the service bv Dr. McClus key. Twenty-five members of Cub Pack 307 were present at the Meth odist church accompanied by the den mothers. Mrs. Roy Aylor, Mrs. John Glaze. Mrs. Robert Hill, Mrs. Sam Hatcher and Mrs. Claire Chal lenharger, and by the cub master, L. J. Hutchinson, and assistant cub master, Sam Hatcher. Several uniformed scouts were also pres ent. During his sermon. Rev. T. Porter Bennett recognized the boys by having them repeat the cub oath and the scouths repeat the scout oath. His serman was de signed especially for the visiting cubs and scouts. Strikes At a Glance By United Pre Nearly 1.470,000 U. S. worker? were away from their jobs Mon day as a result of strikes and shut downs. The major disputes: Steel a decision on steel prices was expected momentarily to pave to settlement of the 22-day-old walkout cf 750,000 steelworkers. Automotive CIO auto workers officials said that General Motors would have to offer more than an IS1 cent increase before 175,000 workers would call off their strike, now in its 8-rd day. Electrical United Electrical workers (CIO) leaders predicted thsn an cent ert lament reached with General Motors would open the way for a similar settlement of strikes against Gen eral Electric and Westinsrhouse. Transportation Philadelphia transit workers struck at 12:01 a. m. Monday, halting bus, trolley and subway service for some 2, 000,000 users. Electric power employes of the Duouesne light and pf filiated companies went ahead with plans for a strike which would black out P.30.000 Pittsburgh homes and halt business operations in two west ern Pennsvlania counties. New Plumbing and Heating Firm Opens In Plattsmouth Another new firm has been add ed to the growing Plattsmouth bus iness roster with the opening of the Glenn Panoknin Plumbing and Heating comDany at C20 First Ave rue, formal announcement of the opening being made Saturday. Pankonin, who came to Platts mouth six years ago from Louis ville, has been employed at the Martin Bomber plant. He and Mrs. Pankonin and their 3-year-old son reside at 1002 Second avenue. The new establishement will specialize in heating installations, sales and service of plumbing and heating items. Sales, service and repairs of windmills and pump units for the farm also will be of fered. File Petition The case of Lena Gilbert vs. George II. Woods and others was filed Monday in the district court, The case T-titii.p to ouiet title on the followingj land: Lots 19 and 20. SWi.4 of the NEViof Sec tion 35, township 11, north range 11, east of the sixth P. M. in Cass county. Henry J. Schafer was fined $1 and costs Saturday by County Judge Paul E. Fauquet after pleading guilty to a charge of driving his car with no drivers' li cense. Earl Wolfe was fined $1 and costs Saturday after pleading guilty to a charge of failure to stop for a stop sign. Refuses to Intervene WASHINGTON, (U.R) The su prene court Monday refused to in tervene in the war crimes trial of Japanese general Masaharu Hom ma who was sentenced a few hours ago to be shot for his part in the death of thousands of U- S. and Philippine war prisoners. Oscar Heline to Speak at Farm Loan Meeting Oscar Heline, of Marcus, la., will be featured speaker at the annual meeting om the Cass-Otoe National Farm Loan association Wednesday at the agricultural auditorium in Weeping Water. For the past 14 years Heline has been president of the Iowa Farmers Grain Dealers associa tion, an organization of over "00 Iowa co-op elevators. He is also president of the National Coopeda tive Elevator association, a direct or of the National Association of I' m imiimiiii mi 11 inimiyi .uwmhiiii nn nam ! OSCAR HELINE Coopedatives, and a trustee of the American Institute of Cooperat ives. On Original Committee Heline was on the original state and national com hog com mittee of the Triple-A and as sisted in the first year's organiza tion. He is a member of the Farm Credit District board, elected by farmers' cooperatives which own stock in the Omaha bank for co operatives. Harold C. Elliott, secretary treasurer of the farm loan as sociation, will review 1045 bus iness snd present the financial re port to the stockholders. T EIet Director Two directors will be elected for thiee years to fill the exnirino terms of Nelson Beeer. of Ne hawka. and John E. Lambert, and one director will be elected to fill the unexoired term of Herman L. Bornemeier. A noon lunch will be served bv the ladies of the Christian church and will be followed by the bus iness session. The entertainment part of the urogram will include readings by Minnie Klemme and a debate by the Plattsmouth hieh school and North high of Omaha. Keith and Kenneth Fitch will be the mem bers of the debate team from Plat tsmouth and will support the nega tive side of the question on whether or not peacetime con scription should be continued. General Homma Is Found Guiltv MANILA 0J.R) Lt. G e n. Masaharu Homma, conqueror of Bataan and Corregidor. was con victed bv a U. S. military com mission Monday of permitting his troops to commit atrocities and was sentenced to be ''shot to deah with musketry." The verdict held Homma directly responsible for 80,735 killings and tortures in cluding those of the Bataan death march and in the bombing of Manila after it was declared an open city, Dec. 26, 1P41. He was acouitted of a charge in a second indictment that he re fused to grant miarters to Ameri can troops in Manila Bav when Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwrieht of fered to surrender Mav. 1042. The courtroom was iammed with spectator- when Homm? dressed in a w'te b-dness suit and brown necktie, was led before the commission. The crowd had been warned previously that the verdict mast be received in silence. Commission president Maj. L?o B. Donovan announced that the verdict had been reached in a secret written ballot, with -two-thirds or more of the -members concurring. Homma. who speaks English fluently, listened intently as Don ovan read the verdict. Although he had wept three times when de fense witnesses described him as kind-hearted and peace-maker he showed no emotion as he heard the death sentence pronounced. The conviction and sentence, as in the case of Lt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita, who previously was sentenced to death by hanging for war crimes in the Philippines, are subpect to review by Lt. Gen. W. D. Styer, commander of western Pacific forces. -l Winston Churchill Completes Talk With President Truman WASHINGTON, U P. Winston Churchill, Britains - '" - leader, planned to return to. r Ionda Monday after flying here for a 90 minute talk with President Tru - man. Churchill's take-off plans were .that left the capital ana under five inches of snow. But by morn ing the skies were clearing and the weatherman withdrew a fore cast of additional snow. Churchill arrived here from Miami at 3:45 p- m- Sunday for Ian hour and a half talk with Mr. Truman. The announced purpose was to plan the March 5 flight to, to settle the contract dispute be Fulton, Mo., where Churchill wiihtween PTS and the transport address the student horly at est - ! minister college. He will he in troduced by the president. There were persistent reports and rumors that even more im portant sabjects had lead to the discussions. A high Britih source, however, pointed out that Churc hill was no longer a spokesman for the British government and said the announced explanation for his visit was "perfectly straight i forward." i UNO Compromise ight Postpone w f icompany with making a "hollow j CIO General Counsel Lee Pres loTTO IOntrOVerSV jrr--tense,'' and laid blame for the . man told the senate labor commit 4FCC V J - strike on the management. itee that the bill, under the guise LONDON fU.R' A compromise! No Disorder of trying to n'-event violence, nnstnnnin. UNO security council I ... . sou Tht to destroy labor but re- ---- . action in the heightening contro versy over Indonesia until the Dutch and Indonesians h"hl nego- , er? tore rf uM to start new runs tiations on new Dutch self-govcn- ;and bv midnight every piece of ment proposals appeared possible ier:iirront in the "system va off Monday. j the street. Resrardless what action thet io01 n 1n union nn- security council takes Mou!ay the pounced officially th strike had week end dispute forced delegates ! tared. B"t it was only a for to abandon hopes of finishing the jj,: Ty,P vst rail network? was UNO meeting Tuesday. Session? , pjVP3,jv e,rT,tV- Tuce? were park in a v continue until next week-end. r 1 :n v,arrt; nT1,l o-aras Seek Java Investigation The Russians were pressing hard for appointment of a UNO commission to investigate the ituoaion im Javn, TrretpSwiet delegate Andrei Vishinsky claim ed there was danger of a spark which might set off another world war. Foreign Secretary Ernest Eevin of Britain was dead set against such a commission during two Sunday security council sessions. Foreign minister Eelco Van Kleffens of the Netherlands also opposed it. but less vigorously. Officials Impressed American officials were 1m-1 nroccoH r n r r o H Ki- ffcoi I strength of Vishinsky' attack on I Britain and the Netherlands Sun-.itor ! day. They feared it mieht force a show-down vote on appointment of a commission. Tr,o TTn if ot Qtoin. T.- n ,-;,. l ous stand at San Francisco against any impediment of the councils authority to discuss and investi gate situations likeiv to threaten ! peace. American delegates might be embarrassed if such an issue .am,- Uu a m,,. iney uiu nor..,,, ..rooarance not want to oppose Bevin at this.th,s .'ts normal arinaiance stage. But they did not want to be j according to Dr. Ptruve. , j: j. ti i: i on lecoru as exposing a thorough investigation. fmsy ,.,n what . delegates considered his most impressive L NO appearance, ripped the Brit-ihas tan iuicu iwmuuii up ana uown.iiorK and reduced the city s fuel certed activity in American mdus and charged that the British I supnlv to a nerilousb- low level rial relations. It is a vicious and troops were used to suppress the j legitimate aspirations of 99 per cent of the Indonesians ! 4?-tn' cl? 'SS& , .4f iV5' vxs-vs jp f Ji. v?' V ARMY SGT. WILL MAKE $4700 PER YEAR S-Sgt. Anthony R. Schiavoni, with his, wife and seven of their eight children at then home in Cleveland, Ohio, before he left for Camp Atterbury, Ind., after re-enlisting in the army. His total income while serving overseas will Philadelphia Transit Workers Strike Monday; Transportation Shut Down PHILADELPHIA (U.P) Alii , tv i.ic iransporcamm tor uic en v s j 9 111) i0(l reM-nt-: was stonofd :,idav bv a strike of !C." tian ; v.5fw workers. The entire rail and bus network lo'fine I'Miiadenmia rransoonauon i a.m. Every tro ley, bus, subway n was parked in a elevated tra barn or at a. terminal point. company said it would not TiiOt to ooerate any -jinp- at. ederal concilators mpde an 11th hour attemr.t Sunday right : workers unom ( IO or at b ast a postponement of the strike, failed iit both efforts. 26 L'rion Demands Ib-mand-: for a union shop and an improed pension plan precip itated tho strike. The TWIT also made 20 othi-r demands including a I ?2-i'.av wage increase, b u t nj -oed to r-uhmit t!se to arbita- ti' ! 'TC's board of directors, which j of ered to i-ubmit all 2 demand to an atl.ltation boa id, refused , 1 ai at IF !mi r tolbudee from their position. At j WASHINGTON, The CIO th en 1 of an emergency session . M o r? d a y denounced the case at ! 1 .45 a.m. They announced they ; strike-control bill as a "punitive still were making the same offer. ! expedition" against organised la in reply, the TWU charged thejbor. 10 ctcii'o wn f-r.'o'ii pxr-nir- eel and without diovler. Two hoi'T-.! lipfn'e te deadline, the op- T.eft to fhift for themselves for trr nsrortrtien were sn estimeied c,o 1,001 vorke'-s. Motor pools wt-p formed throughout the city Explosion of Star Is Seen Monday Y r Ckr t ihsevvatorv. v 1 1 I- i hams Bay. Wis. U.F The star T !of the northern crown (corona .'morning emoted in a second atomic exrdosion of internal gases i which arain brightened the star as :the brilliance of the first blast wore off. According- io it. uuu ' 'director of the Yerkes ohserva-. the explosion actually oe-j furred several hundred to thous-j sana years atro, out iney are jusl i row becoming visible on earth because of the vast distance the I flash of the blast m ust travel. He estimated that Star T is 6.000, 000.000.000,000 miles from the earth- In t? Pent state of gase ous eruption star i looms larerer than tbe sun in the heavens, when i i a. i j .i- i orseiseu inrousrn u xeiescoue iui i Tug Boat Wo,ker. I I NEW YORK (U.P Striking : tug boatmen whose 7-day walkout paralyzed the port of New voted Monday to return to work and submit their dispute to arbi- tration. and trucks and private busses were used to help transport the 'Workers to factories ar.i worker' 1 business 'houses. r pt,. Federal and city authorities lVd and grain plants in the mid completed emergency plans to g.-t j diewet, Sunday. Loss wa exti woikers to vital points, such as ; ,-..atei aL ;2o0,000. hospitals and schools, and iui- j r , 'n,1r ,.,,.,.. r,r tht 1 portant industries. Police Superintendent Howard P. Suttin ordered the city's 4,5'Ui policemen on 12-hour shifts, hire men weie given an extra two hours' duty daily. Parking re strictions were lifted for the strike duration. The city's 1,000 taxicabs were placed on 24-hour duty, but it was almost impossible to iret on'. The Pennsylvania ; roads, which I lines to t he we! e unable equipment. and Reading rail- opt rate subways, to add conor liter said they anv extra CIO Denounces As Anti-Labor i : i ... j icmiiiMi mi ;;ris.reiv silent concern ing the conr.;racT of American industry to defy the government . . . and its laws." Pressman's testimony expanded on a statement by CIO President Philip Murray on Saturday that the ovgjni?ath"n opposed any la bor legislation at thi-s time. The committee originally intended to s-' art wiiinj itc own lbor bill thi- weekend but schedtiVd nw te - ti - morv on the Ca- bill, which was approved hy tho hruse last week. Subject to In t.5T!ct;on It would make l"bor unions and their members snbJect to iniunc-': tioand civil pit for hreecb of. contract or violence in strikes. ; "All lawvers familiar with the ! field Ccf lpho- law) know that aj court can find thr.t all forr of: piCKeunc croisiiLute it:ce, i imm man testified. "The bill laso punishes em- ployes fcr and min- ; ov scuffling on the picket line by j denying them protections of the ! Jay. wanner act. The Warner Act now. i Army engineers employed a heli as interpreted bv the Nations! La-1 rooter Saturday to dron nine high bor Relations Bard. contains r.de-1 oiiaxe iimiauon on cne niit ui those strikers who engage in true ; violence." 1 Emplo-er, Weapon ties-n:an sn.'i n- cii-t- um w.-uiu Pressman said he cae bill would 1 ' " - i one which protects the right? ofj emnloves into a vert-on in the I hr-ncls of the emiovers to destroy lab-""" organization0." "The bill. pPutrh it purports! to deal with violence in hiior dis-' putes. savs' nothing about the ns-? of tfr m lit- omnlnvers to lire.iki S strikes or about the resort to ter- eiYVior0T preman con-1 en.rlo..e.., Herman - 1 "The irersPon;ble at'arks UT3n under the pf prp. venting force is merely a device to invite the courts to destroy picket- ing as a form of protected, con-! thoroughly undemocratic interfer-, ference with the exercise of the, lights to strike amount to $4700 this year. Left to right, Tear: Anthony, Jr., 7; Abbie, 10; Sgt. and Mrs. Schia voni; Orlando, 13; Kathleen, 5; front; James, 4; Marilyn, 2; Charles, 5; Ronald, 7; (not pictured). (NEA Telephoto) Fire Destroys Large Grain Elevator in Superior, Nebraska SUPERIOR, Neb (U.R) Fire destroyed the i of unknown origin Nebr aska-Kunsas feed mills' ele- 1 vu uj. one 01 the largest mixeu j Ebei hart-SIirnjs''Ti chain of tie j vators, said only office records nd Two trucks were saved. Lan- 'ill-ir t'ltil i,tl lute? JL'-i (liVPM'fl TiV insurance. No one was injured in the fire. I The elevator, a four story struc j ture with floor space equivalent j nf nAn v,,,),,,' lf rft; anA ! ;i v.nn limnp f-nnat-itv nn 1;) car loads of grain. Landry said the structure was full of grain at the time of the fire. Fire departments from Superior Nelson and Hardy were called, but despite their efforts the building collapsed les than two hours after the blaze was discovered. Night Chief of Police Roy Schaeffer said six homes nearby and a gasoline service station suf fered slight damage. A second gasoline station was saved by con stant streams of water. More British Brides Start for New Homes NEW YORK, fU.R Another 1 , 7 1 i British war brides and C15 babies who arrived Sunday aboard the liner Queen Mary took off Monday in special trains for their new homes. Somt 500 of the brides were re united Sunday night with impa tient husbands who had been wait ing at the Tth Avenue armory since noon. The remainder of them are scheduled to leave the city Mon day in five special trains arranged bv the army transportation corps : Th" biggest group of women and children 270, were bound homes in New York state. for Bombing Ineffective Against Ice Block OMAHA, (U.R The army engi neer corps has no definite plans lor inwueuiaie icMiiupuun jicii- j copter bombing of the 11-mile ice block in the Missouri River north of Rulo. Lt. Col. Delbert B. Free- man, district engineer said Mon- exrdosive charees on the ice block. "The ice block is still there." Coi. Freeman said. "We tried the bombing Saturday as an experi- mer.t and didn't buds the ice. y may try aeam and we mav not. Freeman q;, the use of the helk.orer merely was an incident to the engineers entire program of study of the liver. Savs Statisticians A Shirt to Find High Cost of Living j nv Frederick C Otbman WT B-STe tud- ionc ;nA pien in ion rows f-ddU, Jwith t(1-ir sierules ' ?nd make marte about tho cot of ivifl(r on their charts: Sen. Kenneth Wher- j rv of Nebraska and I think they're j,; bubbles ,--e bejeve the-- oueht to get j their noses ouf of their eleeric calculating machines, actually buy j themselves a shirt wow! and ! "-uess again about the high cost of The senator tr.U A. T Hinrichs. acting commissioner of labor sta tistics, that his totals were rcrewv; that nnvbodv knew the H. C. L. was fr hieher than th official ! figures showed. I remained neu i ti-oi i7- n thf la"- m" ol'i shirts, j sorry dev. vrtt to- tvc 'nmdrv ' nnd enme bncV as locoTvnive-win- j i tpcs. I hf d to -pr new ones; that or a ont of paint-. Shtrts on Sl There nre plntv of shirts on a1e in Washington- one leading h.berdashe'- has shelf nnon shelf of cAttn shirts. The cheao ones I wouldn't even wear to laundrAT men's ovter roast. They cost ?7 r each. Thv rnn in rravy color etnlori with ecr and or cin"mon lroris. The-1' are the ugliest shirts, ba- none, I ever saw. Th medum-rrde shirts, a bttle bter in nuabtv and p little ecr; wildeved in shade, sell for S8.50. That's on? for $8.0. not four. Foo! that T was. cold and desnerate, too. I boueht one of thse. I've get it on now. It is the color of a cloudv dav at sea, jn?t before the dawn, but with white strioes every inch. I told the man it didn't look decent. "They Were Beauties" He said no, it didn't. He said Willys-Overland Signs Agreement With CIO Workers DETROIT, OI.R) Willys - Over land company and the CIO unit ed auto workers reached a new wage agreement Monday providing an "interim" pay increase of 10 cents an hour for 3,.r00 hourly rated salaried and production workers, amounting to $60,000 monthly. The agreement announced joint ly in Todelo, Ohio by the company and union became effective Mon day and will continue "until the wage pattern in the automotive in dustry becomes definitely estab lished'." Wage Status William E. Paris, company oper ations manager, and Richard T. Gosser, UAW regional director, said the wage status of Willys Oveiland workers would be re negotiated when the industry pay scale is set presumably with the end of the General Motors form ula. The statement was announced after Chas. E. Wilson General Mo tors president, denied charges be fore a national labor relations board hearing in Detroit that GM failed to bargain in good faith with its 175,000 striking production employees. Paris and Gosser hailed the Willys-Overland agreement as "an other point of stabilization in the nations automotive industry and said it marked "the tenth consec utive year that contracts have been negotiated between the company and the union without a single work stoppage." On Witness Stand Wilson took the witness stand as testimony resumed in a hearing before the national labor relations board on UAW claims that General Motors has "stalled" attempts to j end the unions 83-day strike i against GM. Negotiations to end the S3-day old G. M. strike, scheduled to be resumed Monday afternoon, were postponed until 2:30 p. m. Tues day, because company and union officials were busy with the NLRB hearing. Egyptian Police :pjre Qn Roters CAIRO, Egyptian police open ed fire on anti-British demonstra tors in Alexandria and the agri cultural towns of Mansoura and Shebin el Kom Monday, dispat ches from the Nile delta region re ported. Reports of new clashes between authorities and demonstrators against British police in Egypt fol lowed a troubled week end in which scores were wounded. The news paper Al Balaga said a number more persons were reported killed in today's skirmishes in Alexand ria and other Delta communities. Authoratative reports on casual ties were lacking. Need to Buy he'd show me his good shirts. I must report they were beauties. They were in solid shades of soft yellow, blue, gray, green, and pink; they had good buttons pro perly sewn. The material was ex cellent. "Ten dollars each." the man said. "They're goin fast; you bet te stock up." That made me sore. I told him I'd nhone the OPA and thst Ches ter Bowles, himself would be over within 20 minutes to iail him as chisler number one. He smiles a superior smile. Ue said he was used to hottempered but ignorant fellows like me. IiPDorted Cloth Thn. so hdn me. he showed me the OPA ceilinr ir-ie tae on ach shirt. He spid the reason thy were expensive wa bcsu the cloth wfi! imnorted. "From Shang r"Tl?" I demanded. "From Bra zil." he said, "and made up soc ial, strictly under all mice regula tions." Chester, what's gointr on here? Bureau of labor nistics, why don't vou buy p shirt? Statistician Hinrichs insisted his fimres were corect. excmt for nnality deteriorptjon. He told Sen. Wherrv he cnuHn't takf every itpm going into his list of neces sities and decide whether it was worth the price. . WEATHER Nebraska T'oreeast: Cloudv. occasional litrht snow north and est portions, colder Monday: cloudv with lieht snow Mondnv niht probably becoming moderate Tuesday colder east much colder north east Monday night low Mon day nisrht 5 to 10 northest, 15 to 20 south and west portion.