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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1952)
I d?J2Z)Z ?fp?rpjz Js I I lllllll I II I I HI II I" I Mil I 111 Ill I I 1 RATES Two cents per word for First Insertion; One Cent for each additional insertion. Notices NOTICE I will be in my office in the Ruse Bldg. from 10 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. daily except Sun day. Mike Tritsch, Optomet rist . Phone 270. 65-tfc NOTICE Lawn mowers sharp ened and repaired at resi dence. All work guaranteed. Vf rite L. J. Clarence or phone 2551 Union. 51-tfc KOTICE See us about airplane praying of weeds, brush and insects. Henry Smith. Phone 3104, Avoca. 61-25tp NOTICE If you want carpen ter or roof "work done, write or call Anton Vlasak, Platts mouth, Phone 4119. 75-14tp NOTICE Wanted riders to Omaha, leave Plattsmouth 7 a. m., leave Omaha 5:15. Ph. 8493. 79-tfc Cass Taxi Company , Closed Labor Day September 1, 1952 Personals SAVE MONEY On your in surance needs. Insure with Farmers Mutual of Madison, Wise, good reliable company. Prompt claim service. Na ional standard policies. Save up to 40. See Harley M. Bur dick, or Dial 3123. Authorized Agent. 75-tfc Card of Thanks CARD OF THANKS To my many friends, relatives, neigh bors I would like to extend my thanks for all the cards, gilts and flowers sent to me while I was in the hospital. Such kindness and neighbor ly thoughtfulness will nevei be forgotten. Francis Lynn Cook. 80-ltc J Lest and Found LOST OR STRAYED Small brown and white shepherd dog. Phone 8462. 78-2tc LOST Three quarter blood black setter, one fourth span iel weight 30 lbs. Answers to name of Candy. Substantial reward for return or where abouts. Harold Dodson. phone 2672 Nehawka. 78-2tc Help Wanted WANTED Man for dry clean ing department. Lugsch Cleaners. 77-2tc Wanted WANTED Sewing of all kinds, and alterations, to do at my home. Phone 8357 or see Mrs. F. L. Olson. 77-4tdh WANTED Dirt, old bricks, ; concrete or anything for fill. No cans or garbage. Phone 4100. 77-tfc ! WANTED Building lot for a home, reasonable, and on level around. Mr. John Ahrens. Phone 4226. 78-tfc Wanted to Rent WANTED TO RENT Garage: close in. Phone 7156. 80-ltp Services Offered Trash Hauling Garbage Pickup ."Mid Odd Jobs - Phone 3124 - PLATTSMOUTH HAULAWAY Emery Rozell 46-tfc 15 to 20 DISCOUNT On All Types Of FURNITURE PURCHASE DIRECT FROM WAREHOUSE See Us Today MEISINGER FIRESTONE 5ih & Main Phone 5114 37-tfc-Mon. FUR CCAT RESTYLING and REPAIRING at reasonable prices. Latest style Ladies coats or capes made from your fur coats, $35.00. STRANGE'S FUR SHOP, 110 North Sixth Street, Nebraska City. Phone 201. 69-10tp Dial I t Refrigerator Range - Washer Sales & Service Wm. Schmidtmann PHONE 7152 for Expert Plumbing & Heating PROMPT SERVICE Distributor Meyers Water System Gardner & Wurjele Plattsmouth Think Cf SMITH'S For SHOES SHIRTS SUITS JACKETS COATS TIES SPOUT WEAR WORK CLOTHES SAMSONITE LUGGAGE SMITH'S MEN'S WEAR AIR CONDITIONED Plattsmouth, Nebr. WESTERN'S MJTO PARTS Wester Auto Auoctote Stor Plattsmouth, Nebr. Phone 6239 SERVICES OFFERED Cesspool and septi: tank cleaning, free estimates. Write cr phone E. K. Gray. Nebraska- City. - Ph. Rural 2612. 72-4M Instructions LEARN WATCHMAKING. High paying jobs open everywhere. Our 44th year training men and women. Thousands of successful jewelers and watch makers throughout the nation cju attest to the reliability of our school. Write for com plete details. Chicago School of Watchmaking, Dept. PJ, 1603 No. Milwaukee Ave., Chi cago, 111. 26-tfp For Sale FOR SALE Peaches and grapes. Bring your own con tainer. Phone 8353. Fred Spangler. 80-2tc ' FOR SALE Tomatoes. Phone 4004. 80-2tc FOR SALE Home grown peach es. Murray 4614, Plattsmouth 8125. 79-2tc FOR SALE 4940. -Baby buggy. Phone 78-4tc FOR SALE Prairie hay, baled. Theo. Schafer. 79-2tp REPLACE that old CAR LATTERY with a NEW VARCON BATTERY for as little as 7.95 and your old battery Gomfefcd 506 Main Order Your FURNACE AIR FILTERS NOW Be Kcady for Fall WARGA HARDWARE Main Phone 3171 51' FOR SALE aisco Aluminum combination ser eens and storm windows; porch enclo sures. Free estimates. Small down payment. 3Q months to pay. H. C. and Carl Tickotter. Phones 4159 or 4055. 32-tfc 241 CLASSIFIED advertising: will be accept ed up to 11:00 A. M. on dayof Publication. Household Goods SPECIAL SALE Innerspring MATTRESSES Reg. 34.95 NOW 29.88 and Reg. 69.95 NOW 44.95 UTILITY TABLES 7.49 FURNITURE 532 Main Phone 413a FOR SALE Two used refrigera tors, completely overhauled, one Norge. one Kelvinator. $40 each. Phone 5967. 79-2tc Livestock for Sale FOR SALE Three Hereford j bulls. Clifford Cooper, 2503 Weeping Water. 79-2tc FOR SALE Registered Shrop shire ewes and rams. Rich ard O. Cole. Phone 8169. 79-tfc Real Estate for Rent FOR RENT 2 bedroom home, furnished. Nice yard, fruit. Phone 6621, Murray. 80-ltp FOR RENT Pooms for men. Plattsmouth Tourist Court. 85-tfc FOR RENT 4237. -Apt. for rent. Ph. 20-tfc FOR RENT Two room unfur nished apt. Refrigerator and gas stove furnished. Utilities I paid. Private bath. Close in. Phone 5216. 74-tfc FOR RENT Five room house, j See Earl Harshoarger, Rt. 1, Plattsmouth. 77-4tp FOR RENT two large furn- ! ished rooms, modern, on pave- , ment. Private entrance, utili ties paid. Call 7149. 75-tfc FOR RENT Three room unfur- j nished Apt. Phone 5282. I 79-tfc FOR RENT Clean three room all modern furnished apart ment. Adults preferred. Ph. 3075. 77-tfc FOR RENT Four room furnish ed Apt., allutilities paid, pri vate bath" and entrance. Adults only. Call 3201, 1123 First Ave. 80-ltc Seed for Sale FOR SALE Certified Pawnee wheat pure seed 99.30. Crop seed none, inert material .70 whea.t seed none, germina tion 98. Richard O. Cole, phone 8169. 79-tfc FOR SALE Pawnee seed wheat. Harold Deitchler, Glenwood, Iowa. Phone 230W. 79-4tp Real Estate for Sale FOR SALE Three bedroom home, combination, storm windows and screen, immedi ate possession. Garage. 709 No. 11th, call 209. 78-tfc FOR SALE All Modern Two Bedroom Home Full Basement with garage - 2 Blocks from School - On Paving. All Modern Two Bedroom Home in Hillcrest Addition. A lovely Home, has only been occupied by present owner. F.H.A. loan can be taken over or new one made. Partly Finished House - Has water, lights & Gas. Make us a cash offer! We're asking $3250.00 3 Lovely Lots on North 7th St. A good site for a lovely ranch house - or 3 separate homes. Sec or Phone STEVE DAVIS Phone 6111 2nd Floor Plattsmouth State Bank Bldg. FOR SALE Five room house on five acres, gas range in good I condition. 17 in. Crosley tele- I vision. 518 Dyke St. 78-6tp FOR SALE 3 2 acreage, five room house, on highway south of town. Phcne 4904. 79-3tp 3 f REAL ESTATE FOR SALE I 6 rooms and bath, all on one j floor, gas heat, on paving. I Price $4,750.00. 5 room house, with lights, water iim gas. miuutang "as lur- nace, end gas hot water heat- ci tiiiu live iui&.ui gruunu. $4,800.00. Four rooms and bath, two rcom Apt. upstairs, two room house, Garage and large yard, all for $6000.00. Bargain. Four room home with large yard in LaPlatte. Six room modern home in Murray with nice grounds and buildings. Good five room house and two acres for enly $4500. A new all modern 5 room home with basement Apt., and up stairs Apt. Located on paving near school. A good 4 room house and yard for only $3000.C0. An all modern, 3 bedroom. 2 . story bungalow with 8 lots. 1 6500.00. A good 2 room house for only $1500. A modern country home with 4 acres, just outside of city limits. ;An attractive little home near school. Five roctns and bath. Gas furnace. Laundry room and three-room aDartment in basement. Located on paving. j A good rental property or a one- family home. Five rooms plus utility room and bath, gas heat. Price including some furnishings only $4,500.00. A small acreage with a good four-room house. Located on paving. Only $4,500.00. All modern, 4 rooms and bath. $7,000.00. Two-aDartments. two baths. garage and fireplace. Take notice that the trustee . Two apartments, two baths. ' JfnSetftSn11 ex double garage, several lots. tLt IfoL chicken house and cave. j -of "ToTcluntl Large building on east main I and for his discharge as trustee, street. Improved 40 acres, March 1. 1953. possession LORIS B. LONG Licensed Real Estate Broker Tel. 5239 or 4250 Office at 126 N. 4th St. FOR SALE Property for sale, located 414 South 5th St. Sev en rooms, light, water and gas heat. Mrs. Frank Payne. Phone 4142. 78-tfc FOR SALE Four room house for sale. One lot of ground. Close in. Call 2375 or see Mrs. Harold W. Johnson, Weeping WTater, Nebr. 67-tfc Automobiles for Sale 1950 Chrysler Royal. All weather Heating system. Radio and many extras. Less than 10,000 actual miles. , 1949 Ford Custom 4 dr. Radio. 1 Heater and Overdrive $1095 1 1948 Dodge 4 dr. Town Sedan. 1 All weather Air Condition er, Radio. 1947 Kaiser 4 dr. Sedan. 1947 Plymouth 4 dr. Heater and ! Radio 795 1947 Hudson Custom 4 dr. Se- rian Hpatfir T? q H in nnrl overdrive, very nice . 495 1946 Plymouth Coupe. Heater aim rtituiu ovd 1938 Pontiac 6 Sedan. 1949 Studebaker l's-ton Truck. 2 speed axle. A Few 37's - 41's on Hand R. V. Bryant Motor Co. 125 N. 5th Dial 283 FOR SALE 1949 four-door Chevrolet. Actual mileage 7,000. Mrs. Margaret Graham. Phone 8465. 79-2tp ' FOR SALE 1940 Super Deluxe two-rnor Ford sedan, good condition. very reasonable. Dick Fisher, Phone 8133. 75-tfc A Classified Ad In The Jour nal costs as little as 35c. FOR SALE 1942 club coupe, Mercury, in good condition. 1 See at 1723 Ave. B. (Cemetery , road . Contact Winnie or Glen Larsen 79-2fn z. : S Machinery for Sale FOR SALE Whirl wind terrac er. Henry hydraulic scood. Jack Troop, phone 8350. 73-tfC LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICE Morsman, Maxwell, Fike and Sawtell, Attorneys of South Omaha, vs. Paul Stock, et al. Doc. 14, Fage 163 Case No. 11145 To: Fred J. Hastens You will hereby take notice that a pe; ition has been filed in I (lid TV ?t ?-i -t ,-,it nf ffe- rn-. . ! ty. Nebraska, wherein you were named a defendant, wherein plaintii'f prays judgment for the possession of cerfain property, to-wit: (1) HD7 Alhs Chalmers trac tor. Serial No. W9709; Buckeye Cable Dozer and (double drum unit, Serial No. B6023) (1) Smith combination cut ting torch and welding torch with guages (1) Will-weld 220 single-phase 200 Amp. electric welder, complete with 125 feet of cable and hood (1) K. O. Lee hard seat grind ing machine, complete wirn n arrnnnmpnrs .1) 50 lb. Little Giant trip hammer :2) 5-horsepower electric mo-! tors (1) 12-ft. Blaisdell turning lathe (1) 1350 Allis-Chalmers trac tor wBaker bulldozer, Ser. Nos. 1975 7 622 or 1975 & 622. (1) 1946 Caterpillar tractor, Model D7, Serial No. 6842, with cable dozer and dou- uie uiuiu cauie unii. You are required to answer on or before September 22nd, lvoz STOCK YARDS NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTH OMAHA, Plaintiff. 1896 Aug. 4. 7, 11, 14, 18, 21, 25, 28; Sept. 1, 1952 No, Claude D. Lutton, Jr., Attorney NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the County Court of Cass County, Nebraska TO ALL PERSONS INTER ESTED IN THE TRUSTEESHIP OF THE GERTRUDE CUTLER TRUST ESTATE: ! which will be heard before said ! court on September 9, 1952, at 3:CC o'clock P. M. Dated this 22nd day of Aug ust, 1952. BY THE COURT RAYMOND J. CASE, County Judge No. 1911 Aug. 25, Sept. 1, 8, '52 Mrs. Henry Maseman Mr. and Mrs. Sugden and family, Adams, were Sunday dinner guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Behrns. j Fred Linhardt. Sr.. is ill at his home here with a heart ailment. Mrs. John Mohr was ill in j bed several days last week. Lawrence Wulf returned home from the hospital Tuesday eve ' ning. 1 Mr nnrl 'Mrs T7nhfrt TTcjII- evenins from Minnesota fishinsr. I j Mias Evelyn Frendenberg who , attended the summer session at I Peru is home and will teach 1 Cascade school near Weeping Water. Rev. and Mrs. Berger of Otta wa, Kansas spent Friday eve ning and Saturday with Mr. I and Mrs. Henry Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Everman and her mother. Mrs. Shelps went to Iowa to visit Mrs. Ever man's sister over the wreek end. Birth Mr. and Mrs. William Green Storm Lake, Iowa, announce the birth of a daughter, Aug. 7. 1952. They have another daugh ter. They are well known here as he was leader of the Avoca Band several years ago. Avoca j Former Resident Is Polio Patient Barbara Yearslev. 13 vear old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Yearsley now of Dunbar former- ly of here has polio, an acute case, in Lincoln General hosoi tal, Lincoln. Avoca Mrs. Dwight Baier and son Terry returned home Friday evening after spending several days at the William Baier home in Lincoln. Richard Maseman spent Tues day evening here and was a supper guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Hobson at Weeping Water. Girl Receives Burns On Leg Ann Marquardt. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Marquardt. was severly burned on the upner part of her leg at the Tom Ak - cr.on heme near Weeping Water when a coffee maker up set. Fnfprtalnc Af "leriains Al Luncheon Tuesday ,.c. ttq, Cmffv, .i.rfoi. rs- Henry Smith entertained at a. j. u ciock luncaeon lueiay at her home honoring Lucille Moyer. Also present was Miss Moyer's mother. Mrs. Alta Moy er, and her sister. Miss Lonnie Moyer of Omaha, Mrs. Moeens Johnson. Mrs. Sam Smith. Weep ing Water. Mrs. Caroline Mar quardt. Mrs. Calvin Carsten. and Mrs. Roy Ruhge. Ernest Gollner of Chicago ar rived here Monday for a few ' days visit with his parents, and take his family, who have been here several months, home with m. w'niiam Wolh has arrived at Ft. Leonard Wood. Mo. S.A. Clarence Kammon who i has been here on leave with his ! parents. Mr. and Mrs. Herman j Kamman, left Tuesday for San Diego where he will take more training. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Woitzel and children of Greenwood have oeen visiting at the Herman Kamman home this week. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dankleff, Mrs. Kristine Sailing. Miss Ma tilda Madsen. Mrs. Marius Nel sen and Lloyd Nelsen visited in Omaha Saturday evening. . w oca Mrs. Calvin Carsten. Mrs. Roy Ruhge honored Miss Lucille Moyer at a can shower Tuesday in the church parlors. The bride to be was blindfolded to taste some mixtures to tell what they were and when the blindfold was removed her gifts were there in gaily decorated grocery carts. Avoca Mrs. Ernest Jensen was honor ed at a pink and blue shower at the home of Mrs. John Lingle, Jr., Tuesday evening. A basket dinner was held at the Congregational church on Tuesday evening by friends and members of the church. Dr. Arthur Taylor head of the con ference spoke later and told of the prospect of getting a min- ister. Mr. and Mrs. Clive Short. j Chadron. spent several days as guebis oi Airs, mimia xvawtui- j last week. j Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Sudman and son of Syracuse and Mr. I1U 1V11. nri Mrs William Npwham of Weeping Water were Sunday dinner euests of their parents Mr. and Mrs. Kord Sudman Mrs. K. V. White and sons of Snrinefield. Mo., were here vis iting her sister. Mrs. Fred Mar quardt this week. Richard Norris left last week for Canada to help Mr. RalDh Youns of Beatrice with the wheat harvest. Mr. Young is father of Mrs. Dwight Baier. Avoca Polio Patient Returns Home Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dodenhoff and grandson Fritz Staack were Sunday guests at the Herman Kamman home. Fritz stayed with his grandparents while his parents went up to help brine his grandfather Albert Staack home from the hospital where h1 has been for several months with polio. Mr. Staack has a bad case of paralysis from the disease Avoca 1 Mrs. Mvrtle Wolph. Mrs. Em ' ma Rawalt. Miss Elinore Nutz man and Miss Evelyn Frenden berg were in Plattsmouth Sat urday on business. Mrs. Henry Kammon was able to come home from the hospital Monday. Miss Alberta Kirkhoff of Cheney visited her cousin Paula Ludwig several days last week, Sunday Paula Ludwig and Sally Carsten spent the day with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sill. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Behrens. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Boeenrief and granddaughter Sandra, all of Omaha, visited with Mrs. 1 Minnie Neumeister and Bertha 1 tunaay. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn riooacK 1 family left for Chicago Wednesday evening to visit his sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Shantz. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hennincs and his parents. Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Hennings visited with Mr. and Mrs. Merle Hennings in Omaha Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sutton of Omaha and Mrs. Elmer Sho jren of Louisville came down to get their mother. Mrs. Clarence Sutton and took her home with them Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Hall and daughter of Pocateilo. Idaho, visited at the Elmer Johnson home this week. Mrs Emma Nutzman. Verle and Elenor visited Sunday at the Walter Miesback home near Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Lacv and Silas Munn attended the fun eral Monday of Warren Munn. 73, at Nehawka. He was a cou sin of Silas Munn. ! Fred and Robert Marquardt left Sunday on the Hereford cattle tour to Chadron. Rev. and Mrs. Harm ot Ana mosa. Iowa, visited with Rev. and Mrs. Bergastraesser last week. Also visiting this week were his son and family. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bergastraesser, of Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. William Rose suffered a heart attack one day last week and his doctor took him to the Ebler home in. Elmwood? for. several wggIcs rest Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ruhge, Mrs. J. H. F. Ruhge and Mrs. Harry Michle attended the flow er show at Nebraska City Sun- , dav. 1 Mrs. Mark Rich of Council Bluffs visited with Mrs. Harmon , and Don last week. On Sunday , there were: Mr. and Mrs. Earl 1 Harmon, Mr. and Mrs. Charles THE PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL Monday, September 1, 1952 PAGE SEVEN "Now I know why fa wanted a long-nosed butlerli' Legislative SIDELIGHTS.. by BERNIE CAMP Information Director Ncuao-.d Farm Bureau Federation (Legislative Sidelines Is made available to your local newspaper as a service of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation. Op:n- ions expressed are not neces- sanlv nt this newspaper . Parking Meter Revenue Parking meters are big busi- ness jn America these days, with an annual income of more than tn million fnr ritv envprnments. Ninety per cent of the nation's cjties of more than 50 000 popu- lation have such meters. More than a . .. . o c.-ifl alc ul viauvii m Z" to Fairbanks. Alaska, wnen a city decides to install parking meters, chances are that they deal with one of six major man ufacturers who agree to put the meters in on a six-month trial basis. Although there are a few minor manufacturers, the ma jority of the business is done wun me D15 cunipaiiies. lvieccio retail for an average of $50 to $75 each, and the manufacturer agrees if the city decides not to keep the meters to remove them and repair the sidewalki-xJaere they were installe'd. Few cities, however, decide not to retain them. Meters are paid for out of revenues, with the manufac turer receiving 50 per cent of the revenue until the purchase price is paid. The parking meter was de vised as a means of forcing turn-over in parking in retail i areas of towns and cities. In this objective they have been highly successful. Once in many cities all-day parking of cars belonging to persons employed in the retail area greatly cur tailed the space available for customers. Today, where meters are in operation all day park ing is largely eliminated. In many cities, however, the original purpose has been large- iy obscured in the scramble to install more and more meters, not to solve the parking prob- em Dut. as a readily available ancj certain source of income for city governments. 'In many rural areas, county seat and other large towns, communities which cannot plainly have a very serious parking problem continue to install parking me tore- tV(o r-i!v ronrOncirm t r hp drawn from such installations is that thev are for revenue pur poses only. No one can know exactly how much revenue Nebraska towns and cities realize from parking meters annually without a care ful survey of all localities with such installations. However, an uncompleted survey made for this column shows that in 12 of the large cities of Nebraska (Omaha, Lincoln, Kearney. Falls City, Columbus, North Platte, McCook, Grand Island, Hastings, Fremont, Scottsbluff and Nor folk) a total of at least $660,000 was realized from parking me ters in 1951. These same towns 1 had a total installation of ap- proximately 7,850 meters. This is an average income of approx- imately $84 a meter. In many of the cities surveyed the revenue go into police funds, city general funds, city water funds, funds to pay for main tenance and collection from the meters, city paving funds, funds to pay for the meters, for traffic i improvement and traffic lights. and a variety of other general uses. 1 Revenues from parking meters I fill all the requirements for classification as a highway user tax, since only those persons who drive and own automobiles pay the tax. Therefore, it would ' seem reasonable to assume it is ' diversion to use parking meter revenue for any other purpose than for meter maintenance and collection, to pay for the - Strecter, Mr. and Mrs. Harvcv Swindle, Rev. and Mrs. Val Johnson and sons, and Mr. and Mrs. Morton Johnson and Clint. Paul Straub. David and Don nic arc in St. Paul. Minnesota attending the state fair there. i meters themselves, for traffl$. - improvement and safety instal-s -1 lations. for paving or street inv ; provement or any other purpose to improve the use of streets. Where meter revenues go into city general funds, police de partment funds, or city water departments or for any other purpose not directly connected : with street improvement or ad ministration of the meter oper- ation, this highway user income is being diverted irom us pruper assignment, In recent years many Nebras- ka cities have pieaded for 'a share in revenues from suen sources as the gasoline tax and license fees; while they have at the same time been collecting thousands of dollars a year from parking meters and using the revenue for purposes other than reasonable to ask that cities and towns make proper use of the highway revenues from meters . i ; 5 j Diure iney as, lur a. lianiig m revenues uuncu i uK 6 oline tax or license fees? True, residents of the cities contribute a share of the meter street improvement. Is it un revenue, but farm families com ing to town to trade and attend meetings and other visitors probably make up the major share of these revenues. No one particularly quarrels with the right of cities and towns to in- ' stall meters, but those who do j contribute ave a right t0 ex peck; that the revenues will be used to improve the streets and parking facilities of the city. A few Nebraska cities and towns make every effort to use the meter funds to improve street and parking services, but too many use the revenue for other purposes. Diversion of parking meter revenues is but one of many types of revenue obtained from ! legal diversions made of various Nebraska highway users. NICKEL FROM CANADA Canadian producers of nickel in 1951 were responsible for ap proximately 275,000,000 pounds cf nickel production, or more than 90 per cent of the free world's total. THIEF DESCRIBES SELF WISNER, Neb. The burglar, who visited the Hansen Clean ers, left a pretty fair descrip tion of himself. He took trous ers, sizes 30 and 31; shirts, sizes 15, and caps, size 7 1-8. LIVING ON NICKEL Practically all residents of the Sudbury mining area in North ern Ontario, about 70,000, de rive their living directly or in directly from nickel. Production of bituminous coal for 1951 was more than 30 higher than for the prewar 1935-1939 average. WITH WAY ME This new, popular gran ular iorm. of Wayne j helps cut costs. Krums 'save feed, help keep poultry fit are cleaned up faster and are easie and cleaner to feed. Don't delay , Start profiting Tht Wayne Way ffi&- .h FARMERS FEED & SEED 310 Chicago Ave. Phone 3131 ' Plattsmouth I E ffiS 5