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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1946)
a r r i r karoos PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA? MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1946 VOL. NO. 40 NO. 119 Robert Cole Wins National Award In 4-H Club Work Robert Cole has won a trip to the National Club CaniD to be held this summer in Washington, D. C, the highest award in 4-H Club work. Announcement was made Saturday of the award by L. I. Frisbie of the University of Nebraska Colleee of Agriculture, state 4-H club leader. The three other Nebraska yountf people who were given like awards are Verlin Livingston of Chey enne county; Eurice Jensen of Boone county; and Wauneta Braithwait of Dawson county. Entered 4-H in 1938 Bob entered 4-H club work in 1938 and has been outstanding in his achievements during those years. He started in the Progres sive Pioneer Poultry Club and was the state champion poultry judge at the state fair in 1943. He has also don work in forrestry, beef and farm shop work. He has his own repair shop on the farm and does electric weld ing. He has built a manure and cob loader that mounts on a tractor which he exhibited at the state fair two years ago. This machine attracted more attention than oth er items in the exhibit. He has re constructed horse drawn machin ery into tractor drawn machines during the period when they were not available. Recently he was called to Lincoln by the extension service to take a special course of study in tractor service and is now organizing 4-H clubs to car ry on this type of study. Public Speaking In 1943 he won the statewide timely topic public speaking con test sponsored through 4-H club work. He spoke on 4-H club work and the part they were playing in l.A4-AH:nr - X 1 . r jiaaieiiuis Miiury in prouucuon oi , new management, farm stock, feeds and general j Mrs Wright, a long-time resi farm work. j dent of piattsniDuth. has cooked He has also won several other j in several restaurants locally. Her awaras, including a trip to Chi cago in 1944 and attended the state conservation camp. Bob graduated from Platts mouth high school with the class of 1943 where he was one of the highest ranking students, the pres ident of the student council and highly successful in debate as well as the leading character in the senior class play. Attending University During the war he was frozen by the government to his farm work and as soon as possible, he plans to attend the University of Nebraska. In the mean time, he attends the University of Omaha two nights a week for special courses. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy O. Cole, who live south of town and who for many years have been active in farm and civic af fairs. New C of C Officers Will Be Nominated At Meeting Thursday Edward Egenberger, president ! of the Chamber of Commerce, said Monday that the meeting this Thursday noon will be of special interest to all members. The nom inating committee will make their nominations for the election of new officers for the Chamber of Commerce. The men on the nom inating committee are: Searl Davis, Roy Knorr and Henry Schneider. Also scheduled for the meeting Thursday is the report of the exe cutive committee on a new budget. Egenberger said the committee will present a budget providing for a paid secretary. Postof fice Will Be Closed Friday Postmaster Edward Egenberger said Monday that the Plattsmouth postoffice will be closed Friday in observance of Washington's birthday. The postoffice lobby will be open from 6 a. m. to 6 p. m. but there will be no window service, Egenberger said. There will be nt rural delivery and only the main business section in town will re ceive delivery. COUNTY COURT ITEMS Helen M. Trotter was appointed administratrix in estate of George W. Trotter. Final decree was entered in estates of Albert A. Wetenkamp, Glen Carl Baier and Marvin E. Bushnell. Marine Hero PHILADELPHIA. (UP) AI wUs, samrts on fie rocf. and The Reynolds Metals Co., which Schmidt, a marine who lost his 'nestles over same for 24 boars, made foil for cigaret packages be eyesight after killing more than j or until the cement set. Then it fore the war and which then be- 200 Japanese on Guadalcanal, was listed Monday as a Democratic candidate for state senator. Sch midt will seek election from Phil adelphia's Eighth district. .S Will ; WAUNfTA BRAITHVAITJiMTllSr VfRLIN LIVINC5T0N CAMSOV COLhTr XILMJii 1 CHEYEN' COUNTr SFSqk Ji TllTS -ir&V ROBERT COM cass couurr The four younz men and women shown above will represent Nebraoka at the National 4-H Camp to be held in Washington, D. C, thi rummer for the first time since the war started. The honor is the highest that ran tome to any 4-H club member in the CornhusWer State. (U. f N. Photo.) Hull's Cafe Is Sold Monday The Hull- Cafe, was taken over Monday by Mrs. Elizabeth Wright and her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Pruess and is now being: operated under the son-in-law, recently discharged from service in the armed forces, came to Plattsmouth four years ago. The new operators plan no .im mediate change in operation, but will continue the same policies as the previuos owners. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hull, from whom the restaurant was purchas ed, will go to Clinton, Mo., where 4 they plan to engage in the same line of business. They have been assisted in the operation of the cafe bv Mr. and Mrs. P"y Bann- j ing, relatives of Mrs. Iluil. They purchased the cafe from Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jacob No- Bradley. ! vember 1, 1945 and have operat- ! j ed it since then. They will re- j Plead "Not Guilty" ! main at the restaurant and help! Charles C. Clark and James' the new owners get established Blunt pled guilty Saturday in the, during the forepart of this week, .county court to a charge of dam-1 Judge Collet ' aging property in the city jail, but' 1 pled "not guilty' to a charge of, WASHINGTON AJ.R) Judge intoxication. j John C. Collet, shortly to be re-J County Judge Paul E. Fauqueti placed as stabilization adminis- set a hearing cn the case for 10' trator, Monday formally anncunc- a. m. Wednesday and deferred; ed the promised increase of $5 sentence on the guilty pleas until per ton in the piiee of all carbon after th ehearing. Bail bond was!, and allo-v steel mill products. Housing Shortage Spurs Creation ot New Machines for Building Homes By Frederick C. Othman WASHINGTON, (U.R) There is a mach ine that squats on a vacant r. hen. and lay? not n egg, louse. There is the balloon lot lik? but a h house, the ho use wun a sieei poie ition, the aluminum e bouse made of ce- for a foundat house, and th ment whipped like cream until stiff. Or by next year no telling what kind of house you'll be calling home. Few things, perhaps, are more exciting todav than the uni oue schemes to nut a roof ever vour head, now coming r,f thp drawing boards in answer to nresi- dent Truman's call for 2.700,000 new homes before 1948. As a fel- low who has had more housing troubles than rrost and who. good ness knows, follows all develop ments, I think I am the one to tell yon about them Machine-Made Houses Take Robert G. I e Tourneau whose machinery had duir more holes in the eaith than anybody's. A week from todav at LonTview Tex., he will .unveil his irarguateian steel hen. wh'ch will, with a mini mum of clucking, lay a row of four-room houses. j His invention is a vehicle 30-' feet snuare with a motor in front, traveling on rubber tires twice as tall as a man. It rolls onto a building lot. lavs a foundation on the earth. pours the concrete churs awav to lav another house fan to expand in a dozen direc while the exnert nut class in the tions. has built in Louisville, Ky. windows o the firt one. , the first five room aluminum Balloon Houses b"nlow. The joits are alumin- In Los Angeles is an organiza-' (Turn to Page 6, Number 4) EUNICE JENSEN doove cowry Legion Committee Backs Charges Made By Commander Stellej?c INDIANAPOLIS (UJV The national executive committee of i American Te-ion Monday stnrd firmlv behind national Com- mander John S telle in his charges of a "tragic breakdown" in the Veterans Administration. The committee, meeting in an extraordinary session, concluded a stormy all-day session Sunday night by adopting unanimously a resolution citing "substantial fail ure" in the administration of vet erans' affairs, The statement said an analysis of the fact showed that Stelle "had no other alternative" than to ' ocean shipping which would ease nolicv. and the remainder of 750,-j In thee hearine-s, army sources make public his charges and add- , the wartime strain on rail and port 000 ctrikin? steel workers, was ex- say. w:tnee3 cannot discus ed that "we commend and approve ; facilities of the east and gulf pected in be called back by the atomic subies or arme the?1 his taking that action." j coasts. j end of thb. week. ' own ;ews w'tVmit inadvertently The resolution, as drafted by & 3. A -large source of "cheap,- Official of th kev steel indus- releasing vnlrs-ible information resolutions committee and approv- denendable power" generated tries emnhasized that it would be Th? witnpsps. thev ray. have ?ni? ed by Legion officials, stated, without the use of coal or other annroxin-ately three weeks before into technical aspect? of the nrob however, that the veterans' group items in critical short supply avail- full production was resumed. Fur- lem which have contributed little "has not and does not demand" j able in an area which during naces must be reheated slowly and to congressional attempts to eb the resignation of Gen. Omar N. World War II was a "power de- stockpiles of raw materials "built l'shine a control policy but which set at SI 00. tion hop(ul of building hous?s around balloons. A balloon of size) to suit your needs is anchored on! your lot and inflated Then the: workers spray the outside of ,t v. 11.11 icnit-ni. ntfn uiii uii-, imr; balloon is deflated and hauled outj the front door, leaving the con- crete shell. Ihis makes a spherical house, like an overgrown tennis tall, but with the proper number of window cut in later it should be as snug a nest as you could wish. R. Buckrninister Fuller is work- in in Kansas on the dymaxion house, which swings from a single j steel post in the ground, and 1 which can, if you want, turn with he clock so that the sun shines! into your living room day long, j Dozens of concerns are planning! on making prefabricated houses. Many are in productoin now. Several varieties are on display in department stores. The U. S. steel corp., hss a subsidiary about to begin production of houses made principally of steel plate and enamel. The Beech Aircraft Co. is making homes of plywood and plastic. Aluminum Houses Purdue University has experi- rrented at length with the alumi- nam house; a committee of civic leaders in Pontaic, Mich.,, is ready to erect the first one, with walls and roof of rolled alumiunum. Acheson Says St. Lawrence Seaway Essential j WAPHIVHTOV (UP.) Under ' secretary of State Dean Acheson told consross Monday the propos ed St. Lawrence seawav and power aereement was esent'ql to national sedulity and a vigorous , foreign trade. I The United State, he told a ' senate foi-eicn relation?-- sub-com- 1 ... r f , il.. miltce. can no loncrer anoru me.. numerous wte of wealth inv ed in our failure to harness the energy of this river." Urpes Aooroval lie nreed annrovai of a m posed U. S.. Canadian aereement tr rarrv out the lonc-dehated ; velopment. It would open a 2.700 mile waterway for oeean ermine shins from Duluth. Minn., to the j Atlantic and provide for nroducr jtion of 2.200.000 horsenower of j enercv, half of which would be to i Canada. i Acheson said the benefits of the .program would sreatlv- offset the ; cost of ?200.000.nno to the fed ! eral government. New York State, iwhih would handle the rower fa cilities as a public nroiect, has aereed to pay an additional $93,- 000.000. The undersecretary said rail ;road. port cities, power and coal , interests Mho oppose the plan wf" j "uniustified" in savine it would (cut their revenue. He cited a 1941 I commerce department survev in- dieatin? that the freieht load will so increase in Jo years tnat ine eawav ''will be an absolute ! necessity to help handle ocean j traffic. ' i Reads Letter Acheson resd a joint letter by Secretary of War Robert P. Pat- returned to their ob at the U. S. terson and Secretary of the Navy ' gjeel Corp., and 12 other comnan James Forrestal to secretary of je's under aeeemeTit! o-rantin? State Jan:es F. Byrnes, whole- th"" wa boot of S1.4S a Hav. heartedlv endorsinc the aeree- j The steel settloent reduced ment and outlinine its advantages. tfe number of ctriVinw Arrrnean Forrestal and Patterson said -tf-orkers to 1.1 1. 000 (M), lowest the nroiect "in the event of a na- j h pearlv a month, tional emergency" would provide:) Othe" steel eomnanies ranidlv 1. Shipbuilding and repair, cilities in a relatively secure area, j 2. An additional supply line for fiet area.' 4 American Archbishops Become Cardinals in Secret Consistory ROME. (U.R) Four American Archbishops became Cardinals of the Roman Catholic church Mon day when their nominations by Pope P'us XII were approved along with 28 from 18 other na tions by the sacred College of Cardinals in a secret consistory. The new American cardinals, in the older of their seniority, were: John Joseph Glennon of St. Louis; Edward Mooney of Detroit; Sam uel A. Stritch of Chicago and Francis J. Spellman of New York. 1 The inaugurations, accompanied by all the co)or of o!d world entr ushered in a new era in CathoIic church hist0 reSulting Qr jrt;j time il minority inhe col d;1 in an Italian re. tes The secret consistory, the first ftJK m 7TrTT Til I f ' r ' .?l"""''' -QIWHII linil lull - n ' r----r .i:. - itmn'"-- f TTitmrr -li t niiMnin mmum mmn nlK-immuiilHtimSffi'M mf .Tnn. " This is the Vatican's Consistorial Hall, below the Pope's apartments, where the actual creation of new cardinals occurs at a secret consistory before the public ceremony. In photo above, the throne is flanked by Noble Guards, who with the papal gendarmes and the Swiss ClnoH -iro fH ri"i- of policing the Papal State. Chinese Press Opens fitter Attack on Russian Activities Y S CHU:C-KING. GJ.PJ The Chi- XiPse press onc-ned a venement at tack on Soviet Russia Monday, de-V-iarin? that red armv actions in Manchuria h)d killed the Sino-Sov-jet treatv i?ned last year. ; Dronning the'r previous retic ence, sir of the 12 dailv newsnan-t-rs in Chunekin? nrinte'l editorials In a heavv anti-Rusian tone. They cnlled the treaty with Rus- rfa meaningless and a "very grave .j.ii - , "IV The attack on Ru:;ia anpca "ej$hortly after the official nati anpcared ! i nn-, tj,e 1 tiict nuarters connrmea inai e civil war his DroKen ou: airam m southern .Mancnurri. j ciref of the homo nroiect, de i: Officii reports said that Ameri- ; c.arej that the nation has 1 js t nationalist armies : the important rail town of Lia- Celine. 50 miles southwest of ' in"- the entire war time develon-MuV-den. after brief communist j ment period, but deHned to spec resistance. ! if.v source of the leaks. ' ;. The nat;onali?t operations by Other army source- warned that the armies of Gen. Tu Li-Ming ' hitherto ton secret infnigti -n tvere said to be mtennea to sona- ify the rationalist flanks and se cure north China communications links against communist maraud ers. F:?htirr thu far has been noitinnal skirmishes, it was thouTht. Steel Workers Go Back to Jobs Today By United Press i Steel wm-Vcw beo-nn streamer j t0 sail from Senttle with a suit b?ek to tfceir iebc in the : case conta'nine the dati. He said mine, mls and 'hrieUe'- Mondnv ;n weekly radio ( APO broad four weeks to the clnv after walk- J cast that the incident had brought jipo- out in support of demands f or j a "how-down" in U. S. -Soviet re- ihWHe wntres. I At 12:01 s.m.. the vsnfnnrr, of 1 no.OOO ctrikintr TTO seelworlcers fa-i4)? fallirnr in line with the wag" settlement rented as a result of the administration's waee-pnee up again. ! held since 1937, was the first of j 0 week-long series of rites to corn- nlete the investure of the new car dinals. The Americans received their formal notification of election in the historic 15th century palace of the apostolic chancellarv on the Corso Vittorio Emmanuele, one of the principal streets of the city. ' envelope, glanced briefly at the There they awaited Father Mar- contents and passed it to his sec tin GilTgan of Cincinnati who j retary to be read aloud, had been appointed their special i Up until they received the notes envoy to deliver their tickets of ' they had been addressed as "your For thu cer 1 dinals wore tr; tied with a vie nomination. ceremony the new car- ains of purple cloth riolet silken knot and f ilk tassle, a pectorial cross with a cord and a green and gold tassle, a skull cap and violet biretta. Each American was attended bv Chester Bowles Warns Congress Price Controls Must Be Extended . A Army Aroused by Multiple Leaks Of Atom Secrets W ASH(M.. u.k' Army ex- nerts Monday expressed era ye cn- i fovr .it wTnt thev terme.-i "mulii- , , , , ,i,i i i I'lc iea:s ui im'm.i cuaiutu atomic bomb secrets. .muj. utu. jl-mii- ur.m., nioie secuiuy on the bomb dur- !ner ttie Dast lour weeKs man aur- consxanny s;i'innc mu. ;nu con tended that the leaks endanger th"s nation's supremacy in the atomic field. They said no ade onnte leeal protection for the vital information was now avail able. AnDcasin? Rmsia Columnist Drew Pearson said Snr.dnv nieht thut atom bomb sec-; rets did constitute the "conf'den- tial by information" supolied Rusia a Canadian spy ring, atlinc: t a Ru'si?.n asrent was permitted !th lations and convinced many offic- ' ials that "we cannot go on ap-I peasing Russia." ; Chief Sources j Armv sources cited what thev s con::dered two chief way which bomb information has ped. out. These are: i 1. Loosely cuarded nuVie talk j bv those connected with the borab' development. 2. Testimony of witnesses in the current -hearings on atomic energy before the special senate Dnirirr .-,nim;tr-o have jeanardied security. a secretary. trainbearer, herald end valet. Notification cf Election Th- notifieat:on of clertiop we-e e handwritten bv Father Gilli-ran on official stationery of the vati- can secretary of state and sealed ', in nlaiu envelopes. : Each new Cardinal accented his jc minencies." But as soon as the 1 messages were read by their sec- retr.ries they ranked as cardinals and were addresed as "your ex- cellencies." Receive Hats Wednesday Although they ranked as card- (Turn tT Page 6, Number 3) Ten Million Man Days of Work Were Lost During January WASHINGTON (U.R) Strikes cost the nation around 10,000,000: man-days of work in January, ; i the largest such loss on record, ac- j cording: to government estimates j Monday. j The loss of work refected the ' impact of the steel General Mo- tors, electrical and other strikes, j , It dimmed an otherwise gen- i erally bright economic picture. A j employment and unemployment Lii.tLu uc f miucu i - (disregarding strikes) both gained .somewhat. The fact that both in- J creased at the same time was due i to the expanding size of the labor I force as more servicemen sought civilian jobs. The industrial production index in January was off five points as strikes in the steel and auto in dustry forced shutdowns in other lines. The retail price index made a fractional gain. The farm price index took a small seasonal set back after several months of up- turn. Treasury spending continued to fau lower." Receipts almost equal- ed those of the previous month. j an(j exceeded those of January ia?t year. The deficit was lower. ' Trie weekly nverae wae in the latest month for which figures ! "f "streamline prodcedrec" for were available was off slightly j J"ttinr. the new.wage price policy Kn orom lnrc n-ftll- VLo.i'ntO effect. wise showed a decline. Pauley Debate j Brings Clash in Senate Hearing WASHINGTON 'U.PJ Republi- ca"s and Democrats on the senate naval affairs committee shouted j fWiarce at each other Mondav a (the committee resumed hearinp-s on the nomination of E. W. Paule- !to be undersecretary of the navy. ' The dadi rrcurrpd during exam i instion of Harold Judson, assist. f"t IT S. solicitor ceneral. Jmlsop jwas called by Pauley's opnonent ifor niestioninsr in connection wit I a fipht over a California oil law j in 1P39. j Judson became embroiled i-n i such an argument with Rennblicp ; senators that senator Allen J iEllender, D. La., interrupted to hout : 1 "Who's on trial here, Pauley or ! Judson." j Shout Threats Republican senators O w e n j Brewster of Maine and Charles O. iTcbey of N. H., shouted back tha j "there would be plenty on Pnulev i "there would be plenty on Pauley S,vnen tnev unisnea w present ; examination. Senator Millard E. Tvdintrs, D. jJia- enanengea tne propriety 01 questions put to Judson by Tobey !ariu Brewster. Chairman David I. Walsh, D. Mass., obtained order finally only by outshouting the other senators at the table. Pauley fighting for confirma tion to the navy post despite a disupte which reached cabinet level and brought the resignation of secretary of the interior Harold L. Ickes, sat expressionless throughout the argument. Starts Argument The argument started when Tobey asked Judson whether he ever contributed any funds io de feat the 1939 referendum in Cali fornia on an oil proposition. Details of the California fight were not discussed beyond the fact that Judson was retained by in dependent oil interests to defeat the referendum. Judson did not coitribuce any funds but was paid S22,500 for legal work which included chal lenging referendum signatures as forgeries. Swedish Prince Gives Up Title NEW YCIK. (U.R) Prince Carl Tohan of Sweden will give up his title for the love of a country woman Tuesday as he and Swedish iournal'st Kerstin Wijkmark are married at Riverside church. The 35-year-old subject who won her prince from the steps of the throne will wear a short biege dress with brown accessories as she says her vows before not more than 20 friends in the fashionable church. Following a reception at Club 21, the couple will leave for a ten day honeymoon somewhere "not as cold as New York." Also Asks for Food Subsidies WASHINGTON, (U.R) Chester Bowles, newly designated econom ic stabilizer, warnea- coneross Monday that the nation's econ omic system would be smashed "beyond hope of repair'' unless it extends price controls to keep the lid on the present "inflationary dynamite." In his first trip to Capitcl Kill in his new role, the retiring OPA chief urged the house banuing ! comTnittee to approve speedily a , nendinr bill to continue a ve r i after the meSent June 30 exr.ira j jon date. " Food Subsidies ! ne also urged continuation of j food subsidies and establishment of price ceilings on homes. Con tinued inflation in the real estate Market, he warned, will "under mine the construction industry juft as it did after the last war.'' Eowles said extension of the stabilization statutes promptly and without amendment was vit- i al to making President Truman's new waee-nrice stabilization pro- ! "rani effective until increased pro ! duction makes it safe ty remove ! all government controls. Streamline Procedures said ho expected to an- nounce within a few days a series In the meantime, he said, it should ba "emphatically" under stood that the policy means neith er a wage freeze nor eeneral price increasps throughout indus try. .Prices will be raised, he sa'd where wage boosts make it neces sary to assure an ind"stry the ""inin'um level of naetime earn ings duvir.f the com in? vear. Bowie? said te p-oyeimment -a? ow p.waro thrt it staged too soon nter V-J dav in easine controls ome have been reimosd and -thers mav have to be. But if food -"bsidies and nric-wttrol' are ot extended beyond Jn "O. he -aid. ncthin? can prevent nresent n'latioary pressures - from poinsr off "in an explosion that will -irci ou1 economy Evstem beyird hepe or renfli:"' ' S-e"u'ative Fever tie a aid a pnorn'ative fev?r' --. jicent of V-79 was now """Vii? tin m t"1 croc ir nnn rea 1 ctaro 3TarVts. and T,-as alco mani 'octinor itcolf in denane by ''ir- TocnoTsible" o"ronn for rrxo'-'T ? rrice ceilin-rs on this or that P, -it os f aid . fVio1- T30. Jiko "VT-r, """Vinvan. rpjjnrded th n"w crVi;. -a irm roli"v a "Hnl'"o".. i- b -n"? linp and not a "reneral rc-'-oiit froni it. But beside the Knl-re. h" aid. hpre is a threatened beak- Vir,tnpi. Thp P,OVDr)ll"BTl' S r'W "y is nh to "top the i-jo'lrtViTi-l. Fl nff iha. Vn1e nd continue to hold the line Voro it is." PowlS r-n v1 V o -fnllTT-'-r nic. urn trie "itnortTt" ffrr"t' Pood food nrjpc rpTT-espt JO Tray nr-nt O tVjo f r p rrict ti"T.nr o; f-onot'f A-l tV rrrTarrTvir.Tif 1 ri - JF conffrp?1: eont'Ti',",ec hn id ciilriif!,- jircTCriin, nri'p1: cnl bS tntd fit rouj'Vil"' n"nsTit lyol. Pnt vpnvpcciiti! io nor fpnf r ft eoet n T livirjnr. "TT-ic ton rt : i " f V T-inl'l 1 . T pvtani'T t'iA nftnt''ol. (Turn to Page 6. Number 5) James Curv Is SentrtrorJ to Jail For Mail Fraud WACTTTXriTOV. (ii.P Fr. .Tjinvs M- C"t1'". D . "Ts";.. Mon day was find JtVflto aid sont'-n. ced to a fail tenn of six month" o or" snd one half vear frVfow- T.ftftT coil V n ' 1 1 i11t- C . lov tn vpm'in ffsa on h'" ni'ocn FOO n I -vs-VHo pn 5 00 1 ic tal'en. C",-lov'-; otT"ovc Vio-n rj"ated tVict tbe" wo"ld "P"o'l t" cjffo jit nce. tbl cflia.' Trft'oT" cnM "'Vn V r h?d ivnfvco'1 tb cinfon"P pf-t-' r"1id t V II - Vo Vi "1 " 1- ' ''St of t'is vifWcn " n J ?l:-5 tl(prp Wa nnao T-il 1 i rrcr "Oti i " V i'n-ii-s rcv differ.' "T ant others no fr-rv-rT4-or piore o than T 0 -i. fnv nnriicTiTvtnt ir c-.,J ' - said. WEATHER Nebraska Forecast: p r 1 1 v cloudy Monday. Monday vX nA Tuesday little change in tempa ture. except ooler et,,DTv" woct Monday low Monda" nih " lower 30's. l v J