NICHOLAS FUND INC
485BPOS, 1998-04-28
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						     File No. 2-30447

			      FORM N-1A
				  
		 SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
		       Washington, D.C. 20549
				  
       REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
				  
		   PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. ___
				  
		   POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 44
				  
				 and
				  
   REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
				  
				  
			   AMENDMENT NO. 23
				  

			NICHOLAS FUND, INC.
	 (EXACT NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED IN CHARTER)

   700 NORTH WATER STREET, SUITE 1010, MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN 53202
	      (ADDRESS OF PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES)

		  414-272-6133 or 800-227-5987
	(REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE)

		       DAVIS & KUELTHAU, S.C.
		111 EAST KILBOURN AVENUE, SUITE 1400
		      MILWAUKEE, WI  53202-6613
			   (414) 276-0200
				  
		    ALBERT O. NICHOLAS, PRESIDENT
			 NICHOLAS FUND, INC.
		       700 NORTH WATER STREET
		     MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN 53202

	    (Names and Addresses of Agents for Service)

It is proposed that the filing will become effective:

[  ] immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
[X]  on July 30, 1997 pursuant to paragraph (b)
[  ] sixty (60) days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
[  ] on __________________ pursuant to paragraph (a) (1)
[  ] 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
[  ] on __________________ pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485

Pursuant to Rule 24f-2, the Registrant hereby registers an indefinite
amount  of  securities.   On  May  23,  1997,  Registrant  filed  the
necessary  Rule  24f-2 Notice and filing fee with the Commission  for
its fiscal year ended March 31, 1997.

			    NICHOLAS FUND, INC.
			   CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
			(As required by rule 481(A))

PART A.  INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS    HEADING
- ------   ----------------------------------    -------
Item 1.  Cover Page.........................   Cover Page

Item 2.  Synopsis...........................   Performance Data

Item 3.  Condensed Financial Information....   Consolidated Disclosure of Fund
					       Fees  and  Expenses;  Financial
					       Highlights

Item 4.  General Description of Registrant..   Introduction; Investment 
					       Objectives and Policies; 
					       Investment Restrictions

Item 5.  Management of the Fund.............   Investment Advisor, Management
					       Directors; Executive  Officers
					       of the Fund
Item 5A. Management's discussion of Fund
	 Performance........................   Management's discussion of Fund
					       Performance

Item 6.  Capital Stock and Other Securities.   Transfer of Capital Stock; 
					       Dividends and 
					       Federal Tax Status; Description
					       of Capital Stock; Annual
					       Meeting;  Shareholder Reports

Item 7.  Purchase of Securities Being Offered  Purchase and Redemption of 
					       Capital Stock; Exchange
					       Priviliges to Other Nicholas Co.
					       Funds; Transfer of Capital 
					       Stock; Determination of Net 
					       Asset Value; Dividend 
					       Reinvestment Plan; Systematic
					       Withdrawl Plan; Individual 
					       Retirement Account; Master
					       Retirement Plan.

Item 8.  Redemption or Repurchase...........   Purchase of Capital Stock; 
					       Redemption of Capital Stock

Item 9.  Legal Proceedings..................   N/A

PART B.  INFORMATION REQUIRED IN STATEMENT OF  HEADING
	       ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- -------  ------------------------------------  -------
Item 10. Cover Page.........................   Cover Page

Item 11. Table of Contents..................   Table of Contents

Item 12. General Information and History....   Introduction

Item 13. Investment Objectives and Policies.   Investment Objectives and
					       Policies; Investment
					       Restrictions

Item 14. Management of the Fund.............   Investment Advisor; Management;
					       Directors, Executive Officers of
					       the Fund

Item 15. Control Persons and Principal 
	 Holders of Securities..............   Principal Shareholders

Item 16. Investment Advisory and Other 
	 Services...........................   Investment Advisor; Custodian and
					       Transfer Agent; Councel and 
					       Auditors
Item 17. Brokerage Allocation and other
	 Practices.........................   Brokerage

Item 18. Capital Stock and Other Securities.  Transfer of Capital Stock; 
					      Income; Dividends and Federal
					      Tax Status; Description of
					      Capital Stock; Shareholder
					      Reports; Annual Meeting
					      
Item 19. Purchase, Redemption and                                              
	 Pricing of Securities
	 Being Offered.....................   Purchase of Capital Stock; 
					      Redemption of Capital Stock; 
					      Exchange Privilages to Other 
					      Nicholas Company Funds;
					      Transfer of Capital Stock; 
					      Determination of Net Asset
					      Value; Dividend Reinvestment
					      Plan; Individual Retirement
					      Account; Master Retirement
					      Plan; Systematic Withdrawl
					      Plan

Item 20. Tax Status........................   Income; Dividends and Federal
					      Tax Status

Item 21. Underwriters......................   N/A

Item 22. Calculation of Performance Data...   Performance Data

Item 23. Financial Statements..............   Financial Information
    
PART C.  OTHER INFORMATION                    HEADING
- -------  ------------------                   -------
Item 24. Financial Statements and   
	 Exhibits..........................   Part C

Item 25. Persons Controlled By or
	 Under   Common   Control
	 with Registrant...................   Part C

Item 26. Number  of Holders of
	 Securities........................   Part C

Item 27. Indemnification...................   Part C

Item 28. Business   and     Other
	 Connections of Investment
	 Adviser...........................   Part C

Item 29. Principal Underwriters............   Part C

Item 30. Location of Accounts and
	 Records...........................   Part C

Item 31. Management Services...............   Part C

Item 32. Undertakings......................   Part C



		       Nicholas Fund, Inc.
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
			    FORM N-1A
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
		       PART A:  PROSPECTUS

		       NICHOLAS FUND, INC.
				
			   PROSPECTUS
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
	       700 North Water Street, Suite 1010
		   Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202
			 (414) 272-6133


      Nicholas  Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is an open-end management
investment  company, having as its investment  objective  capital
appreciation  in  which income is a secondary consideration.   To
achieve its objective, the Fund invests in a diversified list  of
common stocks having growth potential.


	  NO-LOAD FUND - NO SALES OR REDEMPTION CHARGE
				
		       Investment Adviser
		     NICHOLAS COMPANY, INC.
				
		Minimum Initial Investment - $500
				
  THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR HAS THE COMMISSION
    PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS.
    ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
				

      This  Prospectus sets forth concisely the information about
the   Fund  that  a  prospective  investor  should  know   before
investing.  Additional information about the Fund has been  filed
with  the  Securities and Exchange Commission in the  form  of  a
Statement  of Additional Information, dated July 31,  1997.   The
Fund   will   provide  copies  of  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information upon request without charge to each person to whom  a
Prospectus is delivered.  Such requests may be made by  telephone
or  by letter.  The telephone number and address of the Fund  are
shown above.

			 July 30, 1997

   INVESTORS SHOULD READ AND RETAIN THIS PROSPECTUS FOR FUTURE
			   REFERENCE.


		       TABLE OF CONTENTS

							     Page

Introduction............................................       2
Consolidated Disclosure of Fund Fees and Expenses.......       2
Financial Highlights....................................       3
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance.............       3
Performance Data........................................       5
Investment Objectives and Policies......................       5
Risk Factors............................................       6
Investment Restrictions.................................       6
Investment Adviser......................................       7
Management-Directors and Executive Officers of the Fund.       8
Purchase of Capital Stock...............................       10
Redemption of Capital Stock.............................       11
Signature Guarantees....................................       12
Exchange Privilege to Other Nicholas Company Funds......       13
Transfer of Capital Stock...............................       14
Determination of Net Asset Value........................       14
Dividends and Federal Tax Status........................       14
Dividend Reinvestment Plan..............................       15
Systematic Withdrawal Plan..............................       15
Individual Retirement Account...........................       15
Self-Employed Master Retirement Plan....................       15
Description of Capital Stock............................       16
Annual Meeting..........................................       16
Shareholder Reports.....................................       16
Custodian and Transfer Agent............................       16
Counsel and Auditors....................................       16


      No person has been authorized to give any information or to
make  any  representations other than  those  contained  in  this
Prospectus and the Statement of Additional Information dated July
30,  1997   and,   if  given  or  made,  such   information   or
representations may not be relied upon as having been  authorized
by Nicholas Fund, Inc.

      This  Prospectus  does  not constitute  an  offer  to  sell
securities  in  any state or jurisdiction in which such  offering
may not lawfully be made.  The delivery of this Prospectus at any
time shall not imply that there has been no change in the affairs
of Nicholas Fund, Inc. since the date hereof.


		      NICHOLAS FUND, INC.


			  INTRODUCTION

      Nicholas Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") was incorporated under the
laws  of  Maryland on July 10, 1968.  The Fund  is  an  open-end,
diversified  management investment company registered  under  the
Investment  Company  Act  of 1940,  as  amended.   This  type  of
investment  company  is commonly called a  mutual  fund.   As  an
open-end   investment   company,  it  obtains   its   assets   by
continuously selling shares of its common stock, $.50 par  value,
to the public.  Proceeds from such sales are invested by the Fund
in   securities  of  other  companies.   The  resources  of  many
investors  are  combined  and  each individual  investor  has  an
interest  in every one of the securities owned by the Fund.   The
Fund  provides  each individual investor with diversification  by
investing  in  the securities of many different  companies  in  a
variety  of  industries and furnishes experienced  management  to
select and watch over its investments.  As an open-end investment
company,  the Fund will redeem any of its outstanding  shares  on
demand  of  the  owner at their net asset value  next  determined
following receipt of the redemption request in proper form.   The
investment  adviser  to the Fund is Nicholas Company,  Inc.  (the
"Adviser").


       CONSOLIDATED DISCLOSURE OF FUND FEES AND EXPENSES

Shareholder Transaction Expenses

Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Purchases
 (as a percentage of offering price)....................     None
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Reinvested Dividends
  (as a percentage of offering price)...................     None
Deferred Sales Load
   (as  a  percentage  of original purchase price
or  redemption proceeds, if applicable).................     None
Redemption Fees
  (as a percent of redemption proceeds, if applicable)..     None
Exchange Fee(1).........................................     None

Annual Fund Operating Expenses(2)(as a percentage of average  net assets)

Management Fees.........................................    0.65%
12b-1 Fees..............................................     None
Other Expenses..........................................    0.07%
Total Fund Operating Expenses...........................    0.72%

   (1) There is a $5 fee for telephone exchanges only.

   (2) Annual  Fund  Operating Expenses  are  based  on  expenses
       incurred for the year ended March 31, 1997.

Example

      A  shareholder would pay the following expenses on a $1,000
investment, assuming:  (1) 5% annual return and (2) redemption at
the end of each time period:


      One Year    Three Years      Five Years      Ten Years
      --------    -----------      ----------      ---------
	  $7         $23              $40            $89

      This  Example should not be considered a representation  of
past  or  future  expenses.  Actual expenses may  be  greater  or
lesser than those shown.

      The  purpose  of  the  table is to assist  the  prospective
investor in understanding the various costs and expenses that  an
investor  in the Fund will bear directly and indirectly.   For  a
description  of  "Management  Fees"  and  "Other  Expenses,"  see
"Investment Adviser."


		      FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
	  (For a share outstanding throughout the year)

      The following Financial Highlights of the Fund, for the ten
years  ended March 31, 1997 have been examined by Arthur Andersen
LLP,  independent  public accountants, whose  report  thereon  is
included  in the Fund's Annual Report for the fiscal  year  ended
March  31,  1997.   The Financial Highlights should  be  read  in
conjunction  with  the  financial statements  and  related  notes
included in the Fund's Annual Report which is incorporated herein
by reference.

<TABLE>                                                      
						      Year ended March 31,                                           
					 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
					 1997     1996      1995     1994     1993     1992     1991     1990     1989     1988
					 ----     ----      ----     ----     ----     ----     ----     ----     ----     ----  
<S>                                  <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF YEAR      $63.81   $52.22   $51.10   $52.91   $49.68   $42.99   $37.72   $35.27   $32.15   $39.94
  INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS:
  Net investment income                    .40      .57      .69      .74      .75      .70      .80      .96      .97     1.07
  Net gains or (losses) on securities
     (realized and unrealized)            8.64    15.68     4.46     (.68)    5.20     7.49     5.48     3.46     3.63    (2.99)
					------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   

     Total from investment operations     9.04    16.25     5.15      .06     5.95     8.19     6.28     4.42     4.60    (1.92)
					------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   
  LESS DISTRIBUTIONS:
  Dividends (from net
     investment income)                   (.42)    (.57)    (.71)    (.82)    (.68)    (.68)    (.79)    (.92)   (1.03)   (1.84)
  Distributions (from capital gains)     (5.32)   (4.09)   (3.32)   (1.05)   (2.04)    (.82)    (.22)   (1.05)    (.45)   (4.03)
					------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------ 
     Total distributions                 (5.74)   (4.66)   (4.03)   (1.87)   (2.72)   (1.50)   (1.01)   (1.97)   (1.48)   (5.87)
					------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------    ------ 

NET ASSET VALUE, END OF YEAR            $67.11   $63.81   $52.22   $51.10   $52.91   $49.68   $42.99   $37.72   $35.27   $32.15
					------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   
					------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   

TOTAL RETURN                            14.68%   32.38%   10.88%    0.04%   12.41%   19.33%   17.13%   12.55%   14.81%   (3.74%)


RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of year (millions)   $3.989.5  $3,655.3  $3,004.4  $2,941.2  $3,013.4 $2,234.1 $1,642.8 $1,389.5 $1,172.3 $1,117.8
Ratio of expenses to average net assets   .72%      .74%     .77%      .78%     .76%     .78%     .81%     .82%     .86%     .86%
Ratio of net investment income
  to average net assets                   .61%      .87%     1.34%    1.40%    1.53%    1.60%    2.17%    2.56%    2.84%    3.04%
Portfolio turnover rate                 15.18%    25.70%    29.82%   33.39%   10.20%   14.58%   21.85%   21.31%   24.03%   31.63%
Average commission rate paid by the
  Fund on portfolio investment
  transactions*                         $0.0473  $0.0492       --       --       --       --       --       --        --      --

MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION OF FUND PERFORMANCE

      Individual  stock  selection is  the  focal  point  of  the
Adviser's equity philosophy.  The Adviser's efforts are  directed
toward purchasing stocks that represent good value based upon the
criteria  outlined  below.   It  is  also  the  Adviser's  strong
conviction  that superior long-term results are achieved  through
the  minimization of capital losses during adverse periods in the
general  market.   The Adviser primarily seeks stocks  where  the
price/earnings  ratio is low in relation to  earnings  growth  or
where  the price is reasonable in relation to book value.   Above
average  secular  earnings  growth and  strong  current  earnings
momentum are important factors.
   
     The Fund completed its fiscal year ended March 31, 1997 with
a 14.68% total annual return (including reinvested dividends). In
comparison, the Standard & Poors 500r Composite Stock Price Index 
("S&P 500 Index") increased by 19.83% and the Russell 2000  Index  
increased by 5.11% for the same period. During the fiscal quarter 
ended March 31, 1997, the Fund produced  a total return of 1.77%, 
compared to 2.68% and -5.17% for the  S&P  500 Index and  Russell 
2000 Index, respectively.   The  Fund's  cash  position was 2.60% 
at fiscal year ended March 31, 1997.

      In  assessing  investment performance, shareholders  should
keep  in  mind  the  nature of the current stock  market.   Large
market  capitalization stocks have performed substantially better
than  small  market capitalization stocks, as  evidenced  by  the
recent result of the S&P 500 Index versus the Russell 2000 Index.
A  few  large  company equities are greatly responsible  for  the
gains  that  we see in the major market averages.   Further,  any
adverse development in a company's fundamentals can result  in  a
disastrous,  inordinate decline in its share  price.   Many  such
declines have occurred in the recent months, indicating that  the
market  has become less bullish in its overall posture.   We  are
attempting  to  take  advantage  of  these  conditions   in   the
marketplace in our stock selection process.
    
     Set forth below is a comparison of the initial account value
and  subsequent  account values at the end of each  of  the  most
recently  completed  ten fiscal years of  the  Fund,  assuming  a
$10,000  investment  in the Fund at the beginning  of  the  first
year, to the same investment over the same periods in the S&P 500
Index.

(The performance graph plot points are as follows:)


Fiscal         Nicholas                    S&P 500    
 Year           Fund      % returns         Value          % returns
 Ended          Value                      
- -------       ----------  ---------       ---------      -----------------


03/31/87      10,000.00                   10,000.00     
03/31/88      9,626.17     -3.74%          9,166.75          -8.33%
03/31/89      11,051.92    14.81%         10,830.35          18.15%
03/31/90      12,439.25    12.55%         12,917.59          19.27%
03/31/91      14,570.09    17.55%         14,779.22          14.41%
03/31/92      17,386.29    19.33%         16,410.86          11.04%
03/31/93      19,543.61    12.41%         18,910.14          15.23%
03/31/94      19,551.40     0.04%         19,188.53           1.47%
03/31/95      21,679.38    10.88%         22,170.43          15.54%
03/31/96      28,699.16    32.38%         29,289.36          32.11%
03/31/97      32,912.50    14.68%         35,096.44          19.83%


      The  Fund's average annual total returns for the one  year,
five  year and ten year periods ended on the last day of the most
recent fiscal year are as follows:

			    One                 Five                Ten
			 Year Ended         Years Ended         Years Ended
		       March 31, 1997      March 31, 1997      March 31, 1997
		       --------------      --------------      --------------

Average Annual
Total Return. . . .        14.68%             13.61%               12.65%


      Total  returns are historical and include change  in  share
price   and   reinvestment   of   dividend   and   capital   gain
distributions.   Past  performance  is  no  guarantee  of  future
results.   Principal  value  and  return  will  fluctuate  so  an
investment,  when  redeemed,  may be  worth  more  or  less  than
original cost.


PERFORMANCE DATA

     The Fund may from time to time include its "total return" or
"average annual total return" in advertisements or in information
furnished  to  present or prospective shareholders.   The  "total
return"  of the Fund is expressed as a ratio of the increase  (or
decrease)  in value of a hypothetical investment in the  Fund  at
the  end  of a measuring period to the amount initially invested.
The  "average annual total return" is the total return discounted
for the number of represented time periods and is expressed as  a
percentage.  The rate represents the annual rate achieved on  the
initial investment to arrive at the ending redeemable value.  The
ending  value  assumes reinvestment of dividend and capital  gain
distributions and the reduction of account charges, if any.  This
computation does not reflect any sales load or other nonrecurring
charges, since the Fund is not subject to such charges.

      The  "total  return" and the "average annual total  return"
calculations are historical measures of performance and  are  not
necessarily  indicative of future performance.  Such measurements
will vary from time to time depending upon market conditions, the
composition of the Fund's portfolio, operating expenses, and  the
distribution  policy  as determined by the  Board  of  Directors.
These  factors  should be considered when evaluating  the  Fund's
performance.    For   additional   information   regarding    the
calculation  of  this  performance data,  see  the  Statement  of
Additional Information.

      The figures below show the total return performance for the
Fund from the date of initial public offering to March 31,  1997,
as  compared  to the S&P 500 Index and the Consumer Price  Index.  
The calculations for the Fund  assume reinvestment of all capital 
gain distributions and dividends  and do not  take  into  account 
tax consequences to  the  individual investor.

      Performance  will vary from time to time and these  results
are  not  necessarily  representative of  future  results.   This
prospectus  may  be  in  use for a full  year  and,  accordingly,
performance figures for periods subsequent to March 31, 1997  may
vary substantially from the figures shown below:

				Percentage Change from
				  July 14, 1969(1) to       Average Annual
				    March 31, 1997           Total Return
				-----------------------     --------------

Net Asset Value Per Share
  of Nicholas Fund, Inc.(2)            3269.73%                  13.53%
Standard & Poor's 500
  Index - Reinvested                   2151.62%                  11.88%
Consumer Price Index                    336.89%                   5.46%

      (1) Date of initial public offering.  The S&P 500 Index
and Consumer Price Index date used was June 30, 1969.

      (2) Includes  the reinvestment of all dividend  and  capital
gain distributions in additional shares.


INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES

      The  Fund  has  adopted a primary investment objective  and
certain  other  policies  which are not fundamental  and  may  be
changed  by the Board of Directors without shareholder  approval.
Any  such  change  will  be  made only  upon  advance  notice  to
shareholders.

      The  primary  investment objective of the Fund  is  capital
appreciation,  and securities are selected for its  portfolio  on
that  basis.   Current  income will  be  a  secondary  factor  in
considering  the  selection  of investments.   Market  risks  are
inherent  in any investment; therefore, there can be no assurance
that the objective of the Fund will be realized, nor can there be
any  assurance against possible loss in the value of  the  Fund's
portfolio.

      It  is the policy of the Fund to invest in securities which
the  Adviser  believes  to offer possibilities  for  increase  in
value.  These will generally be common stocks of companies  which
the  Adviser  considers  to have favorable  long-term  prospects.
Since  the  major  portion of the Fund's  portfolio  consists  of
common  stocks,  its  net asset value may be subject  to  greater
fluctuation than a portfolio containing a substantial  amount  of
fixed-income securities.

      Securities  of unseasoned companies, where  the  risks  are
considerably  greater than with securities  of  more  established
companies,  may also be acquired from time to time  by  the  Fund
when the Adviser believes such investments offer possibilities of
capital  appreciation.  However, the Fund will  not  invest  more
than  a total of 5% of its total net assets in the securities  of
unseasoned companies, that is, companies which have a  record  of
less  than three years' continuous operation.  Reference is  made
to   the  Statement  of  Additional  Information  for  additional
investment restrictions adopted by the Fund.

      Debt  securities and preferred stock that  are  convertible
into or carry rights to acquire common stock, and other long-term
investment  grade debt securities, may be acquired from  time  to
time   when  the  Adviser  thinks  such  investments  offer   the
possibility of appreciation in value.

      It  is  anticipated that the major portion of the portfolio
will  at all times be invested in common stocks.  However,  there
is no minimum or maximum percentage of the Fund's assets which is
required to be invested in any type of security.  Cash and United
States Government securities will be retained by the Fund  in  an
amount sufficient to provide moderate liquid reserves.  The  Fund
reserves  the  freedom  to  temporarily  invest  its  assets   in
investment grade fixed-income securities as a defensive  measure,
when  conditions,  such  as a decline in the  stock  market,  are
deemed  to  warrant such action.  "Investment grade  fixed-income
securities" refers to fixed-income securities ranked in  the  top
four  categories  of  Standard & Poor's  Corporation  or  Moody's
Investors Services, Inc. rating services.

      Securities are not purchased with a view to rapid  turnover
or to obtain short-term trading profits, which the Fund refers to
as  profits  on  assets held less than twelve months.   The  term
"portfolio turnover rate" refers to the percentage determined  by
dividing the lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities
during  the year by the average value of the portfolio securities
owned  by  the  Fund during the year.  "Portfolio turnover  rate"
excludes investments in all securities with less than one year to
maturity at the time of purchase.


RISK FACTORS

      The  Fund  will often purchase common stock  of  small  and
medium  sized  companies in seeking capital appreciation.   These
companies  may  be unseasoned and often fluctuate in  price  more
than common stocks of larger, more mature companies, such as many
of   those   included  in  the  Dow  Jones  Industrial   Average.
Therefore,  during the history of the Fund, its price  per  share
has  often  been  more volatile, in both "up" and "down"  markets
than most of the popular stock averages.


INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

      The Fund has adopted the following restrictions, which  are
matters  of fundamental policy and cannot be changed without  the
approval  of the holders of a majority of its outstanding  shares
or, if it is less, 67% of the shares represented at a meeting  of
shareholders at which 50% or more of the holders are  represented
in person or by proxy:

      1.   The  Fund  will  not  purchase securities  on  margin,
participate in a joint trading account, sell securities short, or
act as an underwriter or distributor of securities other than its
own capital stock.  The Fund will not lend money, except for:

	  (a)   the purchase of a portion of an issue of publicly
     distributed debt securities;

	  (b)    the  purchase of a portion of  investment  grade
     bonds, debentures or other debt securities of types commonly
     distributed privately to financial institutions in an amount
     not  to exceed 10% of the Fund's total net assets, taken  at
     market.

      2.   The  Fund  will not purchase or sell  real  estate  or
interests in real estate, commodities or commodity futures.   The
Fund  may  invest  in  the securities of real  estate  investment
trusts,  but not more than 10% in value of the Fund's  total  net
assets will be so invested.

      3.   The  Fund may make temporary bank borrowings  (not  in
excess  of 5% of the lower of cost or market value of the  Fund's
total assets) for emergency or extraordinary purposes.

     4.  The Fund will not pledge any of its assets.

      5.  Securities of other regulated investment companies will
not  be  purchased, except on the open market where no commission
or  profits result, other than the broker's commission, or  as  a
part  of  a  plan  of  merger,  consolidation  or  reorganization
approved  by shareholders of the Fund.  No more than  5%  of  the
value  of  the  Fund's total net assets will be invested  in  the
securities of other regulated investment companies.

      6.   Investments  will  not be  made  for  the  purpose  of
exercising control or management of any company.  The  Fund  will
not  purchase  securities of any issuer if, as a result  of  such
purchase,  the  Fund  would hold more  than  10%  of  the  voting
securities of such issuer.

      7.   Not more than 5% of the Fund's total net assets, taken
at  market value, will be invested in the securities of  any  one
issuer (excluding United States Government securities).

     8.  Not more than 25% of the Fund's total net assets will be
concentrated in companies of any one industry or group of related
industries.

      9.  The Fund will not acquire or retain any security issued
by  a  company, if an officer or director of such company  is  an
officer  or  director  of  the Fund,  or  an  officer,  director,
shareholder or other interested person of the Adviser.

       All  percentage  limitations  apply  as  of  the  date  of
investment by the Fund.

      In  addition  to the foregoing restrictions, the  Fund  has
adopted other restrictions to comply with the securities laws  of
various   states  set  forth  in  the  Statement  of   Additional
Information.  These restrictions may be changed by the  Board  of
Directors of the Fund without shareholder approval.  However,  so
long  as  the securities of the Fund are registered for  sale  in
those  states  which require these restrictions, the restrictions
will not be changed.


INVESTMENT ADVISER

      Under an investment advisory agreement dated July 17,  1985
(the  "Agreement"),  Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,  700  North  Water
Street,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin 53202,  furnishes  the  Fund  with
continuous  investment  service and is  responsible  for  overall
management  of the Fund's business affairs subject to supervision
by the Fund's Board of Directors.

      Nicholas  Company, Inc. is the investment adviser  to  five
other  mutual funds and to approximately twenty-five institutions
and  individuals with substantial investment portfolios.  It  was
organized  in  1967, formed the Fund in 1968, and  has  been  the
Fund's  only  investment adviser since the first public  offering
date of the Fund's shares on July 14, 1969.  The other funds  for
which  Nicholas  Company,  Inc. acts as  investment  adviser  are
Nicholas  Income Fund, Inc., Nicholas II, Inc., Nicholas  Limited
Edition,  Inc.,  Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc.,  and  Nicholas
Equity Income Fund, Inc.

      Albert O. Nicholas  was the  portfolio  manager of the Fund
from  its  inception  in July, 1969 through November, 1996. Since 
November, 1996, Albert O.  Nicholas  and  David  O. Nicholas have 
been  co-portfolio  managers  of  the  Fund  and  are   primarily
responsible  for  the  day-to-day   management  of  the    Fund's 
portfolio.

Albert  O. Nicholas  is  also  portfolio  manager of, and has had 
responsibility for the day-to-day management of the portfolios of 
the Nicholas Income Fund, Inc.  and  the  Nicholas  Equity Income 
Fund, Inc. since  the  Nicholas  Company,  Inc.  has  served   as 
investment  advisers  for  such funds. David O. Nicholas has been
portfolio manager and primarily  responsible  for  the day-to-day 
management   of  the portfolios of Nicholas II, Inc. and Nicholas 
Limited Edition, Inc. since March, 1993. 

      The  annual fee paid to the Adviser is paid monthly and  is
based  on  the average net asset value of the Fund, as determined
by  valuations  made  at the close of each business  day  of  the
month.   The  annual  fee is seventy-five one hundredths  of  one
percent (.75 of 1%) of the average net asset value of the Fund up
to and including $50,000,000 and sixty-five one hundredths of one
percent  (.65 of 1%) of the average net asset value in excess  of
$50,000,000.   This fee may be higher than the fee paid  by  most
other  mutual funds.  As of March 31, 1997,  the net asset  value
of  the  Fund was $3,989,488,700.  During the fiscal  year  ended
March  31,  1997,   the  Fund paid the Adviser  an  aggregate  of
$25,060,663 in fees.

       Under  the  Investment  Advisory  Agreement,  the  Adviser
provides  the Fund with the non-exclusive right to use  the  name
"Nicholas."   At  its own expense and without reimbursement  from
the  Fund,  the Adviser furnishes office space, office facilities
and executive officers.  The Adviser bears all executive expenses
and  sales  and  promotional expenses of  the  Fund,  other  than
expenses incurred in complying with laws regulating the issue  or
sale of securities and fees paid for attendance at Board meetings
to  directors  who are not interested persons of the  Adviser  or
officers or employees of the Fund.  The Fund will pay all of  its
operating  expenses including, but not limited to, the  costs  of
preparing and printing its registration statements required under
the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940
and any amendments thereto, the expense of registering its shares
with  the  Securities and Exchange Commission and in the  various
states,  the  printing  and distribution  costs  of  prospectuses
mailed to existing shareholders and to persons making unsolicited
requests for information, the cost of stock certificates, reports
to  shareholders,  interest charges, taxes  and  legal  fees  and
expenses.   Also  included  are salaries  of  administrative  and
clerical  personnel, association membership  dues,  auditing  and
accounting  services,  fees  and expenses  of  any  custodian  or
trustees  having  custody of Fund assets,  printing  and  mailing
expenses, postage and charges and expenses of dividend disbursing
agents, registrars and stock transfer agents.

      The  Adviser has undertaken to reimburse the  Fund  to  the
extent  that  the aggregate annual operating expenses,  including
the  investment  advisory  fee  but  excluding  interest,  taxes,
brokerage  commissions, and extraordinary  expenses,  exceed  the
lowest,  i.e., most restrictive percentage of the Fund's  average
net  assets  established by the laws of the states in  which  the
Fund's   shares  are  registered  for  sale,  as  determined   by
valuations made as of the close of each business day of the year.
Currently the lowest percentage-of-asset limitation of any  state
in  which the Fund is registered is 1.5% of the first $30 million
of  average  net assets and 1.0% over that amount.   The  Adviser
shall,  on  a  monthly basis, reimburse the  Fund  by  offsetting
against  its monthly fee all expenses in excess of these  amounts
as prorated on an annual basis.
   
      Albert O. Nicholas is President and a Director of both  the
Fund and the Adviser.  Thomas J. Saeger, Executive Vice-President
and  Secretary  of  the  Fund,  is Executive  Vice-President  and
Assistant  Secretary  of  the  Adviser.   David  L.  Johnson   is
Executive Vice-President of the Fund and Executive Vice-President
of  the  Adviser.  He is a brother-in-law of Albert O.  Nicholas.
Lynn S. Nicholas and David O. Nicholas are Senior Vice-Presidents
of  the Fund and Senior  Vice-Presidents  of  the        Adviser.  
David O. Nicholas is also a  Director  of  the  Adviser. They are
the  daughter  and  son,  respectively, of  Albert  O.  Nicholas.
Candace  L.  Lesak  is  Vice-President of the  Fund,  and  is  an
employee  of  the Adviser.  Christina M. Mouradian  is  Assistant
Treasurer of the Fund and is an employee of the Adviser.  Jeffrey
T.  May is a Senior Vice-President and Treasurer of the Fund  and
Senior  Vice-President and Treasurer of the  Adviser.   Tracy  C.
Eberlein  is  an  Assistant Vice President of  the  Fund  and  an
employee of the Adviser.  David E. Leichtfuss, 100 East Wisconsin
Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is a Director and the Secretary  of
the  Adviser.  Mr. Leichtfuss is a partner with the law  firm  of
Michael,     Best    &    Friedrich,    Milwaukee,     Wisconsin.
Daniel J. Nicholas, 2618 Harlem Boulevard, Rockford, Illinois, is
the  only other Director of the Adviser.  Mr. Nicholas, a brother
of Albert O. Nicholas, is a private investor.
    
       Ninety-one   percent  (91%)  of  the  outstanding   voting
securities of the Adviser are owned by Albert O. Nicholas.


MANAGEMENT - DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE FUND

      The  overall  operations of the Fund are conducted  by  the
officers of the Fund under the control and direction of its Board
of  Directors.   The  following table sets  forth  the  pertinent
information about the Fund's officers and directors  as  of  June
30, 1997:


					
   Name, Age              Positions Held        Principal Occupations
   and Address              With Fund           During Past 5 Years
   -----------            --------------        ---------------------   

*Albert O. Nicholas, 66      President,         President, and  Director, 
700 North Water Street       Director           Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
Milwaukee, WI  53202         and Portfolio      the  Adviser to the Fund,
			     Manager            since 1967.  He has  been
						Portfolio Manager (or Co-
						Portfolio Manager, in the
						case of the Fund,   since
						November    1996)    for,
						and primarily responsible
						for     the    day-to-day
						management    of,     the
						portfolios of  the  Fund,
						Nicholas  Equity   Income
						Fund,  Inc. and  Nicholas
						Income  Fund, Inc.  since
						the Adviser has served as
						investment  adviser   for
						such   funds.    He   was
						Portfolio   Manager   for
						Nicholas  II,  Inc.   and
						Nicholas Limited Edition,
						Inc.  from  the  date  of
						each      such     fund's
						inception   until   March
						1993.   He is a Chartered
						Financial Analyst.

Melvin L. Schultz, 64        Director           Director  and  Management
3636 North 124th Street                         Consultant,  Professional
Wauwatosa, WI  53222                            Management  of Milwaukee,
						Inc.   He  is a Certified
						Professional     Business
						Consultant  and  provides
						financial    advice    to
						members  of  the  medical
						and dental professions.

Richard Seaman, 71           Director           Management Consultant  on
5270 North Maple Lane                           an    independent   basis
Nashotah, WI  53058                             primarily in the areas of
						mergers, acquisitions and
						strategic planning.


Robert H. Bock, 65           Director           Professor, University  of
102 Commerce                                    Wisconsin    School    of
1155 Observatory Drive                          Business,        Madison,
Madison, WI  53706                              Wisconsin.  From 1973  to
						1984  he was the Dean  of
						the School of Business at
						the     University     of
						Wisconsin.

David L. Johnson, 55         Executive          Executive Vice-President,
700 North Water Street       Vice-President     Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            the  Adviser to the  Fund
						since  1980.   He  is   a
						Chartered       Financial
						Analyst.

Thomas J. Saeger, 53         Executive          Executive  Vice-President
700 North Water Street       Vice-President,    and  Assistant Secretary,
Milwaukee, WI  53202         Secretary          Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
						the  Adviser to the Fund,
						since  1969.   He  is   a
						Certified          Public
						Accountant.

Lynn S. Nicholas, 41         Senior  Vice-      Senior    Vice-President,
700 North Water Street       President          Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            the  Adviser to the Fund,
						and   employed   by   the
						Adviser since 1983.   She
						is  a Chartered Financial
						Analyst.

David O. Nicholas, 36        Senior  Vice-      Senior     Vice-President
700 North Water Street       President Co-      and Director,    Nicholas
Milwaukee, WI  53202         Portfolio          Company,   Inc.,      the
			     Manager            Adviser to  the Fund, and
						employed      by      the  
						Adviser  since 1985.   He
						has  been    Co-Portfolio
						Manager of the Fund since
						1996. He  is  a Chartered
						Financial Analyst.

Jeffrey T. May, 41           Senior Vice        Senior Vice-President and
700 North Water Street       President          Treasurer,       Nicholas  
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            Company, Inc., Adviser to
						the Fund, and employed by
						the  Adviser since  1987.
						He  is a Certified Public
						Accountant.

Candace L. Lesak, 39         Vice-President     Employee    of   Nicholas
700 North Water Street                          Company,    Inc.,     the
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            Adviser   to  the   Fund,
						since  1983.   She  is  a
						Certified       Financial
						Planner.

Christina M. Mouradian, 35   Assistant          Employee    of   Nicholas
700 North Water Street       Treasurer          Company,    Inc.,     the
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            Adviser   to  the   Fund,
						since 1985.
		  
	    

   
Tracy C. Eberlein, 36        Assistant          Employee    of   Nicholas
700 North Water Street       Vice-              Company,    Inc.,     the
Milwaukee, WI 53202          President          Adviser   to  the   Fund,
						since  1985.   She  is  a
						Certified       Financial
						Planner.
    
All  Directors  and  Executive Officers as a Group  (12  persons)
beneficially  own less than 1% of the outstanding shares  of  the
Fund.

*Mr.  Nicholas  is  the  only director of  the  Fund  who  is  an
"interested  person" in the Adviser, as that term is  defined  in
the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

     Albert  O.   Nicholas   and  David  O.  Nicholas  serve    as 
Co-Portfolio Managers of  the  Fund  and are primarily responsible 
for the day-to-day management of the Fund's portfolio.

      The  Investment  Advisory Agreement between  the  Fund  and
Nicholas Company, Inc. provides for payment by the Fund  of  fees
for  attendance at meetings of the Fund's Board of  Directors  to
directors  who are not interested persons of Nicholas Fund,  Inc.
The amount of such fees is subject to increase or decrease at any
time,  but  is  subject to the overall limitation of  the  Fund's
annual expenses.  During the fiscal year ended March 31, 1997,  a
total  of  $15,186 was paid in fees to the Fund's  non-interested
directors, including reimbursed out-of-pocket travel expenses.

PURCHASE OF CAPITAL STOCK

     Applications for the purchase of shares are made to Nicholas
Fund,  Inc., c/o Firstar Trust Company, P.O. Box 2944, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin  53201-2944.  Firstar Trust Company  acts  as  transfer
agent  and  custodian for the Fund.  The Fund  has  available  an
Automatic  Investment Plan for shareholders.   Anyone  interested
should contact the Fund for additional information.

      The  price  per  share  will be the net  asset  value  next
computed  after  the time the application is received  in  proper
order  and accepted by the Fund.  The determination of net  asset
value for a particular day is applicable to all applications  for
the purchase of shares received at or before the close of regular
trading  on the New York Stock Exchange (the "Exchange") on  that
day  (usually  4:00  p.m. New York time).  Accordingly,  purchase
orders received on a day the Exchange is open for trading,  prior
to  the  close of trading on that day, will be valued as  of  the
close  of  trading  on that day.  Applications  for  purchase  of
shares  received after the close of trading on the Exchange  will
be  based on the net asset value as determined as of the close of
trading on the next day the Exchange is open.

      The Fund does not consider the U.S. Postal Service or other
independent  delivery  services to  be  its  agents.   Therefore,
deposit  in the mail or with such services, or receipt at Firstar
Trust Company's Post Office Box of purchase applications does not
constitute receipt by Firstar Trust Company or the Fund.  DO  NOT
mail letters by overnight courier to the Post Office Box address.
CORRESPONDENCE MAILED BY OVERNIGHT COURIER SHOULD BE SENT TO  THE
FIRSTAR  TRUST  COMPANY, THIRD FLOOR, 615 EAST  MICHIGAN  STREET,
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN 53202.

      All  purchase  applications are subject  to  acceptance  or
rejection by authorized officers of the Fund and are not  binding
until  accepted.  Applications must be accompanied by payment  in
U.S. Funds.  Payment should be made by check or money order drawn
on  a  U.S.  bank, savings & loan or credit union.  The custodian
will charge a $20 fee against a shareholder's account in addition
to any loss sustained by the Fund, for any payment check returned
to the custodian for insufficient funds.  It is the policy of the
Fund not to accept applications under circumstances or in amounts
considered disadvantageous to shareholders.  For example,  if  an
individual previously tried to purchase shares with a bad  check,
or the proper social security number or tax identification number
is  omitted,  the  Fund reserves the right not to  accept  future
applications  from  such  individual.   Any  accounts  (including
custodial  accounts)  opened without  a  proper  social  security
number  or  tax  identification  number  may  be  liquidated  and
distributed  to the owner(s) of record on the first business  day
following  the  60th  day  of  investment,  net  of  the  back-up
withholding tax amount.

      The  Board of Directors has established $500 as the minimum
initial  purchase.   The minimum for any subsequent  purchase  is
$100, except in the case of dividend reinvestment.  The Automatic
Investment Plan has a minimum monthly investment of $50.  Due  to
the fixed expenses incurred by the Fund in maintaining individual
accounts,  the  Fund reserves the right to redeem  accounts  that
fall   below  the  $500  minimum  required  investment   due   to
shareholder redemption (but not solely to a decrease in net asset
value  of  the Fund).  In order to exercise this right, the  Fund
will  give  advance written notice of at least  30  days  to  the
accounts below such minimums.

      Purchase  of  shares  will be made in full  and  fractional
shares  computed to three decimal places.  To purchase additional
shares of the Fund by federal wire transfer, please send to:

		Firstar Bank Milwaukee, N.A.
		     ABA #0750-00022
	     Trust Funds, Account #112-952-137
		 777 East Wisconsin Avenue
		 Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202
	    for further credit to Nicholas Fund, Inc.
       [your  account number and the title  of  the  account]

Please  call Firstar Trust Company (414-276-0535 or 800-544-6547)
with  the  appropriate account information prior to  sending  the
wire.

      Shares of the Fund may be purchased or sold through certain
broker-dealers, financial institutions or other service providers
("Processing  Intermediaries").  When  shares  of  the  Fund  are
purchased this way, the Processing Intermediary, rather than  its
customer,  may  be  the  shareholder of  record  of  the  shares.
Processing   Intermediaries  may  use   procedures   and   impose
restrictions in addition to or different from those applicable to
shareholders who invest in the Fund directly.

      An  investor  intending to invest in  the  Fund  through  a
Processing   Intermediary  should  read  the  program   materials
provided by the Processing Intermediary in conjunction with  this
Prospectus.  Processing Intermediaries may charge fees  or  other
charges  for  the  services  they  provide  to  their  customers.
Investors who do not wish to receive the services of a Processing
Intermediary,  or  pay  the fees that may  be  charged  for  such
services, may want to consider investing directly with the  Fund.
Direct purchase or sale of shares of the Fund may be made without
a sales or redemption charge.

      Certificates representing Fund shares purchased will not be
issued  unless the shareholder specifically requests certificates
by signed written request to the Fund.  If a shareholder requests
certificates  at  any  time  other  than  in  connection  with  a
purchase,   the  request  must  be  accompanied  by  a  signature
guarantee.    Certificates  are  normally  mailed  to  requesting
shareholders approximately two weeks after receipt of the request
by  the  Fund.   In no instance will certificates be  issued  for
fractional  shares.   When certificates are  not  requested,  the
Fund's   transfer   agent,  Firstar  Trust  Company,   Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, will credit the shareholder's account with the  number
of  shares purchased.  Written confirmations are issued  for  all
purchases and redemptions of Fund shares.


		  REDEMPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

     A shareholder may require the Fund at any time during normal
business hours to redeem his/her shares in whole or in part.   If
in   writing,  redemption  requests  must  be  signed   by   each
shareholder,  in  the  exact  manner  as  the  Fund  account   is
registered,  and  must state the amount of the  redemption.   The
shareholder  account  number  and tax  identification  number  or
social security number should be included with the request.  When
shares   are   represented  by  certificate(s),   redemption   is
accomplished  by  delivering  to  the  Fund,  c/o  Firstar  Trust
Company,  P.O.  Box  2944, Milwaukee, Wisconsin  53201-2944,  the
certificate(s)  for  the  full  shares  to  be   redeemed.    The
certificate(s)  must  be  properly  endorsed  or  accompanied  by
instrument   of   transfer,  in  either  case,  with   signatures
guaranteed  by  a  bank, savings and loan association,  or  by  a
member  firm of a national securities exchange.  A notary  public
is not an acceptable guarantor.

      If  certificates  have not been issued, redemption  can  be
accomplished by delivering an original signed written request for
redemption  addressed to Nicholas Fund, Inc., c/o  Firstar  Trust
Company.   Facsimile transmission of redemption requests  is  not
acceptable.   The written request must be signed exactly  as  the
account  is  registered, i.e., individual,  joint  tenants,  sole
proprietorship, custodial (Uniform Transfers to Minors  Act),  or
general partners.  Both owners must sign if the account is  owned
jointly.

      The  Fund  may require additional supporting documents  for
written    redemptions    made   by   corporations,    executors,
administrators,  trustees  and  guardians.   If  the  account  is
registered  in  the  name of a corporation  or  association,  the
written  request  must  be accompanied by a corporate  resolution
signed  by  the authorized person(s).  A redemption  request  for
accounts  registered  in  the name  of  a  legal  trust  must  be
accompanied  by the trust agreement and signed by the trustee(s).
If  the  trustee's(s') name is not registered on the  account,  a
copy  of the trust document certified within the last 60 days  is
required.

      If  there is doubt as to what documents or instructions are
necessary in order to redeem shares, please write or call Firstar
Trust  Company (telephone no. 414-276-0535 or 800-544-6547) prior
to submitting a written redemption request.  A redemption request
will  not become effective until all documents have been received
in proper form by Firstar Trust Company.

      Shareholders  who  have  an individual  retirement  account
("IRA")  or other retirement plan must indicate on their  written
redemption  requests  whether or not to withhold  federal  income
tax.   Unless a redemption request specifies not to have  federal
income   tax   withheld,  the  redemption  will  be  subject   to
withholding.   Please  consult your current Disclosure  Statement
for any applicable fees.

      The  redemption price per share will be the net asset value
next  computed after the time of receipt by Firstar Trust Company
of  the  certificate(s) or written request set  forth  above,  or
pursuant  to  proper  telephone instructions  (see  below).   The
determination  of  the net asset value for a  particular  day  is
applicable to all requests for the redemption of shares  received
at or before the close of regular trading on the Exchange on that
day.   Accordingly, shares tendered for redemption on a  day  the
Exchange  is open for trading, prior to the close of  trading  on
that  day, will be valued as of the close of trading on that day.
Requests  for  redemption of shares received after the  close  of
trading  on  the  Exchange will be based on the net  asset  value
determined  as  of  the close of trading  on  the  next  day  the
Exchange is open.

     The Fund does not consider the U. S. Postal Service or other
independent  delivery  services to  be  its  agents.   Therefore,
deposit  in the mail or with such services, or receipt at Firstar
Trust  Company's Post Office Box of redemption requests does  not
constitute receipt by Firstar Trust Company or the Fund.  DO  NOT
mail letters by overnight courier to the Post Office Box address.
CORRESPONDENCE MAILED BY OVERNIGHT COURIER SHOULD BE SENT TO  THE
FIRSTAR  TRUST  COMPANY, THIRD FLOOR, 615 EAST  MICHIGAN  STREET,
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN 53202.

      All redemptions will be processed immediately upon request.
Redemption proceeds will be made payable to the account  owner(s)
and  mailed  to  the  address of record.  The  Fund  will  return
redemption requests that contain restrictions as to the  time  or
date  redemptions are to be effected.  Redemption proceeds  which
are  to be wired will normally be wired on the next business  day
after  a net asset value is determined.  There is a $12.00 charge
to  wire the redemption proceeds.  The Fund reserves the right to
hold   payment  up  to  twelve  days  or  until  satisfied   that
investments  made  by  check have been  collected.   Payment  for
shares  redeemed will be made within seven days after redemption.
Shares cease earning dividends on the date of redemption.

      Telephone  redemption  is  automatically  extended  to  all
accounts  in  the  Fund  unless this  privilege  is  declined  in
writing.   This option does not apply to IRA accounts and  master
retirement  plans  for  which  Firstar  Trust  Company  acts   as
custodian.   Telephone redemptions can only be  made  by  calling
Firstar Trust Company at (414) 276-0535 or (800) 544-6547.  In an
effort  to prevent unauthorized or fraudulent redemption requests
by  telephone, the Fund and its transfer agent employ  reasonable
procedures  to  confirm that such instructions are  genuine.   In
addition  to account registration information, shareholders  will
be  required  to  provide the account number and social  security
number.   Telephone calls will be recorded.  Telephone redemption
requests  must be received prior to the closing of the  New  York
Stock Exchange (usually 4:00 p.m., New York time) to receive that
day's net asset value.  There will be no exceptions due to market
activity.   The  maximum  telephone  redemption  is  $25,000  per
account/per  business day.  The maximum telephone redemption  for
related  accounts  is  $100,000 per business  day.   The  minimum
telephone  redemption is $1,000 except when redeeming an  account
in full.

     The Fund reserves the right to refuse a telephone redemption
if  it  is believed advisable to do so.  Procedures for redeeming
Fund  shares  by telephone may be modified or terminated  at  any
time by the Fund or Firstar Trust Company.  Neither the Fund  nor
Firstar  Trust Company will be liable for following  instructions
communicated  by  telephone  that it reasonably  believes  to  be
genuine.

      The  shareholder may instruct Firstar Trust Company to mail
the  proceeds  to the address of record or to directly  mail  the
proceeds to a pre-authorized bank account.  The proceeds may also
be  wired to a pre-authorized account at a commercial bank in the
United  States.  Firstar Trust Company charges a wire  redemption
fee of $102.00.  Please contact the Fund for the appropriate form
if  you  are  interested in setting your account up  with  wiring
instructions.


SIGNATURE GUARANTEES

      A  signature guarantee of each owner is required to  redeem
shares  in  the  following situations, for all size transactions:
(i)  if a shareholder changes the ownership on his account;  (ii)
upon redemption of shares when certificates have been issued  for
an  account;  (iii)  when  a  shareholder  wants  the  redemption
proceeds  sent to a different address than is registered  on  the
account; (iv) for both certificated and uncertificated shares, if
the  proceeds  are to be made payable to someone other  than  the
account  owner(s);  (v)  any redemption proceeds  transmitted  by
federal wire transfer to a shareholder's bank not previously  set
up  with  the  Fund; and (vi) if a change of address request  has
been  received  by the Fund or Firstar Trust Company  within  the
last  15  days.   Signature guarantees will be required  for  all
redemptions of $100,000 or more from any shareholder  account  in
the Nicholas Family of Funds.  A redemption will not be processed
until  the  signature guarantee is received in  proper  form.   A
notary public is not an acceptable guarantor.


EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE TO OTHER NICHOLAS COMPANY FUNDS

     If a shareholder chooses to exercise the exchange privilege,
the  shares will be exchanged at their next determined net  asset
value.   When  an exchange into the Nicholas Money  Market  Fund,
Inc.  would involve investment of the exchanged amount on  a  day
when  the  New  York Stock Exchange is open for trading  but  the
Federal  Reserve  Banks are closed, shares of the  Fund  will  be
redeemed  on the day upon which the exchange request is received;
however, issuance of Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc. shares  may
be  delayed  an  additional day in order to  avoid  the  dilutive
effect  on  return (i.e., reduction in net investment income  per
share) which would result from issuance of such shares on  a  day
when  the exchanged amount cannot be invested.  In such  a  case,
the  exchanged  amount would not be invested  for  this  one  day
period.

     Shareholders interested in exercising the exchange privilege
must  obtain  the  appropriate prospectus from Nicholas  Company,
Inc.  An exchange constitutes a sale for federal tax purposes and
a  capital  gain  or  loss  will be realized  upon  the  exchange
depending upon whether the net asset value at the time is more or
less  than the shareholder's cost.  An exchange between the funds
involving  master  self-employed (Keogh) plan  and  IRA  accounts
generally  will not constitute a taxable transaction for  federal
tax purposes.

      The  exchange privilege may be terminated or modified  only
upon 60 days' advance notice to shareholders; however, procedures
for  exchanging  Fund  shares by telephone  may  be  modified  or
terminated  at  any  time by the Fund or Firstar  Trust  Company.
Shareholders   are  reminded,  however,  that  Nicholas   Limited
Edition,  Inc.  is restricted in size to 10 million  shares,  and
that  the exchange privilege into that fund may be terminated  or
modified at a time when the maximum is reached.

      Shares  of  the Fund may be exchanged for shares  of  other
investment companies for which Nicholas Company, Inc.  serves  as
the  investment  adviser.  Nicholas Company,  Inc.  is  also  the
investment  adviser to Nicholas II, Inc., Nicholas  Income  Fund,
Inc., Nicholas Limited Edition, Inc., Nicholas Money Market Fund,
Inc.,  and Nicholas Equity Income Fund, Inc.  Nicholas  II,  Inc.
and Nicholas Limited Edition, Inc. both have an objective of long-
term  growth  in  which  income  is  a  secondary  consideration.
Nicholas Income Fund, Inc.'s investment objective is to seek high
current  income consistent with the preservation and conservation
of  capital  value.   Nicholas Money Market  Fund,  Inc.  has  an
investment  objective of achieving as high  a  level  of  current
income  as  is  consistent with preserving capital and  providing
liquidity.  Nicholas Equity Income Fund, Inc. has an objective of
production  of  reasonable  income, in which  moderate  long-term
growth  is a secondary consideration.  Exchange of shares can  be
accomplished in the following ways:

      EXCHANGE  BY MAIL.  An exchange of shares of the  Fund  for
shares  of  other available Nicholas mutual funds  will  be  made
without   cost   to   the  investor  through   written   request.
Shareholders  interested  in  exercising  the  exchange  by  mail
privilege  may  obtain the appropriate prospectus  from  Nicholas
Company, Inc.

      Signatures  required  are the same as previously  explained
under "Redemption of Capital Stock."

       EXCHANGE  BY  TELEPHONE.   Shareholders  may  exchange  by
telephone  among all funds for which the Nicholas  Company,  Inc.
serves as investment adviser.

      Only  exchanges  of  $1,000 or more  will  be  executed  by
telephone.   Firstar Trust Company charges a $5.00 fee  for  each
telephone exchange.

      In an effort to avoid the risks often associated with large
market timers, the maximum telephone exchange per account per day
is  set  at  $100,000 with a maximum of $1,000,000  per  day  per
related  accounts.  Four  telephone exchanges during  any  twelve
month  period will be allowed per account.  An exchange  consists
of a move from one fund to another fund.

      The  Fund reserves the right to refuse a telephone exchange
if  it is believed advisable to do so.  Procedures for exchanging
Fund  shares  by telephone may be modified or terminated  at  any
time by the Fund or Firstar Trust Company.  Neither the Fund  nor
Firstar Trust Company will be responsible for the authenticity of
exchange instructions received by telephone.

      Telephone  exchanges can only be made  by  calling  Firstar
Trust  Company at (414) 276-0535 or (800) 544-6547.  You will  be
required to provide pertinent information regarding your  account
(social  security  number and account  number).   Calls  will  be
recorded.


TRANSFER OF CAPITAL STOCK

      Shares of the Fund may be transferred in instances, such as
the  death  of  a  shareholder, change of  account  registration,
change of account ownership and in cases where shares of the Fund
are  transferred as a gift.  Documents and instructions necessary
to  transfer capital stock can be obtained by writing or  calling
Firstar  Trust Company (414-276-0535 or 800-544-6547) or Nicholas
Company  (414-272-6133 or 800-227-5987) prior to  submitting  any
transfer requests.


DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

     The net asset value of a share is determined by dividing the
total value of the net assets of the Fund by the total number  of
shares  outstanding at that time.  Net assets  of  the  Fund  are
determined  by deducting the liabilities of the Fund  from  total
assets.   The  net asset value is determined as of the  close  of
regular  trading on the New York Stock Exchange on each day  that
the Exchange is open for regular unrestricted trading.

      Securities  traded on a stock exchange will  ordinarily  be
valued  on  the  basis  of the last sale price  on  the  date  of
valuation, or in the absence of any sale on that day, the closing
bid  price.   Other securities will be valued at the current  bid
price.   Any securities for which there are no readily  available
market quotations will be valued at fair value, as determined  in
good faith by the Board of Directors.  Odd lot differentials  and
brokerage  commissions  will be excluded in  calculating  values.
All  assets other than securities will be valued at their current
fair value as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors.


DIVIDENDS AND FEDERAL TAX STATUS

      The  Fund intends to qualify, as it did for the last fiscal
year,  annually  as  a "regulated investment company"  under  the
Internal  Revenue  Code  and intends to  take  all  other  action
required  to  insure that little or no federal income  or  excise
taxes  will  be  payable  by the Fund.  As  a  result,  the  Fund
generally   will   seek   to  distribute  to   its   shareholders
substantially all of its net investment income and  net  realized
capital  gain  (after utilization of any available  capital  loss
carryovers)  in  one or more distributions with respect  to  each
fiscal year.

      Distributions  by  the Fund, whether received  in  cash  or
invested in additional shares of the Fund, will be taxable to the
Fund's  shareholders,  except those  shareholders  that  are  not
subject  to  tax  on  their  income.   Long-term  capital   gains
distributed by the Fund will retain the character that it had  at
the   Fund  level.   Income  distributed  from  the  Fund's   net
investment income and net realized short-term capital  gains  are
taxable to shareholders as ordinary income.

      Distributions will tentatively be made in May and  December
of  each year.  Shareholders will be advised of the source(s) and
tax treatment of any distribution.

      Since  at the time of purchase of shares the Fund may  have
undistributed income or capital gains included in the computation
of  the  net  asset value per share, a dividend or  capital  gain
distribution   received  shortly  after  such   purchase   by   a
shareholder may be taxable to the shareholder although it is,  in
whole or in part, a return of capital and may have the effect  of
reducing the net asset value per share.

     Under federal law, some shareholders may be subject to a 31%
"backup  withholding"  on  reportable  dividends,  capital   gain
distributions  (if  any)  and  redemption  payments.   Generally,
shareholders subject to backup withholding will be those (i)  for
whom  a  taxpayer identification number is not on file  with  the
Fund or who, in the Fund's knowledge, have furnished an incorrect
number;  or  (ii)  who  have failed to declare  or  underreported
certain  income  on their federal returns.  When establishing  an
account, an investor must certify under penalties of perjury that
the  taxpayer  identification number  supplied  to  the  Fund  is
correct and that he is not subject to back-up withholding.

     The foregoing tax discussion relates to federal income taxes
only  and  is  not  intended to be a complete discussion  of  all
federal tax consequences.  Shareholders should consult with a tax
adviser  concerning the application of federal, state  and  local
taxes to an investment in the Fund.


DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN

     Unless a shareholder elects to accept cash, all dividend and
capital gain distributions are automatically reinvested in shares
through  the Dividend Reinvestment Plan.  An election  to  accept
cash  may  be  made  on  the application to purchase  shares,  by
telephone,   or   by   separate   written   notification.     All
reinvestments are at the net asset value per share in  effect  on
the   dividend  distribution  date  and  are  credited   to   the
shareholder's account.  Shareholders will receive a  confirmation
showing  the  number of shares purchased and the price  following
each reinvestment.

      Shareholders  may  withdraw from  or  thereafter  elect  to
participate  in  the Dividend Reinvestment Plan at  any  time  by
giving  notice in writing or by telephone to the Transfer  Agent.
An  election must be received by Firstar Trust Company  prior  to
the  dividend record date of any particular distribution for  the
election  to be effective for that distribution.  If an  election
to withdraw from or participate in the Dividend Reinvestment Plan
is  received between a dividend record date and payment date,  it
shall  become  effective on the day following the  payment  date.
The  Fund may modify or terminate the Dividend Reinvestment  Plan
at any time on 30 days' written notice to participants.


SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN

      Shareholders who have purchased or currently own $10,000 or
more  of  Fund  shares at the current market  value  may  open  a
Systematic   Withdrawal  Plan  and  receive  monthly,  quarterly,
semiannual  or annual checks for any designated amount.   Firstar
Trust Company reinvests all income and capital gain dividends  in
shares  of  the Fund.  Shareholders may add shares  to,  withdraw
shares from, or terminate the plan, at any time.  Each withdrawal
may  be  a taxable event to the shareholder.  Liquidation of  the
shares in excess of distributions may deplete or possibly use  up
the  initial  investment, particularly in the event of  a  market
decline,  and withdrawals cannot be considered a yield or  income
on the investment.  In addition to termination of the plan by the
Fund or shareholders, the plan may be terminated by Firstar Trust
Company  upon written notice mailed to the shareholders.   Please
contact Nicholas Company, Inc. for copies of the plan documents.


INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT

      Individuals who qualify may be able to establish their  own
tax  sheltered individual retirement account ("IRA").   The  Fund
offers  a  prototype  IRA Plan for adoption  by  individuals  who
qualify  for spousal, deductible or non-deductible IRA  accounts.
As  long  as  the  IRA  contributions  meet  the  Fund's  minimum
investment  requirement  of  $500,  the  Fund  will  accept   any
allocation  of such contribution between spousal, deductible  and
non-deductible  accounts.  The acceptability of this  calculation
is  the sole responsibility of the shareholder.  For this reason,
it  is advisable for taxpayers to consult with their personal tax
adviser   to   determine   the   deductibility   of   their   IRA
contributions.

      A  description  of  applicable  service  fees  as  well  as
application forms are available upon request from the Fund.   The
IRA  documents  also  contain a disclosure  statement  which  the
Internal  Revenue Service requires to be furnished to individuals
who  are considering adopting an IRA.  As changes occur from time
to  time  in existing IRA regulations, it is important  that  you
obtain  up-to-date  information from the Fund before  opening  an
IRA.

      Because  a retirement program involves commitments covering
future  years, it is important that the investment objectives  of
the  Fund  are  consistent with your own  retirement  objectives.
Premature  withdrawals  from an IRA may  result  in  adverse  tax
consequences.  Consultation with a tax adviser regarding the  tax
consequences is recommended.


SELF-EMPLOYED MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN

      The  Fund  has available a master retirement plan (formerly
called  a Keogh Plan) for self-employed individuals.  Any  person
seeking additional information or wishing to participate  in  the
Plan  may  contact  the Fund.  Consultation with  a  tax  adviser
regarding the tax consequences of the Plan is recommended.


DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

      The Fund has an authorized capital of 200,000,000 shares of
common stock, $0.50 par value.  All shares are of the same  class
with equal rights and privileges.  Each share is entitled to  one
vote  and  to  participate equally in dividends and distributions
declared  by  the  Fund, and on liquidation, in  its  net  assets
remaining   after   satisfaction  of   outstanding   liabilities.
Fractional  shares have the same rights, proportionately,  as  do
full  shares.  Fund shares are fully paid and nonassessable  when
issued and have no preemptive, conversion or exchange rights.

       Fund   shares  do  not  have  cumulative  voting   rights.
Therefore, the holders of more than half of the shares voting for
the  election of directors are able to elect all of the directors
and, in such event, the holders of the remaining shares so voting
will not be able to elect any directors.


ANNUAL MEETING

      The  State  of  Maryland business corporation  law  permits
registered  investment companies, such as the  Fund,  to  operate
without   an  annual  meeting  of  shareholders  under  specified
circumstances  if  an  annual meeting  is  not  required  by  the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.  The Fund has adopted
the  appropriate  provisions in its By-Laws  and  will  not  hold
annual  meetings  of shareholders, including  for  the  following
purposes,  unless otherwise required to do so:  (1)  election  of
directors; (2) approval of any investment advisory agreement; (3)
ratification  of the selection of independent auditors;  and  (4)
approval of any distribution agreement.

      In  the  event  the  Fund is not required  to  hold  annual
meetings  of  shareholders  to  elect  Directors,  the  Board  of
Directors   of  the  Fund  will  promptly  call  a   meeting   of
shareholders  of  the Fund for the purpose  of  voting  upon  the
question of removal of any Director when requested in writing  to
do  so  by  the  record  holders of not  less  than  10%  of  the
outstanding  shares of Common Stock of the Fund.  The affirmative
vote  of two-thirds of the outstanding shares, cast in person  or
by  proxy  at  a meeting called for such purpose, is required  to
remove a Director of the Fund.  The Fund will assist shareholders
in communicating with each other for this purpose pursuant to the
requirements  of Section 16(c) of the Investment Company  Act  of
1940, as amended.


SHAREHOLDER REPORTS

      Shareholders will be provided at least semiannually with  a
report  or a current prospectus showing the Fund's portfolio  and
other   information,  including  an  annual  report  or   current
prospectus containing financial statements audited by the  Fund's
independent  public  accountants, Arthur Andersen  LLP,  for  the
fiscal  year ending March 31 of each year.  Inquiries  concerning
the Fund may be made by calling (414) 272-6133 or (800) 227-5987,
or  by  writing  to Nicholas Fund, Inc., 700 North Water  Street,
Suite  1010,  Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202,  Attention:   Corporate
Secretary.


CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT

      The  Firstar  Trust  Company,  615  East  Michigan  Avenue,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202, acts as Custodian and Transfer Agent.


COUNSEL AND AUDITORS

     Davis & Kuelthau, S.C., 111 East Kilbourn Avenue, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin 53202-6613, has passed upon the legality of the  shares
of  Common Stock of the Fund offered by this Prospectus.   Arthur
Andersen  LLP,  100  East Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee,  Wisconsin
53202, has been selected as the independent auditors for the Fund
for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1998.



		      Nicholas Fund, Inc.








			   Form N-1A








	  PART B:  STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION



		      NICHOLAS FUND, INC.




	      STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION




	       700 North Water Street, Suite 1010
		   Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202
			 (414) 272-6133







      This  Statement of Additional Information, which is  not  a
Prospectus,  supplements and should be read in  conjunction  with
the current Prospectus of Nicholas Fund, Inc. (the "Fund"), dated
July  31,  1997,   as it may be revised from time  to  time.   To
obtain a copy of the Fund's Prospectus, please write or call  the
Fund at the address and telephone number set forth above.




	  NO LOAD FUND - NO SALES OR REDEMPTION CHARGE




		       Investment Adviser
		     NICHOLAS COMPANY, INC.





			 July 30, 1997


		       TABLE OF CONTENTS

							     Page

Introduction.............................................       1
Investment Objectives and Policies.......................       1
Investment Restrictions..................................       2
Investment Adviser.......................................       3
Management-Directors and Executive Officers of the Fund..       5
Purchase of Capital Stock................................       7
Redemption of Capital Stock..............................       9
Signature Guarantees.....................................      10
Exchange Privilege to Other Nicholas Company Funds.......      11
Transfer of Capital Stock................................      12
Determination of Net Asset Value.........................      12
Income, Dividends and Federal Tax Status.................      12
Dividend Reinvestment Plan...............................      13
Systematic Withdrawal Plan...............................      14
Individual Retirement Account............................      14
Self-Employed Master Retirement Plan.....................      15
Brokerage................................................      15
Principal Shareholders...................................      16
Performance Data.........................................      16
Description of Capital Stock.............................      17
Stock Certificates.......................................      17
Annual Meeting...........................................      18
Communications Between Shareholders......................      18
Shareholder Reports......................................      18
Custodian and Transfer Agent.............................      18
Counsel and Auditor......................................      19
Financial Information....................................      19



		      NICHOLAS FUND, INC.


			  INTRODUCTION

      Nicholas Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") was incorporated under the
laws  of  Maryland on July 10, 1968.  The Fund  is  an  open-end,
diversified  management investment company registered  under  the
Investment  Company  Act  of 1940,  as  amended.   This  type  of
investment  company  is commonly called a  mutual  fund.   As  an
open-end   investment   company,  it  obtains   its   assets   by
continuously selling shares of its common stock, $.50 par  value,
to the public.  Proceeds from such sales are invested by the Fund
in  securities of other companies.  In this manner, the resources
of  many investors are combined and each individual investor  has
an  interest  in every one of the securities owned by  the  Fund.
The  Fund  provides each individual investor with diversification
by  investing in the securities of many different companies in  a
variety  of  industries and furnishes experienced  management  to
select and watch over its investments.  As an open-end investment
company,  the Fund will redeem any of its outstanding  shares  on
demand  of  the  owner at their net asset value  next  determined
following  receipt  of  the redemption request.   The  investment
adviser to the Fund is Nicholas Company, Inc. (the "Adviser").


	       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES

      The  Fund  has  adopted a primary investment objective  and
certain  other  policies  which are not fundamental  and  may  be
changed  by the Board of Directors without shareholder  approval.
Any  such  change  will  be  made only  upon  advance  notice  to
shareholders.

      The  primary  investment objective of the Fund  is  capital
appreciation,  and securities are selected for its  portfolio  on
that  basis.  Current income will be only a secondary  factor  in
considering the selection of investments.  There are market risks
inherent in any investment and there can be no assurance that the
objective  of  the Fund will be realized, nor can  there  be  any
assurance  against  possible loss in  the  value  of  the  Fund's
portfolio.

      It  is the policy of the Fund to invest in securities which
the  Adviser believes offer possibilities for increase in  value.
These  will  generally be common stocks of  companies  which  the
Adviser  considers to have favorable long-term prospects.   Since
the  major  portion  of the Fund's portfolio consists  of  common
stocks, its net asset value may be subject to greater fluctuation
than  a portfolio containing a substantial amount of fixed-income
securities.

     Securities of small and medium sized companies, which may be
unseasoned,  where the risks are considerably greater  than  with
securities  of more established companies, may also  be  acquired
from  time  to  time by the Fund when the Adviser  believes  such
investments   offer   possibilities  of   capital   appreciation.
However,  the  Fund  is limited in the percentage  of  total  net
assets  which  may  be invested in the securities  of  unseasoned
companies;  that is, companies which have a record of  less  than
three years' continuous operation.

      Debt  securities and preferred stock that  are  convertible
into  or  carry  rights to acquire common stock  and  other  debt
securities,  such as those selling at substantial discounts,  may
be  acquired  from  time  to time when the  Adviser  thinks  such
investments offer the possibility of appreciation in value.

      It  is  anticipated that the major portion of the portfolio
will  at all times be invested in common stocks.  However,  there
is no minimum or maximum percentage of the Fund's assets which is
required to be invested in any type of security.  Cash and United
States Government securities will be retained by the Fund  in  an
amount sufficient to provide moderate liquid reserves.  The  Fund
reserves  the  freedom  to  temporarily  invest  its  assets   in
investment  grade fixed income securities as a defensive  measure
when  conditions are deemed to warrant such action.   "Investment
grade  fixed-income securities" refers to fixed-income securities
ranked   in  the  top  four  categories  of  Standard  &   Poor's
Corporation or Moody's Investors Services, Inc. rating services.

      Securities are not purchased with a view to rapid  turnover
or to obtain short-term trading profits, which the Fund refers to
as  profits  on  assets held less than twelve months.   The  term
"portfolio turnover rate" refers to the percentage determined  by
dividing the lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities
during  the  year  by the average of the value of  the  portfolio
securities  owned  by  the  Fund  during  the  year.   "Portfolio
turnover  rate" excludes investments in all securities with  less
than one year to maturity at the time of purchase.


		    INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

      The Fund has adopted the following restrictions, which  are
matters  of fundamental policy and cannot be changed without  the
approval  of the holders of a majority of its outstanding  shares
or, if it is less, 67% of the shares represented at a meeting  of
shareholders at which 50% or more of the holders are  represented
in person or by proxy:

      1.    The  Fund  will  not purchase securities  on  margin,
participate in a joint trading account, sell securities short, or
act as an underwriter or distributor of securities other than its
own capital stock.  The Fund will not lend money, except for:

	   (a)  the purchase of a portion of an issue of publicly
     distributed debt securities;

	   (b)  the purchase of debt securities issued by the  U.
     S.  Treasury or by other federal agencies, instrumentalities
     or   corporations  with  a  simultaneous  resale   of   such
     securities  to the seller for later delivery (on  an  agreed
     upon later date or indefinitely), in an amount not to exceed
     20%  of the total net assets, taken at market, of the  Fund;
     provided,  however, that repurchase agreements  maturing  in
     more  than seven (7) days will not constitute more than  10%
     of the total net assets, taken at market; and

	   (c)  the purchase of a portion of bonds, debentures or
     other   debt   securities  of  types  commonly   distributed
     privately  to  financial institutions in an  amount  not  to
     exceed 10% of the Fund's total net assets, taken at market.

      2.    The  Fund  will not purchase or sell real  estate  or
interests in real estate, commodities or commodity futures.   The
Fund  may  invest  in  the securities of real  estate  investment
trusts,  but not more than 10% in value of the Fund's  total  net
assets will be so invested.

      3.    The  Fund may make temporary bank borrowings (not  in
excess  of 5% of the lower of cost or market value of the  Fund's
total assets) for emergency or extraordinary purposes.

     4.   The Fund will not pledge any of its assets.

     5.   Securities of other regulated investment companies will
not  be  purchased, except on the open market where no commission
or  profits result, other than the broker's commission, or  as  a
part  of  a  plan  of  merger,  consolidation  or  reorganization
approved  by shareholders of the Fund.  No more than  5%  of  the
value  of  the  Fund's total net assets will be invested  in  the
securities of other regulated investment companies.

      6.    Investments  will  not be made  for  the  purpose  of
exercising control or management of any company.  The  Fund  will
not  purchase  securities of any issuer if, as a result  of  such
purchase,  the  Fund  would hold more  than  10%  of  the  voting
securities of such issuer.

      7.   Not more than 5% of the Fund's total net assets, taken
at  market value, will be invested in the securities of  any  one
issuer (excluding United States Government securities).

      8.    Not more than 25% of the Fund's total assets will  be
concentrated in companies of any one industry or group of related
industries.

     9.   The Fund will not acquire or retain any security issued
by  a  company, if an officer or director of such company  is  an
officer  or  director of the Fund, or an officer or  director  or
shareholder or other interested person of the Adviser.

      In  addition  to the foregoing restrictions, the  Fund  has
adopted  the following restrictions which may be changed  by  the
Board  of  Directors  of  the Fund without shareholder  approval.
However, so long as the securities of the Fund are registered for
sale  in  those  states  which require  these  restrictions,  the
restrictions will not be changed.  Any such change would be  made
only upon advance notice to shareholders.

     1.   The Fund will not acquire or retain any security issued
by  a  company if one or more directors or shareholders or  other
affiliated  persons  of its investment adviser  beneficially  own
more  than one-half of one percent (0.5%) of such company's stock
or other securities, and all of the foregoing persons owning more
than one-half of one percent (0.5%) together own more than 5%  of
such stock or security.

      2.   The Fund will not invest more than 5% of its total net
assets in equity securities which are not readily marketable  and
in  securities of unseasoned companies (companies  which  have  a
record  of less than three years' continuous operation, including
the operation of any predecessor business of a company which came
into   existence   as  a  result  of  a  merger,   consolidation,
reorganization or purchase of substantially all of the assets  of
such predecessor business).

	  3.    The Fund will not invest in interests in oil, gas
or other mineral exploration programs.

      4.    The  Fund will not invest in puts, calls,  straddles,
spreads or any combination thereof.

	  5.   The Fund will not invest more than 1% of its total
net assets in restricted securities.

     6.   The Fund will not purchase securities of any issuer if,
as  a result of such purchase, the Fund would hold more than  10%
of all classes of the securities of such issuer.

      7.    The Fund will not invest in warrants, valued  at  the
lower  of cost or market, which exceed 5.0% of the value  of  the
Fund's  net  assets.   Included within that amount,  but  not  to
exceed  2.0%  of  the  value of the Fund's  net  assets,  may  be
warrants  which are not listed on the New York or American  Stock
Exchange.  Warrants acquired by the Fund in units or attached  to
securities may be deemed to be without value.

     All percentage limitations apply on the date of investment
by the Fund.


		       INVESTMENT ADVISER

      Under an investment advisory agreement dated July 17,  1985
(the  "Agreement"),  Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,  700  North  Water
Street,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin 53202,  furnishes  the  Fund  with
continuous  investment  service and is  responsible  for  overall
management  of the Fund's business affairs subject to supervision
of the Fund's Board of Directors.

      Nicholas  Company, Inc. is the investment adviser  to  five
other  mutual funds and to approximately twenty-five institutions
and  individuals with substantial investment portfolios.  It  was
organized  in  1967, formed the Fund in 1968, and  has  been  the
Fund's  only  investment adviser since the first public  offering
date  of the Fund's shares on July 14, 1969.  The other Funds  to
which  Nicholas  Company,  Inc. acts as  investment  adviser  are
Nicholas  Income Fund, Inc., Nicholas II, Inc., Nicholas  Limited
Edition,  Inc.,  Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc.,  and  Nicholas
Equity  Income Fund, Inc.  All of the Funds are also sold without
sales  charge.  The investment objective of Nicholas Income Fund,
Inc. is high current income consistent with the preservation  and
conservation  of capital values.  Nicholas II, Inc. and  Nicholas
Limited  Edition, Inc. have as an investment objective  long-term
growth  in  which income is a secondary consideration.   Nicholas
Money  Market Fund, Inc. has an investment objective of achieving
as  high  a  level  of  current  income  as  is  consistent  with
preserving  capital  and  providing liquidity.   Nicholas  Equity
Income  Fund,  Inc.  has as its investment  objective  reasonable
income   in  which  moderate  long-term  growth  is  a  secondary
consideration.

      The  annual fee paid to the Adviser is paid monthly and  is
based  on  the average net asset value of the Fund, as determined
by  valuations  made  at the close of each business  day  of  the
month.   The  annual  fee is seventy-five one hundredths  of  one
percent  (0.75 of 1%) of the average net asset value of the  Fund
up  to and including $50,000,000 and sixty-five one hundredths of
one percent (0.65 of 1%) of the average net asset value in excess
of $50,000,000.  As of March 31, 1997, the net asset value of the
Fund was $3,989,488,700.

       Under  the  Investment  Advisory  Agreement,  the  Adviser
provides  the Fund with the non-exclusive right to use  the  name
"Nicholas."   At  its own expense and without reimbursement  from
the  Fund,  the Adviser furnishes office space, office facilities
and executive officers.  The Adviser bears all executive expenses
and  bears all sales and promotional expenses of the Fund,  other
than  expenses  incurred in complying with  laws  regulating  the
issue or sale of securities and fees paid for attendance at Board
meetings  to  directors  who are not interested  persons  of  the
Adviser or officers or employees of the Fund.  The Fund will  pay
all  of its operating expenses including, but not limited to, the
costs  of  preparing  and  printing its  registration  statements
required  under  the  Securities Act of 1933 and  the  Investment
Company  Act of 1940 and any amendments thereto, the  expense  of
registering   its  shares  with  the  Securities   and   Exchange
Commission   and  in  the  various  states,  the   printing   and
distribution   costs   of   prospectuses   mailed   to   existing
shareholders  and  to  persons making  unsolicited  requests  for
information,   the  cost  of  stock  certificates,   reports   to
shareholders,  interest  charges,  taxes  and  legal   fees   and
expenses.   Also  included  are salaries  of  administrative  and
clerical  personnel, association membership  dues,  auditing  and
accounting  services,  fees  and expenses  of  any  custodian  or
trustees  having  custody of Fund assets,  printing  and  mailing
expenses, postage and charges and expenses of dividend disbursing
agents, registrars and stock transfer agents, including the  cost
of  keeping  all necessary shareholder records and  accounts  and
handling any problems related thereto.

      The  Adviser has undertaken to reimburse the  Fund  to  the
extent  that  the aggregate annual operating expenses,  including
the  investment advisory fee, but excluding interest, taxes,  and
brokerage  commissions,  and extraordinary  expenses  exceed  the
lowest,  i.e., most restrictive, percentage of the Fund's average
net  assets  established by the laws of the states in  which  the
Fund's   shares  are  registered  for  sale,  as  determined   by
valuations made as of the close of each business day of the year.
Currently the lowest percentage-of-asset limitation of any  state
in  which the Fund is registered is 1.5% of the first $30 million
of  average  net assets and 1.0% over that amount.   The  Adviser
shall,  on  a  monthly basis, reimburse the  Fund  by  offsetting
against  its monthly fee all expenses in excess of these  amounts
as  pro rated on an annual basis.  During the fiscal years  ended
March 31, 1997, March 31, 1996, and March 31, 1995  the Fund paid
the   Adviser  an  aggregate  of  $25,060,663,  $21,433,970   and
$19,010.314, respectively, in fees.  During none of the foregoing
fiscal  years  did  the expenses borne by  the  Fund  exceed  the
expense  limitation  then  in effect  and  the  Adviser  was  not
required to reimburse the Fund for any additional expenses.

      The agreement with the Adviser is not assignable and may be
terminated  by  either  party, without penalty,  on  sixty  days'
notice.  Otherwise, the agreement continues in effect so long  as
it  is  approved annually by (i) the Board of Directors or  by  a
vote of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund and (ii)
in  either  case,  by  the affirmative  vote  of  a  majority  of
directors  who  are not parties to the agreement  or  "interested
persons"  of  the  Adviser  or of the Fund,  as  defined  in  the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, cast in person  at  a
meeting called for the purpose of voting for such approval.

      Albert O. Nicholas is President and a Director of both  the
Fund and the Adviser.  Thomas J. Saeger, Executive Vice-President
and  Secretary  of  the  Fund,  is Executive  Vice-President  and
Assistant  Secretary  of  the  Adviser.   David  L.  Johnson   is
Executive Vice-President of the Fund and Executive Vice-President
of  the  Adviser.  He is a brother-in-law of Albert O.  Nicholas.
Lynn S. Nicholas and David O. Nicholas are Senior Vice-Presidents
of  the Fund and Senior  Vice-Presidents  of  the        Adviser.  
David O. Nicholas is also a  Director  of  the  Adviser. They are
the  daughter  and  son,  respectively, of  Albert  O.  Nicholas.
Candace  L.  Lesak  is  Vice-President of the  Fund,  and  is  an
employee  of  the Adviser.  Christina M. Mouradian  is  Assistant
Treasurer of the Fund and is an employee of the Adviser.  Jeffrey
T.  May is a Senior Vice-President and Treasurer of the Fund  and
Senior  Vice-President and Treasurer of the  Adviser.   Tracy  C.
Eberlein  is  an  Assistant Vice President of  the  Fund  and  an
employee of the Adviser.  David E. Leichtfuss, 100 East Wisconsin
Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is a Director and the Secretary  of
the  Adviser.  Mr. Leichtfuss is a partner with the law  firm  of
Michael,     Best    &    Friedrich,    Milwaukee,     Wisconsin.
Daniel J. Nicholas, 2618 Harlem Boulevard, Rockford, Illinois, is
the  only other Director of the Adviser.  Mr. Nicholas, a brother
of Albert O. Nicholas, is a private investor.

       Ninety-one   percent  (91%)  of  the  outstanding   voting
securities of the Adviser are owned by Albert O. Nicholas.


   MANAGEMENT - DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE FUND

      The  overall  operations of the Fund are conducted  by  the
officers of the Fund under the control and direction of its Board
of  Directors.   The  following table sets  forth  the  pertinent
information about the Fund's officers and directors  as  of  June
30, 1997:

   Name, Age              Positions Held        Principal Occupations
   and Address              With Fund           During Past 5 Years
   -----------            --------------        ---------------------   

*Albert O. Nicholas, 66      President,         President, and  Director, 
700 North Water Street       Director           Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
Milwaukee, WI  53202         and Portfolio      the  Adviser to the Fund,
			     Manager            since 1967.  He has  been
						Portfolio Manager (or Co-
						Portfolio Manager, in the
						case of the Fund,   since
						November    1996)    for,
						and primarily responsible
						for     the    day-to-day
						management    of,     the
						portfolios of  the  Fund,
						Nicholas  Equity   Income
						Fund,  Inc. and  Nicholas
						Income  Fund, Inc.  since
						the Adviser has served as
						investment  adviser   for
						such   funds.    He   was
						Portfolio   Manager   for
						Nicholas  II,  Inc.   and
						Nicholas Limited Edition,
						Inc.  from  the  date  of
						each      such     fund's
						inception   until   March
						1993.   He is a Chartered
						Financial Analyst.

Melvin L. Schultz, 64        Director           Director  and  Management
3636 North 124th Street                         Consultant,  Professional
Wauwatosa, WI  53222                            Management  of Milwaukee,
						Inc.   He  is a Certified
						Professional     Business
						Consultant  and  provides
						financial    advice    to
						members  of  the  medical
						and dental professions.

Richard Seaman, 71           Director           Management Consultant  on
5270 North Maple Lane                           an    independent   basis
Nashotah, WI  53058                             primarily in the areas of
						mergers, acquisitions and
						strategic planning.


Robert H. Bock, 65           Director           Professor, University  of
102 Commerce                                    Wisconsin    School    of
1155 Observatory Drive                          Business,        Madison,
Madison, WI  53706                              Wisconsin.  From 1973  to
						1984  he was the Dean  of
						the School of Business at
						the     University     of
						Wisconsin.

David L. Johnson, 55         Executive          Executive Vice-President,
700 North Water Street       Vice-President     Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            the  Adviser to the  Fund
						since  1980.   He  is   a
						Chartered       Financial
						Analyst.

Thomas J. Saeger, 53         Executive          Executive  Vice-President
700 North Water Street       Vice-President,    and  Assistant Secretary,
Milwaukee, WI  53202         Secretary          Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
						the  Adviser to the Fund,
						since  1969.   He  is   a
						Certified          Public
						Accountant.

Lynn S. Nicholas, 41         Senior  Vice-      Senior    Vice-President,
700 North Water Street       President          Nicholas  Company,  Inc.,
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            the  Adviser to the Fund,
						and   employed   by   the
						Adviser since 1983.   She
						is  a Chartered Financial
						Analyst.

David O. Nicholas, 36        Senior  Vice-      Senior     Vice-President
700 North Water Street       President Co-      and Director,    Nicholas
Milwaukee, WI  53202         Portfolio          Company,   Inc.,      the
			     Manager            Adviser to  the Fund, and
						employed      by      the  
						Adviser  since 1985.   He
						has  been    Co-Portfolio
						Manager of the Fund since
						1996. He  is  a Chartered
						Financial Analyst.

Jeffrey T. May, 41           Senior Vice        Senior Vice-President and
700 North Water Street       President          Treasurer,       Nicholas  
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            Company, Inc., Adviser to
						the Fund, and employed by
						the  Adviser since  1987.
						He  is a Certified Public
						Accountant.

Candace L. Lesak, 39         Vice-President     Employee    of   Nicholas
700 North Water Street                          Company,    Inc.,     the
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            Adviser   to  the   Fund,
						since  1983.   She  is  a
						Certified       Financial
						Planner.

Christina M. Mouradian, 35   Assistant          Employee    of   Nicholas
700 North Water Street       Treasurer          Company,    Inc.,     the
Milwaukee, WI  53202                            Adviser   to  the   Fund,
						since 1985.
   
Tracy C. Eberlein, 36        Assistant          Employee    of   Nicholas
700 North Water Street       Vice-              Company,    Inc.,     the
Milwaukee, WI 53202          President          Adviser   to  the   Fund,
						since  1985.   She  is  a
						Certified       Financial
						Planner.
    

*Mr.   Nicholas  is  the only director of  the  Fund  who  is  an
"interested  person" in the Adviser, as that term is  defined  in
the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

      Reference is made to the Section "Investment Adviser" for a
description of the relationships of the officers of the  Fund  to
the Adviser and the family relationships between directors of the
Adviser and officers and directors of the Fund.
 
      Albert O. Nicholas is President, Treasurer and Director  of
Nicholas Income Fund, Inc., and Nicholas Money Market Fund,  Inc.
and  is  President  and Director of Nicholas II,  Inc.,  Nicholas
Limited  Edition,  Inc.  and Nicholas Equity  Income  Fund,  Inc.
David   L.  Johnson  and  Thomas  J.  Saeger  are,  respectively,
Executive   Vice-President  and  Executive   Vice-President   and
Secretary  of Nicholas II, Inc., Nicholas Limited Edition,  Inc.,
Nicholas Income Fund, Inc., Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc., and
Nicholas  Equity Income Fund, Inc.  Mr. Saeger is also a director
of  Nicholas Limited Edition, Inc.  Lynn S. Nicholas and David O.
Nicholas  are  Senior  Vice-Presidents  of  Nicholas  II,   Inc.,
Nicholas Limited Edition, Inc.,  and Nicholas Equity Income Fund,
Inc., and Vice-Presidents of Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc.  In
addition, David O. Nicholas is Vice-President of Nicholas  Income
Fund, Inc.  and  portfolio  manager  of  Nicholas  II,  Inc.  and 
Nicholas  Limited   Edition,   Inc.  Jeffrey T.  May  is   Senior  
Vice-President  and  Treasurer  of  Nicholas  II, Inc.,  Nicholas 
Equity Income Fund,  Inc.,  Nicholas  Income Fund, Inc., Nicholas 
Money  Market  Fund,  Inc., and Senior Vice-President of Nicholas 
Limited  Edition,  Inc.  Candace  L.  Lesak  is Vice-President of 
Nicholas II, Inc., Nicholas  Equity  Income  Fund, Inc., Nicholas 
Income Fund, Inc., Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc,  and Nicholas  
Limited  Edition,  Inc. Messrs. Bock, Schultz and Seaman serve as 
Directors of  Nicholas II,  Inc. and Nicholas Equity Income Fund, 
Inc.  Mr. Schultz also serves  as a Director  of Nicholas Limited 
Edition, Inc., Nicholas  Money  Market  Fund,  Inc.  and Nicholas 
Income Fund, Inc.

      The  Investment  Advisory Agreement between  the  Fund  and
Nicholas Company, Inc. provides for payment by the Fund  of  fees
for  attendance at meetings of the Fund's Board of  Directors  to
directors  who are not interested persons of Nicholas Fund,  Inc.
The amount of such fees is subject to increase or decrease at any
time,  but  is  subject to the overall limitation of  the  Fund's
annual expenses.

      The  table  below  sets  forth the  aggregate  compensation
received  from the Fund by all directors of the Fund  during  the
fiscal  year  ended  March 31, 1997.  No  officers  of  the  Fund
receive   any  compensation  from  the  Fund,  but  rather,   are
compensated  by  the  Adviser in accordance with  its  Investment
Advisory Agreement with the Fund.


</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
		       Aggregate       Pension or Retirement    Estimated         Total Compensation
		       Compensation    Benefits Accrued As      Annual Benefits   From Fund and Fund
Name  and Position     From the Fund   Part of Fund Expenses    Upon Retirement   Complex Paid to Directors
- ------------------     -------------   ---------------------    ---------------   -------------------------
<S>                    <C>             <C>                      <C>               <C>
Albert O. Nicholas(2)  $0              $0                       $0                $0
Melvin L. Schultz(2)   $5,000          $0                       $0                $17,400
Richard Seaman(2)      $5,000          $0                       $0                $10,200
Robert H. Bock(2)      $5,186          $0                       $0                $10,386

</TABLE>

(1)  During  the fiscal year ended March 31, 1997,  the Fund  and
     other  funds  in its Fund Complex (i.e., those  funds  which
     also  have Nicholas Company, Inc. as its investment adviser,
     namely Nicholas Equity Income Fund, Inc., Nicholas II, Inc.,
     Nicholas  Limited Edition, Inc., Nicholas Income Fund,  Inc.
     and  Nicholas  Money  Market Fund, Inc.)  compensated  those
     directors who are not "interested persons" of the Adviser in
     the  form  of an annual retainer per director per  fund  and
     meeting attendance fees.  During the fiscal year ended March
     31,  1997,  the Fund compensated the disinterested directors
     at  a rate of $500 per director per meeting attended and  an
     annual  retainer of $3,000 per director.  The  disinterested
     directors  did  not  receive any other  form  or  amount  of
     compensation  from the Fund Complex during the  fiscal  year
     ended  March 31, 1997.  All other directors and officers  of
     the  Fund were compensated by the Adviser in accordance with
     its Investment Advisory Agreement.

(2)  Mr.  Nicholas is also a member of the Board of Directors  of
     Nicholas  Equity  Income  Fund,  Inc.,  Nicholas  II,  Inc.,
     Nicholas  Limited Edition, Inc., Nicholas Income Fund,  Inc.
     and Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc.  Mr. Schultz is also  a
     member  of the Board of Directors of Nicholas Equity  Income
     Fund,  Inc.,  Nicholas II, Inc., Nicholas  Limited  Edition,
     Inc.,  Nicholas Income Fund, Inc. and Nicholas Money  Market
     Fund,  Inc.   Mr. Seaman is also a member of  the  Board  of
     Directors of Nicholas Equity Income Fund, Inc. and  Nicholas
     II,  Inc.   Mr.  Bock  is  also a member  of  the  Board  of
     Directors of Nicholas Equity Income Fund, Inc. and  Nicholas
     II, Inc.

		   PURCHASE OF CAPITAL STOCK

     Applications for the purchase of shares are made to Nicholas
Fund,  Inc.  c/o Firstar Trust Company, P.0. Box 2944, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin 53201-2944.  The Firstar Trust Company acts as transfer
agent  and  custodian for the Fund.  The Fund  has  available  an
Automatic  Investment Plan for shareholders.   Anyone  interested
should contact the Fund for additional information.

      The  price  per  share  will be the net  asset  value  next
computed  after  the time the application is received  in  proper
order  and accepted by the Fund.  The determination of net  asset
value for a particular day is applicable to all applications  for
the purchase of shares received at or before the close of trading
on  the  New  York Stock Exchange (the "Exchange")  on  that  day
(usually 4:00 p.m. New York time).  Accordingly, purchase  orders
received on a day the Exchange is open for trading, prior to  the
close  of trading on that day, will be valued as of the close  of
trading  on  that  day.   Applications  for  purchase  of  shares
received after the close of trading on the Exchange will be based
on  the  net asset value as determined as of the close of trading
on the next day the Exchange is open.

      The Fund does not consider the U.S. Postal Service or other
independent  delivery  services to  be  its  agents.   Therefore,
deposit  in the mail or with such services, or receipt at Firstar
Trust  Company's  Post Office Box, of purchase applications  does
not  constitute  receipt by Firstar Trust Company  or  the  Fund.
Correspondence intended for overnight courier delivery should  be
sent  to  Firstar Trust Company, Third Floor, 615  East  Michigan
Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202.

      All  purchase  applications are subject  to  acceptance  or
rejection by authorized officers of the Fund and are not  binding
until  accepted.  Applications must be accompanied by payment  in
U.S. funds.  Payment should be made by check or money order drawn
on  a U.S. bank, savings and loan or credit union.  The custodian
will  charge  a  $20  fee  against a  shareholder's  account,  in
addition to any loss sustained by the Fund, for any payment check
returned  to  the custodian for insufficient funds.   It  is  the
policy of the Fund not to accept applications under circumstances
or  in  amounts considered disadvantageous to shareholders.   For
example,  if  an  individual previously tried to purchase  shares
with  a  bad check, or the proper social security number  or  tax
identification  number was omitted, the Fund reserves  the  right
not  to  accept  future applications from such  individual.   Any
accounts  (including custodial accounts) opened without a  proper
social  security  number  or  tax identification  number  may  be
liquidated  and distributed on the first business  day  following
the  sixtieth  (60th)  day  of investment,  net  of  the  back-up
withholding tax amount.

      The  Board of Directors has established $500 as the minimum
initial  purchase  and  $100 as the minimum subsequent  purchase,
except  through dividend reinvestment.  The Automatic  Investment
Plan  has a minimum monthly investment of $50.  Due to the  fixed
expenses incurred by the Fund in maintaining individual accounts,
the  Fund  reserves the right to redeem accounts that fall  below
the   $500   minimum  required  investment  due  to   shareholder
redemption  (but not due solely to a decrease in net asset  value
of  the  Fund).  In order to exercise this right, the  Fund  will
give  advance written notice of at least 30 days to the  accounts
below such minimums.

      Purchase  of  shares  will be made in full  and  fractional
shares  computed to three decimal places.  To purchase additional
shares of the Fund by federal wire transfer, please send to:

		  Firstar Bank Milwaukee, N.A.
			 ABA #0750-00022
		Trust Funds, Account #112-952-137
		    777 East Wisconsin Avenue
		   Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202
	    for further credit to Nicholas Fund, Inc.
       [your account number and the title of the account]

Please  call Firstar Trust Company (414-276-0535 or 800-544-6547)
with  the  appropriate account information prior to  sending  the
wire.

      Shares of the Fund may be purchased or sold through certain
broker-dealers, financial institutions or other service providers
("Processing  Intermediaries").  When  shares  of  the  Fund  are
purchased this way, the Processing Intermediary, rather than  its
customer,  may  be  the  shareholder of  record  of  the  shares.
Processing   Intermediaries  may  use   procedures   and   impose
restrictions in addition to or different from those applicable to
shareholders who invest in the Fund directly.

      An  investor  intending to invest in  the  Fund  through  a
Processing   Intermediary  should  read  the  program   materials
provided by the Processing Intermediary in conjunction with  this
Statement  of  Additional Information.  Processing Intermediaries
may charge fees or other charges for the services they provide to
their  customers.   Investors who do  not  wish  to  receive  the
services  of a Processing Intermediary, or pay the fees that  may
be  charged  for  such services, may want to  consider  investing
directly with the Fund.  Direct purchase or sale of shares of the
Fund may be made without a sales or redemption charge.

      Certificates representing Fund shares purchased will not be
issued  unless the shareholder specifically requests certificates
by signed written request to the Fund.  If a shareholder requests
certificates  at  any  time  other  than  in  connection  with  a
purchase,   the  request  must  be  accompanied  by  a  signature
guarantee.  Certificates  are  mailed to requesting  shareholders
approximately two weeks after receipt of the request by the Fund.
In no instance will certificates be issued for fractional shares.
When  certificates are not requested, the Fund's transfer  agent,
Firstar  Trust  Company,  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  will  credit  the
shareholder's  account  with  the  number  of  shares  purchased.
Written   confirmations  are  issued  for   all   purchases   and
redemptions of Fund shares.


		  REDEMPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

     A shareholder may require the Fund at any time during normal
business hours to redeem his/her shares in whole or in part.   If
in   writing,  redemption  requests  must  be  signed   by   each
shareholder,  in  the  exact  manner  as  the  Fund  account   is
registered,  and  must state the amount of the  redemption.   The
shareholder  account  number  and tax  identification  number  or
social security number should be included with the request.   The
Fund and the Custodian have business hours from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.  and  8:00  a.m. to 7:00 p.m. respectively, Milwaukee  time,
Monday   through   Friday.   When  shares  are   represented   by
certificates,  redemption is accomplished by  delivering  to  the
Fund,  c/o  Firstar  Trust  Company, P.O.  Box  2944,  Milwaukee,
Wisconsin  53201-2944, the certificate(s) for the full shares  to
be  redeemed.  The  certificate(s) must be properly  endorsed  or
accompanied  by  instrument of transfer,  in  either  case,  with
signatures guaranteed by a bank, savings and loan association, or
by  a  member firm of a national securities exchange.   A  notary
public is not an acceptable guarantor.

      If  certificates  have not been issued, redemption  can  be
accomplished by delivering an original signed written request for
redemption  addressed to Nicholas Fund, Inc., c/o  Firstar  Trust
Company.   Facsimile transmission of redemption requests  is  not
acceptable.   The written request must be signed exactly  as  the
account  is  registered, i.e., individual,  joint  tenants,  sole
proprietorship, custodial (Uniform Transfers to Minors  Act),  or
general partners.  Both owners must sign if the account is  owned
jointly.

      The  Fund  may require additional supporting documents  for
written    redemptions    made   by   corporations,    executors,
administrators,  trustees  and  guardians.   If  the  account  is
registered  in  the  name of a corporation  or  association,  the
written  request  must  be accompanied by a corporate  resolution
signed  by  the authorized person(s).  A redemption  request  for
accounts  registered  in  the name  of  a  legal  trust  must  be
accompanied  by the trust agreement and signed by the trustee(s).
If  the  trustee's(s') name is not registered on the  account,  a
copy  of the trust document certified within the last 60 days  is
required.

      If  there is doubt as to what documents or instructions are
necessary in order to redeem shares, please write or call Firstar
Trust Company (telephone no. 414-276-0535 or 800-544-6547), prior
to submitting a written redemption request.  A redemption request
will  not become effective until all documents have been received
in proper form by Firstar Trust Company.

      Shareholders  who  have  an individual  retirement  account
("IRA")  or other retirement plan must indicate on their  written
redemption  requests  whether or not to withhold  federal  income
tax.   Unless a redemption request specifies not to have  federal
income   tax   withheld,  the  redemption  will  be  subject   to
withholding.   Please  consult your current Disclosure  Statement
for any applicable fees.

      The  redemption price per share will be the net asset value
next  computed after the time of receipt by Firstar Trust Company
of  the certificate(s) or written request in the proper form  set
forth  above,  or pursuant to proper telephone instructions  (see
below).   The  determination  of  the  net  asset  value  for   a
particular  day is applicable to all requests for the  redemption
of  shares received at or before the close of regular trading  on
the  Exchange  on  that day.  Accordingly,  shares  tendered  for
redemption  on a day the Exchange is open for trading,  prior  to
the  close of trading on that day, will be valued as of the close
of  trading  on  that  day.  Requests for  redemption  of  shares
received after the close of trading on the Exchange will be based
on  the net asset value determined as of the close of trading  on
the next day of Exchange is open.

      All redemptions will be processed immediately upon request.
Redemption proceeds will be made payable to the account  owner(s)
and  mailed  to  the  address of record.  The  Fund  will  return
redemption requests that contain restrictions as to the  time  or
date  redemptions are to be effected.  Redemption proceeds to  be
wired will normally be wired on the next business day after a net
asset value is determined.  There is a $12.00 charge to wire  the
redemption proceeds.  The Fund reserves the right to hold payment
up  to  twelve days or until satisfied that investments  made  by
check  have been collected.  Payment for shares redeemed will  be
made  within  seven days after redemption.  Shares cease  earning
dividends on the date of redemption.

      The  right of redemption may be suspended and the  date  of
payment postponed for more than seven days for any period  during
which  the  New  York  Stock Exchange is closed  other  than  the
customary weekend and holiday closings, and may be suspended  for
any period during which trading on the Exchange is restricted  as
determined  by  the  Securities and Exchange Commission,  or  the
Commission  has  by  order  permitted  such  suspension,  or  the
Commission has determined that an emergency exists as a result of
which it is not reasonably practicable for the Fund to dispose of
its  securities  or  to determine fairly the  value  of  its  net
assets.

     Although not anticipated, it is possible that conditions may
arise  in  the future which would, in the opinion of  the  Fund's
Adviser  or Board of Directors, make it undesirable for the  Fund
to pay for all redemptions in cash.  In such cases, the Board may
authorize  payment  to be made in portfolio securities  or  other
property  of  the  Fund.  However, the Fund has obligated  itself
under  the Investment Company Act of 1940 to redeem for cash  all
shares  presented  for redemption by any one  shareholder  up  to
$250,000 (or 1% of the Fund's net assets if that is less) in  any
90-day  period.   Securities delivered in payment of  redemptions
would  be  valued at the same value assigned to them in computing
the  net  asset  value  per share.  Shareholders  receiving  such
securities would incur brokerage costs when these securities  are
sold.

      Telephone  redemption  is  automatically  extended  to  all
accounts  in  the  Fund  unless this  privilege  is  declined  in
writing.   This option does not apply to IRA accounts and  master
retirement  plans  for  which  Firstar  Trust  Company  acts   as
custodian.   Telephone redemptions can only be  made  by  calling
Firstar Trust Company at (414) 276-0535 or (800) 544-6547.  In an
effort  to prevent unauthorized or fraudulent redemption requests
by  telephone, the Fund and its transfer agent employ  reasonable
procedures  to  confirm that such instructions are  genuine.   In
addition  to account registration information, shareholders  will
be  required  to  provide the account number and social  security
number.   Telephone calls will be recorded.  Telephone redemption
requests  must be received prior to the closing of the  New  York
Stock Exchange (usually 4:00 p.m., New York time) to receive that
day's net asset value.  There will be no exceptions due to market
activity.   The  maximum  telephone  redemption  is  $25,000  per
account/per  business day.  The maximum telephone redemption  for
related  accounts  is  $100,000 per business  day.   The  minimum
telephone  redemption is $1,000 except when redeeming an  account
in full.

     The Fund reserves the right to refuse a telephone redemption
if  it  is believed advisable to do so.  Procedures for redeeming
Fund  shares  by telephone may be modified or terminated  at  any
time by the Fund or Firstar Trust Company.  Neither the Fund  nor
Firstar  Trust Company will be liable for following  instructions
communicated  by  telephone  that it reasonably  believes  to  be
genuine.

      The  shareholder may instruct Firstar Trust Company to mail
the  proceeds  to the address of record or to directly  mail  the
proceeds to a pre-authorized bank account.  The proceeds may also
be  wired to a pre-authorized account at a commercial bank in the
United  States.  Firstar Trust Company charges a wire  redemption
fee  of $12.00.  Please contact the Fund for the appropriate form
if  you  are  interested in setting your account up  with  wiring
instructions.

     The Fund does not consider the U.S.  Postal Service or other
independent  delivery  services to  be  its  agents.   Therefore,
deposit  in the mail or with such services, or receipt at Firstar
Trust  Company's Post Office Box of redemption requests does  not
constitute receipt by Firstar Trust Company or the Fund.  DO  NOT
mail letters by overnight courier to the Post Office Box address.
Correspondence mailed by overnight courier should be sent to  the
Firstar  Trust  Company, Third Floor, 615 East  Michigan  Street,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202.


		      SIGNATURE GUARANTEES

      A  signature guarantee of each owner is required to  redeem
shares  in  the  following situations, for all size transactions:
(i)  if  you  change  the ownership on your  account;  (ii)  upon
redemption of shares when certificates have been issued for  your
account;  (iii) when you want the redemption proceeds sent  to  a
different  address  than is registered on the account;  (iv)  for
both certificated and uncertificated shares, if the proceeds  are
to  be  made payable to someone other than the account  owner(s);
(v)  any redemption proceeds transmitted by federal wire transfer
to  your bank not previously set up with the Fund; and (vi) if  a
change  of  address  request has been received  by  the  Fund  or
Firstar  Trust  Company  within  the  last  15  days.   Signature
guarantees  will be required for all redemptions of  $100,000  or
more  from  any  shareholder account in the  Nicholas  Family  of
Funds.   A  redemption will not be processed until the  signature
guarantee is received in proper form.  A notary public is not  an
acceptable guarantor.


       EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE TO OTHER NICHOLAS COMPANY FUNDS

     If a shareholder chooses to exercise the exchange privilege,
the  shares will be exchanged at their next determined net  asset
value.   When  an exchange into the Nicholas Money  Market  Fund,
Inc.  would involve investment of the exchanged amount on  a  day
when  the  New  York Stock Exchange is open for trading  but  the
Federal  Reserve  Banks are closed, shares of the  Fund  will  be
redeemed  on the day upon which the exchange request is received;
however, issuance of Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc. shares  may
be  delayed  an  additional day in order to  avoid  the  dilutive
effect  on  return (i.e. reduction in net investment  income  per
share) which would result from issuance of such shares on  a  day
when  the exchanged amount cannot be invested.  In such  a  case,
the  exchanged  amount would not be invested  for  this  one  day
period.

     Shareholders interested in exercising the exchange privilege
must  obtain  the  appropriate prospectus from Nicholas  Company,
Inc.  An exchange constitutes a sale for federal tax purposes and
a  capital  gain  or  loss  will be realized  upon  the  exchange
depending upon whether the net asset value at the time is more or
less  than the shareholder's cost.  An exchange between the funds
involving  master  retirement  (Keogh)  plan  and  IRA   accounts
generally  will not constitute a taxable transaction for  federal
tax purposes.

      The  exchange privilege may be terminated or modified  only
upon 60 days' advance notice to shareholders; however, procedures
for  exchanging  Fund  shares by telephone  may  be  modified  or
terminated  at  any  time by the Fund or Firstar  Trust  Company.
Shareholders   are  reminded,  however,  that  Nicholas   Limited
Edition,  Inc.  is restricted in size to 10 million  shares,  and
that  the exchange privilege into that fund may be terminated  or
modified at a time when the maximum is reached.

      Shares  of  the Fund may be exchanged for shares  of  other
investment companies for which Nicholas Company, Inc.  serves  as
the  investment  adviser.  Nicholas Company,  Inc.  is  also  the
investment  adviser to Nicholas II, Inc., Nicholas  Income  Fund,
Inc., Nicholas Limited Edition, Inc., Nicholas Money Market Fund,
Inc.,  and Nicholas Equity Income Fund, Inc.  Nicholas  II,  Inc.
and  Nicholas  Limited Edition, Inc. both have  an  objective  of
long-term  growth  in which income is a secondary  consideration.
Nicholas Income Fund, Inc.'s investment objective is to seek high
current  income consistent with the preservation and conservation
of  capital  value.   Nicholas Money Market  Fund,  Inc.  has  an
investment  objective of achieving as high  a  level  of  current
income  as  is  consistent with preserving capital and  providing
liquidity.    Nicholas  Equity  Income  Fund,  Inc.  has  as  its
investment  objective to produce reasonable income  and  moderate
long-term growth.  Exchange of shares can be accomplished in  the
following ways:

      EXCHANGE  BY MAIL.  An exchange of shares of the  Fund  for
shares  of  other available Nicholas mutual funds  will  be  made
without   cost   to   the  investor  through   written   request.
Shareholders  interested  in  exercising  the  exchange  by  mail
privilege  may  obtain the appropriate prospectus  from  Nicholas
Company, Inc.

     Signatures required are the same as previously explained
under "Redemption of Capital Stock."

       EXCHANGE  BY  TELEPHONE.   Shareholders  may  exchange  by
telephone  among all funds for which the Nicholas  Company,  Inc.
serves as investment adviser.

      Only  exchanges  of  $1,000 or more  will  be  executed  by
telephone.   Firstar Trust Company charges a $5.00 fee  for  each
telephone exchange.

      In an effort to avoid the risks often associated with large
market timers, the maximum telephone exchange per account per day
is  set  at  $100,000 with a maximum of $1,000,000  per  day  per
related  accounts.   Four telephone exchanges during  any  twelve
month  period, per account will be allowed.  An exchange consists
of a move from one fund to another fund.

      The  Fund reserves the right to refuse a telephone exchange
if  it is believed advisable to do so.  Procedures for exchanging
Fund  shares  by telephone may be modified or terminated  at  any
time by the Fund or Firstar Trust Company.  Neither the Fund  nor
Firstar Trust Company will be responsible for the authenticity of
exchange instructions received by telephone.

      Telephone  exchanges can only be made  by  calling  Firstar
Trust  Company at (414) 276-0535 or (800) 544-6547. You  will  be
required to provide pertinent information regarding your  account
(social  security  number and account  number).   Calls  will  be
recorded.


		   TRANSFER OF CAPITAL STOCK

      Shares of the Fund may be transferred in instances such  as
the  death  of  a  shareholder, change of  account  registration,
change of account ownership and in cases where shares of the Fund
are  transferred  as  a  gift.   If  shares  are  represented  by
certificates,  the certificates representing  the  shares  to  be
transferred  must  be delivered to the Fund,  c/o  Firstar  Trust
Company,   P.O.   Box  2944,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin   53201-2944,
accompanied  by appropriate written instructions and endorsed  or
accompanied  by an instrument of transfer and guaranteed  in  the
same manner as described under "Redemption of Capital Stock."  If
no   certificates   have  been  issued,  then   signed,   written
instructions  must  be delivered to the Fund, c/o  Firstar  Trust
Company.  The instructions must be signed exactly as provided  in
"Redemption  of  Capital  Stock" for  redemption  of  shares  not
represented   by   certificates.   Documents   and   instructions
necessary to transfer capital stock can be obtained by writing or
calling  Firstar Trust Company (414-276-0535 or 800-544-6547)  or
Nicholas  Company, Inc. (414-272-6133 or 800-227-5987)  prior  to
submitting any transfer requests.


		DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

     The net asset value of a share is determined by dividing the
total value of the net assets of the Fund by the total number  of
shares  outstanding at that time.  Net assets  of  the  Fund  are
determined  by deducting the liabilities of the Fund  from  total
assets.   The  net asset value is determined as of the  close  of
regular  trading on the New York Stock Exchange on each day  that
the Exchange is open for regular unrestricted trading.

      Securities  traded on a stock exchange will  ordinarily  be
valued  on  the  basis  of the last sale price  on  the  date  of
valuation, or in the absence of any sale on that day, the closing
bid  price.   Other securities will be valued at the current  bid
price.   Any securities for which there are no readily  available
market quotations will be valued at fair value, as determined  in
good faith by the Board of Directors.  Odd lot differentials  and
brokerage  commissions  will be excluded in  calculating  values.
All  assets other than securities will be valued at their current
fair value as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors.

	    INCOME, DIVIDENDS AND FEDERAL TAX STATUS

Federal Tax Status of the Fund
- ------------------------------
      The  Fund  intends  to  qualify annually  as  a  "regulated
investment company" under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986  (the
"Code")  and intends to take all other action required to  insure
that  little or no federal income or excise taxes will be payable
by  the  Fund.   As  a result, the Fund generally  will  seek  to
distribute  to  its shareholders substantially  all  of  its  net
investment   income   and  net  realized  capital   gain   (after
utilization of any available capital loss carryovers) in  one  or
more  distributions with respect to each fiscal  year.   However,
the  Code  contains  a  number  of  complex  tests  relating   to
qualification  as a regulated investment company which  the  Fund
possibly might not meet in any particular year.  If the Fund does
not  qualify as a "regulated investment company" under the  Code,
it  would be treated for tax purposes as an ordinary corporation,
and all its taxable income will be taxed to the Fund at corporate
rates.

      The Code generally imposes a 4% nondeductible excise tax on
a  regulated investment company, such as the Fund, if it does not
distribute to its shareholders during the calendar year an amount
equal  to  978%  of  the Fund's investment company  income,  with
certain  adjustments, for such calendar year,  plus  98%  of  the
Fund's capital gain net income for the one-year period ending  on
October  31 of such calendar year.  In addition, an amount  equal
to any undistributed investment company taxable income or capital
gain  net  income from the previous calendar year  must  also  be
distributed to avoid the excise tax.  The excise tax  is  imposed
on  the  amount  by  which the Fund does not meet  the  foregoing
distribution   requirements.    The   Fund   intends   to    make
distributions necessary to avoid imposition of the excise tax.

Dividends and Distributions
- ---------------------------
      For federal income tax purposes, distributions by the Fund,
whether received in cash or invested in additional shares of  the
Fund,  will  be taxable to the Fund's shareholders, except  those
shareholders that are not subject to tax on their income.   Long-
term  capital  gains  distributed by the  Fund  will  retain  the
character that it had at the Fund level.  Income distributed from
the  Fund's  net  investment income and net  realized  short-term
capital  gains  are taxable to shareholders as  ordinary  income.
Distributions  tentatively will be made in May  and  December  of
each year.  Shareholders will be advised of the source or sources
and tax treatment of any distribution.

      Since  at the time of purchase of shares the Fund may  have
undistributed income or capital gains included in the computation
of  the  net  asset value per share, a dividend or  capital  gain
distribution   received  shortly  after  such   purchase   by   a
shareholder may be taxable to the shareholder, although it is, in
whole or in part, a return of capital and may have the effect  of
reducing the net asset value per share.

       Under  the  Code,  dividends  declared  by  the  Fund   to
shareholders of record in December of any year will be deemed  to
have been received by (and will be taxable to) shareholders as of
the  record date, provided the dividend is actually paid  by  the
Fund before February 1 of the following year.

Backup Withholding of Dividends and Redemption Payments
- -------------------------------------------------------
     Under Federal law, some shareholders may be subject to a 31%
"backup  withholding"  on  reportable  dividends,  capital   gain
distributions  (if  any)  and  redemption  payments.   Generally,
shareholders subject to backup withholding will be those (i)  for
whom  a  taxpayer identification number is not on file  with  the
Fund or who, to the Fund's knowledge, have furnished an incorrect
number;  or  (ii)  who  have failed to declare  or  underreported
certain  income  on their federal returns.  When establishing  an
account, an investor must certify under penalties of perjury that
the  taxpayer  identification number  supplied  to  the  Fund  is
correct and that he is not subject to backup withholding.

      THE FOREGOING TAX DISCUSSION RELATES SOLELY TO U.S. FEDERAL
TAXES  AND  IS  NOT INTENDED TO BE A COMPLETE DISCUSSION  OF  ALL
FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES. SHAREHOLDERS SHOULD CONSULT WITH A  TAX
ADVISER  CONCERNING THE APPLICATION OF FEDERAL, STATE  AND  LOCAL
TAXES TO AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUND.


		   DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN

      Unless  a  shareholder elects to accept cash, all dividends
and  capital gains distributions are automatically reinvested  in
shares  of  the  capital stock of the Fund through  the  Dividend
Reinvestment Plan.  An election to accept cash may be made on the
application to purchase capital stock of the Fund, by  telephone,
or  by  separate written notification.  All reinvestments are  at
the  net  asset  value  per  share  in  effect  on  the  dividend
distribution  date and are credited to the shareholder's  account
in  full shares and fractional shares, if necessary, (computed to
three  decimal places).  Shareholders will receive a confirmation
showing  the  number of shares purchased and the price  following
each  reinvestment.   As in the case of normal  purchases,  stock
certificates  are not issued unless requested.   In  no  instance
will a certificate be issued for a fraction of a share.

      Shareholders  may  withdraw from  or  thereafter  elect  to
participate  in  the Dividend Reinvestment Plan at  any  time  by
giving  in  writing  or  by  telephone notice  to  Firstar  Trust
Company.   An election must be received by Firstar Trust  Company
prior  to the dividend record date of any particular distribution
for  the election to be effective for that distribution.   If  an
election   to  withdraw  from  or  participate  in  the  Dividend
Reinvestment Plan is received between a dividend record date  and
payment date, it shall become effective on the day following  the
payment  date.   The  Fund may modify or terminate  the  Dividend
Reinvestment  Plan  at  any  time  30  days'  written  notice  to
participants.

		   SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN

      Shareholders who have purchased or currently own $10,000 or
more  of  Fund  shares at the current market  value  may  open  a
Systematic   Withdrawal  Plan  and  receive  monthly,  quarterly,
semiannual  or annual checks for any designated amount.   Firstar
Trust Company reinvests all income and capital gain dividends  in
shares  of  the Fund.  Shareholders may add shares  to,  withdraw
shares from, or terminate the plan, at any time.  Each withdrawal
may  be  a taxable event to the shareholder.  Liquidation of  the
shares in excess of distributions may deplete or possibly use  up
the  initial  investment, particularly in the event of  a  market
decline,  and withdrawals cannot be considered a yield or  income
on the investment.  In addition to termination of the plan by the
Fund or shareholders, the plan may be terminated by Firstar Trust
Company  upon written notice mailed to the shareholders.   Please
contact Nicholas Company, Inc. for copies of the plan documents.


		 INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT

      Individuals who qualify may be able to establish their  own
tax-sheltered  IRA plans.  The Fund offers a prototype  IRA  plan
for  adoption by individuals who qualify for spousal,  deductible
or  nondeductible  IRA accounts.  As long as  the  aggregate  IRA
contributions  meet the Fund's minimum investment requirement  of
$500,  the  Fund will accept any allocation of such  contribution
between  spousal,  deductible  and nondeductible  accounts.   The
acceptability  of this calculation is the sole responsibility  of
the  shareholder.  For this reason, it is advisable for taxpayers
to  consult  with  their personal tax adviser  to  determine  the
deductibility  of their IRA contributions.  Excess contributions,
certain  distributions prior to age 59-1/2, and failure to  begin
distributions  after  age  70-1/2  may  result  in  adverse   tax
consequences.  An individual may revoke an IRA plan  (other  than
rollovers  of  distributions  from  qualified  retirement  plans)
within  seven days of establishment and receive a full return  of
his  or  her contributions.  An individual may redeem his or  her
account  at  any time.  The Fund's prototype plan has received  a
favorable  determination letter on its tax-qualified status  from
the Internal Revenue Service.

      The  Firstar Trust Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin serves  as
custodian and furnishes services for the IRA plan as required  by
ERISA.    The   custodian  is  required  to   invest   all   cash
contributions,  dividends  and  capital  gains  distributions  in
shares  of  the  Fund.   The  custodian  currently  charges   the
following  fees  against  each  participant's  account  for   its
services:   $12.50  ($25.00  for two  or  more  accounts)  annual
maintenance  fee; $15 for transfer to a successor  trustee;   $15
for  final  distribution to participant; $12.00 for any  outgoing
wire transfer and $15 for refunding any contribution in excess of
the  deductible  limit.  These fees are subject to  change.   The
custodian will purchase and redeem shares of the Fund in the same
manner  as  set  forth  under "Purchase  of  Capital  Stock"  and
"Redemption of Capital Stock," provided that before shares can be
redeemed in an individual retirement account, the custodian  must
have  on  file  a  written  notice  together  with  any  required
withholding  information of such termination  setting  forth  the
effective date thereof.

      As  changes  occur  from  time  to  time  in  existing  IRA
Regulations,   it   is  important  that  you  obtain   up-to-date
information  from  the Fund before opening an IRA.   Consultation
with a tax adviser regarding the tax consequences of the Plan  is
recommended.


	      SELF-EMPLOYED MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN

      The  Fund  has available a master retirement plan (formerly
called    a    Keogh   Plan)   for   self-employed   individuals.
Participating  employers may adopt either the profit  sharing  or
money  purchase  portion  of the Plan,  or  both.   The  Internal
Revenue  Service  has  approved the Plan as qualified  under  the
Self-Employed Individuals Tax Retirement Act of 1962, as amended.
It will operate in compliance with that Act.

      Under  such  a  plan, a self-employed  individual,  who  is
eligible,   may   deduct   for  federal  income   tax   purposes,
contributions subject to the limitations set forth  in  the  Plan
and Internal Revenue Code.  The Firstar Trust Company, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin  serves  as custodian and furnishes  services  for  the
master retirement plan as required by that Act. The custodian  is
required to invest all cash contributions, dividends and  capital
gains  distributions  in  shares  of  the  Fund.   The  custodian
currently  charges the following fees against each  participant's
account  for  its  services, which fees are  subject  to  change:
$12.50  ($25.00 for two or more accounts) annual maintenance  fee
per participant account; $15 for a transfer to successor trustee;
$15  for  final  distribution to a participant;  $12.00  for  any
outgoing   wire   transfer;  and  $15  for   refund   of   excess
contribution.   Any  person  seeking  additional  information  or
wishing to participate in the Plan may contact the Fund.

      As  changes  occur  from time to time  in  existing  master
retirement  plan  regulations, it is important  that  you  obtain
up-to-date  information  from the Fund before  opening  a  master
retirement  plan.  Consultation with a tax adviser regarding  the
tax consequences of the Plan is recommended.


			   BROKERAGE

     The Adviser, who decides to buy and sell securities, selects
a  broker  or dealer for the execution of a portfolio transaction
on the basis that such broker or dealer will execute the order as
promptly  and  efficiently as possible subject to the  overriding
policy  of  the Fund.  This policy is to obtain the  best  market
price  and reasonable execution for all its transactions,  giving
due consideration to such factors as reliability of execution and
the  value of research, statistical and price quotation  services
provided  by  such  broker  or  dealer.   The  research  services
provided  by  brokers consist of recommendations to  purchase  or
sell  specific  securities,  the rendering  of  advice  regarding
events  involving specific issuers of securities and  events  and
current  conditions in specific industries, and the rendering  of
advice regarding general economic conditions affecting the  stock
market and the U. S. economy.

      The Adviser does not specifically negotiate commissions and
charges  with  a broker or dealer in advance of each transaction.
The  approximate  brokerage discount and  charges  are,  however,
generally   known   to  the  Adviser  prior  to   effecting   the
transaction.   In determining the overall reasonableness  of  the
commissions  paid, the Adviser compares the commission  rates  to
those  it pays on transactions for its other client accounts  and
to  the  rates generally charged in the industry to institutional
investors  such as the Fund.  The commissions are also considered
in  view  of  the  value of the research, statistical  and  price
quotation  services,  if any, rendered by the  broker  or  dealer
through whom a transaction is placed.

      Purchases  and sales of portfolio securities are frequently
placed,  without  any agreement or undertaking  to  do  so,  with
brokers  and  dealers who provide the Adviser  with  supplemental
research, statistical and price quotation services.  The  Adviser
understands  that  since the brokers and dealers  rendering  such
services  are compensated therefor by commissions, such  services
would  be  unilaterally reduced or eliminated by the brokers  and
dealers  if  none of the Fund's transactions were placed  through
them.   While these services have value which cannot be  measured
in  dollars, the Adviser believes such services do not reduce the
Fund's or the Adviser's expenses.

      In instances where it is determined by the Adviser that the
supplemental research and statistical services are of significant
value,  it  is  the practice of the Adviser to place  the  Fund's
transactions  with  brokers or dealers  who  are  paid  a  higher
commission  than other brokers or dealers.  However,  commissions
paid are generally lower than those paid prior to the elimination
of fixed minimum rates in 1975 and are no higher than rates which
could  be  obtained from other brokers or dealers who would  also
furnish   comparable   supplemental  research   and   statistical
services.   The  Adviser utilizes research and other  information
obtained  from brokers and dealers in managing its  other  client
accounts.   On  the other hand, the Adviser obtains research  and
information from brokers and dealers who transact trades for  the
Adviser's  other client accounts, which is also utilized  by  the
Adviser in managing the Fund's portfolio.

      The Fund may effect portfolio transactions with brokers  or
dealers  who recommended the purchase of the Fund's shares.   The
Fund  may  not allocate brokerage on the basis of recommendations
to purchase shares of the Fund.

      Over-the-counter market purchases and sales  are  generally
transacted directly with principal market makers, who retain  the
difference  between  their  cost in a security  and  its  selling
price.   In  some  circumstances where, in  the  opinion  of  the
Adviser,  better  prices and executions are available  elsewhere,
the   transactions  are  placed  through  brokers  who  are  paid
commissions directly.

      Brokerage  commissions paid by the Fund during  the  fiscal
year   ended  March  31,  1997   totaled  $1,501,852.   Brokerage
commissions  paid by the Fund during the fiscal year ended  March
31,  1996  and March 31, 1995 totaled $1,882,028 and $2,236,595
respectively.  The Fund's portfolio turnover rates  were  15.18%,
25.70%,  and  29.82%,  respectively, for the fiscal  years  ended
March 31, 1997, March 31, 1996 and March 31, 1995.


		     PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS

     All directors and executive officers of the Fund, as a group
(12  persons),  beneficially own less than 1% of the  outstanding
shares of the Fund.


			PERFORMANCE DATA

      The  Fund may quote a "total return" or an "average  annual
total  return"  from  time  to  time  in  advertisements  or   in
information  furnished  to  present or prospective  shareholders.
The  "total  return" of the Fund is expressed as a ratio  of  the
increase  (or decrease) in value of a hypothetical investment  in
the Fund at the end of a measuring period to the amount initially
invested.   The  "average annual total return" is  determined  by
discounting  the  "total return" for the number of  time  periods
represented.   These  values  are  computed  according   to   the
following formulas:
			 P(1+T)n = ERV
			 
			       or

		     Total Return = ERV - 1
				    ---
				     P
	
	AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN = nth root of ERV
						 -----  - 1
						   P

where:

P    = a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000

T    = average annual total return

n    = number of years

ERV  = ending redeemable value of a hypothetical $1,000 payment
       made at the beginning of the one, five and ten year periods.

			      One Year       Five Year        Ten Year
			      -------        ---------        --------
Total Return                  +14.68%        +89.30%          +229.12%
Average Annual Total Return   +14.68%        +13.61%          + 12.65%

       For   purposes   of  these  calculations,  the   following
assumptions are made: (1) all dividends and distributions by  the
Fund  are  reinvested at the net asset value  calculated  on  the
reinvestment  dates during the period; (2) a complete  redemption
at the end of the period is made; (3) all recurring fees that are
charged to all shareholder accounts are included; and (4) the one
year, five year and ten year periods end on March 31, 1997.

      These  figures are computed by adding the total  number  of
shares purchased by a hypothetical $1,000 investment in the  Fund
to  all additional shares purchased within a one year period with
reinvested  dividends and distributions, reducing the  number  of
shares by those redeemed to pay account charges, taking the value
of  those shares owned at the end of the year and reducing it  by
any  deferred  charges,  and then dividing  that  amount  by  the
initial $1,000 investment.  This computation does not reflect any
sales  load or other nonrecurring charges, since the Fund is  not
subject to such charges.

      The  "total  return"  and  "average  annual  total  return"
calculations are historical measures of performance and  are  not
necessarily  indicative of future performance.  Such measurements
will vary from time to time depending upon market conditions, the
composition of the Fund's portfolio, operating expenses, and  the
distribution  policy  as determined by the  Board  of  Directors.
These  factors  should be considered when evaluating  the  Fund's
performance.

		   DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

      The Fund has an authorized capital of 200,000,000 shares of
common stock, $0.50 par value.  All shares are of the same  class
with equal rights and privileges.  Each share is entitled to  one
vote  and  to  participate equally in dividends and distributions
declared  by  the  Fund, and on liquidation, in  its  net  assets
remaining   after   satisfaction  of   outstanding   liabilities.
Fractional  shares have the same rights, proportionately,  as  do
full  shares.  Fund shares are fully paid and nonassessable  when
issued  and  have  no preemptive, conversion or exchange  rights.
Shareholders  are entitled to redeem shares as  set  forth  under
"Redemption of Capital Stock".

       Fund   shares  do  not  have  cumulative  voting   rights.
Therefore, the holders of more than half of the shares voting for
the  election of directors are able to elect all of the directors
and, in such event, the holders of the remaining shares so voting
will not be able to elect any directors.


		       STOCK CERTIFICATES

      The  Fund  will  not issue certificates  evidencing  shares
purchased unless so requested in writing.  Where certificates are
not  issued, the shareholder's account will be credited with  the
number   of   shares   purchased,   relieving   shareholders   of
responsibility for safekeeping of certificates and  the  need  to
deliver  them upon redemption.  Written confirmations are  issued
for  all  purchases  of  shares.   Any  shareholder  may  deliver
certificates to the Fund's transfer agent, Firstar Trust Company,
and  direct  that  his account be credited with  the  shares.   A
shareholder  may direct Firstar Trust Company in writing  at  any
time to issue a certificate for his shares without charge.  If  a
shareholder  requests  certificates at any  time  other  than  in
connection  with  an  initial  purchase,  the  request  must   be
accompanied by a signature guarantee.


			 ANNUAL MEETING

      The  State  of  Maryland business corporation  law  permits
registered  investment companies, such as the  Fund,  to  operate
without   an  annual  meeting  of  shareholders  under  specified
circumstances  if  an  annual meeting  is  not  required  by  the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.  The Fund has adopted
the  appropriate  provisions in its By-Laws  and  will  not  hold
annual  meetings  of shareholders, including  for  the  following
purposes  unless  otherwise required to do so:  (1)  election  of
directors; (2) approval of any investment advisory agreement; (3)
ratification  of the selection of independent auditors;  and  (4)
approval of a distribution agreement.


	      COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN SHAREHOLDERS

      In  the  event  the  Fund is not required  to  hold  annual
meetings  of  shareholders to elect directors by  virtue  of  the
amendment  to Maryland law described under "Annual Meeting,"  the
Board  of  Directors of the Fund will promptly call a meeting  of
shareholders  of  the Fund for the purpose  of  voting  upon  the
question of removal of any director when requested in writing  by
the record holders of not less than 10% of the outstanding shares
of  Common Stock of the Fund.  The affirmative vote of two-thirds
of  the  outstanding shares, cast in person  or  by  proxy  at  a
meeting called for such purpose, is required to remove a director
of  the Fund.  The Fund will assist shareholders in communicating
with each other for this purpose pursuant to the requirements  of
Section 16(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.


		      SHAREHOLDER REPORTS

      Shareholders will be provided at least semiannually with  a
report  or a current prospectus showing the Fund's portfolio  and
other   information,  including  an  annual  report  or   current
prospectus containing financial statements audited by the  Fund's
independent  public  accountants, Arthur Andersen  LLP,  for  the
fiscal  year ending March 31 of each year.  Inquiries  concerning
the Fund may be made by calling (414) 272-6133 or (800) 227-5987,
or  by  writing  to Nicholas Fund, Inc., 700 North Water  Street,
Suite  1010,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin 53202,  Attention:  Corporate
Secretary.


		  CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT

      The  Firstar  Trust  Company,  P.O.  Box  2944,  Milwaukee,
Wisconsin   53201-2944,    (telephone   no.   414-276-0535     or 
800-544-6547),  acts  as custodian  of all cash and securities of 
the Fund.  As custodian, the  Trust  Company holds all securities 
and cash for the Fund (except for cash  maintained in an  expense  
account with the Firstar National  Bank,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin),  
delivers and receives payment for securities sold,  receives  and  
pays for securities purchased, collects income  from  investments
and performs other duties, all as directed by the officers of the
Fund.   The  Trust  Company  does not  exercise  any  supervisory
function over the management of the Fund, the purchase or sale of
securities or the payment of distributions to shareholders.   The
Trust Company also acts as transfer agent.


		      COUNSEL AND AUDITORS

      Davis  & Kuelthau, S.C., Milwaukee, Wisconsin, counsel  for
the  Fund and the Adviser, have passed upon the legality  of  the
shares offered by this Prospectus.  Arthur Andersen LLP has  been
selected as the independent auditors for the Fund for the  fiscal
year ending March 31, 1998.


		     FINANCIAL INFORMATION

      The  financial  statements and other financial  information
relating  to the Fund contained in the Annual Report of the  Fund
for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1997, are incorporated herein
by reference.


	      STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION





		      NICHOLAS FUND, INC.



		       Investment Adviser
		     Nicholas Company, Inc.
			   Milwaukee
			 (414) 272-6133



	 Custodian, Transfer Agent and Disbursing Agent
		     Firstar Trust Company
			   Milwaukee
			 (414) 276-0535


		 Independent Public Accountants
		      Arthur Andersen LLP
			   Milwaukee


			    Counsel
		     Davis & Kuelthau, S.C.
			   Milwaukee








			  700 North Water Street
			 Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202


						     July 30, 1997


		      Nicholas Fund, Inc.






			   Form N-1A








		   PART C:  OTHER INFORMATION


		   PART C.  OTHER INFORMATION


Item 24.  Financial Statements and Exhibits
	  ---------------------------------
      (a)  Financial Statements:  Condensed Financial Information
	   ---------------------
incorporated  herein by reference to Part A of this  registration
statement.

      (b)  Exhibits:  All exhibits required to be filed with this
	   ---------
Form  N-1A,  pursuant to Item 24(b) thereof, are  listed  in  the
Exhibit  Index appearing elsewhere in this Registration Statement
and (i) appear in their entirety, herein or (ii) are incorporated
by   reference  to  previous  filings  with  the  Commission,  as
indicated in such Exhibit Index.


Item 25.  Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with Registrant
	  -------------------------------------------------------------
      There is no person known to Registrant to own more than  5%
of   its  outstanding  common  stock.  Accordingly,  other   than
Registrant's Board of Directors, no person controls Registrant.

     Registrant does not control any other person.

      Registrant, Nicholas Income Fund, Inc., Nicholas II,  Inc.,
Nicholas Limited Edition, Inc., Nicholas Money Market Fund, Inc.,
and  Nicholas Equity Income Fund, Inc. are advised  by  the  same
investment adviser, Nicholas Company, Inc.


Item 26.  Number of Holders of Securities
	  -------------------------------
     As of March 31, 1997,  the number of record holders was:

	     Title of Class              Number of Record Holders
	     --------------              ------------------------
	      Common Stock                       156,235   

Item 27.  Indemnification
	  ---------------
      Reference is made to Item 4 of Part II, and to Exhibit 6 to
Registrant's  Post-Effective Amendment No.  20,  filed  with  the
Commission  on September 29, 1977, which is incorporated  herein.
Reference   is   further   made  to  Item   4   of   Registrant's
Post-Effective  Amendment No. 21 filed  with  the  Commission  on
October 20, 1977, which is incorporated herein.

      The investment adviser to the Registrant, Nicholas Company,
Inc.,   has,   by  corporate  resolution,  agreed  to   indemnify
Registrant's officers, directors and employees to the  extent  of
$50,000  deductible provided by the Errors and  Omissions  Policy
and subject to the undertaking contained in Item 4 of Part II  of
Registrant's Post-Effective Amendment No. 21.


Item 28.  Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser
	  ----------------------------------------------------
     None.


Item 29.  Principal Underwriters
	  ----------------------
     None.


Item 30.  Location of Accounts and Records
	  --------------------------------
     Registrant, at its principal office, 700 North Water Street,
Milwaukee,  Wisconsin,  and  Firstar  Trust  Company,  615   East
Michigan  Avenue,  Milwaukee, Wisconsin,  maintain  the  required
accounts and records.


Item 31.  Management Services
	  -------------------
     None.


Item 32.  Undertakings
	  ------------
      The Registrant's By-Laws provide that it will indemnify the
Officers and Directors of the Registrant for liabilities incurred
by  them in any proceeding arising by reason of the fact that any
such  person  was or is a director or officer of the  Registrant.
Insofar  as indemnification for liability arising under  the  Act
may  be  permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons
of  the  Registrant  pursuant  to  the  Act,  or  otherwise,  the
Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities
and  Exchange  Commission such indemnification is against  public
policy   as   expressed  in  the  Act  and  may,  therefore,   be
unenforceable.   In  the event that a claim  for  indemnification
against  such  liabilities  (other  than  the  payment   by   the
Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or
controlling person of the Registrant in the successful defense of
any  action,  suit or proceeding) is asserted by  such  director,
officer  or  controlling person in connection with the securities
being  registered, the Registrant will, unless in the opinion  of
its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent,
submit  to  a  court  of  appropriate jurisdiction  the  question
whether  such indemnification by it is against public  policy  as
expressed  in  the  Act  and  will  be  governed  by  the   final
adjudication of such issue.

      Subject to the terms and conditions of Section 15(d) of the
Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934, the  undersigned  Registrant
hereby  undertakes  to  file  with the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission such supplementary and periodic information, documents
and reports as may be prescribed by any rule or regulation of the
Commission  heretofore  or  hereafter duly  adopted  pursuant  to
authority conferred in that section.

      The undersigned Registrant hereby undertakes to deliver  or
cause to be delivered with the prospectus, to each person to whom
the  prospectus  is sent or given, the latest  annual  report  to
security  holders  that  is  incorporated  by  reference  in  the
prospectus and furnished pursuant to and meeting the requirements
of  Rule 14a-3 or Rule 14c-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934;  and,  where interim financial information required  to  be
presented by Article 3 of Regulation S-X are not set forth in the
prospectus,  to deliver, or cause to be delivered to each  person
to  whom  the prospectus is sent or given, the latest  semiannual
report  that  is  specifically incorporated by reference  in  the
prospectus.


			   SIGNATURES


      Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of  1933
and  the  Investment Company Act of 1940, the  Registrant  hereby
certifies that it meets all of the requirements for effectiveness
of  this  Registration  Statement under  Rule  485(b)  under  the
Securities  Act  of 1933, and  has duly caused this  Registration
Statement  to  be  signed  on  its  behalf  by  the  undersigned,
thereunto  duly  authorized, in the City of Milwaukee,  State  of
Wisconsin, on the 23rd day of July, 1997.


				   NICHOLAS FUND, INC.
				   
				   By: /s/ Albert O. Nicholas
				      -------------------------
					   Albert O. Nicholas
					 President and Director


      Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933,
this  Registration  Statement  has  been  signed  below  by   the
following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.


	  Signature                   Title                    Date
	  ---------                   -----                    ---- 

      /s/ Albert O. Nicholas       President and            July 23, 1997
      ------------------------     Director                           
	  Albert O. Nicholas              

      /s/ Jeffrey T. May
      ------------------------     Senior Vice-President    July 23, 1997
	  Jeffrey T. May           and Treasurer 
      
      /s/ Melvin Schultz
      ------------------------     Director                 July 23, 1997
	  Melvin L. Schultz
      
      /s/ Richard Seaman
      ------------------------     Director                 July 23, 1997
	  Richard Seaman                                   



			LIST OF CONSENTS


1.   Consent of Davis & Kuelthau, S.C.
     (included in Exhibit (b)(10))

2.   Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP
     (included as Exhibit (b)(17))

			 EXHIBIT INDEX


Exhibit                                                   Sequential
  No.                 Description                           Page No.  
- -------               -----------                          ----------
							  
							     
(b)(1)    Articles   of  Incorporation  of   Registrant        *
	  [incorporated  by reference  to  Part  II  of
	  Registrant's Post-Effective Amendment No. 25,
	  as  filed  with  the Commission  on  July  2,
	  1979].

(b)(2)    By-Laws   of   Registrant  [incorporated   by        *
	  reference  to  Part II of Registrant's  Post-
	  Effective Amendment No. 35, as filed with the
	  Commission on July 27, 1988].

(b)(4)    Specimen certificate evidencing common stock,        *
	  $.50  par  value, of Registrant [incorporated
	  by reference to Part II of Registrant's Post-
	  Effective Amendment No. 25, as filed with the
	  Commission on July 2, 1979].

(b)(5)    Investment Advisory Agreement, dated July 17,        *
	  1985,   between   Registrant   and   Nicholas
	  Company,  Inc. [incorporated by reference  to
	  Part   C   of   Registrant's   Post-Effective
	  Amendment  No. 32, filed with the  Commission
	  on May 24, 1985].

(b)(8)    Custodian  Agreement between  Registrant  and        *
	  Firstar   Trust  Company,  [incorporated   by
	  reference  to  Part II of Registrant's  Post-
	  Effective Amendment No. 28, as filed with the
	  Commission on May 28, 1981].

(b)(10)   Opinion of Davis & Kuelthau, S.C., concerning      _______
	  the  legality  of Registrant's common  stock,   
	  including  attorney's consent to the  use  of
	  such opinion.

(b)(12)   Statement   of  assets  and  liabilities   of      _______
	  Registrant,   including   the   schedule   of
	  investments,  as of March 31, 1997,  and  the
	  related statement of operations for the  year
	  then  ended,  statement  of  changes  in  net
	  assets  for  each  of the two  years  in  the
	  period  ended  March 31, 1997,  and  the  per
	  share income and capital changes for each  of
	  the  ten years in the period ended March  31,
	  1997  [included  in  the  Annual  Report   to
	  Shareholders  of Registrant  for  the  fiscal
	  year ended March 31, 1997].

(b)(14)   Retirement  plans in conjunction  with  which        *
	  Registrant offers its securities pursuant  to
	  a  Prototype IRA Plan and a Master Retirement
	  Plan [incorporated by reference to Part II of
	  Registrant's Post-Effective Amendment No. 38,
	  as  filed  with the Commission  on  July  18,
	  1991].

(b)(16)   Schedule   for  computation  of   performance      _______
	  quotation  provided in response to  Item  22,
	  Form N-1A.

(b)(17)   Consent  of  Arthur Andersen LLP, independent      _______
	  public accountants.


     *Incorporated by reference to previous filing as indicated.     


                 ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

                             of
Roll 41 Page 795
                 LAKESIDE CAPITAL FUND, INC.


                We, the undersigned natural persons of the
                age of twenty-one years or more, acting as
                incorporators of a corporation under the
                General Laws of the State of Maryland
                authorizing the formation of corporations,
                adopt the following Articles of
                Incorporation for such corporation:


                FIRST:    The name of the corporation (which
                is hereinafter called the "Corporation")
                is LAKESIDE CAPITAL FUND, INC.


                SECOND:   The period of its existence is
                perpetual.


                THIRD:    The purpose or purposes for which
                the Corporation is organized are:

                      A.   To engage in the business of a
                      diversified open-end management
                      investment company.

                      B.   To purchase or otherwise acquire,
                      hold for investment or otherwise, and
                      to sell, exchange or otherwise dispose
                      of securities, or rights or warrants
                      to acquire securities, of any private
                      or public company, corporation,
                      association, trust or syndicate
                      however organized.
<PAGE>
     ROLL 41 PAGE 796

             C.   To purchase or otherwise acquire, hold for
             investment or otherwise, and to sell, exchange,
             or otherwise dispose of, securities issued or
             guaranteed by the United States of America, by
             any State of the United States of America, by
             any political subdivision of any State, by any
             public instrumentality of a State, or by any
             person controlled or supervised by and acting
             as an instrumentality of the United States of
             America.

             D.   To deposit its funds from time to time in
             such checking account or accounts as may
             reasonably be required, and to deposit its
             funds at interest in any bank, savings bank or
             trust company in good standing organized under
             the laws of the United States of America or any
             State thereof, or of the District of Columbia.

             E.   To conduct research and investigations
             with respect to securities, organizations and
             business conditions in the United States and
             elsewhere; to secure information and advice
             pertaining to the investment and employment of
             the assets and funds of the Corporation and to
             pay compensation to others for the furnishing
             of any or all of the foregoing.

             F.   Subject to any restrictions contained in
             the Investment Company Act of 1940, in
             applicable state securities or "blue sky"
             laws, or in any rules or regulations issued
             pursuant to any of the foregoing, to exercise
             in respect of all securities, property and
             assets owned by it all rights, powers and
             privileges which could be exercised by any
             natural person owning the same Becurities,
             property or assets.


                          -2-
<PAGE>
                                   ROLL 41 PAGE 797


             G.   To acquire all or any part of the good
             will, property and business of any firm,
             person, association or corporation heretofore
             or hereafter engaged in any business similar to
             any business which it has power to conduct, and
             to hold, utilize, enjoy, and in any manner
             dispose of the whole or any part of the rights,
             property and business so acquired and to assume
             in connection therewith any liabilities of any
             such person, firm, association or corporation.

             H.   Without the vote or consent of the
             shareholders of the Corporation, to purchase,
             acquire, hold, dispose of, transfer and reissue
             or cancel shares of its own capital stock in
             any manner or to any extent now or hereafter
             permitted by the laws of Maryland and by these
             Articles of Incorporation.

             I.   To carry out all or any part of the
             aforesaid objects and purposes and to conduct
             its business in all or any of its branches in
             any or all states, territories, districts and
             possessions of the United States of America and
             in foreign countries; and to maintain offices
             and agencies in any and all states,
             territories, districts and possessions of the
             United States of America and in foreign
             countries.

             The foregoing objects and purposes shall,
             except when otherwise expressed, be in no way
             limited or restricted by reference to or
             inference from the terms of any clause of this
             or any other Section of these Articles of
             Incorporation, or of any amendment thereto, and
             shall


                          -3-
<PAGE>
     ROLL 41 PAGE 798


     each be regarded as independent and construed as powers as
     well as objects and purposes.

     The Corporation shall be authorized to exercise and
     enjoy all of the powers, rights and privileges granted
     to or conferred upon corporations of a similar
     character by the General Laws of the State of Maryland
     now or hereafter in force, and the enumeration of the
     foregoing powers shall not be deemed to exclude any
     powers, rights or privileges so granted or conferred.


     FOURTH:   The aggregate number of shares which the
     Corporation shall have authority to issue is Two
     Hundred Thousand (200, 000) consisting of one class
     only, designated as "Common Stock," of the par value
     of $1.00 per share and of the aggregate par value of
     Two Hundred Thousand Dollars ($200, 000).

     FIFTH:    Provisions limiting or denying to
     shareholders the preemptive right to acquire
     additional shares of the Corporation are:

     No holder of any of the shares of this Corporation
     shall, as such holder, have any pre-emptive or other
     right to purchase or subscribe for any shares which
     this Corporation may issue or sell other than such
     rights, if any, as the board of directors in its
     discretion may from time to time determine to offer to
     shareholders of this Corporation.


     SIXTH:    The number of initial directors is three (3),
     and the names of the initial directors are:


                             -4-
<PAGE>
     ROLL 41 PAGE 799


                Albert 0. Nicholas

                Richard S. Strong

                Frank C. DeGuire

Thereafter, the number of directors shall be such number
(not less than three) as is fixed from time to time by the
By-Laws.


     SEVENTH:  The post office address of the principal
     office of the Corporation in this State is c/o The
     Corporation Trust Incorporated, First National Bank
     Building, Light and Redwood Streets, Baltimore,
     Maryland 21202.  The name of the resident agent of the
     Corporation in this State is The Corporation Trust
     Incorporated, a corporation of this State, and the post
     office address of the resident agent is First National
     Bank Building, Light and Redwood Streets, Baltimore,
     Maryland 21202.


     EIGHTH:  The name and address of each incorporator is:
	Name				Address

     Albert 0. Nicholas			312 East Wisconsin Avenue
					Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202

     Richard S. Strong			312 East Wisconsin Avenue
					Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202

     David E. Leichtfuss		324 East Wisconsin Avenue
					Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202
  

     NINTH:     The following provisions are hereby adopted
     for the purpose of defining, limiting and regulating
     the powers of the Corporation



                          -5-
<PAGE>
                                ROLL 41 PAGE 800


    and of the directors and shareholders:


   A.   The board of directors of the Corporation shall
   authorize an initial issuance of shares of the capital
   stock of the Corporation for such consideration not less
   than the aggregate par value of the shares included in
   the issuance as the board of directors shall determine.
   After such initial issuance, the board of directors may
   authorize the issuance (and reissuance) from time to time
   of shares of capital stock of any class, whether now or
   hereafter authorized, for such consideration as said
   board of directors may deem advisable, provided that such
   consideration shall be not less than the aggregate par
   value of such shares issued nor less than the net asset
   value of such shares applicable at the time an order for
   purchase is accepted by the Corporation, as such net
   asset value is computed in accordance with Section J of
   this Article NINTH. That portion of the consideration
   received by the Corporation for shares issued (or
   reissued) which is equal to the aggregate par value of
   such shares shall be capital and any consideration
   received in excess of said aggregate par value shall be
   capital surplus. The board of directors may, in its sole
   and absolute discretion, reject in whole or in part
   orders for the purchase of shares of capital stock, and
   may, in addition, require such orders to be in such
   minimum amounts as it shall determine.

   B.   The holders of any fractional shares of the capital
   stock of the Corporation shall be entitled to the payment
   of dividends on such fractional shares, to receive the
   net asset value thereof upon redemption and to share in
   the assets of the Corporation upon liquidation, but no
   holder of a fractional share shall be entitled to receive
   a certificate representing any fractional share, nor
   shall any such holder have any voting rights with respect
   to any fractional share. Whenever a shareholder owns
   fractional shares aggregating a full share, he shall have
   all rights provided herein with respect to such full
   share and shall be entitled to receive a certificate
   representing such full share.

   D.   The board of directors shall have full power in
   accordance with good accounting practice: (a) to
   determine what receipts of the Corporation shall
   constitute income available for payment of dividends and
   what receipts shall constitute principal and to make such
   allocation of any particular receipt between principal
   and income as it may deem proper; and (b) from time to
   time, in its discretion (i) to determine whether any and
   all expenses and other outlays paid or incurred
   (including any and all taxes, assessments or governmental
   charges which the Corporation may be required to pay or
   hold under any present or future law of the United States
   of America or of any other taxing authority therein)



                          -6-
<PAGE>
shall be charged to or paid from principal or income or
both; and (ii) to apportion any and all of said expenses and
outlays, including taxes, between principal and income.

D.  Each holder of record of stock of
this Corporation shall be entitled to one (1) vote for each
share thereof standing registered in his name on the books
of the Corporation. At all elections of directors of the
Corporation, each shareholder shall be entitled to vote the
shares owned of record by him for as many persons as there
are directors to be elected, but shall not be entitled to
exercise any right of cumulative voting.

E.  The board of directors shall have
power to determine from time to time whether and to what
extent and at what time and places and under what conditions
and regulations the books, accounts and documents of the
Corporation, or any of them, shall be open to the inspection
of shareholders, except as otherwise provided by statute or
by law; and except as so provided, no shareholder shall have
any right to inspect any book, account or document of the
Corporation unless authorized to do so by resolution of the
board of directors.

F.  When the total assets of the
Corporation shall for the first time have amounted to $100,000,
or more, a fact which shall be conclusively evidenced by
a resolution of the board of directors of the Corporation
specifying the date and time when such total assets first
amounted to $100, 000, or more, each holder of shares of the
capital stock of the Corporation shall be entitled at any
time thereafter to require the Corporation to redeem all or
any part of the shares standing in the name of such holder
on the books of the Corporation at the net asset value of
such shares as determined in accordance with the provisions
of this Article NINTH, subject to the provisions of Section
K of this Article.

G.  The net asset value to which a
holder of shares of capital stock of the Corporation shall
be entitled upon redemption of shares held by him is the net
asset value applicable at the time when certificates
representing said shares, duly endorsed or accompanied by
proper instruments of assignment, with proper stock transfer
stamps affixed, if required, and accompanied by irrevocable
instructions in writing in form acceptable to the board of
directors to redeem the stock represented by such
certificates, shall have been received by the Corporation as
such place as the board of directors may from time to time
designate.

H.  The time of payment for shares
redeemed shall be within seven (7) days after certificates
representing the shares to be redeemed have been received by
the Corporation in accordance with Section G of this Article
NINTH.

                             -7-
<PAGE>
                               ROLL 41 PAGE 802


I.  The net asset value of each share of
the Corporation shall be determined as of the close of
trading on the New York Stock Exchange each day that said
Exchange is open for trading and any such net asset value
shall be applicable to all transactions in the capital stock
of the Corporation occurring before the close of  business on
that day and after the close of  business on the last
preceding day on which said Exchange was open for trading,
or in accordance with any controlling provisions of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, any rule or regulation
thereunder.

J.  The net asset value of each share of
the capital stock of the Corporation at any particular time
shall be the quotient obtained by dividing the value of the
net assets of the Corporation (i.e., the value of the assets
of the Corporation, less its liabilities exclusive of
capital and suplus) at such time by the total number of
shares (including fractional shares) outstanding at such
time, all determined and computed as follows:

    (1)  The value of any cash on hand or on
    deposit, bills and demand notes and accounts receivable,
    prepaid expenses, dividends receivable (from and after
    the ex-dividend date) and interest declared or accrued
    and not yet received shall be deemed to be the full
    amount thereof unless the board of directors shall have
    determined that any such deposit, bill, demand note or
    account receivable is not worth the full amount thereof,
    in which event such value shall be the fair value
    thereof as determined in good faith by the board of
    directors.

    (2)  Securities listed or commonly dealt
    in on the New York Stock Exchange or the American Stock
    Exchange shall be valued at the last sale prices on such
    Exchanges on the day on which such value is being
    computed (or, lacking any such sales, the last bid
    price), unless it appears to the board of directors that
    some other price reflects more closely the true market
    value, but in no case shall such other price be lower
    than the last bid price or higher than the last asked
    price at the time as of which the net asset value is
    being determined, all as reported by any means in common
    use; provided, however, that the board of directors may
    by resolution permit over-the-counter rather than stock
    exchange quotations to be used when they appear to the
    board of directors to reflect more closely the true
    market value of any particular security in the portfolio.

    (3)  Other securities as to which market
    quotations are readily available shall be valued in the
    same manner as securities listed or commonly dealt in on
    the New York or American Stock Exchanges.

    (4)  In the case of all other securities
    and assets, the value thereof shall be the fair value as
    determined in good faith by the board of directors (but
    no value shall be assigned to good will of the
    Corporation).


                          -8-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL 41 PAGE 803

    (5)  The liabilities of the Corporation
    shall be deemed to include all bills and accounts
    payable; all administrative expenses payable and/or
    accrued, including the estimated amount of any fees
    payable under an investment advisory agreement, all
    contractual obligations for the payment of money or
    property, including the amount of any unpaid dividends
    upon the shares of the Corporation, declared at or
    before the time as of which the net asset value is being
    determined; all reserves authorized or approved by the
    board of directors for taxes or contingencies, including
    such reserves, if any, for taxes based on any unrealized
    appreciation in the value of the assets of the
    Corporation; and all other liabilities of the
    Corporation of whatsoever kind and nature, except
    liabilities represented by outstanding shares and
    surplus of the Corporation.

    (6)  Securities purchased shall be
    included among the assets of the Corporation, and the
    cost thereof shall simultaneously be regarded as a
    liability, not later than the day following the date of
    purchase; and securities sold shall be excluded from
    such assets, and the amount receivable therefor shall
    simultaneously be included as an asset, not later than
    the day following the date of sale.

    (7)  Shares of the capital stock of the
    Corporation for which purchase orders have been accepted
    shall be considered as issued and outstanding as soon as
    the net asset value thereof can reasonably be
    ascertained pursuant to the provisions of this Article
    NINTH, and the amount receivable therefor shall
    simultaneously become an asset of  the Corporation.

    (8)  Shares of the capital stock of the
    Corporation delivered for redemption or repurchase shall
    be considered as no longer outstanding as soon as the
    net asset value thereof can reasonably be ascertained
    pursuant to the provisions of this Article NINTH, and
    the amount payable on such redemption or repurchase
    shall simultaneously become a liability of the Corporation.

    (9)  Notwithstanding the provisions of
    paragraphs (1) and (5) of this Section J, interest
    declared or accrued and not yet received, and and
    accrued expenses, may be omitted from any calculation of
    net asset value, in the discretion of the board of
    directors, if the net amount of all such interest and
    expenses is less than one percent of the net asset value
    per share.

K.  In the event that the New York Stock
Exchange shall be closed at any time because of then
existing financial conditions or for any other unusual or
extraordinary reason, the right of a holder of shares of the
capital stock of the Corporation to have his shares redeemed
by the


                        -9-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL 41 PAGE 804




   Corporation shall be suspended for a period from and
   including the day on which the action is taken for the
   closing of said Exchange and the day on which said
   Exchange is reopened. In accordance with the provisions
   of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the rules and
   regulations promulgated thereunder by the Securities and
   Exchange Commission, the Corporation may also suspend
   such right of redemption (a) for any period during which
   trading on the New York Stock Exchange is restricted; (b)
   for any period during which an emergency exists as a
   result of which (i) disposal by the Corporation of
   securities owned by it is not reasonably practicable or
   (ii) it is not reasonably practicable for the Corporation
   fairly to determine the value of its net assets; or (c)
   for such other periods as the Commission may by order
   permit for the protection of shareholders of the
   Corporation.

   (L)  The Corporation may purchase in the
   open market or otherwise acquire from any owner or holder
   thereof any shares of its capital stock, in which case
   the consideration paid therefor (in cash or in securities
   in which the funds of the Corporation shall then be
   invested) shall not exceed the net asset value thereof
   determined or estimated in accordance with any method
   deemed proper by the board of directors and producing an
   amount approximately equal to the net asset value of said
   shares (determined in accordance with the provisions of
   this Article NINTH) at the time of the purchase or
   acquisition by the Corporation thereof.

          In respect of all powers, duties and authorities
       conferred by the preceding Sections J and K and this
       Section L, the Corporation may act by and through
       agents from time to time designated and appointed by
       the board of directors and the board of directors may
       delegate to any such agent any and all powers, duties
       and authorities conferred upon the Corporation or
       upon the board of directors by said Sections.


      TENTH:  The Corporation reserves the right
      to enter into, from time to time, investment advisory
      agreements providing for the management and
      supervision of the investments of the Corporation and
      the furnishing of advice to the Corporation with
      respect to the desirability of investing in,
      purchasing or selling securities or other property.
      Such agreement shall contain such other terms,
      provisions and conditions as the board of directors of
      the Corporation may deem advisable.



                            -10-
<PAGE>
                          ROLL 41 PAGE 805

     The Corporation may designate custodians, transfer
     agents, registrars and/or disbursing agents for the
     stock and assets of the Corporation and employ and fix
     the powers, rights, duties, responsibilities and
     compensation of each such custodian, transfer agent,
     registrar and/or disbursing agent.


     ELEVENTH:  The Corporation reserves the right
     from time to time to make any amendment of these
     Articles of Incorporation now or hereafter authorized
     by law, including any amendment which alters the
     contract rights as expressly set forth in these
     Articles of Incorporation of any outstanding stock. The
     Corporation may take or authorize such action upon the
     concurrence of a majority of the aggregate number of
     the votes entitled to be cast thereon.


     Dated May 22, 1968.
  

                        /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
                        ----------------------
			Albert O. Nicholas

                        /s/ Richard S. Strong
                        ---------------------
			Richard S. Strong

                        /s/ David E. Leichtfus
                        ----------------------
                        David E. Leichtfuss

				Incorporators
		-11-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL  41 PAGE 806


STATE OF WISCONSIN
                      ss.
COUNTY OF MILWAUKEE:


     I hereby certify that on   May 22             1968,
     before me, the subscriber, a Notary Public of the State
     of Wisconsin in and for the County of Milwaukee,
     personally appeared ALBERT 0. NICHOLAS, RICHARD S.
     STRONG and DAVID E. LEICHTFUSS, and severally
     acknowledged the foregoing Articles of Incorporation to
     be their act.

      WITNESS my hand and notarial seal this 22nd day of  May
      A. D. 1968.

                        
                                  /S/ Frank C. DeGuire
Corporate Seal                    --------------------
                                  Frank C. DeGuire
                      Notary Public, State of Wisconsin
                      My Commission is Permanent
                            -12-
<PAGE>





                     STATE OF MARYLAND

                  STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND
                           TAXATION A 4671
                      301 WEST PRESTON STREET
                     BALTIMORE MARYLAND 21201



                 You are advised that the Articles of Amendment of

                           LAKESIDE CAPITAL FUND, INC.

                              changing its name to
                      
                           NICHOLAS  STRONG FUND, INC.


          have been received and approved by the STATE
          DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION OF MARYLAND
          this  10th day of July 1968, at 3:00 P.M. and will be recorded.

                STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION OF MARYLAND  
                                 

                                              By:___________________________

<PAGE>
ROLL  42  PAGE 547

                CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATORS

              AMENDED ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

                            of

                 LAKESIDE CAPITAL FUND, INC.
                 ---------------------------

             The undersigned, Incorporators of LAKESIDE
             CAPITAL FUND, INC., hereby certify that:

            1. There are no shares of said corporation
               entitled to vote either outstanding or
               subscribed for; and

            2. The first meeting of the board of directors
             of said corporation has not been held.

            Therefore, said Incorporators hereby adopt the
            attached Amended Articles of Incorporation.

            Dated: July 5, 1968.


                        /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
                        ----------------------
			Albert O. Nicholas

                        /s/ Richard S. Strong
                        ---------------------
			Richard S. Strong

                        /s/ David E. Leichtfus
                        ----------------------
                        David E. Leichtfuss


                                     
                        ROLL  42 PAGE 548

 <PAGE>

              AMENDED ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

                             of

                 NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.
                 --------------------------

       We, the undersigned natural persons of the age of
       twenty-one years or more, acting as Incorporators of
       a corporation under the General Laws of the State of
       Maryland authorizing the formation of corporations,
       adopt the following Articles of Incorporation for
       such corporation:

       FIRST:  The name of the corporation (which is
       hereinafter called the "Corporation") is NICHOLAS
       STRONG FUND, INC.

       SECOND:  The period of its existence is perpetual.

       THIRD:  The purpose or purposes for which
       the Corporation is organized are:

         A.  To engage in the business of a
         diversified open-end management investment company.
                                           
         B.  To purchase or otherwise acquire,
         hold for investment or otherwise, and to sell,
         exchange or otherwise dispose of securities, or
         rights or warrants to acquire securities, of any
         private or public company, corporation,
         association, trust or syndicate however organized.

                              ROLL  42 PAGE 549
<PAGE>
             C.  To purchase or otherwise acquire,
             hold for investment or otherwise, and to sell,
             exchange, or otherwise dispose of, securities
             issued or guaranteed by the United States of
             America, by any State of the United States Of
             America, by any political subdivision of any
             State, by any public instrumentality of a
             State, or by any person controlled or
             supervised by and acting as an instrumentality
             of the United States of America.

             D.  To deposit its funds from time to
             time in such checking account or accounts as
             may reasonably be required, and to deposit its
             funds at interest in any bank, savings bank or
             trust company in good standing organized under
             the laws of the United States of America or any
             State thereof, or of the District of Columbia.

             E.  To conduct research and
             investigations with respect to securities,
             organizations and business conditions in the
             United States and elsewhere; to secure
             information and advice pertaining to the
             investment and employment of the assets and
             funds of the Corporation and to pay
             compensation to others for the furnishing of
             any or all of the foregoing.

             F.  Subject to any restrictions
             contained in the Investment Company Act of
             1940, in applicable state securities or "blue
             sky" laws, or in any rules or regulations
             issued pursuant to any of the foregoing, to
             exercise in respect of all securities, property
             and assets owned by it all rights, powers and
             privileges which could be exercised by any
             natural person owning the same securities,
             property or assets.


                          -2-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL  42 PAGE 550

        G.  To acquire all or any part of the
        good will, property and business of any firm,
        person, association or corporation heretofore
        or hereafter engaged in any business similar to any business
	which it has power to conduct, and to hold, utilize, enjoy,
	and in any manner dispose of the whole or any part of the
	rights, property and business so acquired and to assume in
	connection therewith any liabilities of any such person,
	firm, association or corporation.

             H.  Without the vote or consent of the
             shareholders of the Corporation, to purchase,
             acquire, hold, dispose of, transfer and reissue
             or cancel shares of its own capital stock in
             any manner or to any extent. now or hereafter
             permitted by the laws of Maryland and by these
             Articles of Incorporation.

             I.  To carry out all or any part of the
             aforesaid objects and purposes and to conduct
             its business in all or any of its branches in
             any or all states, territories, districts and
             possessions of the United States of America and
             in foreign countries; and to maintain offices
             and agencies in any and all states,
             territories, districts and possessions of the
             United States of America and in foreign
             countries.

             The foregoing objects and purposes shall,
             except when otherwise expressed, be in no way
             limited or restricted by reference to or
             inference from the terms of any clause of this
             or any other Section of these Articles of
             Incorporation, or of any amendment thereto, and
             shall


                           -3-

                        ROLL  42  PAGE 551
<PAGE>
      each be regarded as independent and
      construed as powers as well as objects and purposes.

      The Corporation shall be authorized to exercise and
      enjoy all of the powers, rights and privileges granted
      to or conferred upon corporations of a similar
      character by the General Laws of the State of Maryland
      now or hereafter in force, and the enumeration of the
      foregoing powers shall not be deemed to exclude any
      powers, rights or privileges so granted or conferred.


     FOURTH:  The aggregate number of shares which
     the Corporation shall have authority to issue is Two
     Hundred Thousand (200, 000) consisting of one class
     only, designated as "Common Stock," of the par value
     of $1.00 per share and of the aggregate par value of
     Two Hundred Thousand Dollars (200,000).


     FIFTH:  Provisions limiting or denying to
     shareholders the preemptive right to acquire additional
     shares of the Corporation are:

     No holder of any of the shares of this Corporation
     shall, as such holder, have any pre-emptive or other
     right to purchase or subscribe for any shares which
     this Corporation may issue or sell other than such
     rights, if any, as the board of directors in its
     discretion may from time to time determine to offer to
     shareholders of this Corporation.


     STXTH:  The number of initial directors is
     three (3), and the names of the initial directors are:


                             -4-
<PAGE>
                ROLL 42 PAGE 552

                 Albert O. Nicholas

                 Richard S. Strong

                 Frank C. DeGuire

Thereafter, the number of directors shall be such number
(not less than three) as is fixed from time to time by the
By-Laws.
                                                
     SEVENTH:  The post office address of the
     principal office of the Corporation in this State is c/o
     The Corporation Trust Incorporated, First National Bank
     Building, Light and Redwood Streets, Baltimore,
     Maryland 21202. The name of the resident agent of the
     Corporation in this State is The Corporation Trust
     Incorporated, a corporation of this State, and the post
     office address of the resident agent is First National
     Bank Building, Light and Redwood Streets, Baltimore,
     Maryland 21202.


     EIGHTH:  The name and address of each incorporator is:

           Name				Address

     Albert 0. Nicholas			312 East Wisconsin Avenue
					Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202

     Richard S. Strong			312 East Wisconsin Avenue
					Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202

      David E. Leichtfuss		324 East Wisconsin Avenue
					Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202

     NINTH:  The following provisions are hereby
     adopted for the purpose of defining, limiting and
     regulating the powers of the Corporation



                           -5-
<PAGE>
					ROLL  42 PAGE 553

and of the directors and shareholders:
    A.  The board of directors of the
    Corporation shall authorize an initial issuance of
    shares of the capital stock of the Corporation for such
    consideration not less than the aggregate par value of
    the shares included in the issuance as the board of
    directors shall determine. After such initial issuance,
    the board of directors may authorize the issuance (and
    reissuance) from time to time of shares of capital stock
    of any class, whether now or hereafter authorized, for
    such consideration, not less than the aggregate par
    value of the shares so issued, as said board of
    directors may deem advisable, provided that, except with
    respect to shares issued as a share dividend or
    distribution, such consideration shall be not less than
    the net asset value of such shares computed in
    accordance with this Article NINTH. That portion of the
    consideration received by the Corporation for shares
    issued (or reissued) which is equal to the aggregate par
    value of such shares shall be capital and any
    consideration received in excess of said aggregate par
    value shall be capital surplus. The board of directors
    may, in its sole and absolute discretion, reject in
    whole or in part orders for the purchase of shares of
    capital stock, and rnay, in addition, require such
    orders to be in such minimum amounts as it shall
    determine.

    B.  The holders of any fractional shares
    of the capital stock of the Corporation shall be
    entitled to the payment of dividends on such fractional
    shares, to receive the net asset value thereof upon
    redemption and to share in the assets of the Corporation
    upon liquidation, but no holder of a fractional share
    shall be entitled to receive a certificate representing
    any fractional share, nor shall any such holder have any
    voting rights with respect to any fractional share.
    Whenever a shareholder owns fractional shares
    aggregating a full share, he shall have all rights
    provided herein with respect to such full share and
    shall be entitled to receive a certificate representing
    such full share.

    C.  The board of directors shall have
    full power in accordance with good accounting practice:
    (a) to determine what receipts of the Corporation shall
    constitute income available for payment of dividends and
    what receipts shall constitute principal and to make
    such allocation of any particular receipt between
    principal and income as it may deem proper; and (b) from
    time to time, in its discretion (i) to determine whether
    any and all expenses and other outlays paid or incurred
    (including any and all taxes, assessments or
    governmental charges which the Corporation may be
    required to pay or hold under any present or future law
    of the United States of America or of any other taxing
    authority therein)

                             -6-
<PAGE>
                              Roll  42 PAGE 554

shall be charged to or paid from principal or income or
both; and (ii) to apportion any and all of said expenses and
outlays, including taxes, between principal and income.

D.  Each holder of record of stock of
this Corporation shall be entitled to one (1) vote for each
share thereof standing registered in his name on the books
of the Corporation. At all elections of directors of the
Corporation, each shareholder shall be entitled to vote the
shares owned of record by him for as many persons as there
are directors to be elected, but shall not be entitled to
exercise any right of cumulative voting.

E.  The board of directors shall have
power to determine from time to time whether and to what
extent and at what time and places and under what conditions
and regulations the books, accounts and documents of the
Corporation, or any of them, shall be open to the inspection
of shareholders, except as otherwise provided by statute or
by law; and except as so provided, no shareholder shall have
any right to inspect any book, account or document of the
Corporation unless authorized to do so by resolution of the
board of directors.

F.  When the total assets of the
Corporation shall for the first time have amounted to $100,000, 
or more, a fact which shall be conclusively evidenced
by a resolution of the board of directors of the Corporation
specifying the date and time when such total assets first
amounted to $100, 000, or more, each holder of shares of the
capital stock of the Corporation shall be entitled at any
time thereafter to require the Corporation to redeem all or
any part of the shares standing in the name of such holder
on the books of the Corporation at the net asset value of
such shares as determined in accordance with the provisions
of this Article NINTH, subject to the provisions of
Section K of this Article.

G.  The net asset value to which a
holder of shares of capital stock of the Corporation shall
be entitled upon redemption of shares held by him is the net
asset value applicable at the time when certificates
representing said shares, duly endorsed or accompanied by
proper instruments of assignment, with proper stock transfer
stamps affixed, if required, and accompanied by irrevocable
instructions in writing in form acceptable to the board of
directors to redeem the stock represented by such
certificates, shall have been received by the Corporation as
such place as the board of directors may from time to time
designate.

H.  The time of payment for shares
redeemed shall be within seven (7) days after certificates
representing the shares to be redeemed have been received by
the Corporation in accordance with Section G of this Article
NINTH.

                             -7-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL  42 PAGE 555



I.  The net asset value of each share of
the Corporation shall be determined as of the close of
trading on the New York Stock Exchange each day that said
Exchange is open for trading and any such net asset value
shall be applicable to all transactions in the capital stock
of the Corporation occurring at or before the close of
business on that day and after the close of business on the
last preceding day on which said Exchange was open for
trading, subject to adjustment for declared dividends or
distributions, or in accordance with any controlling
provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940 or any rule
or regulation thereunder.

J.  The net asset value of each share of
the capital stock of the Corporation at any particular time
shall be the quotient obtained by dividing the value of the
net assets of the Corporation (i.e., the value of the assets
of.the Corporation, less its liabilities exclusive of
capital and surplus) at such time by the total number of
shares (including fractional shares) outstanding at such
time, all determined and computed as follows:

    (1)  The value of any cash on hand or on
    deposit, bills and demand notes and accounts receivable,
    prepaid expenses, dividends receivable (from and after
    the ex-dividend date) and interest declared or accrued
    and not yet received shall be deemed to be the full
    amount thereof unless the board of directors shall have
    determined that any such deposit, bill, demand note or
    account receivable is not worth the full amount thereof,
    in which event such value shall be the fair value
    thereof as determined in good faith by the board of
    directors.

    (2)  Securities listed or commonly dealt
    in on the New York Stock Exchange or the American Stock
    Exchange shall be valued at the last sale prices on such
    Exchanges on the day on which such value is being
    computed (or, lacking any such sales, the last bid
    price), unless it appears to the board of directors that
    some other price reflects more closely the true market
    value, but in no case shall such other price be lower
    than the last bid price or higher than the last asked
    price at the time as of which the net asset value is
    being determined, all as reported by any means in common
    use; provided, however, that the board of directors may
    be resolution permit over-the-counter rather than stock
    exchange quotations to be used when they appear to the
    board of directors to reflect more closely the true
    market value of any particular security in the portfolio.

    (3)  Other securities as to which market
    quotations are readily available shall be valued in the
    same manner as securities listed or commonly dealt in on
    the New York or American Stock Exchanges.

    (4)  In the case of all other securities
    and assets, the value thereof shall be the fair value as
    determined in good faith by the board of directors (but
    no value shall be assigned to good will of the
    Corporation).

                             -8-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL  42 PAGE 556


    (5)  The liabilities or the Corporation
    shall be deemed to include all bills and accounts
    payable; all administrative expenses payable and/or
    accrued, including the estimated amount of any fees
    payable under an investment advisory agreement, all
    contractual obligations for the payment of money or
    property, including the amount of any unpaid dividends
    upon the shares of the Corporation, declared at or
    before the time as of which the net asset value is being
    determined; all reserves authorized or approved by the
    board of directors for taxes or contingencies, including
    such reserves, if any, for taxes based on any unrealized
    appreciation in the value of the assets of the
    Corporation; and all other liabilities of the
    Corporation of whatsoever kind and nature, except
    liabilities represented by outstanding shares and
    surplus of the Corporation.

    (6)  Securities purchased shall be
    included among the assets of the Corporation, and the
    cost thereof shall simultaneously be regarded as a
    liability, not later than the day following the date of
    purchase; and securities sold shall be excluded from
    such assets, and the amount receivable therefor shall
    simultaneously be included as an asset, not later than
    the day following the date of sale.

    (7)  Shares of the capital stock of the
    Corporation for which purchase orders have been accepted
    shall be considered as issued and outstanding as soon as
    the net asset value thereof can reasonably be
    ascertained pursuant to the provisions of this Article
    NINTH, and the amount receivable therefor shall
    simultaneously become an asset of the Corporation.

    (8)  Shares of the capital stock of the
    Corporation delivered for redemption or repurchase shall
    be considered as no longer outstanding as soon as the
    net asset value thereof can reasonably be ascertained
    pursuant to the provisions of this Article NINTH, and
    the amount payable on such redemption or repurchase
    shall simultaneously become a liability of the
    Corporation.

   (9)  Notwithstanding the provisions of
   paragraphs (1) and (5) of this Section J, interest
   declared or accrued and not yet received, and and accrued
   expenses, may be omitted from any calculation of net
   asset value, in the discretion of the board of directors,
   if the net amount of all such interest and expenses is
   less than one percent of the net asset value per share.

K.  In the event that the New York Stock
Exchange shall be closed at any time because of then
existing financial conditions or for any other unusual or
extraordinary reason, the right of a holder of shares of the
capital stock of the Corporation to have his shares redeemed
by the


                        -9-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL  42 PAGE 557



   Corporation shall be suspended for a period from and
   including the day on which the action is taken for the
   closing of said Exchange and the day on which said
   Exchange is reopened. In accordance with the provisions
   of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the rules and
   regulations promulgated thereunder by the Securities and
   Exchange Commission, the Corporation may also suspend
   such right of redemption (a) for any period during which
   trading on the New York Stock Exchange is restricted; (b)
   for any period during which an emergency exists as a
   result of which (i) disposal by the Corporation of
   securities owned by it is not reasonably practicable or
   (ii) it is not reasonably practicable for the Corporation
   fairly to determine the value of its net assets; or (c)
   for such other periods as the Commission may by order
   permit for the protection of shareholders of the
   Corporation.

   (L)  The Corporation may purchase in the
   open market or otherwise acquire from any owner or holder
   thereof any shares of its capital stock, in which case
   the consideration paid therefor (in cash or in securities
   in which the funds of the Corporation shall then be
   invested) shall not exceed the net asset value thereof
   determined or estimated in accordance with any method
   deemed proper by the board of directors and producing an
   amount approximately equal to the net asset value of said
   shares (determined in accordance with the provisions of
   this Article NINTH) at the time of the purchase or
   acquisition by the Corporation thereof.

         In respect of all powers, duties and authorities
         conferred by the preceding Sections J and K and this
         Section L, the Corporation may act by and through
         agents from time to time designated and appointed by
         the board of directors and the board of directors
         may delegate to any such agent any and all powers,
         duties and authorities conferred upon the
         Corporation or upon the board of directors by said
         Sections.


      TENTH:  The Corporation reserves the right
      to enter into, from time to time, investment advisory
      agreements providing for the management and
      supervision of the investments of the Corporation and
      the furnishing of advice to the Corporation with
      respect to the desirability of investing in,
      purchasing or selling securities or other property.
      Such agreement shall contain such other terms,
      provisions and conditions as the board of directors of
      the Corporation may deem advisable.



                            -10-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL  42 PAGE 558


       The Corporation may designate custodians, transfer
       agents, registrars and/or disbursing agents for the
       stock and assets of the Corporation and employ and
       fix the powers, rights, duties, responsibilities and
       compensation of each such custodian1 transfer agent,
       registrar and/or disbursing agent.

      ELEVENTH:  The Corporation reserves the right
      from time to time to make any amendment of these
      Articles of Incorporation now or hereafter authorized
      by law, including any amendment which alters the
      contract rights as expressly set forth in these
      Articles of Incorporation of any outstanding stock.
      The Corporation may take or authorize such action upon
      the concurrence of a majority of the aggregate number
      or the votes entitled to be cast thereon.

      Dated:  July 5, 1968.


                        /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
                        ----------------------
			Albert O. Nicholas

                        /s/ Richard S. Strong
                        ---------------------
			Richard S. Strong

                        /s/ David E. Leichtfus
                        ----------------------
                        David E. Leichtfuss

      
                                             Incorporators





                        -11-
<PAGE>
                        ROLL  42 PAGE 559




   STATE OF WISCONSIN
                        ss.
   COUNTY OF MILWAUKEE:


         I hereby certify that on July 5, 1968, before me,
         the subscriber, a Notary Public of the State of
         Wisconsin in and for the County of Milwaukee,
         personally appeared ALBERT 0. NICHOLAS, 
         RICHARD  S. STRONG and DAVID E. LEICHTFUSS,
         and severally acknowledged the foregoing Articles
         of Incorporation to be their act.

          WITNESS my hand and notarial seal this 5th day of
          July, A. D. 1968.
                                  /S/ Frank C. DeGuire
                                  --------------------------
                                    Frank C. DeGuire
                            Notary Public, State of Wisconsin 
                               My Commission is Permanent
                            -12-
<PAGE>                                     

Roll 43 Page 1312
		ARTICLES  OF AMENDMENT
                         OF
		NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.


    Albert 0. Nicholas, President and Richard S. Strong,
    Secretary of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., do hereby
    certify that the following Articles of Amendment were
    adopted by Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. on August 29th, 1968:

    1.   The Amendment adopted is as follows:

    RESOLVED: that paragraph A of Article Third of the
    Amended Articles of Incorporation of Nicholas Strong
    Fund, Inc., is hereby amended to read as follows:

    A.   To engage in the business of either a non-
    diversified or a diversified open-end management
    investment company."

    2.   The Amendment has been approved by all of the Board
    of Directors.

    3.   At the time of the adoption of said Amendment there
    were no shares of stock entitled to vote thereon.

    IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have executed these Articles of
    Amendment in the name of and on behalf of Nicholas
    Strong Fund, Inc. and have caused the corporate seal of
    the corporation to be affixed this 29th day of August, 1968.

                                /s/ Albert O. Nicholas
                                ----------------------------
                                Albert 0. Nicholas, President
Attest:
/s/ Richard S. Strong
- ---------------------
Richard S. Strong, Secretary

Corporate Seal

					 ROLL 43 PAGE 1313



STATE OF WISCONSIN )
                   ) ss.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY   )




       I hereby certify that on the 30 day of August, 1968,
       before me the subscriber, a Notary Public of the
       State of Wisconsin in and for Milwaukee County,
       personally appeared, Albert 0. Nicholas to me known
       to be the President of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc.,
       and acknowledged that he had signed the foregoing
       Articles of Amendment in the name of and on behalf of
       Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., as President of said
       Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc.

       Witness my hand and Notary Seal, this 30th day of
       August, 1968.
                                        /s/ John G. Vergeront
                                        ---------------------
					John G Vergeront

                                          ROLL  43 PAGE 1314
<PAGE>
                        CERTIFICATION


STATE OF WISCONSIN )
                   ) ss.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY  )  


       I do hereby certify that I am Secretary of Nicholas
       Strong Fund, Inc., that the Amendment set forth in
       the above Articles of Amendment was adopted by
       unanimous consent of the Board of Directors of
       Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. on August 29, 1968,
       pursuant to Section 58 of the Maryland General
       Corporation Law.



                          /S/ Richard S. Strong
                          ---------------------
                          Richard S. Strong


Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 30 day of  August 1968.
/s/
- ---------------------------------
Notary Public, State of Wisconsin

My commission: is permanent.
<PAGE>
Roll 48 PAGE 1584
		ARTICLES  OF AMENDMENT 
			        OF
                 NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.


          Albert 0. Nicholas, President, and Richard S.
          Strong, Secretary of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc.,
          do hereby certify that the following Articles of
          Amendment were adopted by Nicholas Strong Fund,
          Inc. on March 31, 1969:

          The amendments adopted are as follows:

          1.   RESOLVED,  that paragraph A of Article Third
          of the Articles of Incorporation of Nicholas
          Strong Fund, Inc. is hereby amended to read as
          follows:

               "A.   To engage in the business of a
               diversified, open-end management investment
               company, provided that the corporation shall
               not be required to dispose of any securities
               owned at the date of the adoption of this
               amendment by stockholders, in order to meet
               the tests of a diversified investment company
               under the Investment Company Act of 1940."

          2.   RESOLVED,  that the Articles of Incorporation
          of the corporation be amended by adding thereto a
          new Article Twelfth, to read as follows:

               "TWELFTH:   In the event of the dissolution
               of the corporation and in the event there are
               assets available for distribution to the
               stockholders, the trustees or receivers may
               make distributions of assets in cash or in
               kind or partly in cash and partly in kind,
               and it shall not be necessary for the
               trustees or receivers to give each
               stockholder a pro rata share of each asset,
               but the trustees or receivers may allocate
               certain assets to certain stockholders and
               certain assets to other stockholders, so long
               as there shall be distributed to each
               stockholder his pro rata share in market
               value of the assets of the corporation."
<PAGE>
     ROLL 48 PAGE 1585


          The amendments have been duly advised by all of
          the Board of Directors and approved unanimously by
          the stockholders.


          IN WITNESS WHEREOF,  we have executed these
          Articles of Amendment in the name of and on behalf
          of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. and have caused the
          corporate seal of the corporation to be affixed
          this 31 day of March, 1969.



                                /s/ Albert O. Nicholas
                                ----------------------
                                Albert O. Nicholas, President




   ATTEST:

     /s/ Richard S. Strong
     --------------------------
     Richard S. Strong,  Secretary


   (Corporate Seal)





   			  - 2-
<PAGE>
   			  ROLL 48 PAGE 1586





                        CERTIFICATION



     STATE OF WISCONSIN )
      			            )  ss. 
     MILWAUKEE COUNTY  )



            I do hereby certify that I am Secretary of
            Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., and that the
            Amendments set forth in the above Articles of
            Amendment were adopted by unanimous Consents of
            the Board of Directors and the stockholders of
            Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. on  March 28 & 31, 1969, and
            pursuant to Sections 47 and 58 of the Maryland
            General Corporation Law.





                                   /s/ Richard S. Strong
                                   ---------------------
                                   Richard S. Strong



     Subscribed and sworn to before me 
     this 31 day of  March, 1969.

     Notary Public, State of Wisconsin
     My Commission: Lifetime





                             -3-
<PAGE>
			     ROLL 48 PAGE 1587



STATE OF WISCONSIN )
                   ) ss.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY  )



        I hereby certify that on the  31  day of  March,
1969, before me the subscriber, a Notary Public of the State
of Wisconsin in and for Milwaukee County, personally appeared
Albert O. Nicholas to me known to be the President of
Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., and acknowledged that he had signed the
foregoing Articles of Amendment in the name of and on behalf of
Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., as President of said Nicholas
Strong Fund, Inc.


         Witness my hand and Notary Seal this 31 day of  March,
1969.



                                       /S/______________________

                             -4-
<PAGE>
ROLL 55 PAGE 303
               ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

                        OF

             NICHOLAS STRONG FUND,  INC.



        Albert 0. Nicholas, President, and Richard S. Strong, Secretary
 of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., do hereby certify that the following Articles
of Amendment were adopted by Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. on November 21,
1969:

                    1.   The amendment adopted is as
                         follows:

                         RESOLVED, that Article Fourth of
                         the Articles of Incorporation of
                         Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. is
                         hereby amended to read as follows:


                         "FOURTH:  The aggregate number of
                         shares which this Corporation shall
                         have authority to issue is Five
                         Million (5, 000, 000), consisting
                         of one class only, designated as
                         "Common Stock" of the par value of
                         One ($1.00) Dollar per share and of
                         the aggregate par value of Five
                         Million ($5, 000, 000.00) Dollars."

                    2.   The amendment has been duly advised
                         by the Board of  Directors and approved by the
                         shareholders.

                    3.   The total number of shares of all
                         classes of stock heretofore
                         authorized was Two Hundred Thousand
                         (200,000) shares of common stock,
                         $1.00 par value, with an aggregate
                         par value of Two Hundred Thousand
                         ($200,000.00) Dollars.
           
                    4.   The total number of shares of all
                    classes of stock is Five Million
                    (5,000,000) shares, of common stock,
                    $1.00 par value, with an aggregate par
                    value of Five Million ($5, 000, 000.00)
                    Dollars.
<PAGE>
     ROLL 55 PAGE 304

                 5.   The total number of shares issued and
                 outstanding and entitled to vote on said
                 amendment was  77, 973  shares of common
                 stock.  The total number of shares voting
                 in favor of the amendment was  61,003
                 shares of common stock.  The total
	     number of shares voting against the amendment was
          	     3,432.
                  IN WITNESS WHEREOF,  we have executed
                  these Articles of Amendment in the name of
                  and on behalf of Nicholas Strong Fund,
                  Inc. and have caused the corporate seal of
                  the corporation to be affixed this 21st
                  day of November, 1969.


                                       NICHOLAS STRONG FUND,  INC.

                                      /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
                                      -----------------------------
                                      Albert 0. Nicholas , President


Corporate Seal
			   ATTEST:


                                      /s/ Richard S. Strong
                                      ----------------------------
                                      Richard S. Strong, Secretary






			-2-
<PAGE>
   ROLL 55 PAGE  305

     STATE OF WISCONSIN )
                        ) ss
      MILWAUKEE COUNTY ) 

                  I hereby certify that on the 21st day of
                  November, 1969, before me, the subscriber,
                  a notary public of the State of Wisconsin,
                  in and for Milwaukee County, personally
                  appeared Albert 0. Nicholas, to me known
                  to be the President of Nicholas Strong
                  Fund, Inc. and acknowledged that he had
                  signed the foregoing Articles of Amendment
                  in the name of and on behalf of Nicholas
                  Strong Fund, Inc. as President of said
                  Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc.

                   Witness my hand and notary seal this 21st
                   day of November, 1969.


                              /S/_________________________


      


                             -3-
<PAGE>
     ROLL 55 PAGE  306



                                 CERTIFICATION


STATE OF WISCONSIN )
                  )  SS.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY )


                  I do hereby certify that I am Secretary of
                  Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. and that the
                  amendment set forth in the above Articles
                  of Amendment was adopted by unanimous
                  consent of the Board of Directors and by a
                  vote of  61,003 shares of the common stock of Nicholas
                  Strong Fund, Inc. out of a total of  77, 973 shares of
                  such common stock issued and outstanding and
                  entitled to vote on the record date set for said
                  meeting, October 20, 1969.






                                        /s/ Richard S. Strong
                                        ---------------------
                                        Richard S. Strong



Subscribed and sworn to before me 
this 21 day of November, 1969

/s/______________________
Notary Public, State of Wisconsin
My commission expires: Lifetime                                  

                             -4-
<PAGE>
                    ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT
                              OF
                 NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.



     Albert 0. Nicholas, President, and Richard S. Strong,
     Secretary of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., do hereby
     certify that the following Articles of Amendment were
     adopted by Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. on May 5, 1972:

     1.   The amendment adopted is as follows:

          RESOLVED, that Article Fourth of the Articles of
          Incorporation of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. is
          hereby amended to read as follows:

          "FOURTH:  The aggregate number of shares which
          this Corporation shall have authority to issue is
          Two Hundred Million (200,000,000) , consisting of
          one class only, designated as "Common Stock" of
          the par value of One ($1.00) Dollar per share and
          of the aggregate par value of Two Hundred
          Million ($200,000,000.00) Dollars."

     2.   The amendment has been duly advised by the Board
     of Directors and approved by the shareholders.

     3.   The total number of shares of all classes of stock
     heretofore authorized was Five Million (5,000,000)
     shares of common stock, $1.00 par value, with an
     aggregare par value of Five Million ($5,000,000.00)
     Dollars.

     4.   The total number of shares of all classes of stock
     as increased hereby is Two Hundred Million (200,000,000
     shares, of common stock, $1.00 par value, with an
     aggregate par value of Two Hundred Million
     ($200,000,000.00) Dollars.
<PAGE>
     5.   The total number of shares issued and outstanding
     and entitled to vote on said amendment was 3,957,196
     shares of common stock.  The total number of shares
     voting in favor of the amendment was 2,142,045 shares
     of common stock.  The total number of shares voting
     against the amendment was 488,398.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have executed these Articles of
     Amendment in the name of and on behalf of Nicholas
     Strong Fund, Inc. and have caused the corporate seal of
     the corporation to be affixed this 5th day of May, 1972.



    		             NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.  

    (Corporate Seal)           /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
                               ----------------------------- 
                               Albert O. Nicholas, President
																									    


                                     ATTEST:


                                /s/ Richard S. Strong
                                ----------------------------
                                Richard S. Strong, Secretary  
<PAGE>
STATE OF WISCONSIN )
                  )  ss
MILWAUKEE COUNTY  )                              


     I hereby certify that on the 5th day of May, 1972,
     before me, the subscriber, a notary public of the State
     of Wisconsin, in and for Milwaukee County, personally
     appeared Albert 0. Nicholas, to me known to be the
     President of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. and
     acknowledged that he had signed the foregoing Articles
     of Amendment in the name of and on behalf of Nicholas
     Strong Fund, Inc. as President of said Nicholas Strong
     Fund, Inc.

     Witness my hand and notary seal this 5th day of May, 1972.

                                         /S/_____________________

                         CERTIFICATION

<PAGE>

STATE OF WISCONSIN )
                  ) ss
MILWAUKEE COUNTY )


     I do hereby certify that I am Secretary of Nicholas
     Strong Fund, Inc. and that the amendment set forth in
     the above Articles of Amendment was unanimously adopted
     by the Board of Directors at a meeting duly called and
     held on March 24, 1972 and by a vote of  2,142,045
     shares of the common stock of Nicholas Strong Fund,
     Inc. out of a total of  3,957,196 shares of such common
     stock issued and outstanding and entitled to vote on
     April 13, 1972, being the record date set for a Special
     Meeting held May 5, 1972.



                               /S/ Richard S. Strong
                               ---------------------
                               Richard S. Strong



Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 5th day of May, 1972.
/s/___________________________
Notary  Public, State of Wisconsin
My commission expires: lifetime                             

<PAGE>
                         [State Seal]

                      STATE OF MARYLAND


        STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION

                   301 WEST PRESTON STREET

                      BALTIMORE 21201






   THIS IS TO CERTIFY THAT the within instrument is a true copy of the 

                   ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

                           OF

                 NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.






as approved and received for record by the State Department
of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland,   May 11, 1972
 at 8:30  o'clock A.M.

   AS WITNESS my hand and official seal of the said
   Department at Baltimore this 19th day of June, 1972.



                                  /S/ Richard H. Keller
                                  --------------------------
                                  RICHARD H. KELLER,
                                  SUPERVISOR-CHARTER DIVISION

<PAGE>

                               STATE OF MARYLAND
                  STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION
                           301 WEST PRESTON STREET                             
                          BALTIMORE,  MARYLAND 21201






       You are advised that the  ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

				OF
   
                        NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.




          have been received and approved by the STATE
          DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION OF MARYLAND
          this  11th day of May, 1972, at 8:30 A.M. and will be recorded.

                                 STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION 
                                 OF MARYLAND


                                  /s/__________________


<PAGE>


ROLL 97 PAGE 1183



                   ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

                            OF

                 NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.



     Albert 0. Nicholas, President, and Thomas J. Saeger,
     Secretary of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc., do hereby
     certify that the following Articles of Amendment were
     adopted by Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. on June 5, 1974:

     1.   The Amendment adopted is as follows:

               RESOLVED, that the Article First of the
               Articles of Incorporation be and the same is
               hereby amended to read as follows:

               "First.   The name of the Corporation (which
               is hereinafter called the 'Corporation') is
               NICHOLAS FUND, INC."

     2.   The Amendment has been duly advised by the Board
          of Directors and approved by the Shareholders.

     3.   The total number of shares issued and outstanding
          and entitled to vote on said Amendment was
          3,268,045 shares of common stock.  The total
          number of shares voting in favor of the Amendment
          was 1,986,632 shares of common stock.  The total
          number of shares voting against the Amendment was
          42,157 shares of common stock.  Article Eleventh
          of the Articles of Incorporation authorize
          Amendments thereto with the approval of a majority
          of the aggregate number of shares entitled to
          vote.
<PAGE>
ROLL 97 PAGE 1184

          IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have executed these
          Articles of Amendment in the name of and on behalf
          of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. and have caused the
          corporate seal of the corporation to be affixed
          this 5th day of July, 1974.

                                  NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC. 
               
                        /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
                        ----------------------------
                        Albert O. Nicholas, President
		
			ATTEST:

                        /s/ Thomas J. Saeger
                        ------------------------------
                        Thomas J. Saeger, Secretary

Corporate Seal

<PAGE>
ROLL 97 PAGE 1185


State of Wisconsin )
                  )  SS
Milwaukee County )



     I hereby certify that on the 5th day of July, 1974
     before me the subscriber, a Notary Public of the State
     of Wisconsin, personally appeared Albert 0. Nicholas,
     to me known to be the President of Nicholas Strong
     Fund, Inc. and acknowledges that he had signed the
     foregoing Articles of Amendment in the name of and on
     behalf of Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc. as President of
     said Nicholas Strong Fund, Inc.

     Witness my hand and Notary seal the 5th day of July,
     1974.
                                /S/_______________________

<PAGE>
ROLL 97 PAGE 1186

     State of Wisconsin )
                       ) ss
     Milwaukee County )



          I do hereby certify I am the Secretary of Nicholas
          Strong Fund, Inc. and that the Amendment set forth
          in the above Articles of Amendment was unanimously
          adopted by the Board of Directors at a meeting
          duly called and held on April 1, 1974, and by a vote
          of 1,986,632 shares of such common stock issued
          and outstanding and entitled to vote on April 26, 1974,
          being the record date set for the annual meeting of
          shareholders held June 5, 1974.



                                   /s/ Thomas J. Saeger
                                   --------------------------
                                   Thomas J. Saeger, Secretary

<PAGE>

          Subscribed and sworn to before me
          this 5th day of July, 1974.


          /s/________________________

          Notary Public,
          State of Wisconsin
          My Cornmission is permanent

Notary Seal
<PAGE>                                                        A 86208

	    MARYLAND
                State Department of Assessments and Taxation
 				 William L Shoemaker Director




                         301 WEST PRESTON STREET
                       BALTIMORE, MARYLAND   21201



YOU ARE ADVISED THAT THE   ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

                                  OF

                          NICHOLAS FUND, INC.

                   


HAVE BEEN RECEIVED AND APPROVED BY THE STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS
AND TAXATION THIS 15th DAY OF JUNE, 1979 at 8:30 a.m. AND WILL BE RECORDED.

  STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION OF MARYLAND



BY: /S/______________________________________





      


  301 West Preston Street, Baltimore. Maryland 21201 / Phone

<PAGE>
                        ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

                                  OF

                        NICHOLAS FUND, INC.


     Albert 0. Nicholas, President, and Thomas J. Saeger,
     Secretary of Nicholas Fund, Inc., do hereby certify
     that the following Articles of Amendment were adopted
     by Nicholas Fund, Inc. on June 6, 1979:

     1.   The amendment adopted is as follows:

          RESOLVED, that Article Fourth of the Articles of
          Incorporation of Nicholas Fund, Inc. is hereby
          amended to read as follows:

          "FOURTH:  The aggregate number of shares which
          this Corporation shall have authority to issue is
          Two Hundred Million (200,000,000), consisting of
          one class only, designated as "Common Stock" of
          the par value of One-half ($.50) Dollar per share
          and of the aggregate par value of  One Hundred
          Million ($100,000,000.00) Dollars."

     2.   The amendment has been duly advised by the Board
     of Directors and approved by the shareholders.

     3.   The amendment does not result in a reduction of
     stated capital because in connection with the amendment
     one additional share of common stock of the Corporation
     is to be issued for each share outstanding prior to the
     amendment.  The stated capital therefore remains
     constant.
<PAGE>
     4.   The total number of shares issued and outstanding
     and entitled to vote on said amendment was 1,810,716
     shares of common stock.  The total number of shares
     voting in favor of the amendment was 1,179,530 shares of common stock.  The
     total number of shares voting against the amendment was 41,647.
	
     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have executed these Articles of
     Amendment in the name of and on behalf of Nicholas
     Fund, Inc. aud have caused the corporate seal of the
     corporation to be affixed this 7th day of June, 1979.

			 NICHOLAS FUND, INC.

(Corporate Seal)        /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
                        -----------------------------        
			Albert O. Nicholas, President
 
                           	ATTEST:



                        /s/ Thomas J. Saeger
                        --------------------------
 			Thomas J. Saeger, Secretary


<PAGE>

                             -2-




State of Wisconsin )
                 )  SS                       
Milwaukee County)                              


     I hereby certify that on the 7th day of June, 1979
     before me the subscriber, a Notary Public of the State
     of Wisconsin, personally appeared Albert 0. Nicholas,
     to rne known to be the President of Nicholas Fund, Inc.
     and acknowledged that he had signed the foregoing
     Articles of Amendment in the name of and on behalf of
     Nicholas Fund, Inc. as President of said Nicholas Fund,
     Inc.

     Witness my hand and Notary seal the 7th day of June, 1979.
                                /S/______________________

                        VERIFICATION

State of Wisconsin   )
                   )   ss
Milwaukee County  )


     I do hereby certify I am the Secretary of Nicholas Fund,
     Inc. and that the Amendment set forth in the above
     Articles of Amendment was unanimously recommended by
     the Board of Directors at a meeting duly called and
     held on March 27, 1979, and approved on June 6, 1979 by
     a vote of 1,179,530 shares of such common stock issued
     and outstanding and entitled to vote on April 18, 1979,
     being the record date set for the annual meeting of
     shareholders held June 6, 1979.



                              Thomas J. Saeger
                              ___________________________
                              Thomas J. Saeger, Secretary




Subscirbed and sworn to before me
this 7th day of June, 1979.

/s/_________________
Notary Public, State of Wisconsin
My Cornmission is permanent

<PAGE>
 ROLL 140 PAGE 1448


                    ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

                              OF

                     NICHOLAS FUND, INC.



     Albert O. Nicholas, President, and Thomas J. Saeger,
     Secretary of Nicholas Fund, Inc., do hereby certify
     that the following Articles of Amendment were adopted
     by Nicholas Fund, Inc. on June 6, 1979:

     1.   The amendment adopted is as follows:

          RESOLVED, that Article Fourth of the Articles of
          Incorporation of Nicholas Fund, Inc. is hereby
          amended to read as follows:

          "FOURTH:  The aggregate number of shares which
          this Corporation shall have authority to issue is
          Two Hundred Million (200,000,000), consisting of
          one class only, designated as 'Common Stock' of
          the par value of One-half ($.50) Dollar per share
          and of the aggregate par value of One Hundred
          Million ($100,000,000.00) Dollars."

     2.   The amendment has been duly advised by the Board
     of Directors and approved by the shareholders.

     3.   The amendment does not result in a reduction of
     stated capital because in connection with the amendment
     one additional share of common stock of the Corporation
     is to be issued for each share outstanding prior to the
     amendment.  The stated capital therefore remains
     constant.

     4.   The total number of shares issued and outstanding
     and entitled to vote on said amendment was 1,810,716
     shares of common stock.  The total number of shares
     voting in favor of the
<PAGE>

  ROLL 140 PAGE 1449


     amendment was 1,179,530 shares of common stock.  The
     total number of shares voting against the amendment was
     41,647.

          IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have executed these
          Articles of Amendment in the name of and on behalf
          of Nicholas Fund, Inc. and have caused the
          corporate seal of the corporation to be affixed
          this 7th day of June, 1979.

    			NICHOLAS FUND, INC.
                        Albert O. Nicholas
                        ____________________________
    			Albert O. Nicholas, President
Corporate Seal
  		            ATTEST:

                        Thomas J. Saeger
                        __________________________
     			Thomas J. Saeger, Secretary


                             -2-
<PAGE>
ROLL 140 PAGE 145O


State of Wisconsin   )
                    )SS
Milwaukee County  )



     I hereby certify that on the 7th day of June, 1979
     before me the subscriber, a Notary Public of the State
     of Wisconsin, personally appeared Albert 0. Nicholas,
     to me known to be the President of Nicholas Fund, Inc.
     and acknowledged that he had signed the foregoing
     Articles of Amendment in the name of and on behalf of
     Nicholas Fund, Inc. as President of said Nicholas Fund,
     Inc.

     Witness my hand and Notary seal the 7th day of June,
     1979.


                                /S/_______________________


<PAGE>
 ROLL 140 PAGE 1451


                        VERIFICATION


State of Wisconsin   )
                    ) SS
Milwaukee County  )
 


           I do hereby certify I am the Secretary of Nicholas
           Fund, Inc. and that the Amendment set forth in
           the above Articles of Amendment was unanimously
           recommended by the Board of Directors at a
           meeting duly called and held on March 27, 1979,
           and approved on June 6, 1979 by a vote of
           1,179,530 shares of such common stock issued and
           outstanding and entitled to vote on April 18,
           1979, being the record date set for the annual
           meeting of shareholders held June 6, 1979.


                                   /S/ Thomas J. Saeger
                                   --------------------------
                                   Thomas J. Saeger, Secretary

Subscirbed and sworn to before me
this 7th day of June,  1979.
/S/__________________________
Notary Public, State of Wisconsin
My Commission is permanent




             BY- LAWS OF NICHOLAS STRONG FUND, INC.

                            ARTICLE I



                     Shareholders' Meetings



      SECTION  1. PLACE OF MEETINGS. All meetings of shareholders
shall be held at 312 East Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

      SECTION  2.  ANNUAL MEETING.  The annual meeting  of  share
holders for the election of directors and the transaction of such
other  business as may properly come before it shall be  held  at
10:00  A. M., Milwaukee time, on the third Wednesday in  July  of
each  year, commencing in the year 1969, if not a legal  holiday,
and  if  a legal holiday, then on the next secular day following.
Any  business of the corporation may be transacted at the  annual
meeting  without  being specifically designated  in  the  notice,
except such business as is specifically required by statute to be
stated in the notice.

      SECTION 3. SPECIAL MEETINGS. Special meetings of the  share
holders may be called by the board of directors, the president, a
vice  president,  or the secretary, and shall be  called  by  the
secretary  upon  the  written request of the  holders  of  shares
entitled  to  not less than 25% of all the votes entitled  to  be
cast  at  such meeting. Such request shall state the  purpose  or
purposes of such meeting and the matters proposed to be acted  on
thereat.  The  secretary shall inform such  shareholders  of  the
reasonably estimated cost of preparing and mailing such notice of
the  meeting, and upon payment to the corporation of  such  costs
the  secretary shall give notice stating the purpose or  purposes
of  the  meeting  to all shareholders entitled to  vote  at  such
meeting.  No special meeting need be called upon the  request  of
the  holders  of shares entitled to cast less than a majority  of
all  votes  entitled to be cast at such meeting, to consider  any
matter which is substantially the same as a matter voted upon  at
any special meeting of the shareholders held during the preceding
twelve months. The business transacted at any special meeting  of
shareholders  shall  be  limited to the purposes  stated  in  the
notice.

      SECTION  4. NOTICE OF MEETING. Not less than ten  days  nor
more  than  ninety  days before the date of  every  shareholders'
meeting, the secretary shall give to each shareholder entitled to
vote  at such meeting, written or printed notice stating the time
and  place  of the meeting, and in the case of a special  meeting
the  purpose or purposes for which the meeting is called,  either
by mail or by presenting it to him personally or by leaving it at
his  residence or place of business. If mailed, such notice shall
be  deemed  to be given when deposited in the United States  mail
addressed  to  the shareholder at his post office address  as  it
appears  on the records of the corporation, with postage  thereon
prepaid.

      SECTION  5.  QUORUM.  At any meeting  of  shareholders  the
presence in person or by proxy of shareholders entitled to cast a
majority of the votes thereat shall constitute a quorum; but this
section  shall  not effect any requirement under the  statute  or
under the charter for the vote necessary for the adoption of  any
measure.   If  at  any  meeting  a  quorum  is  not  present   or
represented,  the  chairman of the meeting of the  holders  of  a
majority  of  the  stock present or represented may  adjourn  the
meeting from time to time, without notice other than announcement
at the meeting, until a quorum is present or represented. At such
adjourned  meeting at which a quorum is present  or  represented,
any  business may be transacted which might have been  transacted
at the meeting as originally called.

      SECTION  6.  STOCK ENTITLED TO VOTE. Each issued  share  of
stock  shall  be entitled to vote at any meeting of  shareholders
except (i) shares as to which any installment payable thereon  is
overdue  and  unpaid,  and (ii) shares owned,  other  than  in  a
fiduciary  capacity, by the corporation or by another corporation
in which the corporation owns shares entitled to more than 50% of
the  votes entitled to be cast by all shares outstanding of  such
corporation.

      SECTION 7. VOTING. Each outstanding share of stock entitled
to  vote  at a meeting of shareholders shall be entitled  to  one
vote  on  each  matter submitted to a vote. In all elections  for
directors  every  shareholder shall have the right  to  vote  the
shares  owned of record by him for as many persons as  there  are
directors to be elected.

A  shareholder may vote the shares owned of record by him  either
in  person or by proxy executed in writing by the shareholder  or
by his duly authorized attorney-in-fact.  No proxy shall be valid
after  eleven months from its date unless otherwise  provided  in
the proxy.  At all meetings of shareholders, unless the voting is
conducted  by inspectors, all questions relating to the qualifica
tion  of  voters, the validity of proxies and the  acceptance  or
rejection  of  votes  shall be decided by  the  chairman  of  the
meeting.   A  majority of the votes cast at a  meeting  of  share
holders,  duly called and at which a quorum is present, shall  be
sufficient  to  take or authorize any action which  may  properly
come  before the meeting, unless a greater number is required  by
the  statute or by the charter.  No vote upon any matter,  except
the  election of directors and except in those cases where a vote
is required under the provisions of the Investment Company Act of
1940,  need  be  by ballot unless demanded by the holders  of  at
least  10% of the shares of stock present or represented  at  the
meeting.

       SECTION  8.   INFORMAL  ACTION.  Any  action  required  or
permitted to be taken at any meeting of shareholders may be taken
without  a  meeting, if a consent in writing, setting forth  such
action, is signed by all the shareholders entitled to vote on the
subject matter thereof and such consent is filed with the records
of the corporation.



                           ARTICLE II
                                
                            DIRECTORS


        SECTION  1.   NUMBER.   The number of  directors  of  the
corporation shall be three.  By vote of a majority of the  entire
board  of directors, the number of directors fixed by the charter
or  by  these by-laws may be increased or decreased from time  to
time to not exceeding fifteen nor less than three, but the tenure
of  office of a director shall not be affected by any decrease in
the number of directors so made by the board.

        SECTION 2.  ELECTION AND QUALIFICATION.   Until the first
annual  meeting  of  shareholders or until  successors  are  duly
elected and qualify, the board of directors shall consist of  the
persons  named  as  such in the charter.   At  the  first  annual
meeting  of  shareholders and at each annual meeting  thereafter,
the  shareholders shall elect directors to hold office until  the
next  annual  meeting or until their successors are  elected  and
qualify.   A  director need not be a shareholder of  the  corpora
tion, but must be eligible to serve as a director of a registered
investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Each
director  but  one may be an affiliated person of the  investment
adviser  of the corporation, as defined in the Investment Company
Act of 1940

        SECTION  3. VACANCIES. Any vacancy on the board of  direc
tors  occurring  between shareholders' meetings  called  for  the
purpose of electing directors may be filled, if immediately after
filling  any  such vacancy at least two-thirds of  the  directors
then holding office shall have been elected to such office at  an
annual  or  special  meeting of shareholders,  in  the  following
manner:  (i) for a vacancy occurring other than by reason  of  an
increase in directors, by a majority of the remaining members  of
the board, although such majority is less than a quorum; (ii) for
a  vacancy  occurring by reason of an increase in the  number  of
directors,  by  action  of a majority  of  the  entire  board.  A
director elected by the board to fill a vacancy shall be  elected
to  hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders  or
until his successor is elected and qualifies. If by reason of the
death,  disqualification or bona fide resignation of any director
or  directors,  there is no member of the board  who  is  not  an
affiliated  person of the investment adviser of the  corporation,
as  defined  in the Investment Company Act of 1940, such  vacancy
shall  be  filled within thirty days if it may be filled  by  the
board, or within sixty days if a vote of shareholders is required
to  fill  such vacancy; provided that such vacancy may be  filled
within  such  longer period as the Securities  and  Exchange  Com
mission  may  prescribe, by rules and regulations  upon  its  own
motion  or  by order upon application. In the event that  at  any
time  less than a majority of the directors were elected  by  the
shareholders,  the board or proper officer shall forthwith  cause
to  be held as promptly as possible and in any event within sixty
days  a  meeting  of  shareholders for the  purpose  of  electing
directors to fill any existing vacancies in the board unless  the
Securities  and  Exchange Commission shall by order  extend  such
period.

        SECTION 4. POWERS. The business and affairs of the corpor
ation  shall  be  managed by the board of  directors,  which  may
exercise all of the powers of the corporation, except such as are
by  law  or by the charter or by these by-laws conferred upon  or
reserved to the shareholders.

        SECTION 5. REMOVAL. At any meeting of shareholders,  duly
called and at which a quorum is present, the shareholders may, by
the  affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of  the  votes
entitled  to  be cast thereon, remove any director  or  directors
from  office and may elect a successor or successors to fill  any
resulting vacancies for the unexpired terms of removed directors.
        
        SECTION  6. PLACE OF MEETINGS. Meetings of the  board  of
directors, regular or special, may be held at any place in or out
of  the  State of Maryland as the board may from time to time  de
termine or as may be specified in the call of any meeting.

        SECTION  7.  FIRST  MEETING OF NEWLY ELECTED  BOARD.  The
first  meeting of each newly elected board of directors shall  be
held  without call or notice immediately after and  at  the  same
general place as the annual meeting of the shareholders, for  the
purpose   of   organizing  the  board,  electing   officers   and
transacting any other business that may properly come before  the
meeting.

        SECTION  8.  REGULAR MEETINGS. Regular  meetings  of  the
board  of  directors may be held without notice at such time  and
place as shall from time to time be determined by the board.

        SECTION  9.  SPECIAL MEETINGS. Special  meetings  of  the
board of directors may be called at any time either by the board,
the president, a vice president or a majority of the directors in
writing  with  or  without a meeting. Notice of special  meetings
shall either be mailed by the secretary to each director at least
three  days  before the meeting or shall be given  personally  or
telegraphed to each director at least one day before the  meeting
Such  notice  shall set forth the time and place of such  meeting
but  need  not,  unless  otherwise required  by  law,  state  the
purposes of the meeting.

        SECTION 10. QUORUM AND VOTE REQUIRED FOR ACTION.  At  all
meetings of the board of directors a majority of the entire board
shall  constitute a quorum for the transaction of  business,  and
the  action of a majority of the directors present at any meeting
at  which a quorum is present shall be the action of the board of
directors  unless  the  concurrence of a  greater  proportion  is
required   for   such  action  by  statute,   the   articles   of
incorporation or these by-laws. If at any meeting a quorum is not
present,  a  majority of the directors present  may  adjourn  the
meeting from time to time, without notice other than announcement
at the meeting, until a quorum is present.

        SECTION  11.  INFORMAL  ACTION  Any  action  required  or
permitted  to  be taken at any meeting of the board of  directors
may  be  taken  without a meeting, if a written consent  to  such
action  is  signed by all members of the board and  such  written
consent is filed with the minutes of proceedings of the board.

                           ARTICLE III
                                
                     OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES


        SECTION  1.  ELECTION  AND QUALIFICATION.  At  the  first
meeting  of each newly elected board of directors there shall  be
elected a president, one or more vice presidents, a secretary and
a  treasurer.  The  board may also elect one  or  more  assistant
secretaries  and  assistant treasurers.  No  officer  except  the
president  need be a director. Two or more offices, except  those
of  president and vice president, may be held by the same  person
but   no  officer  shall  execute,  acknowledge  or  verify   any
instrument  in  more  than one capacity, if  such  instrument  is
required  by  law,  charter  or these  by-laws  to  be  executed,
acknowledged  or verified by two or more officers.  Each  officer
must  be  eligible  to  serve  as  an  officer  of  a  registered
investment  company  under the Investment Company  Act  of  1940.
Nothing  herein shall preclude the employment of other  employees
or  agents by the corporation from time to time without action by
the board.

        SECTION  2.   TERM, REMOVAL AND VACANCIES.  The  officers
shall be elected to serve until the next first meeting of a newly
elected board of directors and until their successors are elected
and  qualify.  Any officer may be removed by the board,  with  or
without cause, whenever in its judgment the best interest of  the
corporation  will  be served thereby, but such removal  shall  be
without  prejudice  to the contractual rights,  if  any,  of  the
person so removed. A vacancy in any office shall be filled by the
board for the unexpired term.

        SECTION  3.  BONDING. Each officer and  employee  of  the
corporation  who  singly or jointly with  others  has  access  to
securities  or  funds  of  the corporation,  either  directly  or
through  authority to draw upon such funds or to direct generally
the  disposition  of  such  securities shall  be  bonded  against
larceny  and  embezzlement  by  a  reputable  fidelity  insurance
company  authorized to do business in Wisconsin. Each such  bond,
which  may be in the form of an individual bond or a schedule  or
blanket  bond covering all such officers and employees, shall  be
in  such  form and for such amount (determined at least annually)
as  the board of directors shall determine in compliance with the
requirements of Section 17(g) the Investment Company Act of  1940
and  the  rules,  regulations or orders  of  the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission thereunder.
        
        SECTION  4.  PRESIDENT.  The  president  shall   be   the
principal executive officer of the corporation  He shall  preside
at  all  meetings of the shareholders and directors, have general
and  active  management of the business of the  corporation,  see
that  all  orders and resolutions of the board of  directors  are
carried  into effect, and execute in the name of the  corporation
all  authorized instruments of the corporation, except where  the
signing  shall be expressly delegated by the board to some  other
officer or agent of the corporation.

        SECTION  5. VICE PRESIDENTS.  The vice president,  or  if
there  be  more  than  one,  the vice  presidents  in  the  order
determined  by the board of directors, shall, in the  absence  or
disability of the president, perform the duties and exercise  the
powers  of  the president, and shall have such other  duties  and
powers  as  the  board  may from time to time  prescribe  or  the
president delegate.

        SECTION  6.  SECRETARY  AND  ASSISTANT  SECRETARIES.  The
secretary shall give notice of, attend and record the minutes  of
meetings  of shareholders and directors, keep the corporate  seal
and,  when  authorized  by  the board,  affix  the  same  to  any
instrument  requiring it, attesting to the same by his signature,
and shall have such further duties and powers as are incident  to
his  office or as the board may from time to time prescribe.  The
assistant  secretary, if any, or if there be more  than  one  the
assistant secretaries in the order determined by the board, shall
in the absence or disability of the secretary, perform the duties
and  exercise  the powers of the secretary, and shall  have  such
other  duties  and  powers as the board may  from  time  to  time
prescribe or the secretary delegate.

        SECTION  7.  TREASURER  AND  ASSISTANT  TREASURERS.   The
treasurer shall be the principal financial and accounting officer
of  the corporation. He shall be responsible for the custody  and
supervision of the corporation's books of account and  subsidiary
accounting records, and shall have such further duties and powers
as  are  incident to his office or as the board of directors  may
from time to time prescribe. The assistant treasurer, if any,  or
if  there  be more than on the assistant treasurers in the  order
determined  by the board of directors, shall, in the  absence  or
disability of the treasurer, perform the duties and exercise  the
powers  of  the treasurer, and shall have such other  duties  and
powers  as  the  board  may from time to time  prescribe  or  the
treasurer delegate.

                           ARTlCLE IV
                                
                  RESTRICTIONS ON COMPENSATION,
                  TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENTS


        SECTION  1. SALARY AND EXPENSES. Directors, officers  and
employees as such shall not receive any salary for their services
or reimbursement for expenses from the corporation.

        SECTION  2.  COMPENSATION AND PROFIT FROM  PURCHASES  AND
SALES. No affiliated person of the corporation, as defined in the
Investment  Company  Act of 1940, or affiliated  person  of  such
person,  shall, except as permitted by Section 17(e) of the  Act,
or  the  rules,  regulations  or orders  of  the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission thereunder, (i) acting as agent, accept  from
any  source  any  compensation for the purchase or  sale  of  any
property  or  securities  to  or  for  the  corporation  or   any
controlled company of the corporation, as defined in the Act,  or
(ii)   receive  from  any  source  a  commission,  fee  or  other
remuneration  for  effecting  such  transaction.  The  investment
adviser   of  the  corporation  shall  not  profit  directly   or
indirectly from sales of securities to or from the corporation.

        SECTION  3.   TRANSACTIONS WITH  AFFILIATED  PERSONS.  No
affiliated  person  of  the  corporation,  as  defined   in   the
Investment  Company  Act of 1940, or affiliated  person  of  such
person shall knowingly (i) sell any security or other property to
the  corporation or to any company controlled by the corporation,
as  defined in the Act, except shares of stock of the corporation
or  securities of which such person is the issuer and  which  are
part  of  a  general offering to the holders of a  class  of  its
securities,  (ii) purchase from the corporation or any  such  con
trolled  company any security or property, other than  shares  of
stock  of the corporation, (iii) acting as principal, effect  any
transaction in which the corporation or controlled company  is  a
joint   or  joint  and  several  participant  with  such  person;
provided,  however,  that this section shall  not  apply  to  any
transaction permitted by Sections 17 (b), (c) or (d) of  the  Act
or  the  rules,  regulations  or orders  of  the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission thereunder.

        SECTION  4.  INVESTMENT ADVISER.  The  corporation  shall
employ  only  one investment adviser, which employment  shall  be
pursuant to a written agreement in accordance with Section 15  of
the Investment Company Act of 1940.
        
        SECTION  5. OWNERSHIP OF STOCK BY OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.
No officer or director shall take a long or short position in the
stock  of  the corporation, provided, however, that  officers  or
directors  may  purchase stock of the corporation for  investment
purposes at the same price as that available to the public at the
time   of   purchase,   or  in  connection  with   the   original
capitalization of the corporation.

        SECTION 6. PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS. The corporation  shall
not purchase, acquire or retain:

   (a)  any  security  of  an issuer, any of  whose  officers  or
directors  is an officer, director or investment adviser  of  the
corporation  or  affiliated person as defined in  the  Investment
Company Act of 1940, of such investment adviser;


   (b) any security issued by or any interest in the business  of
an   investment  company,  insurance  company,  broker,   dealer,
underwriter  or  investment adviser, except  as  permitted  under
Sections  12 (d) (e) and (g) of the Act or the rules, regulations
or orders of the Securities and Exchange Commission thereunder;

   (c)  voting  securities of another issuer, the acquisition  or
retention  of which would result in circular or cross  ownership,
as defined in Section 20 (c) of the Act, or

   (d)  during  the  existence  of any  underwriting  or  selling
syndicate,  any  security, except stock  of  the  corporation,  a
principal   underwriter  of  which  is  an   officer,   director,
investment adviser or employee of the corporation, or is a person
(other  than a company of the character described in  Section  12
(d)  (3)  (A)  and  (B) of the Act) of which  any  such  officer,
director, investment adviser or employee is an affiliated person,
as  defined  in  the Act, unless in acquiring such  security  the
corporation is itself acting as a principal underwriter  for  the
issue,  except  as  the  Securities and Exchange  Commission,  by
rules, regulations or order shall permit.

        SECTION  7.  GENERAL BUSINESS AND INVESTMENT  ACTIVITIES.
The corporation shall not:

    (a)       purchase any security on margin, except such short-
term credits as are necessary for the clearance of transactions;

   (b)  participate on a joint or joint and several basis in  any
trading account in securities;

   (c) effect a short sale of any security;

   (d)  act as an underwriter in the distribution of any security
other than stock of the corporation;

   (e) make loans to other persons, except for the purchase of  a
portion of an issue of publicly distributed debt securities;

   (f)  borrow  money or issue senior securities  except  to  the
extent  permitted  under  Sections 18(f),  (g)  and  (h)  of  the
Investment Company Act of 1940, provided that the amount of money
that  may  be  borrowed  shall not exceed  that  which  would  be
permitted under the margin requirements of the Board of Governors
of  the  Federal  Reserve System, in force at  the  time  of  the
borrowing,  as  specified  by  Regulation  T,  or  any  amendment
thereto;
   
   (g)  purchase or sell real estate or interests in real estate,
but the corporation may purchase the securities of a
real estate investment trust, provided that not more than 10%  in
value of the corporation's assets will be so invested;

   (h)  issue  any warrant or right to subscribe to  or  purchase
stock  of  the  corporation, except in the form  of  warrants  or
rights  to subscribed expiring not later than one hundred  twenty
days  after their issuance and issued exclusively and ratably  to
its  stockholders,  or any voting trust certificate  relating  to
stock of the corporation;

   (i)  deviate  from  its policy in respect to concentration  of
investments in any particular industry or group of industries  as
reported  in  its  registration statement  under  the  Investment
Company  Act  of  1940,  or deviate from any  fundamental  policy
recited in such registration statement pursuant to Section 8  (b)
of the Investment Company Act of 1940;

   (j) change the nature of its business so as to cease to be  an
investment company;

   (k)  charge  any  sales load or commission in connection  with
the sale or redemption of any stock of the corporation.

                            ARTICLE V
                                
              STOCK CERTIFICATES AND TRANSFER BOOKS



        SECTION  1.   CERTIFICATES.   Each shareholder  shall  be
entitled  to a certificate or certificates, in such form  as  the
board  of directors shall from time to time approve, representing
and  certifying the number of whole shares of stock owned by  him
in  the  corporation.  Each certificate shall be signed, manually
or  by  facsimile signature by the president or a vice president,
countersigned, manually or by facsimile signature by  either  the
secretary, an assistant secretary, the treasurer or an  assistant
treasurer,  and  sealed  with  the corporate  seal  or  facsimile
thereof.  In case any officer who has signed any certificate,  or
whose  facsimile  signature appears  thereon,  ceases  to  be  an
officer of the corporation before the certificate is issued,  the
certificate may nevertheless be issued with the same effect as if
the  officer had not ceased to be such officer as of the date  of
its   issue.   Any  certificate  representing  stock   which   is
restricted or limited as to transferability shall have a  summary
of  such  restriction on limitation plainly stated  thereon.   No
certificate  shall be issued for any share of  stock  until  such
share is fully paid.

        SECTION  2.  LOST CERTIFICATES.   The board of  directors
may  direct  a  new certificate or certificates to be  issued  in
place  of  any certificate or certificates theretofore issued  by
the  corporation alleged to have been lost, stolen, destroyed  or
mutilated (or may delegate such authority to one or more officers
of  the corporation) upon the making of an affidavit of that fact
by  the  person  claiming the certificate  to  be  lost,  stolen,
destroyed or mutilated.  The board or such officer may, in its or
his  discretion,  require the owner of such  certificate  or  his
legal  representative to give bond with sufficient surety to  the
corporation to indemnify it against any loss or claim  which  may
arise  or expense which may be incurred by reason of the issuance
of a new certificate.

        SECTION  3. STOCK LEDGER.  The corporation shall maintain
at  its  office in Milwaukee, Wisconsin3 or at the office of  its
principal transfer agent, if any, an original or duplicate  stock
ledger containing the names and addresses of all shareholders and
the number of shares held by each shareholder.

        SECTION  4.  REGISTERED  SHAREHOLDERS.   The  corporation
shall  be  entitled to recognize the exclusive right of a  person
registered on its books as such, as the owner of shares  for  all
purposes,  and shall not be bound to recognize any  equitable  or
other  claim  to or interest in such shares on the  part  of  any
other  person,  whether  or not it shall have  express  or  other
notice  thereof,  except as otherwise provided  by  the  laws  of
Maryland

        SECTION  5. TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR. The corporation
may  maintain one or more transfer offices or agencies,  each  in
charge  of a transfer agent designated by the board of directors,
where   the  shares  of  stock  of  the  corporation   shall   be
transferable.   The  corporation may also maintain  one  or  more
registry offices, each in charge of a registrar designated by the
board3 where such shares of stock shall be registered.

        SECTION  6.  TRANSFERS OF STOCK. Upon  surrender  to  the
corporation or a transfer agent of a certificate for share 5 duly
endorsed   or  accompanied  by  proper  evidence  of  succession,
assignment or authority to transfer, it shall be the duty of  the
corporation  to  issue a new certificate to the  person  entitled
thereto,  cancel  the old certificate and record the  transaction
upon its books.

        SECTION 7. FIXING OF RECORD DATES AND CLOSING OF TRANSFER
BOOKS. The board of directors may fix, in advance, a date as  the
record  date for the purpose of determining shareholders entitled
to  notice  of,  or  to vote at, any meeting of shareholders,  or
shareholders entitled to receive payment of any dividend  or  the
allotment  of any rights, or in order to make a determination  of
shareholders  for  any other proper purpose. Such  date,  in  any
case, shall be not more than forty days, and in case of a meeting
of  shareholders not less than ten days, prior  to  the  date  on
which  the  particular  action requiring  such  determination  of
shareholders  is to be taken.  In lieu of fixing a  record  date,
the  board  may  provide that the stock transfer books  shall  be
closed for a stated period but not to exceed, in any case, twenty
days.  If the stock transfer books are closed for the purpose  of
determining  shareholders  entitled  to  vote  at  a  meeting  of
shareholders,  such books shall be closed for at least  ten  days
immediately preceding such action.

                           ARTICLE VI
                                
                 ACCOUNTS, REPORTS AND CUSTODIAN


        SECTION  1. INSPECTION OF BOOKS.  The board of  directors
shall determine from time to time whether, and, if allowed,  when
and  under what conditions and regulations the accounts and books
of the corporation (except such as may by statute be specifically
open  to  inspection)  or  any of them,  shall  be  open  to  the
inspection  of the shareholders and the shareholders'  rights  in
this respect are and shall be limited accordingly.

        SECTION  2.  RELIANCE  ON  RECORDS.   Each  director  and
officer  shall,  in  the  performance of  his  duties,  be  fully
protected  in  relying in good faith on the books of  account  or
reports  made  to the corporation by any of its officials  by  an
independent public accountant, or by any appraiser selected  with
reasonable  care by the board, and in relying in good faith  upon
other records of the corporation.

        SECTION  3.  PREPARATION  AND  MAINTENANCE  OF  ACCOUNTS,
RECORDS  AND STATEMENTS. The president, a vice president  or  the
treasurer shall prepare or cause to be prepared annually, a  full
and   correct  statement  of  the  affairs  of  the  corporation,
including a balance sheet or statement of financial condition and
a  financial  statement of operations for  the  preceding  fiscal
year,  which  shall  be submitted at the annual  meeting  of  the
shareholders  and  filed  within twenty days  thereafter  at  the
principal  office  of the corporation in the state  of  Maryland.
The  proper  officers  of  the corporation  shall  also  prepare,
maintain  and  preserve or cause to be prepared,  maintained  and
preserved  the  accounts, books and other documents  required  by
Section  31  of  the  Investment Company Act of  1940  and  shall
prepare  and  file or cause to be prepared and filed the  reports
required  by Section 30 of the Act. No financial statement  shall
be  filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission unless  any
officer  or  employee who prepared or participated in the  prepar
ation   of   such  financial  statement  has  been   specifically
designated for such purpose by the board of directors.

        SECTION  4.  AUDITORS.  No independent public  accountant
shall  be  retained  or employed by the corporation  to  examine,
certify or report on its financial statements for any fiscal year
unless  such selection (i) shall have been approved by a majority
of  the  entire board of directors within thirty days  before  or
after  the  beginning of such fiscal year or  before  the  annual
meeting  of  shareholders for such fiscal year; (ii)  shall  have
been   ratified  at  the  next  succeeding  annual   meeting   of
shareholders, provided that any vacancy occurring between  annual
meetings  due to the death or resignation of such accountant  may
be  filled  by  the  board; and (iii) shall  otherwise  meet  the
requirements of Section 32 of the Investment Company Act of 1940.

        Section  5.   Custodian.  All  securities,  evidences  of
indebtedness  and funds of the corporation shall be entrusted  to
the  custody of one or more custodians or depositaries,  each  of
which  shall be a bank or trust company which is a member of  the
Federal  Reserve  System having capital,  surplus  and  undivided
profits of not less than Two Million ($2,000,000) Dollars, as set
forth in its most recently published report of condition, and the
qualifications prescribed by and pursuant to Sections 17 (f)  and
26  of  the Investment Company Act of 1940, employed as agent  or
agents of the corporation by the board of directors.

        SECTION 6. AGREEMENT WITH CUSTODIAN.  Each such custodian
shall  be  employed pursuant to a written agreement  which  shall
conform to the requirements prescribed by ~ applicable rules  and
regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission  under  the
Investment Company Act of 1940, and, except as otherwise provided
by  such  rules  and regulations, shall provide substantially  as
follows:

   (a)  The custodian shall keep (i) all cash on deposit with  it
or  with  such  other banks in the name of the custodian  as  the
corporation shall direct, and (ii) all securities in  a  separate
account,  not commingled with other assets, in the  name  of  the
custodian,  its  nominee  or  the  corporation  in  care  of  the
custodian,  or in the custody of the custodian or its  agents  in
street  certificate or bearer form.  The custodian shall  receive
and  collect  the  income  or funds  due  with  respect  to  such
securities.

   (b) Securities and cash held by the custodian may be withdrawn
only  upon  written order signed on behalf of the corporation  by
two employees, at least one of whom shall be an officer, included
within  a list of five officers and employees certified for  such
purpose by resolution of the board of directors.

   (c) Securities held by the custodian may be withdrawn only for
the following purposes:

(i)   The  sale  of  such  securities  for  the  account  of  the
corporation  with delivery and payment therefor  in  accord  with
procedures  and  customs used by the custodian  in  the  sale  of
securities for the trust estates of which it is trustee;

  (ii)  The  delivery of securities in exchange for or conversion
into  other  securities alone, cash or cash and other  securities
pursuant  to  the  provisions of such securities  or  a  plan  of
merger,   consolidation,  reorganization,   recapitalization   or
readjustment of the securities of the issuer thereof;

(iii) The surrender of warrants, rights or similar securities  in
the  exercise  of such warrants, rights or similar securities  or
the  surrender  of interim receipts or temporary  securities  for
definitive securities;

(iv)  The  delivery of securities to a lender  as  collateral  on
borrowing effected by the corporation;

(v)  The  delivery of securities as a redemption in  kind  of  or
distribution on stock of the corporation;

provided  that in each case specified in clauses (ii), (iii)  and
(iv)  the  payment, collateral or securities to be  received  are
delivered   to  the  custodian  simultaneously  or  as   promptly
thereafter as possible.

    (d)     Cash held by the custodian may be withdrawn only  for
the following purposes:

(i)  The  purchase of securities to be retained by the  custodian
with delivery and payment therefor in accord with procedures  and
customs  used by the custodian in the purchase of securities  for
the trust estates of which it is trustee;

(ii) The redemption or purchase of stock of the corporation;

(iii) The payment of dividends or other distributions on stock of
the corporation;

(iv)  The payment of taxes, interest, or the investment adviser's
fees   incurred   in  connection  with  the  operation   of   the
corporation;

(v)  The  payment in connection with the conversion, exchange  or
surrender of securities owned by the corporation;

(vi) The deposit of funds in the name of the custodian in or with
any other bank or trust company designated by the corporation.

        SECTION  7.  TERMINATION  OF  CUSTODIAN  AGREEMENT.   Any
employment  agreement  with a custodian shall  be  terminable  on
sixty  days' notice in writing by the board of directors  or  the
custodian and upon any such termination the custodian shall  turn
over only to the succeeding custodian designated by the board  of
directors all funds, securities and property and documents of the
corporation in its possession.

        SECTION  8.  CHECKS AND REQUISITIONS. Except as otherwise
authorized  by the board of directors, all checks and drafts  for
the  payment  of  money  shall be  signed  in  the  name  of  the
corporation  by a custodian, and all requisitions or  orders  for
the  payment of money by a custodian or for the issue  of  checks
and  drafts  therefor, all promissory notes, all assignments,  of
stock or securities standing in the name of the corporation,  and
all  requisitions  or  orders  for the  assignment  of  stock  or
securities standing in the name of a custodian or its nominee, or
for the execution of powers to transfer the same, shall be signed
in  the name of the corporation by not less than two persons (who
shall  be  among those persons, not in excess of five, designated
for this purpose by the board of directors) at least one of which
shall  be an officer. Promissory notes, checks or drafts  payable
to  the  corporation  may be endorsed only  to  the  order  of  a
custodian or its nominee by the treasurer or president or by such
other  person  or persons as shall be thereto authorized  by  the
board of directors.


                           ARTICLE VII
                                
                       GENERAL PROVISIONS


        SECTION  1.   OFFICES.   The  principal  office  of   the
corporation  in  the State of Maryland shall be in  the  City  of
Baltimore  The  corporation may also have offices at  such  other
places within and without the State of  Maryland as the board  of
directors  may from time to time determine. Except  as  otherwise
required by statute, the books and records of the corporation may
be kept outside the State of Maryland.

        SECTION   2.   SEAL.   The  corporate  seal  shall   have
inscribed  thereon  the name of the corporation,  and  the  words
"Corporate  Seal" and ' Maryland The seal may be used by  causing
it  or a facsimile thereof to be impressed affixed, reproduced or
otherwise.

         SECTION  3.   FISCAL  YEAR.   The  fiscal  year  of  the
corporation shall be fixed by the board of directors.

        SECTION  4.  NOTICE  AND WAIVER OF NOTICE.  Whenever  any
notice  of  the  time,  place  or  purpose  of  any  meeting   of
shareholders  or  directors is required to  be  given  under  the
statute,  the  charter  or these by-laws,  a  waiver  thereof  in
writing, signed by the person or persons entitled to such  notice
and filed with the records of the meeting, either before or after
the  holding  thereof, or actual attendance  at  the  meeting  of
shareholders in person or by proxy or at the meeting of directors
in  person,  shall  be deemed equivalent to the  giving  of  such
notice  to  such persons. No notice need be given to  any  person
with whom communication is made unlawful by any law of the United
States  or any rule, regulation, proclamation or executive  order
issued under any such law.

        SECTION  5.  VOTING  OF  STOCK.     Unless      otherwise
ordered by the board of directors, the president shall have  full
power   and  authority,  in  the  name  and  on  behalf  of   the
corporation,  (i)  to  ~tend, act and  vote  at  any  meeting  of
shareholders  of  any  company in which the corporation  may  own
shares of stock of record, beneficially (as the proxy or attorney
in-fact of the record holder) or of record and beneficially,  and
(ii)  to give voting directions to the record shareholder of  any
such  stock  beneficially owned. At any such  meeting,  he  shall
possess  and may exercise any and all rights and powers  incident
to  the  ownership  of such shares and which, as  the  holder  or
beneficial owner and proxy of the holder thereof, the corporation
might  possess  and  exercise  if  personally  present,  and  may
exercise  such  power  and  authority through  the  execution  of
proxies  or  may delegate such power and authority to  any  other
officer, agent or employee of the corporation.

        SECTION  6. DIVIDENDS.  Dividends upon the stock  of  the
corporation,  subject to the provisions of the charter,  if  any,
may  be  declared  by the board of directors at  any  regular  or
special  meeting, pursuant to law.  The source of  each  dividend
payment  shall  be disclosed to the shareholders  receiving  such
dividend,  to  the extent required by the laws of  the  State  of
Maryland and by Section 19 of the Investment Company Act of  1940
and   the  rules  and  regulations  of  the  Securities  Exchange
Commission thereunder. Before payment of any dividend, there  may
be  set  aside out of any funds of the corporation available  for
dividends such sum or sums as the directors from time to time, in
their absolute discretion, think proper as a reserve fund to meet
contingencies, or for equalizing dividends, or for  repairing  or
maintaining  any property of the corporation, or for  such  other
purpose  as the directors shall think conducive to the  interests
of  the corporation, and the directors may modify or abolish  any
such reserve in the manner in which it was created.

        SECTION  7.  INDEMNIFICATION.   Any person who is serving
or  has served as a director or officer of the corporation or, at
its  request, as a director or officer of another corporation  in
which  it  owns  stock  or of which it is a  creditor,  shall  be
indemnified  by  the  corporation  against  expenses   (including
judgments,  amounts paid in settlement and fees and  expenses  of
counsel and experts) actually and necessarily incurred by him  in
connection with the defense of any action, suit or proceeding  in
which  he  is  made a party, or from any claim with which  he  is
threatened  by reason of his being or having been a  director  or
officer of the corporation or any such other corporation (whether
or  not he continues to be a director or officer at the time such
expense is incurred by him) , except in relation to matters as to
which  such  person has been adjudged liable because  of  willful
misfeasance,  bad  faith  or reckless  disregard  of  the  duties
involved  in  the conduct of his office.  In the  absence  of  an
adjudication which expressly absolves such person from  liability
to  the  corporation or its stockholders for willful misfeasance,
bad  faith  or reckless disregard of the duties involved  in  the
conduct of his office, indeminfication shall be conditioned  upon
the  prior determination by a resolution of two-thirds  of  those
members of the board of directors of the corporation who are  not
involved  in  the  action, suit, proceeding or claim  (or,  if  a
majority of such members are so involved, upon the prior  written
opinion of independent counsel, that such person has no liability
by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or reckless disregard
of  the  duties  involved in the conduct of his office.   Amounts
paid in settle~r~tshall not exceed costs, fees and expenses which
would  have  been  reasonably incurred if  the  action,  suit  or
proceeding   had   been  litigated  to  a  conclusion.   Such   a
determination  by  the  board  of directors,  or  by  independent
counsel,  and the payments of amounts by the corporation  on  the
basis  thereof  shall not prevent a stockholder from  challenging
such  indemnification  by appropriate legal  proceedings  on  the
grounds that the person indemnified was liable to the corporation
or  its  security  holders by reason of willful misfeasance,  bad
faith or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct
of his office.  In the event of such person's death, the right to
indemnification  shall extend to his legal  representative.   The
foregoing  rights  of indemnification shall be exclusive  of  any
other  rights to which the officers and directors may be entitled
according to law.

        SECTION  8.   AMENDMENTS.   The board of directors  shall
have  the power to alter or repeal any by-laws of the corporation
and to make new by-laws, except that the board shall not alter or
repeal any by-law made by the shareholders and shall not alter or
repeal  Section  3 of Article III, Sections 2,  3,  6  and  7  of
Article  IV,  Sections 3 through 8 of Article VI and  Sections  6
through 8 of Article VII.  The shareholders shall have the  power
at  any  meeting, if notice thereof be included in the notice  of
such  meeting, to alter or repeal any by-laws of the  corporation
and to make new by-laws.


                        BY-LAW AMENDMENT


   I,  RICHARD S. STRONG , do hereby certify that I am  the  duly

elected, qualified and acting Secretary of Nicholas Strong  Fund,

Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of  the

State of Maryland, that the following is a true and correct  copy

of  a  resolution  adopted  by the Board  of  Directors  of  said

corporation pursuant to a Unanimous Consent of Board of Directors

dated the 22nd day of April, 1970; that said resolution is now in

full force and effect:



RESOLVED,  that ARTICLE I, Section 2 of the By-Laws  of  Nicholas
Strong, Inc. be amended so as to read as follows:

 SECTION  2.  ANNUAL MEETING. The annual meeting of  shareholders
for  the election of directors and the transaction of such  other
business as may properly come before it shall be held at 10:00 A.
M.,  Milwaukee time, on the first Wednesday in June of each year,
commencing  in the year 1970, if not a legal holiday,  and  if  a
legal  holiday,  then  on  the next secular  day  following.  Any
business  of  the  corporation may be transacted  at  the  annual
meeting  without  being specifically designated  in  the  notice,
except such business as is specifically required by statute to be
stated in the notice.

WITNESS,  my hand and seal of said corporation this  1st  day  of
June, 1970.

                                         Richard S. Strong
                                         Secretary
                                
                        BY LAW AMENDMENTS



     I,  Richard S. Strong, do hereby certify that I am the  duly

elected, qualified and acting Secretary of Nicholas Strong  Fund,

Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of  the

State of Maryland, that the following is a true and correct  copy

of  resolutions  adopted  by  the  Board  of  Directors  of  said

corporation at a Special Meeting of the Board of Directors,  duly

called  and at which a quorum was present, held March  24,  1972;

that the resolution pertaining to Article IV, Section 7(k) of the

By-laws  was  also  adopted  by a  vote  of  a  majority  of  the

outstanding  shares of the corporation entitled  to  vote  at  an

Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders held June 7,  1972;  that  said

resolutions are now in full force and effect:



     RESOLVED, that Article IV, Section 1 of the By-Laws  be  and

the same is hereby amended to read as follows:



     "Section 1. Salary and Expenses.



     Directors, officers and employees as such shall not  receive
any  salary for their services or reimbursement for expenses from
the  corporation; provided that the corporation may pay  fees  in
such  amounts  and at such times as the board of directors  shall
determine  to  directors who are not affiliated  persons  of  the
corporation  5 investment adviser for attendance at  meetings  of
the board of directors."

     RESOLVED,  that Article IV, Section 7(k) of the  By-Laws  be

and the same is hereby amended to read as follows:



     "Section 7.  General Business and Investment Activities.



     The corporation shall not:
           (k)  charge any sales load or commission in connection
with  the  issuance  or  sale of any stock  of  the  corporation;
provided  that  the  Board of Directors may impose  a  redemption
charge in such amount, with such limitations and at such times as
the Board of Directors in its discretion shall determine."

     Witness my hand and seal of said corporation this 7th day of

June, 1972.



                                   Richard S. Strong
                                   Secretary

                        BY-LAW AMENDMENT



    I  THOMAS  J.  SAEGER, do hereby certify that I am  the  duly
elected, qualified and acting Secretary of Nicholas Strong  Fund,
Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of  the
State of Maryland, that the following is a true and correct  copy
of   resolution  adopted  by  the  Board  of  Directors  of  said
corporation at a Special Meeting of the Board of Directors,  duly
called  and  at which a quorum was present, held April  1,  1974;
that the resolution pertaining to Article IV, Section 7(e) of the
By-Laws  was  also  adopted  by a  vote  of  a  majority  of  the
outstanding  shares of the corporation entitled  to  vote  at  an
Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders held June 5,  1974,  that  said
resolutions are now in full force and effect:

     RESOLVED,  that Article IV, Section 7(e) of the  By-Laws  be
     and the same is hereby amended to read as follows:

     Section  7.    General  Business and  Investment  Activities

     "The Corporation shall not:



                             * * * *

     (e)   make  loans  to  other persons,  except  for  (i)  the
purchase  of  a portion of an issue of publicly distributed  debt
securities; (ii) the purchase of debt securities issued by the U.
S.  Treasury  or by other federal agencies, instrumentalities  or
corporations with a simultaneous resale of such securities to the
vendor for later delivery, in an amount not to exceed 20% of  the
total  net assets, taken at market, of the corporation; and (iii)
the  purchase  of a portion of bonds, debentures  or  other  debt
securities  of types commonly distributed privately to  financial
institutions,  in an amount not to exceed 10% of  the  total  net
assets, taken at market, of the corporation; I'

    Witness my hand and seal of said corporation this 10th day of
June, 1974.

                               THOMAS J. SAEGER
                               SECRETARY
                               
                               
    The  following Amendment to the Registrant's By-Laws was duly
adopted by action of the Board of Directors on April 6, 1982:

    "RESOLVED, that Section 2 of Article I of the By-Laws of this
Corporation be and the same is hereby amended to read as follows:

        SECTION  2.    ANNUAL  MEETING.   The Annual  Meeting  of
        Shareholders   for   the  election   of   Directors   and
        transaction  of such other business as may properly  come
        before  it  shall be held at 10:00 a.m., Milwaukee  time,
        on  the  3rd  Tuesday in July of each year commencing  in
        the  year  1982, if not a legal holiday, and if  a  legal
        holiday,  then  on the next secular day  following.   Any
        business  of  the  Corporation may be transacted  at  the
        annual  meeting without being specifically designated  in
        the  notice,  except  such business  as  is  specifically
        required by statute to be stated in the notice."

                        BY-LAW  AMENDNENT


     I,  THOMAS J. SAEGER1 do hereby certify that I am  the  duly
elected, qualified and acting secretary of Nicholas Fund, Inc., a
corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of
Maryland,  that  the following is a true and correct  copy  of  a
resolution  adopted by the Board of Directors of said corporation
at  a Special Meeting of the Board of Directors, duly called  and
at  which  a quorum was present, held March 30, 1976;  that  said
resolution is now in full force and effect:

      RESOLVED, that pursuant to Section 8 of Article VII of  the
By-Laws  of this corporation, Section 7 of Article V of  the  By-
Laws be and it hereby is amended to read as follows:

'1SECTION  7    FIXING  OF RECORD DATES AND CLOSING  OF  TRANSFER
BOOKS.

      "The Board of Directors may fix, in advance, a date as  the
record  date for the purpose of determining shareholders entitled
to  notice  of,  or  to vote at, any meeting of shareholders,  or
shareholders entitled to receive payment of any dividend  or  the
allotment  of any rights, or in order to make a determination  of
shareholders  for any other proper purpose.  Such  date,  in  any
case, shall not be more than sixty (60) days, and in the case  of
a 'fleeting of shareholders not less than ten (10) days, prior to
the   date   on  which  the  particular  action  requiring   such
determination of shareholders is to be taken.  In lieu of  fixing
a  record  date, the Board 'flay provide that the stock  transfer
books  shall be closed for a stated period but not to exceed,  in
any  case,  twenty  (20) days.  If the stock transfer  books  are
closed  for  the purpose of determining shareholders entitled  to
vote  at a 'fleeting of shareholders, such books shall be  closed
for at least ten (10) days immediately proceeding such action."

     Witness  my hand and seal of said corporation this 15th  day
of April, 1976.

CORPORATE                     Thomas J. Saeger,
SEAL                          Secretary



Exhibit 1A
    
    The  following Amendment to the Registrant's By-Laws was duly
adopted by action of the Board of Directors on March 22, 1983.

    "RESOLVED that Section 1 of Article II of the By-Laws of this
Corporation be amended to read as follows:

    Section 1. Number. The number of directors of the Corporation
shall  be  five.  By vote of a majority of the  entire  board  of
directors,  the number of directors fixed by the  charter  or  by
these by-laws may be increased or decreased from time to time  to
not  exceeding  fifteen nor less than three, but  the  tenure  of
office of a director shall not be affected by any increase in the
number of directors so made by this board."


    The  following Amendment to the Registrant's By-Laws was duly
adopted by action of the Board of Directors on October 11, 1983.


    "RESOLVED,  that Section 1 of Article II of  the  By-Laws  of
this  Corporation be and the same are hereby amended to  read  as
follows:

    Section   1.  Number.   The  number  of  directors   of   the
Corporation  shall be six.  By vote of a majority of  the  entire
board  of directors, the number of directors fixed by the charter
or  by  these by-laws may be increased or decreased from time  to
time to not exceeding fifteen nor less than three, but the tenure
of  office of a director shall not be affected by any increase in
the number of directors so made by this board."

     The following Amendment to the Registrant's By-Laws was duly
adopted  by Unanimous Consent of the Board of Directors on  April
25, 1984.


"RESOLVED,  that  Section 1, Article 11 of the  By-Laws  of  this
Corporation  be  and  the  same are hereby  amended  to  read  as
follows:

Section  1.  Number.  The number of directors of the  Corporation
shall  be  five.   By vote of a majority of the entire  board  of
directors, the number of directors fixed by the charter or by the
by-laws  may be increased or decreased from time to time  to  not
exceed fifteen nor less than three, but the tenure of office of a
director  shall not be affected by any increase in the number  of
directors so made by this board."


FRONT
NUMBER                                                  SHARES
SEE REVERSE FOR CERTAIN DEFINITIONS                 CUSIP 653735 10 0
INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF MARYLAND
                        NICHOLAS FUND, INC.

This certifies that                                    is the owner of


FULLY PAID AND NON-ASSESSABLE SHARES OF THE CAPITAL STOCK, PAR VALUE $.50 PER
               SHARE OF THE NICHOLAS FUND, INC.
transferable on the books of the Corporation by the holder hereof in person or
by duly authorized attorney upon surrender of this certificate properly
endorsed.
This certificate is not valid until countersigned by the Transfer Agent
WITNESS the facsimile seal of the Corporation and the facsimile signatures of
its duly authorized officers.

/S/ Thomas J. Saeger                                   /S/ Albert O. Nicholas
    ------------------                                     ------------------
    Thomas J. Saeger                                       Albert O. Nicholas
           Secretary                                                President

Dated:

COUNTERSIGNED:
                FIRSTAR TRUST CO. (Milwaukee)
BY                           TRANSFER AGENT

- ---------------------------------------------
                        Authorized Signature

BACK

The following abbreviations, when used in the inscription on the face of this
certificate, shall be constructed as though they were written out in full
according to applicable laws or regulations.
        TEN COM - as tenants in common
        TEN ENT - as tenants by the entireties
        JT TEN - as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as
                 tenants in common
        UNIF GIFT MIN ACT - ___________________ Custodian _________________
                                (Cust)                      (Minor)
                            under Uniform Gifts to Minors Act _____________
                                                                State
                Additional abbreviations may also be used though not in the
                                    above list.

                          TRANSFER FORM
   COMPLETE THIS FORM ONLY WHEN TRANSFERRING TO ANOTHER PERSON

   For value received ________________________________ hereby sell, assign
   and transfer unto

   PLEASE INSERT SOCIAL SECURITY OR
   OTHER IDENTIFYING NUMBER OF ASSIGNED ___________________________________
   ____________________________________ Please print or typewrite name and
                                        address
                                        ___________________________________

                                        ___________________________________

                                        ___________________________________

of the capital stock represented by the within certificate and do hereby
irrevocably constitute and appoint __________________________ attorney to
transfer the same on the books of the within-named corporation, with full
power of substitution in the premises.

Dated ________________________________________________

SIGNATURE GUARANTEE BY:

__________________________________________ ________________________________
                                                 SIGNATURE(S)

Signature guarantee must be made by a      NOTICE: the signature(s) to this
member or a member organization of the     assignment must correspond with
New York Stock Exchange, or by a           the name as written upon the face
commercial bank (not a savings bank),      of the certificate in every 
or by a trust company.                     particular, without alteration or 
                                           enlargement or any change whatever.

                          ---------------------

                             REDEMPTION FORM
              COMPLETE THIS FORM ONLY WHEN REDEEMING SHARES

     The undersigned hereby tenders the written certificate properly endorsed
in blank or in favor of the corporation with any requisite guarantee of
signature and supporting papers and requests the redemption of
___________________________________________________(______________) shares
of capital stock represented by the within certificate in accordance with
the terms of the articles of incorporation of the corporation.

Dated: ____________________________

SIGNATURE GUARANTEE BY:

__________________________________________ ________________________________
                                                 SIGNATURE(S)

Signature guarantee must be made by a      NOTICE: the signature(s) to this
member or a member organization of the     assignment must correspond with
New York Stock Exchange, or by a           the name as written upon the face
commercial bank (not a savings bank),      of the certificate in every 
or by a trust company.                     particular, without alteration or 
                                           enlargement or any change whatever.

                                          ---------------------------------

                                          ---------------------------------
                                                     Address


                  INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT


    AGREEMENT   made   this  _____ day  of  ____________,   1985,
between NICHOLAS FUND, INC., a Maryland corporation (the "Fund"),
and   NICHOLAS  COMPANY,  INC.,  a  Wisconsin  corporation   (the
"Adviser"):

    1.   The  Fund  hereby  employs the  Adviser  to  manage  the
investment  and reinvestment of the assets of the  Fund  for  the
period  and  on  the  terms set forth in  this  Agreement.    The
Adviser  hereby  accepts such employment  for   the  compensation
herein  provided  and  agrees during such period  to  render  the
services and to assume the obligations herein set forth.

    2.   The Adviser shall for all purposes herein be deemed   to
be  an  independent  contractor  and  shall,   unless   otherwise
expressly  provided  or authorized, have no authority to act  for
or  represent the Fund in any way or otherwise be deemed an agent
of  the  Fund.   However,  one  or more  shareholders,  officers,
directors  or  employees of the Adviser may  serve  as  directors
and/or  officers  of  the  Fund,  but  without  compensation   or
reimbursement  of  expenses  for such  services  from  the  Fund.
Nothing  herein contained shall be deemed to require the Fund  to
take any action contrary to its Articles of Incorporation or  any
applicable  statute or regulation, or to relieve or  deprive  the
board  of  directors  of the Fund of its responsibility  for  and
control of the affairs of the Fund.

    3.  The Adviser, at its own expense and without reimbursement
from the Fund, shall furnish office space, office facilities, and
executive officers and executive expenses for managing the assets
of  the  Fund.   The  Adviser  shall  also  bear  all  sales  and
promotional  expenses  of  the  Fund,  including  the   cost   of
prospectuses delivered  to prospective investors other than those
who have requested information from the Fund, except for expenses
incurred in complying with laws regulating the issue or  sale  of
securities.  However, fees paid for attendance at meetings of the
Fund's  board of directors to directors of the Fund who  are  not
interested  persons of the Adviser, as defined in the  Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended, or officers or employees of  the
Fund,  shall be borne by the Fund.  The Fund shall bear all other
expenses  of  its operations, or shall reimburse the Adviser  for
such  other expenses initially incurred by it, provided that  the
total expenses borne by the Fund, including the Adviser's fee but
excluding  all  Federal,  State and local  taxes,  interest,  and
brokerage  charges, shall not in any year exceed that  percentage
of  average  net  asset  value of the  Fund  for  such  year,  as
determined  by  appraisals made as of the close of each  business
day,  which  is the most restrictive percentage provided  by  the
state laws of the various states in which the Fund's common stock
is qualified for sale. The expenses of the Fund's operation borne
by  the  Fund include, by way of illustration and not limitation,
the  costs  of preparing and printing its registration statements
required  under  the  Securities Act of 1933 and  the  Investment
Company  Act  of  1940 (and amendments thereto), the  expense  of
registering   its  shares  with  the  Securities   and   Exchange
Commission  and in the various states, the cost of  prospectuses,
the cost of stock certificates, reports to shareholders, interest
charges,   taxes,   legal   expenses,  noninterested   directors'
fees,  salaries  of   administrative  and   clerical   personnel,
association  membership  dues, auditing  and accounting services,
fees  and  expenses  of  the  custodian  of  the  Fund's  assets,
printing and mailing  expenses, postage,   charges  and  expenses
of dividend  disbursing  agents,  registrars  and  stock transfer
agents and the cost of keeping  all necessary shareholder records
and accounts.

    The  Fund shall monitor its expense ratio on a regular basis.
At  such  times as it appears that the expenses of the Fund  will
exceed the expense limitation established herein, the Fund  shall
create  an account receivable from the Adviser for the amount  of
such  excess.  The Adviser is deemed indebted to the Fund  as  of
the  last day of the Fund's fiscal year and shall pay to the Fund
the  amount shown on such account receivable not later  than  the
last  day  of  the first month following the end  of  the  Fund's
fiscal year.

    4.   For  the  services to be rendered and  the  charges  and
expenses  to be assumed by the Adviser hereunder, the Fund  shall
pay  to  the  Adviser an annual fee, paid monthly, based  on  the
average  net asset value of the Fund, as determined by appraisals
made  as  of  the close of each business day of the  month.   The
annual  fee  shall be seventy-five one hundredths of one  percent
(.75  of  1%)  of  such  net  asset  value  up  to  an  including
$50,000,000, and sixty-five one hundredths of one percent (.65 of
1%)  of  the  average net asset value of the Fund  in  excess  of
$50,000,000.  Such fee shall be prorated in any  month  in  which
this Agreement is not in effect for the entire month.

    5.   The Adviser shall not take, and shall not permit any  of
its  shareholders, officers, directors, or employees  to  take  a
long or short position in the shares of the Fund, except for  the
purchase  of  shares of the Fund for investment purposes  at  the
same  price  as  that  available to the public  at  the  time  of
purchase,  or  in connection with the original capitalization  of
the Fund.

    6.  The services of the Adviser to the Fund hereunder are not
to  be  deemed exclusive and the Adviser shall be free to furnish
similar services to others so long as the services hereunder  are
not impaired thereby.  Although the Adviser has permitted and  is
permitting the Fund to use the name '1Nicholas", it is understood
and  agreed  that the Adviser reserves the right to  use  and  to
permit other persons, firms or corporations, including investment
companies, to use such name.

    7.  This Agreement may not be amended without the approval of
the  board of directors of the Fund in the manner required by the
Investment Company Act of 1940, and by the vote of a majority  of
the  outstanding voting securities of the Fund, as defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940.

    8.  This Agreement may be terminated at any time, without the
payment of any penalty, by the board of directors of the Fund  or
by a vote of the majority of the outstanding voting securities of
the  Fund, as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, upon
giving  sixty  (60)  days written notice  to  the  Adviser.  This
Agreement may be terminated by the Adviser at any time  upon  the
giving  of  sixty  (60) days written notice to  the  Fund.   This
Agreement  shall  terminate automatically in  the  event  of  its
assignment  (as    defined   in   Section   2(aX4)   of       the
Investment   Company   Act  of  1940).    Until   terminated   as
hereinbefore provided, this Agreement shall continue in effect so
long as such continuance is specifically approved annually by (i)
the board of directors of the Fund or by a vote of a majority  of
the  outstanding voting securities of the Fund, as defined in the
Investment  Company Act of 1940, and (ii) the board of  directors
of  the Fund in the manner required by the Investment Company Act
of 1940, provided that any such approval may be made effective no
more than sixty (60) days thereafter.

    IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the parties hereto  have  caused  this
Agreement to be executed on the day first written.


                                 NICHOLAS FUND, INC.


                                
                                     /s/ Albert O. Nicholas
                                     _____________________________
                                 By: Albert 0. Nicholas, President

                                     /s/ Thomas J. Saeger
                                     ___________________________
                                 By: Thomas J. Saeger, Secretary


                                 NICHOLAS COMPANY, INC.

                                     /s/ Albert O. Nicholas
                                     _____________________________
                                 By: Albert 0. Nicholas, President

                                     /s/ David E. Leichtfuss
                                     ______________________________
                                     David E. Leichtfuss, Secretary





CUSIODIAN AGREEMENT

    THIS  AGREEMENT made on the 14th day of September  1980,
    between  NICHOLAS  FUND,  INC., a  Maryland  corporation
    (hereinafter called the "Fund"), and the FIRST WISCONSIN
    TRUST  COMPANY,  a  Wisconsin  corporation  (hereinafter
    called  the "Custodian",

WITNESSETH:

    WHEREAS,  the Fund desires that its securities and  cash
    shall   be  hereafter  held  and  administered  by   the
    Custodian  pursuant to the terms of this  Agreement  and
    that  the  Custodian  act  as  dividend  disbursing  and
    transfer  agent for its Common Stock and  the  Custodian
    desires to hold and administer such securities and  cash
    and  to  act  as such dividend disbursing  and  transfer
    agent.

    NOW, THEREFOR, in consideration of the mutual agreements
    herein  made,  the  Fund  and the  Custodian  agrees  as
    follows:

    Sec. l. Appointment and Acceptance of Custodian.

         The   Fund  hereby  constitutes  and  appoints  the
Custodian as custodian of all of its securities and cash and
as its dividend  disbursing  and  transfer  agent   and  the
Custodian  hereby  accepts  such appointments. The Fund will
promptly deliver  to  the  Custodian all securities and cash
now owned  by  it  and  hereafter from time to time conveyed
into  its  possession.
         
    Sec. 2. Definitions; Names, Titles and Signatures of
            Fund's Officers.

         The  word  "securities"  as  used  herein  includes
stocks, shares, bonds, debentures, notes, mortgages or other
obligations  and   any   certificates, receipts, warrants or
other instruments  representing  rights to receive, purchase
or subscribe for the same, or evidencing or representing any
other  rights  or  interests  therein, or in any property or
assets.

         The  words  "officers' certificate"  shall  mean  a
request  or  direction or certification in writing signed in
the name of the Fund by either any two of  the  President, a
Vice President, the Secretary and the Treasurer of the Fund;
or  any one of the foregoing  officers and one of the Fund's
directors or the Fund's counsel.
         
         The President or Vice  President  and  Secretary or
Assistant  Secretary  of   the  Fund  will  certify  to  the
Custodian the names  and signatures  of  those       persons
authorized   to  sign  the  officers' certificates described
in this Section 2,  and  the names   of  the  members of the
board of  Directors,  together  with  any  changes which may
occur from time to time.
         
See. 3. Receipt and Disbursement of Money.

           A. The Custodian shall hold in a separate account
or  accounts,  and physically segregated at all  times  from
those  of any other persons, firms or corporations, pursuant
to  the provisions thereof, in the name of the Fund, subject
only  to draft or order by the Custodian acting pursuant  to
the terms of this Agreement, all cash received by it from or
for  the account of the Fund. The Custodian shall credit  to
such account or accounts of the Fund all cash received by it
for  the  account of the Fund, allocated into such principal
and interest accounts as the Fund shall direct. Upon receipt
of an officers' certificate from the Fund, the Custodian may
open  and maintain an additional account or accounts in such
other banks or trust companies as may be designated in  such
officers' certificate, such accounts, however, to be in  the
name  of  the  Custodian and subject only to  its  draft  or
order.   The  Custodian shall make payments of cash  to,  or
for the account of, the Fund from such cash only.

         (a)    for  the  purchase  of  securities  for  the
         portfolio  of the Fund upon the (delivery  of  such
         securities to the Custodian, registered in the name
         of  the  Fund  or of the nominee of  the  Custodian
         referred to in Sec. 7 hereof or in proper form  for
         transfer;

         (b)  for the payment of interest, dividends, taxes,
         management   or  supervisory  fees   or   operating
         expenses  (including, without  limitation  thereto,
         fees  for  legal, accounting, auditing,  custodian,
         dividend disbursement and transfer agent services);

         (c)    for   payments   in  connection   with   the
         conversion,  exchange  or surrender  of  securities
         owned or subscribed to by the Fund held by or to be
         delivered to the Custodian; or
         
         (d) for other proper corporate purposes.


         Except as provided below  before  making  any  such
payment  the  Custodian   shall  receive   (and  may    rely
upon)  either  an  officers'   certificate   requesting such
payment and stating that  it  is  for a   purpose  permitted
under the terms of items  (a), (b) or (c) of this subsection
A, or, in respect of item  (d), an officers' certificate and
a certified copy of a resolution of the Board  of  Directors
signed  by an officer of the  Fund  and certified  by    its
Secretary or an Assistant Secretary, specifying  the  amount
of  such payment,  setting  forth  the   purpose  for  which
such payment  is  to  be  made,  declaring  such  purpose to
be a  proper  corporate    purpose, and naming the person or
persons  to  whom  such payment is to be made.

         An  officers'  certificate  need  not  proceed  the
disbursement of cash for the purpose of  purchasing a  money
market instrument if any one of the Fund's  officers  issues
oral instructions to the Custodian    and   an   appropriate
officers'  certificate  is received  by the Custodian within
two (2)  business  days thereafter.

         B. The Custodian is hereby  authorized  to  endorse
and  collect all checks, drafts  or  other  orders  for  the
payment of money received  by  the Custodian for the account
of the Fund.
         
Sec. 4. Receipt of  Securities.

         The  Custodian shall deposit and hold in a separate
account,  and  physically segregated at all times from those
of  any  other  persons,   firms  or corporations,  pursuant
to the  provisions  hereof,  all  securities  received by it
from or for the account  of the Fund. The Custodian, by book
entry  or   otherwise,  shall identify as belonging  to  the
Fund  a  quantity  of  securities  in  a  fungible  bulk  of
securities registered in the name of the  Custodian  or  its
nominee or shown in Custodian's book entry system.  All such
securities are  to  be  held or disposed of by the Custodian
for, and  subject  at  all times to the instructions of, the
Fund pursuant  to the terms of this Agreement. The Custodian
shall  have   no  power or authority to assign, hypothecate,
pledge  or otherwise dispose of  any  such  securities   and
investments, except pursuant to  the  directive of the  Fund
and only for the account of the Fund as  set forth in Sec. 5
of this Agreement.
         
See.  5. Transfer,  Exchange,  Redelivery,  etc.  of
         Securities.

         The  Custodian shall have sole power to release  or
deliver  any  securities of the Fund held by it pursuant  to
this  Agreement. The Custodian agrees to transfer,  exchange
or deliver securities held by it hereunder only:

         (a)   for  sales of such securities for the account
         of  the  Fund  upon  receipt by  the  Custodian  of
         payment therefor;

         (b)   when such securities are called, redeemed  or
         retired or otherwise become payable;

         (c)  for examination by any broker selling any Such
         securities  In  accordance with  "street  delivery"
         customs;

         (d)   in exchange for or upon conversion into other
         securities  alone  or  other  securities  and  cash
         whether   pursuant  to  any  plan  of  liquidation,
         refinancing, merger, consolidation, reorganization,
         recapitalization or readjustment or otherwise;

         (e)  upon conversion of such securities pursuant to
         their terms into other securities;

         (f)   upon  exercise or subscription,  purchase  or
         other   similar   rights   represented   by    such
         securities;

         (g)  for the purpose of redeeming in kind shares of
         capital stock of the Fund upon delivery thereof  to
         the Custodian; or

         (h)  for other proper corporate purposes.

         As to any deliveries made by the Custodian pursuant
to   items  (b),  (d),  (e)  and  (f),  securities  or  cash
receivable in exchange therefor shall be deliverable to  the
Custodian.  Before  making any such  transfer,  exchange  or
delivery,  the Custodian shall receive (and may  rely  upon)
either  an  officers' certificate requesting such  transfer,
exchange  or delivery and stating that it is for  a  purpose
permitted under the terms of items (a), (b), (c), (d),  (e),
(f)  or  (g) of this Sec. 5 or, in respect of item  (h),  an
officers'  certificate and a certified copy of a  resolution
of  the Board of Directors signed by an officer of the  Fund
and  certified  by  its Secretary or an Assistant  Secretary
specifying  the securities to be transferred,  exchanged  or
delivered,   setting  forth  the  purpose  for  which   such
transfer, exchange or delivery is to be made, declaring such
purpose  to  be  a proper corporate purpose and  naming  the
person  or  persons  to  whom  such  transfer,  exchange  or
delivery of such securities is to be made.

See. 6. Custodian's Acts Without  Instructions.

        Unless and until the Custodian receives an officers'
certificate to the contrary, the Custodian shall:

         (a)   Present  for  payment all coupons  and  other
         items  held by it for the account of the Fund which
         call  for  payment upon presentation and  hold  the
         cash  received  by  it upon such  payment  for  the
         account of the Fund;

         (b)    collect   all  income,  profits,   earnings,
         dividends, rights, interest and other distributions
         and collect all payments on account of principal of
         securities  sold,  due,  exchanged  or  called  for
         redemption;

         (c)  hold for the account of the Fund hereunder all
         stock dividends, rights and similar securities;

         (d)   surrender  securities in temporary  form  for
         definitive securities;

         (e)   execute  as agent on behalf of the  Fund  all
         necessary  ownership certificates required  by  the
         Internal Revenue Code or the Income Tax Regulations
         of  the United States Treasury Department or  under
         the  laws of any State now or hereafter in  effect,
         inserting  the Fund's name on such certificates  as
         the owner of the securities covered thereby, to the
         extent it may lawfully do so; and

         (f)  perform the duties of transfer agent specified
         in Sec. 11 below.


Sec. 7   Registration of Securities.

         Except   as  otherwise  directed  by  an  officers'
certificate,  the Custodian shall register  all  securities,
except  such  as  are  in bearer form,  in  the  name  of  a
registered  nominee  of  the Custodian  as  defined  in  the
Interna1  Revenue Code and any regulations of  the  Treasury
Department  issued  thereunder or in any  provision  of  any
subsequent Federal tax law exempting such transactions  from
liability  for stock transfer taxes, and shal1  execute  and
deliver all such certificates in connection therewith as may
be required by such laws or Regulations or under the laws of
any  State. The Custodian shall use its best efforts to  the
end  that the specific securities held by it hereunder shall
be at all times identifiable in its records.

         The  Fund  shall from time to time furnish  to  the
Custodian appropriate instruments to enable the Custodian to
hold  or deliver in proper form for transfer, or to register
in  the name of its registered nominee, any securities which
it  may hold for the account of the Fund and which may  from
time to time be registered in the name of the Fund.

Sec. 8.  Voting and Other Action.

         Neither  the  Custodian  nor  any  nominee  of  the
Custodian shall vote any of the securities held hereunder by
or  for  the account of the Fund, except in accordance  with
the  instructions contained in an officers' certificate. The
Custodian  shall  deliver,  or  cause  to  be  executed  and
delivered,  to  the  Fund  all notices,  proxies  and  proxy
soliciting materials with relation to such securities,  such
proxies  to  be  executed by the registered holder  of  such
securities (if registered otherwise than in the name of  the
Fund),  but  without  indicating the manner  in  which  such
proxies are to be voted.
         
See. 9. Transfer Tax and Other Disbursements.

         The  Fund shall pay or reimburse the Custodian from
time  to  time for any transfer taxes payable upon transfers
of  securities  made hereunder, and for all other  necessary
and  proper  disbursements and expenses made or incurred  by
the Custodian in the performance of this Agreement.

          The  Custodian  shall  execute  and  deliver  such
certificates in connection with securities delivered  to  it
or  by it under this Agreement as may be required under  the
provisions  of the Internal Revenue Code and any Regulations
of  the Treasury Department issued thereunder, or under  the
laws  of  any  State,  to  exemptable  from   taxation   any
exemptable   transfers  and/or  deliveries   of   any   such
securities.

Sec. 10.   Dividend Disbursing Agent

        The Custodian shall act as dividend disbursing agent
for the Fund and shall in paying dividends or distributions,
act  upon  an officers' certificate indicating the  date  of
declaration  of such dividend or distribution, the  date  of
payment   thereof, the record date as of which  shareholders
entitled  to  payment shall be determined,  the  amount  per
share of cash and/or securities payable or distributable  as
dividends,  that  the  appropriate  action  had  been  taken
pursuant to the Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws of the
Fund authorizing the payment of said dividend and such other
matters as may be deemed appropriate.

Sec. 11.  Transfer Agent.

         The  Custodian shall act as transfer agent for  the
Fund.

          A.   In   connection  therewith  It  shall   issue
certificates   or  confirmations  evidencing   or   stating,
respectively,  shares  of Common  Stock  of  the  Fund  upon
receipt of a request to purchase shares from  investors  and
payment  for such shares based upon the net asset  value  of
the  Fund's shares for such day, all as specified as to form
and procedure in the Fund's prospectus current at the time.

         B.  In connection therewith, it shall disburse  the
cash  proceeds to those shareholders of the Fund  requesting
redemption of their shares (or portions thereof) at the  net
asset  value  of  the  Fund, upon receipt  of  a  redemption
request  in  proper form as provided in the  Fund's  current
prospectus,  or if certificates representing the  shares  of
the Fund have been issued, upon receipt of such certificates
properly  endorsed for transfer as provided  in  the  Fund's
prospectus current at the time.

        C. The Custodian may rely upon an oral communication
from  one  of  the persons authorized to sign  an  officers'
certificate on behalf of the Fund, or from an employee(s) of
Nicholas Company, Inc., designated in writing by an  officer
of the Fund, with respect to the daily net asset value of  a
share of common stock of the Fund.

Sec. 12. Concerning Custodian.

         The Custodian shal1 be paid as compensation for its
services pursuant to this Agreement such compensation as may
from time to time be agreed upon in writing between the  two
parties. Until modified in writing between the Custodian and
the Fund, such compensation shall be as set forth in Exhibit
A hereto.

         The  Custodian shal1 not be liable for  any  action
taken in good faith upon any certificate herein described or
certified  copy of any resolution of the Board of Directors,
and  may rely on the genuineness of any such document  which
it may in good faith believe to have been validly executed.

         The Fund agrees to indemnify and hold harmless  the
Custodian and its nominee from all taxes, charges, expenses,
assessments, claims and liabilities (including counsel fees)
incurred or assessed against it or its nominee in connection
with  the performance of this Agreement, except such as  may
arise  from  its  or  its  nominee's own  negligent  action,
negligent   failure  to  act  or  willful  misconduct.   The
Custodian  is authorized to charge any account of  the  Fund
for such items. In the event of any advance of cash  for any
purpose  made  by  the Custodian resulting  from  orders  or
instructions of the Fund, or in the event that the Custodian
or is nominee shall incur or be assessed any taxes, charges,
expenses,  assessments, claims or liabilities in  connection
with  the performance of this Agreement, except such as  may
arise  from  its  or  its  nominee's own  negligent  action,
negligent failure to act or willful misconduct, any property
at  any  time  held  for the account of the  Fund  shall  be
security therefor.

See. 13.  Reports by Custodian

         The  Custodian  shall furnish the  Fund  with   the
following written reports or advices:
                                                                         
         (a)  daily  advices  or confirmations  showing  all
securities  purchased  and prices paid therefor,  securities
sold   and   prices  received  therefor,   and   all   other
transactions  affecting securities held for the  account  of
the fund;

         (b) daily statements setting forth a summary of all
transactions  made or which took place with respect  to  the
account of the Fund;

         (c)  at  the  close of each quarter of  the  Fund's
fiscal  year, a list showing cost of the securities held  by
it  for  the  Fund hereunder, certified by a duly authorized
officer of the Custodian;

         (d)  promptly,  all reports it  receives  from  the
appropriate Federal Reserve Bank or clearing agency  on  its
respective system of internal accounting control;

         (c)  all  reports reasonably requested by the  Fund
from time to time relating to the Custodian's or its agent's
own system of internal accounting control.

        The books and records of the Custodian pertaining to
its actions under this Agreement shall be open to inspection
and  audit  at reasonable times by officers of and  auditors
employed by the Fund.

Sec.14   Use of Central Depository

        Nothing herein shall be deemed to prevent the use by
Custodian  of  a  central  securities  clearing   house   or
depository  and specifically the provisions of Secs.  3A,  4
and   7  hereof  dealing  with  segregation  of  assets  and
securities and registration of securities in the name of the
Custodian's nominee are inapplicable to the extent they  are
inconsistent with the use of such central clearing house  or
depository;  provided, however, that the Custodian  and  the
central  clearing  house or depository meet  all  applicable
federal  and  state laws and rules and the Fund's  Board  of
Directors  approves by resolution the use  of  such  central
clearing house or depository.

Sec. 15.  Termination or

         This Agreement may be terminated by the Fund, or by
Custodian, on sixty (60) days' notice, given in writing  and
sent  by  certified mail to Custodian at 777 East  Wisconsin
Avenue,  Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202 or to the  Fund  at  312
East  Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin  53202  as  the
case  may  be.  The notice to the Custodian shall  be  given
pursuant  to a resolution adopted by the Board of  Directors
of the Fund. Upon termination of the Agreement the Custodian
shall  deliver  to  the  successor  custodian  of  the  Fund
designated in a certified copy of a resolution of the  board
of Directors of the Fund, filed with the Custodian all cash,
securities  and  related instruments held by the  Custodian.
Any  securities registered the name of the Custodian or  its
nominee  shall  be endorsed in form for transfer.  The  Fund
agrees  to  name such successor custodian within sixty  (60)
days  after  the  written  notice  of  termination  of  this
Agreement is received or delivered by it.

         This  Agreement  may not be assigned  by  Custodian
without the consent of the Fund, authorized or approved by a
resolution of its Board of Directors.

         In  witness thereof, the parties hereto have caused
this Agreement to be executed and their respective corporate
seals  to  be  affixed  hereto as of the  date  first  above
written   by   their  respective  officers  thereunto   duly
authorized.


    Executed  in several counterparts, each of which  is  an
    original



                 FIRST WISCONSIN TRUST   COMPANY

Attest:  ________________                By: ______________________
        Assistant Secretary                  Vice President
        Corporate Seal


Attest: __________________        _____________________
        Thomas J Saeger       By: Albert O. Nicholas
        Secretary                 President

FIRSTAR TRUST COMPANY

To:     Tom Saeger

From:   Jim Tyler

Date:   December 24, 1997

Re:     Nicholas Fund Fees For Calendar Years 1998 through 2000

TRANSFER AGENT FEES

                        Current
                        1997    1998    1999    2000
                        ----    ----    ----    ----
First 20,000           $13.40  $14.00  $14.20  $14.40
Next 40,000             12.65   13.25   13.45   13.65
Next 40,000             12.15   12.75   12.95   13.15
100,000 to 275,000      11.90   12.50   12.70   12.90
Over 275,000            10.00   10.60   10.80   11.00
Money Market Fund       14.40   15.00   15.20   15.40

Closed Accounts Billed @ $6.00 per account

CUSTODIAN FEES:

MARKET VALUE BASED FEE:

First 7 Billion: 1/2 Basis Point or (.00005)

Excess over 7 Billion: 4/10 Basis Point or (.00004)

TRANSACTION BASED FEES:

DTC/Fed Book Entry Transactions: The fees for the first 6,000 trades per
year will be waived, we will charge $6.00 for these trades thereafter.

Physical Delivery trades will be charged @ $12.00 per trade.
There will be no fees for commercial paper or demand note transactions.



                            NICHOLAS
                         FAMILY OF FUNDS




                                
                                
                                
                                
                             [LOGO]
                                
                                
                                

                  INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
                      DISCLOSURE STATEMENT


                           TRADITIONAL



                              ROTH

                           EDUCATIONAL


                        TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                             Page

General Information                                            3
     Initial Investment Minimums                               3
     Firstar Trust Company Custodial Fees                      3
     Instructions for Establishing an IRA                      3
          Opening an IRA                                       3
          Transferring an IRA                                  4
          Conversion of Traditional IRA a Roth IRA             4
     Where to Obtain Assistance on Your Nicholas IRA           4
     Disclosure Statement                                      5

Terms and Definitions                                          5

Questions and Answers                                          7
     General IRA Information                                   7
     Traditional IRA                                           9
     Roth IRA                                                 14
     Education IRA                                            17

Individual Retirement Account Custodial Agreements (5305 Series)
     5305-A, Traditional IRA                                  19
     5305-RA, Roth IRA                                        21
     5305-EA, Education IRA                                   23

NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS
GENERAL INFORMATION

Welcome to the Nicholas Family of Funds.  Please take some time
to review this Individual Retirement Account (IRA) Disclosure
Statement as well as the fund prospectus(es) you are considering
investment in.  The following information in this General
Information section will help you by outlining investment options
and minimums, identifying fees associated with IRA accounts,
providing instructions for establishing your IRA account, and
identifying where you can receive assistance on your Nicholas
account.

The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 brings many changes beginning in
1998 to the Traditional IRA as well as the introduction of two
new products: the Roth IRA and the Education IRA.  These changes
extend the opportunity for tax-deferred, and in some instances
tax-exempt, savings through the use of IRA accounts.

The remainder of this Disclosure Statement is divided into
sections to provide easier access to the information pertaining
specifically to the type of IRA account you are considering
investment in.  Please refer to the table of contents for faster
location of information pertinent to your situation.  We hope
that this Disclosure Statement is a useful tool for your IRA
decision making process.  Thank you for considering investing in
the Nicholas Family of Funds.

INITIAL INVESTMENT MINIMUMS:
Nicholas Fund   -   $500               Nicholas Equity Income Fund - $2,000
Nicholas II Fund   -   $500            Nicholas Income Fund -   $500
Nicholas Limited Edition* - $2,000     Nicholas Money Market Fund - $2,000

*NICHOLAS LIMITED EDITION HAS A LIMITED NUMBER OF SHARES FOR SALE
AND MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THIS TIME.  PLEASE CONTACT THE
NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF NICHOLAS
LIMITED EDITION.

FIRSTAR TRUST COMPANY CUSTODIAL FEES:

(a)  Annual maintenance fee; Traditional and Roth IRA  -  $12.50
per account
          (There is a cap of $25.00 for two or more accounts
under one social security or taxpayer identification number.  Education IRA
accounts are not included in this cap. The $25.00 will be divided equally
between all IRA accounts.)

      Annual maintenance fee for Education IRA - $5.00 per account

     THE ANNUAL MAINTENANCE FEE WILL BE DEDUCTED FROM YOUR
     ACCOUNT ANNUALLY, UNLESS IT IS PAID BY SEPTEMBER 15TH.
     ACCOUNTS CLOSED PRIOR TO THAT WILL BE ASSESSED THE ANNUAL
     MAINTENANCE FEE UPON REDEMPTION.
     
(b)  Transfer to a successor trustee-$15.00.

(c)  Distribution to a participant-$15.00. (Excluding Systematic
     Withdrawal Plan distributions)

(d)  Refund of excess contribution-$15.00.
     The charge for refunding excess contributions will be
     deducted from your account at the time of the refund.

(e)  Any outgoing wire transfer-$12.00.

Enough fund shares will be redeemed  to cover these fees. These
fees will apply regardless of the size of your account. The fees
are subject to change.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR ESTABLISHING AN IRA

OPENING AN IRA:
1)   Please read the prospectus for the fund you are interested
     in. If you do not have the applicable investment kit which
     contains the prospectus, contact Nicholas Family of Funds. This
     material contains more complete information regarding charges and
     expenses.

2)   Fill in the information required on the IRA Custodial
     Account Application - Form A (A through F) for Traditional and
     Roth IRA accounts, and on the IRA Custodial Account Application -
     Form B (A through G) for Education IRA accounts.

3)   Please make your check payable to the fund you are investing
     in.  If you are investing in more than one fund, one check made
     payable to Nicholas Family of Funds is appropriate.

4)   Direct Rollover contributions (for use with Traditional IRA
     accounts only) from an employer plan or tax-sheltered annuity
     should be made payable to:
          Firstar Trust Company, Custodian
          Nicholas Family of Funds IRA
          FBO (your name)
5)   Send the completed application along with your check in the
     envelope provided to:
          Firstar Trust Company
          Corporate Trust Department-IRA
          P.O. Box 2944
          Milwaukee, WI  53201-2944
A confirmation verifying your IRA investment will be mailed to
you within a week to 10 days after receipt of your deposit.

NOTE: If a fund has not been selected on the application or is
not indicated on the check, the investment will be made in the
Nicholas Money Market Fund.

TRANSFERRING AN IRA:

Use the transfer form (Form C) enclosed to transfer an existing
IRA from a current custodian or trustee to the Nicholas Family of
Funds. Be sure to fill in all of the information required. Return
the form, intact, with the IRA Custodial Account Application, and
we will handle the transfer for you. If the current custodian
sends you a check for the money in your account, forward a check
to the Firstar Trust Company within 60 days to avoid any tax
liability (please see "rollover" in the terms and definitions).
This last type of transaction is permitted only once every 12
months. PLEASE NOTE THAT MOST CUSTODIANS WILL REQUIRE THAT YOUR
SIGNATURE BE GUARANTEED BY A COMMERCIAL BANK, A MEMBER OF THE NEW
YORK STOCK EXCHANGE OR A SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION.

TRANSFERS CAN ONLY BE MADE BETWEEN LIKE IRA ACCOUNTS; TRADITIONAL
IRA TO TRADITIONAL IRA, ROTH IRA TO ROTH IRA, OR EDUCATION IRA TO
EDUCATION IRA.

CONVERSION OF TRADITIONAL IRA TO ROTH IRA:

1)   Please read the Question and Answer section pertaining to
     Roth IRA accounts.
2)   Complete Form D - Conversion of Traditional IRA to Roth IRA
3)   Complete Form A - IRA Custodial Account Application  for
     Traditional or Roth IRA Account.

It is not necessary to return the Form 5305-RA.

4)   Send completed Form A and Form D to:
       Firstar Trust Company
       Corporate Trust Department-IRA
       P.O. Box 2944
       Milwaukee, WI  53201-2944


A confirmation verifying your IRA investment will be mailed to
you within a week to 10 days after the conversion is complete.

NOTE:  The conversion Roth will be established in the same fund
the Traditional IRA is invested in unless otherwise noted on the
conversion form (Form D) and the IRA application (Form A).

WHERE TO OBTAIN ASSISTANCE ON YOUR NICHOLAS IRA ACCOUNT

ACCOUNT QUESTIONS AND TRANSACTIONS:

Questions regarding your IRA account transactions should be
directed TO FIRSTAR TRUST COMPANY AT (800)544-6547 OR
(414)276-0535.  As the Custodian of Nicholas Family of Funds IRA
accounts, Firstar can answer questions regarding purchases,
redemptions, and compliance issues.  Representatives are
available Monday through Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.,
Central time to speak with investors.  Account holders may access
their account information through our Voice Response Unit 24
hours a day by receiving computerized updates.

INVESTMENT OPTIONS AND PORTFOLIO QUESTIONS:

Questions regarding the Fund objectives, performance, or
management should be directed to NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS AT
(800)227-5987 OR (414)272-6133.  Our registered representatives
are available to assist you personally between 8:15 a.m. and 4:30
p.m., Central time.  After regular business hours, investors may
leave a message on our answering machine to receive additional
information or to have a representative return their call the
following business day.



INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

The Internal Revenue Service requires that you be given a
Disclosure Statement for the purpose of understanding individual
retirement accounts. The following Question/Answer Series is part
of our Disclosure Statement. Please read this section, the
Custodial Agreement (Forms 5305-A, 5305-RA, and 5305-EA) and the
appropriate Prospectus very carefully before deciding to invest.

You may revoke your IRA within seven days from the date the
individual retirement account is established. Upon revocation you
will receive the entire amount of consideration paid for your
account without adjustment for losses, gains or administrative
expenses. You may revoke your IRA by mailing or delivering a
written notice to the address listed below. A mailed notice,
properly addressed with first class postage prepaid, is deemed
mailed on the date of its postmark, certification or
registration.

Firstar Trust Company, Custodian
Nicholas Family of Funds, IRA
P.O. Box 2944
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201-2944

If you need further assistance in answering questions pertaining
to the Nicholas Family of Funds IRA, please call us at (414)
272-6133, or (800) 227-5987 or write to:

Nicholas Family of Funds
Individual Retirement Accounts
700 N. Water St., Suite 1010
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202

We recommend that you consult your lawyer, accountant or personal
tax adviser regarding questions on tax and legal implications.

TERMS AND DEFINITIONS

ACTIVE PARTICIPANT - An employee who is eligible to participate
in, actually participates in, or receives a contribution in
(including forfeitures) an employer-sponsored retirement plan.

BENEFICIARY - The individual(s) identified to receive your IRA
proceeds in the event of your death.  Special rules apply to the
Education IRA; please read the 5305-EA and related materials
closely.

COMPENSATION INCOME - Income reported to you by an employer on
Form W-2 or on Schedule C for self-employed individuals.

CONDUIT IRA - This is an IRA account established as a "holding
account" for proceeds from a previous employer's retirement plan.
You may roll over those assets into another qualified employer's
plan only if they are made up of the funds received from the
first employer's plan (plus earnings), and you did not commingle
regular contributions or funds from other sources with them.

CONTRIBUTION - The annual dollar amount deposited to an IRA
account for a specific calendar year.  Contribution limits vary
depending on individual circumstances.  Please review the
Question and Answer section of the IRA type you are considering
for a more detailed discussion.

CUSTODIAN - A bank, federally insured credit union, savings &
loan association, or other person found acceptable by the
Secretary of the Treasury.  Firstar Trust Company acts as
Custodian on Nicholas Family of Funds IRA accounts.

DIRECT ROLLOVER - A direct rollover to a Traditional IRA is
payment of a distribution from an employer-sponsored plan to the
IRA custodian instead of to you. You are entitled to have all or
part of an eligible rollover distribution made after 1992 from a
qualified plan or tax-sheltered annuity paid as a direct
rollover.

DISTRIBUTION - Any money or property you receive due to a
withdrawal or "pay out" from your IRA account or annuity is a
distribution.  Generally, distributions are to be included in
your gross income in the year you receive them.  Exceptions to
the general rule are rollovers made within the 60 day limitation
period and tax-free withdrawals of excess contributions.  If you
made nondeductible contributions for tax years after 1986, a
portion of each distribution will be tax-free, up to the total
amount of nondeductible contributions you made.

EARNED INCOME - Income earned by providing a service to another
individual or entity.  This does not include investment income
(such as dividends and capital gains).  Earned income does
include income from royalties, commissions, and taxable alimony.

EDUCATION IRA - An Education IRA is a specialized savings vehicle
to be used for post-secondary education expenses incurred by the
designated beneficiary of the account.  Contributions do not
receive a current deduction and are made to an IRA maintained on
behalf of a designated beneficiary.  However, if amounts are used
for certain educational purposes, neither the contributor nor the
beneficiary of the IRA are taxed upon distribution.

EXCESS CONTRIBUTION - The amount you contribute to your IRA
(other than rollover contributions and transfers) that is greater
than the allowable contribution limits outlined in the specific
IRA Question and Answer section. Contributions that exceed the
allowable maximum for federal income tax purposes are treated as
excess contributions.  A nondeductible penalty tax of 6% of the
excess amount contributed will be added to your income tax for
each year in which the excess contribution remains in your
account.  Firstar Trust Company, as Custodian, charges a $15.00
fee to refund any excess amounts.

IRA - "IRA" stands for Individual Retirement Arrangement.  In
general, an IRA is a savings program that lets you set money
aside for future retirement (except with the Education IRA).
Please refer to the Question and Answer section on the type of
IRA you are considering establishing to determine the
deductibility of contributions and the taxation of future
distributions.

MAINTENANCE FEE - The annual fee assessed by the Custodian to
offset expenses related to maintaining IRA accounts within IRS
limitations.

PASSIVE INCOME - Income which is not earned, such as investment
income from dividends and capital gains.

PREMATURE DISTRIBUTION - Any distribution from your IRA made
prior to the minimum standards established by the IRS.  Different
terms govern the different IRA accounts available.   Please refer
to the Question and Answer section for the type of account you
are considering for more specific terms.

REQUIRED MINIMUM DISTRIBUTION - Distributions from a Traditional
IRA must begin by April 1 in the year following the year an IRA
owner attains 70 1/2.  Roth IRAs do not require a minimum
distribution.

ROLLOVER - A rollover is the deposit of cash, stock, etc. from
one retirement program into another tax-free where by the IRA
OWNER RECEIVES A CHECK from the resigning custodian, and upon
receipt of the check has 60 days to deposit the proceeds into
another custodial account.  Only one rollover is permitted per
IRA account in any twelve month period.

ROTH IRA - A Roth IRA is a new IRA product available beginning
with contributions made for tax year 1998. Amounts contributed to
your IRA are taxed at the time of contribution, but distributions
from the IRA may not be subject to tax if you have held the IRA
for certain minimum periods of time (generally, until age 59 1/2
but in some cases longer).

SPOUSAL IRA - An IRA account for a spouse without earned income.
Contribution limits and deductibility of contributions will vary
depending on the situation.  Please refer to the Question and
Answer section for the account type you are considering.

TOTAL RETURN - This is the increase (or decrease) in the Fund's
share price, plus the reinvestment of all dividends and capital
gains, over a specific period of time.  Total return is a measure
of actual past performance and can be used as an indicator of the
future potential growth of a fund, but it is in no way a
guarantee of future performance.

TRADITIONAL IRA  -   A Traditional IRA is a specialized IRA
account where amounts contributed to the IRA may be tax
deductible at the time of contribution. Distributions from the
IRA will be taxed at distribution except to the extent that the
distribution represents a return of your own contributions for
which you did not claim (or where not eligible to claim) a
deduction.


TRANSFER - This is THE MOVEMENT OF IRA PROCEEDS DIRECTLY FROM ONE
CUSTODIAN TO ANOTHER with the funds never coming under your
direct control.  The IRS allows transfers as often as the IRA
owner desires; however, the fund you are considering may impose
restrictions.  Transfers are accomplished with written
instructions, using a Transfer Form provided by the receiving
custodian.

1099-R - The government form used to report distributions (all
except transfers between custodians) from your IRA account.  A
copy is sent to you and to the IRS in January following the year
of distribution.

5498 - The government form used to report annual contributions
and rollovers (but not transfers) as well as the year-end market
value of your IRA account for each calendar year.  Copies are
sent to you and to the IRS in May of the following year.

QUESTION AND ANSWERS
GENERAL IRA ACCOUNT INFORMATION

1) HOW WILL MY ACCOUNT BE INVESTED?
  
  Contributions made to an IRA will be invested, at your
election, in one or more of the regulated investment companies
for which Nicholas Company, Inc. serves as Investment Advisor or
any other regulated investment company designated by Nicholas
Company, Inc. No part of the IRA may be invested in life
insurance contracts; further, the assets of the IRA may not be
commingled with other property.
  
  Information about the shares of each mutual fund available for
investment by your IRA must be furnished to you in the form of a
prospectus governed by rules of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. Please refer to the prospectus for detailed
information concerning your mutual fund. You may obtain further
information concerning IRAs from any District Office of the
Internal Revenue Service.

2) WHAT IS THE RATE OF RETURN ON MY NICHOLAS IRA CONTRIBUTION?
  
  The rate of return on your investment depends on the increase
or decrease of the fund share price in relation to your purchase
price, plus a reinvestment of all distributions.  Growth in the
value of your account is in no way guaranteed by the fund you
choose, Nicholas Company, or the Custodian. Market risks are
inherent in any investment and there can be no assurance against
possible loss in the value of any of the fund's portfolios.
Future earnings on your contributions cannot be projected because
of the fluctuations in the value of the funds.

3) MAY I TRANSFER MY BALANCE BETWEEN THE FUNDS MANAGED BY
NICHOLAS COMPANY?
  
  Yes.  Please review the final article of each Individual
Retirement Account Custodial Agreement (5305 series) for specific
rules. Exchanges made between Nicholas funds are considered
transfers for tax purposes and are not limited by the IRS as to
frequency.  However, Fund policy may limit frequency of
transactions.  Please review your Fund prospectus regarding
exchanges between funds.

4) WHAT IS THE DEADLINE FOR MAKING IRA CONTRIBUTIONS?
  
  The deadline for making contributions to the IRA is the due
date your tax return for the year in which the deduction is
claimed, without extensions. Consequently, you must make your
contribution before April 15, even if you obtain an extension for
filing your tax returns.
  You must fully execute the IRA Custodial Account Application
by April 15.  One exception applies to Education IRAs.  At the
time of this printing, current legislation appears to require
contributions to an Education IRA be made during the calendar
year the contribution applies to.

5) AM I REQUIRED TO CONTRIBUTE TO AN IRA EVERY YEAR?
  
  No.

6) CAN I HAVE MORE THAN ONE IRA ACCOUNT?
  
  Yes. You may establish more than one IRA account provided that
the total contributions to all of your IRAs  (including
Traditional, Roth, and Education where applicable) for the
taxable year do not exceed the maximum limits. For example, you
may wish to place a portion of your contribution in a mutual fund
IRA, and place the remainder with an IRA offered by a savings and
loan or bank.

7) WHAT HAPPENS IF I MAKE AN EXCESS CONTRIBUTE TO MY IRA?
  
  If you make a contribution in excess of your allowable
maximum, you may correct the excess contribution and avoid the 6%
penalty tax for that year by withdrawing the excess contribution
and its earnings on or before the date, including extensions, for
filing your tax return for the tax year for which the
contribution was made. Any earnings on the withdrawn excess
contribution may be subject to a 10% early distribution penalty
tax if you are under age 59 1/2.  In addition, in certain cases an
excess contribution may be withdrawn after the time for filing
your tax return. Finally, excess contributions for one year may
be carried forward and applied against the contribution
limitation in succeeding years.

8) WHAT DO I DO IN THE EVENT I WISH A REFUND OF THE EXCESS
CONTRIBUTION AND EARNINGS IN MY NICHOLAS IRA?
  
  To request a refund you must submit a letter, addressed to the
Custodian at the address given on page 5 of this Disclosure
Statement, indicating the principal amount of the excess
contribution which should be redeemed and refunded to you. This
letter should include the date of the contribution, state that
this redemption is due to an over-contribution and that the net
income attributable to the contribution should also be returned.
The letter must bear your signature.

9) HOW ARE DISTRIBUTIONS MADE?
  
  If you wish to receive a full or partial distribution, or
installment payments from your IRA account in the Nicholas Family
of Funds, an IRA Distribution Request Form must be completed and
returned to the Custodian prior to distribution. This form can be
obtained by writing or calling Firstar Trust Company
(414-276-0535 or 800-544-6547). A written request for
distribution is also acceptable provided it contains a facsimile
notice of federal income tax withholding as it appears on our
form.
  
  Distributions can be made in a single sum payment or in
various installment methods which are described in greater detail
in the appropriate 5305 form at the end of this Disclosure
Statement.

10) CAN ANYTHING CAUSE DISQUALIFICATION OF MY IRA?
  
  Yes. If you or your beneficiary engage in a prohibited
transaction (i.e. self-dealing types of activities, including
borrowing of money from the account) described in section 4975(c)
of the Internal Revenue Code with respect to your IRA, the
account will lose its tax-deferred status as of the first day of
the taxable year in which the prohibited transaction occurs. The
fair market value of the account as of the first day of the
taxable year must be included in your gross income, or in the
gross income of your beneficiary. If your account is disqualified
in this manner, and you are not disabled or 59 1/2 years of age on
the first day of the taxable year, you must also pay the 10%
additional tax as though there had been a premature distribution.

11)  MAY I REDEEM PERSONAL SHARES AND TRANSFER THE CASH INTO AN
IRA?
  
  Yes, however, you should take into consideration that any
realized gains made on the redemption may be subject to federal
and state income taxes.

12)  MAY I PLEDGE MY IRA AS SECURITY FOR A LOAN?
  
  If you pledge your IRA as security for a loan, the portion so
pledged is treated as a fully taxable distribution. If you have
not attained the age of 59 1/2 at the time of the pledge, the
distribution is also subject to a 10% nondeductible excise tax as
a premature distribution.

13)  WHERE MAY I OBTAIN ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT MY IRA?
  
  You may obtain additional information about your IRA from your
local Internal Revenue Service district office.

NOTE:  As of calendar year 1997, the 15% excess distribution tax
is repealed, as is the 15% excess accumulation at death tax.

TRADITIONAL IRA ACCOUNTS

1) WHAT ARE SOME OF THE RULES GOVERNING TRADITIONAL INDIVIDUAL
RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS?
  
  An Individual Retirement Account (IRA) is either a trust or
custodial account. It must be created by document for your
exclusive benefit, as an individual, or for your beneficiaries.
It also must meet the following IRS requirements:

(a) The custodian must be a bank, federally insured credit union,
savings and loan association, or other person found acceptable by
the Secretary of the Treasury.

(b) Contributions may not exceed $2,000 (or your full income,
whichever is less) in any taxable year and are combined with any
other contributions made for your benefit to other IRA accounts
such as Roth IRAs or Education IRAs.  Distributions from
qualified employer retirement plans or tax-sheltered annuities
purchased for you by a public school or charitable employer are
not included in the annual $2,000 limit.  Contributions must be
made by check and not in the form of securities.

(c) No part of the assets of the savings plan fund may be
invested in ordinary life insurance contracts.

(d) The assets of the custodial account may not be commingled
with other property except in a common trust fund or common
investment fund.

(e) Your interest, as a depositor, in the balance of your IRA
must be non-forfeitable.

(f) The entire interest, in a Traditional IRA maintained for your
benefit, must be distributed to you by the "required beginning
date for distributions", which is April 1 following the close of
the calendar year in which you attain age 70 1/2. Alternatively,
the entire interest must be distributed, beginning no later than
the required beginning date for distributions, over either:
  
  (i)   your life as depositor, or the joint lives of you and
your designated beneficiary; or over
  
  (ii)  a period not extending beyond your life expectancy, or
the joint life expectancy of you and your designated beneficiary.

(g) If you die on or after the date distribution of your interest
has begun, the remaining interest will continue to be distributed
to your beneficiaries under the same method in effect prior to
your death. If you die before the distribution of your interest
has begun, the entire remaining interest will, at the election of
your beneficiary or beneficiaries, be distributed either:
  
  (i)   by December 31 of the year containing the fifth (5th)
anniversary of the your death; or
  
  (ii)   in equal or substantially equal payments over the life
or life expectancy of the designated beneficiary or
beneficiaries.

The election of either (i) or (ii) above must be made by December
31 of the year following the year of your death. If the
beneficiary or beneficiaries do not elect either of the
distribution options by that time, distribution will be made in
accordance with (ii) if the beneficiary is your surviving spouse,
and in accordance with option (i) if the beneficiary or
beneficiaries are or include anyone other than your surviving
spouse. Distributions under option (ii) must begin by December 31
of the year following the year of your death. However, if your
spouse is the beneficiary, distributions need not begin until
December 31 of the year you would have attained age 70 1/2.  The
spouse, as beneficiary, has the option to rollover your account
into their own IRA and take distributions according to
Traditional IRA rules.  It should be noted that the deferral on
income recognition may be available to the surviving spouse upon
proper elections being made.  Professional advice should be
obtained to effect the deferral of income recognition.

2) DOES THE NICHOLAS IRA MEET ALL OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE
REQUIREMENTS?
  
  Yes. The Nicholas IRA has been approved, in form, by the
Internal Revenue Service. IRS approval is not a determination of
the merit of the Nicholas IRA as an investment.

3) WHO IS ELIGIBLE TO PARTICIPATE IN A TRADITIONAL IRA?
  
  Anyone under age 70 1/2 who has earned income at some time
during the year may participate in an IRA. You may contribute
whether or not you are an active participant in an
employer-sponsored retirement plan. However, if you are an active
participant in an employer-sponsored plan, your contributions
will be deductible only if the income of you and your spouse, if
any, is below certain limits (see Question 6 on page 10).

4) ARE THERE LIMITATIONS ON THE AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTIONS I CAN
MAKE TO AN IRA?
  
  Yes, yearly IRA contributions may not exceed the lesser of the
following amounts: (1) $2,000, or (2)100 % of your annual
compensation (earned income) that is includable in your gross
income. Please see the answer to Question 6 on page 10 for rules
relating to the deductibility of IRA contributions.


5) DO THE IRA LIMITATIONS MENTIONED PREVIOUSLY APPLY SEPARATELY
TO A HUSBAND AND WIFE WHO BOTH WORK?
  
  Yes, a husband can contribute $2,000 maximum per year to his
IRA, and his wife may contribute $2,000 maximum per year to her
IRA.
  
  It is important to note that there can be no joint IRA
accounts. IRAs are set aside in the name of one person; however,
beneficiaries are designated in the event of death.

6) ARE TRADITIONAL IRA CONTRIBUTIONS FULLY TAX DEDUCTIBLE?
  
  Your Traditional IRA contributions will be fully tax
deductible (up to the maximum contribution limit) if you, or you
and your spouse, are not an active participant(s) in an
employer-sponsored retirement plan.  Your Traditional IRA
contributions will also be fully deductible if you are not an
active participant in an employer sponsored retirement plan, but
your spouse is and your adjusted gross income is less than
$150,000 for the taxable year the contribution is being made.
(If your adjusted gross income is between $150,000 and $160,000,
your contribution will be partially deductible.)
  
  If you are an active participant in an employer-sponsored
plan, please refer to the following charts to determine
deductibility.  These limits are subject to changes by the IRS
and you should consult with the IRS or your tax advisor for the
most recent levels.
  
  If you are married and file a separate return and are not an
"active participant" in an employer-sponsored retirement plan,
you may make a fully deductible contribution to a Traditional IRA
(up to the contribution limits described above). If you are
married and filing separately and are an "active participant" in
an employer-sponsored retirement plan, you may not make a fully
deductible contribution to a Traditional IRA. A partial deduction
is available if your 1998 adjusted gross income is less than
$10,000. This amount is not adjusted for cost-of-living changes
or otherwise.

EARNED INCOME LEVELS FOR "ACTIVE PARTICIPANTS"
  TRADITIONAL IRA CONTRIBUTIONS

SINGLE and HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD:

                 Eligible To Make A   Eligible To Make A   Not Eligible To Make
                     Deductible       Partially Deductible  A  Deductible
         Year   Contribution If AGI   Contribution If AGI    Contribution
                    Less Than Or            Between         If AGI is Equal to
                        Equal To                              or Greater Than
         ----   --------------------  -------------------  -------------------
         [S]          [C]              [C]                       [C]
         1998         $30,000          $30,001 - $39,999         $40,000
         1999         $31,000          $31,001 - $40,999         $41,000
         2000         $32,000          $32,001 - $41,999         $42,000
         2001         $33,000          $33,001 - $42,999         $43,000
         2002         $34,000          $34,001 - $43,999         $44,000
         2003         $40,000          $40,001 - $49,999         $50,000
         2004         $45,000          $45,001 - $54,999         $55,000
  2005 and thereafter $50,000          $50,001 - $59,999         $60,000


MARRIED FILING JOINTLY:

                 Eligible To Make A   Eligible To Make A   Not Eligible To Make
                     Deductible       Partially Deductible  A  Deductible
         Year   Contribution If AGI   Contribution If AGI    Contribution
                    Less Than Or            Between         If AGI is Equal to
                        Equal To                              or Greater Than
         ----   --------------------  -------------------  -------------------
         [S]            [S]             [S]                        [S]
         1998           $50,000         $50,001 - $59,999          $60,000
         1999           $51,000         $51,001 - $60,999          $61,000
         2000           $52,000         $52,001 - $61,999          $62,000
         2001           $53,000         $53,001 - $62,999          $63,000
         2002           $54,000         $54,001 - $63,999          $64,000
         2003           $60,000         $60,001 - $69,999          $70,000
         2004           $65,000         $65,001 - $74,999          $75,000
         2005           $70,000         $70,001 - $79,999          $80,000
         2006           $75,000         $75,001 - $84,999          $85,000
    2007 and thereafter $80,000         $80,001 - $99,999         $100,000

7) IF MY IRA CONTRIBUTIONS ARE NOT FULLY DEDUCTIBLE, MAY I MAKE
NONDEDUCTIBLE CONTRIBUTIONS?
  
  Yes, as long as your total contributions do not exceed the
yearly maximum described in the answer to Question 4. For
example, if you are single and can only make a $1,000 deductible
IRA contribution in a certain year, you can make an additional,
nondeductible contribution that year of $1,000 as long as you
have earned income of at least $2,000.  All earnings will
continue to accumulate tax-free until distributed.
  
  You must designate all nondeductible contributions as such on
your tax return (use IRS Form 8606) for the taxable year for
which they are made.

8) CAN A TRADITIONAL IRA BE ESTABLISHED FOR A SPOUSE WITHOUT
EARNED INCOME?
  
  Yes, this is referred to as a Spousal IRA.  A working spouse
also can elect in any year to be treated as having no
compensation for that year in order to be eligible for a Spousal
IRA.
  
  If you are married and file a joint income tax return, you may
make contributions to your spouse's IRA.  However, the maximum
amount contributed to both your own and to your spouse's IRA may
not exceed 100% of your combined taxable compensation or $4,000,
whichever is less.  Moreover, the annual contribution to each
individual IRA may not exceed $2,000.
  
  If either you or your spouse is an active participant in an
employer-sponsored retirement plan, the allowable tax deduction
for a Spousal IRA for that year may be reduced or eliminated in
accordance with the rules explained in the answer to Question 6.
Nondeductible contributions may still be made as long as the
combined total contributions to both IRAs for the tax year do not
exceed the lesser of  $4,000 or 100% of your combined taxable
income.

9) WHAT IS THE TAX STATUS OF EARNINGS ON MY TRADITIONAL IRA?
  
  IRA earnings, including both dividends and capital gains, are
exempt from federal income tax as long as your plan remains
qualified and until distributions are made.

10)  WHEN CAN DISTRIBUTIONS FROM MY TRADITIONAL IRA BEGIN?
  
  Generally, you must be at least 59 1/2 years old to receive a
penalty-free IRA distribution.  Other penalty-free distributions
may be made before age 59 1/2 in the event of death, disability,
or if they are in the form of lifetime, periodic payments which
meet IRS requirements.
  
  The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 permits penalty-free early withdrawals from your IRA where
such withdrawn amounts are used for:
  
  1)  qualified medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of adjusted
gross income; or
  
  2)  the payment of medical insurance premiums for qualified
unemployed individuals.
  
  Additionally, beginning with tax year 1997, penalty-free
premature distributions may be made from your Traditional IRA
for:

       1)  First time home purchase (up to $10,000 lifetime limit)

       2)  Post-secondary education expenses.
  
  You should consult your tax adviser before you take any
distributions. Premature distributions will be penalized by a 10%
nondeductible excise tax on the amount of the distribution that
is includable in gross income. A premature distribution must also
be added to your gross income for the taxable year (except any
portion representing nondeductible contributions), and may result
in additional income taxes. An individual receiving a premature
distribution must file Form 5329 with the IRS for the year in
which the distribution is received.

11)  How will I be taxed on distributions from my Traditional IRA
after the age of 59 1/2?
  
  Distributions are taxable as ordinary income. Capital gain
treatment or income averaging is not available for IRA
distributions. Installment payments are taxable as ordinary
income in the year of receipt. Distributions to persons who have
attained the age of 65 prior to the close of the taxable year may
qualify for credit for the elderly.
  
  A proportionate amount of each distribution will be tax-free
if you have made nondeductible contributions for tax years after
1986.  For this purpose, all distributions during any year from
any of your IRAs must be totaled and treated like a single
distribution, and all of your IRAs are treated like a single IRA.
The total amounts you receive tax-free for all years cannot
exceed the total nondeductible contributions made.
  
  (Any distributions from your IRA represent a return of pre-tax
and after-tax dollars.  You must determine what percentage of
your prior year-end market value on all of your IRA accounts is
represented by after-tax contributions.  That same percentage of
any distributions during the current calendar year will not be
taxable; the balance of the distribution will be taxable at
ordinary income levels for the current calendar year.  Any return
of after-tax dollars due to partial distributions from your IRA
reduces the remaining after-tax dollars represented in the
balance of your IRA in future years.  This new balance will be
used for calculating the percentage of after-tax dollars in
future distributions.)


12)  HOW LONG MAY I DELAY DISTRIBUTIONS FROM MY TRADITIONAL IRA?
  
  You must comply with certain "minimum distribution rules" that
apply to your IRA under the Internal Revenue Code. The failure to
satisfy these rules can result in significant adverse tax
consequences for you, such as being taxed on your entire IRA
account balance and paying other tax penalties.
  
  I. PRE-DEATH DISTRIBUTIONS
  
  The minimum distribution rules require that in your 70 1/2
year, and each year thereafter, you make withdrawals from the IRA
that are at least equal to the "minimum distribution." Your 70 1/2
year is the calendar year that contains the date six months after
your seventieth birthday. The amount of the minimum distribution
is usually determined by dividing the account balance of the IRA
as of December 31 of the prior year by a divisor that is based on
your life expectancy, or the joint life expectancy for you and
your beneficiary. However, there are a number of rules that
determine how the calculation of your minimum distribution should
be made, including special exceptions that may apply to you.
These are discussed in IRS Publication 590, Individual Retirement
Arrangements, which you should consult.
  
  Generally, you must withdraw an amount at least equal to the
minimum distribution by December 31 of each year. However, you
may delay your minimum required distribution for your 70 1/2 year
until April 1 of the following year. This means that if you wait
to make your withdrawal for the 70 1/2 year until April 1 of the
following year, your total withdrawal in that year must equal the
minimum distributions for two years-a withdrawal by April 1 that
is equal to the minimum distribution for the 70 1/2 year, and a
second withdrawal by December 31 that is equal to the minimum
distribution for the current year. In each following year you
must withdraw the minimum distribution for that year by December
31.
  
  II. DISTRIBUTIONS AFTER DEATH
  
  If you are the beneficiary of an IRA account for which the
owner is deceased, the minimum distribution rules also apply to
you. Specific information on how the minimum distribution rules
apply to beneficiaries of an IRA is contained in IRS Publication
590, Individual Retirement Arrangements. In general, the amount
that you must withdraw in each year depends upon whether the IRA
owner reached age 70 1/2 before death, and whether you are the
surviving spouse of the IRA owner.
  
  If the IRA owner was age 70 1/2 before death, then regardless
of your age you must withdraw an amount in each year that is at
least equal to the amount that the IRA owner would have been
required to withdraw. This rule also applies if you are the
surviving spouse of the IRA owner, and you choose not to roll the
account into an IRA of your own.
  
  If the IRA owner was not age 70 1/2 before death and you are
not the surviving spouse, there are two possible options. Under
the first option, you must withdraw the entire IRA account by
December 31 of the fifth year following the year of the IRA
owner's death. Under the second option, you must, by December 31
of the year following the year of the IRA owner's death and in
each year thereafter, withdraw an amount that is at least equal
to the IRA account balance divided by your life expectancy. If
you are the surviving spouse, the same two options apply, but
additional options are available to you for satisfying the
minimum distribution requirements.
  
  III. OTHER RULES
  
  You can satisfy the minimum distribution rules by withdrawing
from one IRA the amount required to satisfy the minimum
distribution requirement for all of your IRAs.
  
  Unless you or your spouse elects otherwise, your life
expectancy and/or the life expectancy of your spouse will be
recalculated annually.  An election not to recalculate life
expectancy(ies) is irrevocable and will apply to all subsequent
years.  The life expectancy of a nonspouse beneficiary may not be
recalculated.
  
  Distributions from your IRA must satisfy the special "minimum
distribution incidental benefit" rules of the Internal Revenue
Code.  These provisions set forth certain limitations on the
determination of the joint life expectancy of you and your
beneficiary.  Special rules will determine how you calculate the
joint life expectancy of you and your beneficiary if your
beneficiary is not your spouse and is more than 10 years younger
than you.
  
  This explanation only summarizes the minimum distribution
rules. Other rules and exceptions may apply to you that are not
discussed in this summary including rules which, in some cases,
would prevent you from using certain options described above. You
should consult your personal tax adviser or IRS publication 590,
Individual Retirement Arrangements, for more detailed
information. This publication is available from your local IRS
office or by calling 1-800-TAX-FORM.

13)  WHAT HAPPENS TO MY TRADITIONAL IRA IN THE EVENT OF DEATH?
  
  Part E of the IRA Custodial Account Application (Form A)
permits you to name a beneficiary or beneficiaries to receive any
amounts remaining in your IRA at the time of your death.  If you
do not name a beneficiary, your beneficiary will be your estate.
The act of naming a beneficiary to receive IRA benefits upon your
death is not considered a gift subject to federal gift taxes.
Your beneficiary designation can be revoked at any time by
completing a Change of Beneficiary form. Contact Nicholas Family
of Funds at 1-800-227-5987 for this form.
  
  Amounts remaining in your Traditional IRA at death will be
included in your estate and may be subject to estate tax.
  
  See Question 1(g) for information on the timing of
distributions to your beneficiaries.

14)  What are the Specific Limitations of Rollovers?
  
  The IRS allows one rollover per IRA account in any 12 month
period. When the rollover represents a distribution from an
employer-sponsored retirement plan or a tax-sheltered "403(b)"
annuity purchased for you by a public school or charitable
employer, a penalty tax of 20% is withheld upon distribution to
you and it is your responsibility to deposit the full amount of
the employer plan proceeds into an IRA custodial account within
60 days to avoid IRS penalties and taxes.  The 20% withholding
can be returned through your annual tax filing.  Rollover
contributions are not tax deductible.
  
  Most distributions made after 1992 of all or part of your
interest in a qualified plan or tax-sheltered annuity are
eligible rollover distributions, unless the distribution is: a
return of your after-tax contributions; part of a series of
substantially equal installments being paid over a period of 10
years or more, or a period measured by one or more lives or life
expectancies; or a required minimum distribution (e.g., if you
have reached age 70 1/2 ). Certain other exceptions may also
apply.

15)  WHY SHOULD I CONSIDER A DIRECT ROLL OVER FROM MY PREVIOUS
EMPLOYER WHEN THEY CAN GIVE ME A CHECK?
  
  The direct rollover option is important because if you do not
elect a direct rollover of the distribution (to a Traditional IRA
or certain other eligible plans), 20% of the distribution will be
withheld for income taxes. You can still make a rollover
contribution other than a direct rollover, but you will not fully
avoid taxes.
  
  For example, if the eligible rollover distribution is $10,000
and it is paid to you instead of paid as a direct rollover,
$2,000 will be withheld. You will only receive $8,000. If you
rollover only the $8,000, the other $2,000 will be taxed as a
distribution as described in the answers to Questions 10 and 11.
In order to avoid these taxes, you will have to add $2,000 of
your own funds to the rollover to make up for the amounts
withheld. The withheld amounts will not be refunded by the IRS
until your tax return for the year is filed.
  
  In order to make a direct rollover to a Nicholas Traditional
IRA, make sure the distribution check from your qualified plan or
tax-sheltered annuity is made payable as described under "Opening
an IRA" (see page 3). You may also need to provide certain other
information required by the plan administrator or annuity
provider.

ROTH IRA ACCOUNTS

1 Am I eligible to contribute to a Roth IRA?
  
  Anyone with compensation income whose adjusted gross income
does not exceed the limits described below is eligible to
contribute to a Roth IRA. You may also establish a Roth IRA to
receive rollover contributions or transfers from another Roth IRA
or, in some cases, from a Traditional IRA. You may not roll
amounts into a Roth IRA from other retirement plans such as an
employer-sponsored qualified plan. However, current law does not
appear to prohibit a rollover from a qualified plan into a
Traditional IRA, and then from the Traditional IRA into a Roth
IRA.
  
  The limits to AGI are as follows:

                   Full Contribution if  Partial Contribution  No Contribution
                     AGI is Less Than or   if AGI is Between  Allowed if AGI is
                        Equal to                                Equal to or
                                                                Greater Than
                   --------------------- -------------------- -----------------
[S]                      [C]             [C]                       [C]
Single and Head of
Household Filers         $95,000         $95,001 - $109,999        $110,000

Married Filing Jointly   $150,000       $150,001 - $159,999        $160,000

Married Filing Separately     $0             $1 - $14,999           $15,000

  Note that the amount you may contribute to a Roth IRA is not
affected by your participation in an employer-sponsored
retirement plan.

2) WHEN CAN I MAKE CONTRIBUTIONS?
  
  You may make annual contributions to your Roth IRA any time up
to and including the due date for filing your tax return for the
year, not including extensions. Unlike a Traditional IRA, you may
continue to make regular contributions to your Roth IRA even
after you attain age 70 1/2 as long as you have earned income.  In
addition, rollover contributions and transfers (to the extent
permitted as discussed below) may be made at any time, regardless
of your age.

3) HOW MUCH MAY I CONTRIBUTE TO A ROTH IRA?
  
  You may make annual contributions to a Roth IRA in any amount
up to 100% of your compensation for the year or $2,000, whichever
is less. The $2,000 limitation is reduced by any contributions
made by you or on your behalf to any other individual retirement
plan (such as a Traditional IRA). (Legislation pending as of this
printing clarifies that, for this purpose, the term individual
retirement plan does not include SEP IRAs or SIMPLE IRAs.)  Also,
your annual contribution limitation is not reduced by
contributions you make to an Education IRA that covers someone
other than yourself. Qualifying rollover contributions and
transfers are not subject to these limitations.
  
  In addition, if you are married and file a joint return, you
may make contributions to your spouse's Roth IRA. Also, the
maximum amount contributed to both your own and to your spouse's
Roth IRA may not exceed 100% of your combined compensation or
$4,000, whichever is less. The maximum amount that may be
contributed to either your Roth IRA or your spouse's Roth IRA is
$2,000. Again, these dollar limits are reduced by any
contributions made by or on behalf of you or your spouse to any
other individual retirement plan (such as a Traditional IRA),
except that the limit is not reduced for contributions either of
you make to an Education IRA for someone other than yourselves.
  
  Please note that these contribution limits may be reduced or
eliminated if your filing status and AGI are within certain
limits.  Please refer to the chart in Question #1 (above) for the
1998 income limitations.

4) CAN I ROLL OVER OR TRANSFER AMOUNTS FROM OTHER ROTH IRAS?
  
  You are allowed to "roll over" a distribution or transfer your
assets from one Roth IRA to another without any tax liability.
Rollovers between Roth IRAs are permitted once per 12 month
period per account and must be accomplished within 60 days after
receipt of the distribution.
  
  Transfers between Roth accounts may also be transacted and are
not restricted by the IRS.  Please consult your Fund prospectus
for any Fund restrictions.

5) CAN I MOVE MONEY FROM MY TRADITIONAL IRA INTO A ROTH IRA?
  
  Yes.  This transaction is called a "conversion".  If you are a
single, head of household or married filing jointly taxpayer and
your adjusted gross income (as measured at the calendar year end
for the year of conversion) is not more than $100,000, you may
roll over amounts from another individual retirement plan (such
as a Traditional IRA) to a Roth IRA. Such amounts are subject to
tax as if they were additional income to you for the year, but
are not subject to the 10% penalty tax. (However, under
legislation pending as of this printing, if the amount rolled
over is distributed before the end of the five-tax-year period
beginning with the beginning of the tax year of the rollover, a
10% penalty tax will apply to the taxed portion of the rollover
as well as a potential additional penalty tax on the premature
Roth distributions for conversions done in 1998.)

6) CAN I ROLL OVER FROM OTHER RETIREMENT PLANS INTO MY ROTH IRA?
  
  You may not roll amounts into a Roth IRA from other retirement
plans such as an employer-sponsored qualified plan. However,
current law does not appear to prohibit a rollover from a
qualified plan into a Traditional IRA and then from the
Traditional IRA into a Roth IRA, as long as you are within the
established income levels for doing a conversion transaction.
(See question 5, page 14)

7) ARE THERE SPECIAL TAX ISSUES I SHOULD BE AWARE OF REGARDING
CONVERSIONS FROM TRADITIONAL IRAS TO ROTH IRAS?
  
  If you roll over amounts from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA
during 1998, you may take advantage of special tax treatment.
Under the special rules, you may take your rollover into income
as if one quarter of the amount rolled over was distributed to
you in 1998 and one quarter of the amount was distributed to you
in each of the following three years.
  
  (Legislation pending as of this printing indicates that if you
die prior to taking all four amounts into income, the remaining
amounts are included in income for the year of your death unless
you have a spouse who elects to take those amounts into his or
her income over the remaining period.)
  
  Subject to the foregoing limits, you may also directly convert
a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA with similar tax results.
  
  Furthermore, if you have made contributions to a Traditional
IRA during the year in excess of the deductible limit, you may
convert those nondeductible IRA contributions to contributions to
a Roth IRA (subject to the contribution limit for a Roth IRA).
  
  You may not roll over amounts to a Roth IRA from a qualified
retirement plan or any other retirement plan that is not an
individual retirement plan.

8) WHAT IF I MAKE AN EXCESS CONTRIBUTION?
  
  Contributions that exceed the allowable maximum for federal
income tax purposes are treated as excess contributions. A
nondeductible penalty tax of 6% of the excess amount contributed
will be added to your income tax for each year in which the
excess contribution remains in your account.

9) HOW DO I CORRECT AN EXCESS CONTRIBUTION?
  
  If you make a contribution in excess of your allowable
maximum, you may correct the excess contribution and avoid the 6%
penalty tax for that year by withdrawing the excess contribution
and its earnings on or before the date, including extensions, for
filing your tax return for the tax year for which the
contribution was made. Any earnings on the withdrawn excess
contribution may also be subject to the 10% early distribution
penalty tax if you are under age 59 1/2 or have not satisfied the
five-year requirement described below. In addition, although you
will still owe penalty taxes for one or more years, excess
contributions may be withdrawn after the time for filing your tax
return. Finally, excess contributions for one year may be carried
forward and applied against the contribution limitation in
succeeding years.
  
  (Legislation pending as of this printing would permit an
individual who is partially or entirely ineligible for a Roth IRA
to transfer amounts of up to $2,000 to a nondeductible
Traditional IRA (subject to reduction for amounts remaining in
the Roth IRA and for other Traditional IRA contributions).)

10)  CAN I COMBINE MY CONVERSION ROTH ACCOUNT WITH MY CURRENT
YEAR ROTH CONTRIBUTIONS?
  
  No.  Form 5303-RA, Article I, number 2 states "If this Roth
IRA is designated as a Roth conversion IRA, no contributions
other than IRA conversion contributions made during the same tax
year will be accepted."

11)  HOW ARE DISTRIBUTIONS FROM A CONTRIBUTION ROTH IRA TREATED?
  
  Distributions from Roth accounts which represent annual
contributions are treated as contributions being removed first.
Contributions can be removed at any time without tax or penalty.
Any earnings removed before the later of five years or age 59 1/2
will be subject to an early withdrawal penalty tax of 10% and
will be treated as ordinary income in the year of the
distribution, unless the distribution is for a qualified purpose.

12)   HOW DO DISTRIBUTIONS FROM CONVERSION ROTH ACCOUNTS DIFFER
FROM CONTRIBUTORY ROTH ACCOUNT DISTRIBUTIONS?
  
  According to legislation currently pending, contributions plus
earnings must remain in a Conversion Roth account for a minimum
of five calendar years, beginning with the calendar year of the
conversion, to avoid any penalty taxes and income tax.  After the
five calendar year waiting period, the principal converted may be
removed without penalty, regardless of the depositor's age.  The
earnings must remain in the Roth account until the depositor
attains age 59 1/2 to avoid a penalty tax of 10% and treatment as
ordinary income for tax purposes.  Any distributions of principal
and/or earnings prior to the five year waiting period will be
subject to a 10% early distribution penalty.  Plus, distributions
representing a return of principal converted to a Roth IRA in
1998 may be subject to an additional penalty tax.

13)  ARE THERE ANY SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES WHEN EARNINGS CAN BE
  WITHDRAWN BEFORE THE LATER OF FIVE YEARS OR 59 1/2 WITHOUT
  PENALTY?
  
  Yes. No penalty tax nor income tax will be assessed on
qualified distributions.  Qualified Distributions include first
time home purchases (maximum $10,000 lifetime limit), disability,
medical expenses in excess of 7.5% of AGI, or death.
Distribution for qualified post-secondary education expenses may
be penalty-free, but not tax free.

14)  ARE THERE ANY OTHER SPECIAL TAX ISSUES I SHOULD BE AWARE OF?
  
  To the extent a distribution would be taxable to you, neither
you nor anyone else can qualify for capital gains treatment for
amounts distributed from your account. Similarly, you are not
entitled to the special five- or ten-year averaging rule for
lump-sum distributions that may be available to persons receiving
distributions from certain other types of retirement plans.
Rather, the taxable portion of any distribution is taxed to you
as ordinary income. Your Roth IRA is not subject to taxes on
excess distributions or on excess amounts remaining in your
account as of your date of death.
  
  You may be required to indicate on distribution requests
whether or not federal income taxes should be withheld on the
taxable portion (if any) of a distribution from a Roth IRA.
Redemption requests not indicating an election not to have
federal income tax withheld will be subject to withholding with
respect to the taxable portion (if any) of a distribution to the
extent required under federal law. (Note that legislation pending
as of this printing clarifies that, for federal tax purposes,
Roth IRAs are taxed separately from Traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs
with rollovers are taxed separately from Roth IRAs without
rollovers, and Roth IRAs with rollovers with different five-year
periods are taxed separately.)

15)  WHEN MUST DISTRIBUTIONS FROM A ROTH IRA BEGIN?
  
  Unlike Traditional IRAs, there is no requirement that you
begin distribution of your account at any particular age.

16)  ARE THERE DISTRIBUTION RULES THAT APPLY AFTER MY DEATH?
  
  Your account must be distributed after your death in
accordance with rules similar to those that apply to
distributions from a Traditional IRA. Thus, although the IRS has
not issued guidance it is expected that the rules will require
that your remaining interest in your Roth IRA will, at the
election of your beneficiary or beneficiaries, (i) be distributed
by December 31 of the year in which occurs the fifth anniversary
of your death, or (ii) must commence distributions by December 31
of the year following your death over a period not exceeding the
life or life expectancy of your designated beneficiary or
beneficiaries.  If your beneficiary is your spouse, he/she will
have the option to roll your Roth IRA into a Roth IRA of his/her
own under the same rules for other Roth accounts.

17)  WHAT IF I PLEDGE MY ACCOUNT?
  
  If you use (pledge) all or part of your Roth IRA as security
for a loan, your account may lose its tax-favored status.

18)  HOW ARE CONTRIBUTIONS TO A ROTH IRA REPORTED FOR FEDERAL TAX
PURPOSES?
  
  As of the date of this printing, the Internal Revenue Service
had not issued forms for reporting information related to
contributions to or distributions from a Roth IRA.

19)  IS THERE ANYTHING ELSE I SHOULD KNOW?
  
  Your Roth Individual Retirement Account Plan has been approved
as to form by the Internal Revenue Service. The Internal Revenue
Service approval is a determination only as to the form of the
Plan and does not represent a determination of the merits of the
Plan as adopted by you. You may obtain further information with
respect to your Roth Individual Retirement Account from any
district office of the Internal Revenue Service. The statute
provides that Roth IRAs are to be treated the same as Traditional
IRAs for most purposes. As the IRS clarifies its interpretation
of the statute, revised or updated information will be provided.


EDUCATION IRA ACCOUNTS

1) Who is eligible for an Education IRA?
  
  The beneficiary of an Education IRA must be under age 18 at
the time a contribution is made to an Education IRA on his or her
behalf.  An Education IRA may also be established to receive
rollover contributions or transfers from another Education IRA.
  
  For purposes of this discussion, except as noted, the term
"beneficiary" is used to refer to an individual whose education
is to be financed, in part or in whole, through an Education IRA.

2) Who can contribute to an Education IRA?
  
  Anyone may contribute to an Education IRA regardless of his or
her relationship to the beneficiary as long as they are within
certain limits for AGI.  Please refer to the following chart:


                   Full Contribution if  Partial Contribution  No Contribution
                     AGI is Less Than or   if AGI is Between  Allowed if AGI is
                        Equal to                                Equal to or
                                                                Greater Than
                   --------------------- -------------------- -----------------
[S]                     [C]               [C]                       [C]
Single/Head of
Household/Married       $95,000           $95,001 - $109,999        $110,000
Filing Separately

Married Filing Jointly  $150,000          $150,001- $159,999        $160,000


3)   WHEN CAN I MAKE CONTRIBUTIONS TO AN EDUCATION IRA?
  
  You may make contributions to an Education IRA for the
calendar year during the calendar year regardless of your age.
At the time of this printing, current legislation appears to
require contributions for a specific calendar year be made during
that calendar year, without the allowance of the April 15th
deadline given to Traditional and Roth IRA contributions.
However, you may not make a contribution to an Education IRA
after the beneficiary attains age 18.  In addition, rollover
contributions and transfers (as discussed below) may be made at
any time, regardless of the age of the beneficiary

4) HOW MUCH MAY I CONTRIBUTE TO AN EDUCATION IRA?
  
  The total of all contributions made to all Education IRAs that
cover a particular beneficiary may not exceed $500 in a taxable
year.  It is the joint responsibility of the contributor and the
beneficiary (or the person legally responsible if the beneficiary
is under 18) to verify that excess contributions are not made on
behalf of a particular beneficiary.  Qualifying rollover
contributions and transfers are not subject to these limitations.
Note that special rules apply to contributions to Education IRAs
for purposes of gift and estate taxes.
  
  The total amount a contributor may deposit on behalf of a
beneficiary may be reduced or eliminated depending on the
contributor's AGI.  Please refer to the chart in question #2
(above).
  
  In addition to the limitations described above, the $500 limit
may be reduced by other amounts contributed to an individual
retirement plan for the benefit of a particular beneficiary, but
is not affected by the adjusted gross income of the beneficiary.
  
  If the beneficiary of the Education IRA also maintains a
Traditional or Roth IRA, his or her overall contributions to
other individual retirement plans may be limited.  Please contact
your tax advisor for more information.

5) CAN I ROLL OVER OR TRANSFER AMOUNTS FROM ANOTHER EDUCATION
IRA?
  
  Amounts may be "rolled over" from one Education IRA to another
Education IRA benefiting the same beneficiary.  In addition,
amounts may be rolled over without any tax liability to benefit
(i) the spouse of the beneficiary, (ii) an ancestor of the
beneficiary, (iii) a descendant of the beneficiary, of the
beneficiary's parents, or of the beneficiary's spouse, or (iv)
the spouse of a lineal descendant of an individual described in
(iii).  Rollovers between Education IRAs may be made once per 12
month period and must be accomplished within 60 days of receipt
of the distribution.
  
  You may also transfer Education IRA accounts directly between
IRA custodians without IRS restrictions.  Please contact the
receiving custodian for the appropriate transfer form.

6) WHAT IF I MAKE AN EXCESS CONTRIBUTION?
  
  Contributions that exceed the allowable maximum for federal
income tax  purposes are treated as excess contributions.  A
nondeductible penalty tax of 6% of the excess amount contributed
must be paid for each year in which the excess contribution
remains in the beneficiary's account.

7) HOW DO I CORRECT AN EXCESS CONTRIBUTION?
  
  If a contribution in excess of the allowable maximum is made,
it may be corrected to avoid the 6% penalty tax for that year by
withdrawing the excess contribution and its earnings on or before
the due date, including extensions, for filing the tax return for
the contributor's tax year for which the contribution was made.
(Legislation pending as of this printing would use the
beneficiary's tax year rather than the contributor's.)  Any
earnings on the withdrawn excess contribution will be taxable in
the year the excess contribution was made and will be subject to
a 10% penalty tax.

8) WHAT FORMS OF DISTRIBUTION ARE AVAILABLE FROM AN EDUCATION
IRA?
  
  Distributions may be made as a lump sum of the entire account,
or distributions of a portion of the account may be requested.

9) WHEN MUST DISTRIBUTIONS FROM AN EDUCATION IRA BEGIN?
  
  There is no requirement that a beneficiary begin distribution
of an Education IRA account at any particular age.  (Legislation
pending as of the date of this printing would in general require
distribution within 30 days of the earlier of the beneficiary's
death or attainment of age 30 and would deem distribution to
occur for any amounts not distributed within such time.)

10)  ARE THERE DISTRIBUTION RULES THAT APPLY AFTER DEATH?
  
  Special rules apply in the case of the divorce or death of a
beneficiary of an Education IRA.  (In particular, under
legislation pending as of this printing, any balances to the
credit of a beneficiary must be distributed to his or her estate
within 30 days of death.)

11)  HOW ARE DISTRIBUTIONS FROM AN EDUCATION IRA TAXED FOR
FEDERAL INCOME TAX PURPOSES?
  
  Amounts distributed are generally excludable from gross income
if they do not exceed the beneficiary's "qualified higher
education expenses" for the year, or are rolled over to another
Education IRA.  "Qualified higher education expenses" generally
include the cost of tuition, fees, books, supplies, and equipment
for enrollment at (i) accredited post-secondary educational
institutions offering credit toward a bachelor's degree, an
associate's degree, a graduate-level or professional degree or
another recognized post-secondary credential and (ii) certain
vocational schools.  In addition, room and board may be covered
if the beneficiary is at least a "half-time" student.  This
amount may be reduced by certain scholarships, qualified state
tuition programs, HOPE, Lifetime Learning tax credits, and other
amounts paid on the beneficiary's behalf.  To the extent payments
during the year exceed such amounts, they are partially taxable
and partially nontaxable, similar to payments received from an
annuity.  Any taxable portion of a distribution is subject to a
10% penalty tax in addition to income tax unless the distribution
is due to the death or disability of the beneficiary or is made
on account of scholarship received by the beneficiary.  A
beneficiary may elect to waive the exclusion from gross income
for qualified higher education expenses and treat the entire
distribution as if it were a payment from an annuity.
  
  To the extent a distribution is taxable, capital gains
treatment does not apply to amounts distributed from the account.
Similarly, the special five- and ten-year averaging rules for
lump-sum distributions do not apply to distributions from an
Education IRA.  The taxable portion of any distribution is taxed
as ordinary income except the portion of a distribution that
represents a return of nondeductible contributions.
  
  The recipient of a distribution may need to indicate on
certain distribution requests whether or not federal income taxes
should be withheld.  Redemption requests not indicating an
election not to have federal income tax withheld will be subject
to withholding with respect to the taxable portion (if any) of
the distribution to the extent required under federal law.

12)  WHAT IF A PROHIBITED TRANSACTION OCCURS?
  
  If a "prohibited transaction," as defined in Section 4975 of
the Internal Revenue Code, occurs, the Education IRA could be
disqualified.  Rules similar to those that apply to Traditional
IRAs will apply.

13)  WHAT IF THE EDUCATION IRA IS PLEDGED?
  
  If all or part of the Education IRA is pledged as security for
a loan, rules similar to those that apply to Traditional IRAs
will apply.  In general, those rules provide that the amount
pledged is treated as distributed.

14)  HOW ARE CONTRIBUTIONS TO AN EDUCATION IRA REPORTED FOR
FEDERAL TAX PURPOSES?
  
  As of the date of this Disclosure Statement, the Internal
Revenue Service had not issued forms for reporting information
related to contributions to or distributions from an Education
IRA.

15)  IS THERE ANYTHING ELSE I SHOULD KNOW?
  
  As the IRS clarifies its interpretation of the Education IRA
provisions of the Code, revised or updated information will be
provided to you.
  
  [Form 5305-A Individual Retirement Custodial Account]
  (Under Section 408(a) of the Internal Revenue Code)
  
  [Form 5305-RA Roth Individual Retirement Custodial Account]
  (Under Section 530 of the Internal Revenue Code)
  
  [Form 5305-EA Education Individual Retirement Custodial Account]
  (Under Section 530 of the Internal Revenue Code)
  
NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS
IRA CUSTODIAL ACCOUNT APPLICATION
__Traditional IRA Account  __Contributory Roth IRA  __Conversion Roth IRA
______________________________________________________________________________

After reading the prospectus(es) for the fund(s) you are interested in,
PLEASE COMPLETE THE INFORMATION BELOW WHICH IS REQUIRED TO SET UP AN ACCOUNT.
If you are interested in a fund that you do not have a prospectus for, please
contact the Nicholas Family of Funds at (800) 227-5987 or (414) 272-6133. The
prospectus contains more complete information regarding charges and expenses.
Read it carefully before you invest.

A.   __Nicholas Fund $_________   __Nicholas Equity Income Fund $____________
       $500 minimum                 $2,000 minimum 
     __Nicholas II $_________     __Nicholas Income Fund $_________
       $500 minimum                 $500 minimum
     __*Nicholas Limited Edition  $_________
       $2000 minimum
     __Nicholas Money Market Fund  $_________
       $2,000 minimum             

*This Fund may close at any time. Call Nicholas for details.

B.  TOTAL AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTION   $__________________________
    This should be applied to (choose one):

__Traditional IRA Contribution for tax year ________
__Roth IRA Contribution for tax year ________
__Conversion Roth IRA Contribution for tax year ________
  (redemption of Traditional IRA deposited into Roth IRA)
__Transfer (Traditional IRA to Traditional IRA; Roth IRA to Roth IRA)
__Roll Over (You have received a check within the last 60 days payable
  to you from an IRA or employer retirement plan.)
__Direct Roll Over (Attached is a check from your employer retirment
  plan made payable to: Firstar Trust Co. as custodian of Nicholas
  IRA fbo: employee's name.)

C. GENERAL INFORMATION (Please print clearly)

______________________________________________________________________________
Name
____________________________________   __________________   ________  ________
Street Address                         City                 State     Zip

____________________________________   __________________      _______________
Date of Birth                          Social Security Number  Daytime Phone

D. TELEPHONE OPTIONS (Details are provided in your Fund prospectus. If no
   option is indicated, telephone exchange privileges will automatically be
   available on your account(s)). PHONE REDEMPTION IS NOT AVAILABLE ON IRAS.
                                  -----------------------------------------
__YES  Telephone exchange - transfer of assets among all funds in the
       Nicholas Family by telephone.
__NO   Telephone exchange - exchanges among all funds in the Nicholas
       Family must be done in writing.

E. BENEFICIARY DESIGNATION
   Hereby revoking all prior designations, I designate as my beneficiary(ies)
   under the Nicholas Funds IRA Custodial Account the following person(s):

PRIMARY BENEFICIARY

________________________   _____________   _________________  _______________
Name                       Relationship    Address            Social Security #
                                                              (if available)
SECONDARY BENEFICIARY

________________________   _____________   _________________  _______________
Name                       Relationship    Address            Social Security #
                                                              (if available)

I retain the right to revoke this designation and to designate a new
beneficiary or beneficiaries at any time by communicating to the Firstar
Trust Company in writing similarly executed. I understand that if no
designated beneficiary survives me, then in accordance with the Custodial
Agreement, any benefits due upon my death shall be paid to my estate.

F.	DEPOSITOR'S STATEMENT
        I attest that I have read the form 5305-A Custodial Agreement or form
        5305-RA Roth Custodial Agreement, the Disclosure Statement and the
        applicable fund prospectus, and that I meet the eligibility
        requirements for the type of account I am establishing. I understand
        and agree to be governed by the provisions of the Custodial Agreement
        and this Application, and understand that I alone am responsible for
        ascertaining the deductibility and tax consequences of any
        contribution and/or withdrawal to or from my account. I hereby
        authorize Firstar Trust Company to act as custodian of my shares of
        the Nicholas fund indicated above.

___________________________________    __________________________
Signature                              Dated

G.	ACCEPTANCE BY CUSTODIAN
This Application is hereby accepted by the Custodian, Firstar Trust Company.

___________________________________    __________________________
Signature                              Dated

_____________________________________________________________________________
3/98
  
                  NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS
     EDUCATION IRA CUSTODIAL ACCOUNT APPLICATION      B
   
   After reading the prospectus for the fund(s) you are interested in,
   PLEASE CANT PLETE THE INFORMATION BELOW WHICH IS REQUIRED TO SET UP
   AN ACCOUNT. If you are interested in a fund that you do not have a
   prospectus for, please contact the Nicholas Family of Funds at
   (800)227-5987 or (414)2726133. The prospectus contains more complete
   information regarding charges and expenses. Please read it carefully
   before you invest.

A. FUND CHOICES (initial investment is $500 for each fund);

     Nicholas Fund $______________________________

     Nicholas II $________________________________
     
     Nicholas Income Fund $_______________________

B. TRANSACTION TYPE:

      __ Calendar Year Contribution (maximum $500 annually
         to beneficiary under 18 years old)
      __Transfer (Education IRA to Education IRA only)
      __Rollover (Education IRA to Education IRA only)

C. BENEFICIARY INFORMATION:

___________________________________    _______  ____________________________
First Name of Beneficiary              M.I.     Last Name of Beneficiary

___________________________________    _______  ____________________________
First Name of Person Legally           M.I.     Last Name of Person Legally  
Responsible for the Beneficiary                 Responsible for the Beneficiary
(if applicable)                                 (if applicable)

___________________________________  ________________________________
Address                              Birth Date of Beneficiary

____________________________________
Telephone Number

D. DEPOSITOR INFORMATION:

_________________________  ____   _____________________  ____________________
First Name                 M.I.   Last Name              Social Security Number

_________________________  __________________  ____________  ________________
Address                    City                State         Zip code


E. TELEPHONE OPTIONS (Details are provided in your fund
   prospectus. If no option is indicated, telephone exchange
   privileges will automatically be available on your
   account(s)). PHONE REDEMPTION IS NOT AVAILABLE ON IRA'S.
                ------------------------------------------
    __YES - Telephone exchange - exchanges of assets among all funds in the
            Nicholas Family by telephone.

     __NO - Telephone exchange - exchanges of assets among all funds in the
            Nicholas Family must be done in writing.

F. DEPOSITOR'S STATEMENT
   I attest that I have read the form 5305-EA Education Individual Retirement
   Custodial Account Agreement, the Disclosure Statement, and the applicable
   fund prospectus(es), and that I meet the eligibility requirements, including
   earned income limitations, to make a deposit on behalf of the above
   identified beneficiary. I understand that I alone am responsible for
   ascertaining any tax consequences of any contribution to this beneficiary's
   account

________________________________________  ________________________________
Signature of Donor                        Dated


C. BENEFICIARY'S STATEMENT (or Person Legally Responsible for the Beneficiary)
   I attest that I have read the form 5305-EA Education Individual Retirement
   Custodial Account Agreement, the  Disclosure Statement, and the applicable
   fund prospectus(es), and that l meet the eligibility requirements for  the
   type of account I am establishing. I understand and agree to be governed by
   the provisions of the Custodial Agreement, as well as this Application. I
   understand that I alone am responsible for ascertain any tax consequences
   of any contribution and/or withdrawal to or from my  account. I hereby
   authorize Firstar Trust Company at P.O. Box 2944, Milwaukee, WI 53201-2944,
   to act as custodian of my shares of the Nicholas fund(s) indicated above.

_______________________________________  ___________________________________
Signature of Beneficiary (or Person      Dated
Legally Responsible for the Beneficiary)      


H. ACCEPTANCE BY CUSTODIAN
   This application is hereby accepted by the Custodian, Firstar Trust Company.

______________________________________  ____________________________________
Signature                               Dated

  
TRANSFER FORM - NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS                                C
______________________________________________________________________________
INSTRUCTIONS:
Use this form to transfer assets of an existing IRA or employer retirement
plan to a plan with the NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS.

If you are opening a new account, the appropriate Nicholas application
form MUST accompany this form. Do NOT retain a copy of this form.

Transactions that constitute a rollover or a distribution from an
employer-sponsored plan will result in tax reporting to the IRS.

Please be aware that your resigning trustee/custodian may impose a fee
or penalty, and may require additional documentation. Consult your
resigning trustee/custodian to see if they require a signature guarantee
by a commercial bank or NYSE member. Most trustees/custodians WILL REQUIRE
it to process a direct transfer.

Fill in ALL of the information in Section I (A & B). Incomplete forms will
delay your transfer. Including a copy of your latest statement may assist
us with this transfer. Mail this form with your application (Form A or B)
in the enclosed envelope to:

FIRSTAR TRUST COMPANY, P.O. Box 2944, Milwaukee, WI 53201-2944.

We will contact your current trustee/custodian and handle the transfer for
you. Nicholas Family of Funds will send you confirmation when the transfer
is complete and your funds are invested.

SECTION I.

A. _________________________________    ___________________________________
   Name of owner (or person legally     name of resigning trustee/custodian
   responsible - Education IRA only)      

   _________________________________    ___________________________________
   street address                       resigning fund name (if applicable)

   __________________________________   ___________________________________
   city             state         zip   resigning account number

   __________________________________   ___________________________________
   daytime phone number                 address of resigning trustee/custodian

   ______________________  __________   ___________________________________
   social security number  date of birth   city        state          zip

Attention: Retirement Plan Department
__ Transfer on receipt of this request __ Transfer on maturity date of_________

Please accept this authorization to sell and transfer the sum of
     __All of my assets    $______ of assets in the above mentioned
     account and prepare a check made payable to the NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS.

The resigning trustee/custodial account is (choose one):
__Traditional IRA        __ SEP IRA     __Master Retirement Plan/Profit Sharing
__Contributory Roth IRA  __ SAR-SEP IRA __Master Retirement Plan/Money Purchase
__Conversion Roth IRA for tax year  __5304-SIMPLE IRA
__Other Employer-Sponsored Retirement Plan   __Education IRA



It is my intention to transfer these assets to the Nicholas Family of Funds as
(choose one):
__Traditional IRA        __ SEP IRA     __Master Retirement Plan/Profit Sharing
__Contributory Roth IRA  __ SAR-SEP IRA __Master Retirement Plan/Money Purchase
__Conversion Roth IRA for tax year  __5304-SIMPLE IRA
__Other Employer-(from employer plan)   __Education IRA

If I am over 70 1/2, I certify that none of the amount transferred will include
the required minimum distribution per the Internal Revenue Code for the current
year.

_____________________________   _______________
signed                          dated

______________________________________________________________________________
signature guarantee if required by resigning trustee/custodian

B.   PLEASE CHECK

This is a new account for:
__Nicholas Fund __ Nicholas II __Nicholas Limited Edition*
__Nicholas Equity Income Fund  __Nicholas Income Fund
__Nicholas Money Market Fund

__Deposite to my existing Nicholas retirement account________________________
                                                      account number   
                         

*Nicholas Limited Edition has a limited number of shares for sale.
 The Fund may be closed at the time assets are received. A Nicholas
 Money Market account will be established if Nicholas Limited Edition
 is closed. Call Nicholas Family of Funds at 1-8O0-227-5987 to check
 on the availability of Nicholas Limited Edition shares.
______________________________________________________________________________
SECTION II. (To be completed by the Firstar Trust Company - trustee/custodian
             for the Nicholas Family of Funds)

Custodian:
We have been requested to send you a letter of acceptance in order to transfer
the assets of the above mentioned account for deposit to the NICHOLAS FAMILY 
OF FUNDS. To ensure proper crediting, please return the check made payable to
NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS for the benefit of the individual named above.

Mail to: Nicholas Family of Funds, Firstar Trust Company, P.0. Box 2944,
         Milwaukee, WI 53201-2944.

Please include a copy of this form to identify the check as a transfer of
assets. This is to be executed as a fiduciary to fiduciary transfer so as
not to put the plan participant in actual or constructive receipt of all
or any part of the transferred assets.

Tax reporting will be issued on transactions between Traditional IRA and
Conversion Roth IRA accounts and between Master Retirement Plan/Employer-
Sponsored Retirement Plan accounts and Traditional IRA accounts.

Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter.

_____________________________________    ____________________________________
dated                                    authorized signature

SUBMIT THIS FORM INTACT TO: Nicholas Family of Funds
                            c/o Firstar Trust Company
                            P.O. Box 2944, Milwaukee, WI 53201-2944
2/98                        800-544-6547   414-276-0535
  
  


NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS


Dear Investor:

   Enclosed  is the Master Retirement Plan package  for  the
   Nicholas  Master  Retirement  Profit  Sharing  and  Money
   Purchase plans.

   The  Internal Revenue Service has issued opinion  letters
   approving  the form of these plans. The Internal  Revenue
   Service  has categorized the Nicholas Profit Sharing  and
   Money  Purchase plans as "standardized," "paired"  plans.
   As  a  result, the individual employer-sponsors  are  not
   required to apply by submitting Form 5307 to the Internal
   Revenue Service for a determination letter with regard to
   the employer's participation in the plans unless:

   1.  The  employer ever maintained another qualified  plan
   for one or more employees who are covered by the Nicholas
   Plans,  other  than a specified paired  plan  within  the
   meaning  of  Section 7 of Rev. Proc. 89-9, 1989-6  I.R.B.
   14; or

   2.  After  December  31,1985, the  employer  maintains  a
   welfare  benefit  fund defined in Internal  Revenue  Code
   Section  419(e),  which provides post-retirement  medical
   benefits allocated to separate accounts for key employees
   as defined in Code Section 419(A)(d)(3).

   If  either  of  the two exceptions applies, the  employer
   should  request a determination letter as to whether  the
   Nicholas  Plan,  considered with  all  related  qualified
   plans   and,  if  appropriate,  welfare  benefit   funds,
   satisfies the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code.

   An  employer  who does not fall within  one  of  the  two
   exceptions who adopts one of the Nicholas Plans  will  be
   considered  to have a plan qualified under  Code  Section
   401  (a) provided all the terms of the plan are followed,
   and  the  eligibility requirements and contributions  are
   not   more  favorable  for  officers,  owners  or  highly
   compensated employees than for other employees.

   Employers  must  provide  notice  of  the  adoption   (or
   amendment)  of the Nicholas Plan(s), or if applicable  as
   described   above,  of  the  intent  to   apply   for   a
   determination letter; to interested parties in accordance
   with  the requirements of Sections 16, 17 and 18  of  IRS
   Revenue   Procedure  94-6  (or  of  any  subsequent   IRS
   pronouncement   which  may  modify  or  supersede   these
   sections of Rev. Proc. 94-6).

   We  have  enclosed a copy of the Internal Revenue Service
   opinion letters together with the Basic Plan Document and
   all  related  documents which have been approved  by  the
   Internal  Revenue Service. Employers should complete  and
   submit  separate Participation Agreements for the  profit
   sharing  plan  and  the  money  purchase  plan.  We  have
   enclosed both Participation Agreements for your  use.  Of
   course, if you intend to participate in only one  of  the
   two  plans,  your  should complete and  return  only  the
   Participation Agreement for that plan.

   We  would  like to remind all employers that the Nicholas
   Company  does  not provide plan administration  forms  or
   services.  Forms necessary for plan administration  (such
   as  a summary Plan Description, if necessary, Beneficiary
   Designations and Benefit Election and Distribution Forms)
   must   be   provided  by  the  employer  or  other   plan
   administrator designated by the employer, and  should  be
   prepared  in  consultation with legal counsel  to  ensure
   compliance with the requirements of the Internal  Revenue
   Code and ERISA.

   We  have enclosed for all employers an explanation of the
   Nicholas Master Retirement Plan which answers some of the
   most  frequently asked questions. Please keep  this  form
   for  your  reference. Also enclosed is a brief  checklist
   for  your use along with a list of custodian fees. If not
   separately  included, all fees will be  deducted  equally
   from each account.

   If   you  have  any  questions  after  looking  over  the
   information enclosed, you should contact me at
      (414) 272-6133.


                         NICHOLAS FAMILY OF FUNDS


Candace L. Lesak
                                    Vice-President

                                                  12/94



NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN
FOR SELF-EMPLOYED INDIVIDUALS
As Amended to January 1, 1989
Basic Plan Document Number 01





                          SECTION 1
                              
                           PURPOSE

This  Master Plan has been established by Nicholas  Company,
inc.,  for use by self-employed individuals and partnerships
who  wish to establish retirement plans which qualify  under
the Self-Employed Individuals Tax Retirement Act of 1962, as
amended, and the Employee Retirement income Security Act  of
1974.


                          SECTION 2
                              
                         DEFINITIONS
                              
  The  following words and terms as used herein  shall  have
the following meanings:
     
(a)  BENEFICIARY  shall  mean the  person  designated  by  a
Participant   as   his   beneficiary  on   the   Beneficiary
Designation  Form,  or in the absence  thereof,  the  person
designated  in accordance with the procedure established  by
Section  7.5.  Any  designation of a non-spouse  Beneficiary
shall   be  automatically  revoked  upon  the  marriage   or
remarriage of a Participant, and the designation of any non-
spouse  Beneficiary  which  has not  been  consented  to  in
writing   by  the  Participant's  spouse  on  a  Beneficiary
Designation  Form  provided by the Plan Administrator  shall
also be automatically evoked.
     (b)   BENEFICIARY  DESIGNATION  Form  shall  mean   the
   instrument  by  which  the  Participant  designates   his
   beneficiary.
     (c)   BREAK  IN  SERVICE  shall  occur  in  any  twelve
   consecutive  month period (computation  period)  used  to
   compute a Year of Service under Section 2(ff) in which  a
   Participant  has not accumulated more than  five  hundred
   (500)  Hours of Service. A one (1) year Break in  Service
   will  not  be  deemed to have occurred during  the  first
   computation period that the Participant failed to earn at
   least five hundred and one (501) Hours of Service because
   of  (i)  pregnancy of the Participant, (ii)  birth  of  a
   child of the Participant, (iii) placement of a child  for
   adoption with the Participant, or (iv) caring for a child
   during  the period immediately following such a birth  or
   placement. A Participant who takes a leave of absence for
   one  of the above reasons shall certify on such forms  as
   are provided by the Plan Administrator that the leave was
   taken for one of the above reasons and shall supply  such
   supporting  documentation  as  shall  be  required  under
   uniform rules adopted by the Plan Administrator.
     (d)  CODE shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of  1986
   and amendments thereto.
     (e)  COMPENSATION, as elected by the  Employer  in  the
   Participation   Agreement,  shall  mean   all   of   each
   Participant's  (i) W-2 earnings or (ii) compensation  (as
   that  term is defined in section 415(c) (3) of the Code).
   For  any Self-Employed Individual covered under the Plan,
   Compensation will mean Earned Income. Compensation  shall
   include only that compensation which is actually paid  to
   the  Participant during the Applicable Period. Except  as
   provided  elsewhere in this Plan, the  Applicable  Period
   shall  be  the  period  elected by the  Employer  in  the
   Participation   Agreement  if  the  Employer   makes   no
   election, the Applicable Period shall be the Plan Year.
     Notwithstanding the above, if elected by  the  Employer
   in   the  Participation  Agreement,  Compensation   shall
   include  any amount which is contributed by the  Employer
   pursuant to a salary reduction agreement and which is not
   includible  in  the  gross income of the  Employee  under
   Sections 125, 402(a) (8), 402(h) or 403(b) of the Code.
     If   the  above  definition  of  Compensation  replaces
   another  definition of Compensation under the  Employer's
   Plan  and  is  being  adopted as part of  the  Employer's
   amendment  of its plan to comply with the Tax Reform  Act
   of  1986, the above definition of Compensation shall take
   effect  as of the first day of the first Plan Year  after
   the  Plan  Year  in which the amendment is  adopted.  The
   following  limitation, however, is effective  January  1,
   1989.
     The  annual Compensation of each Participant taken into
   account  under  the Plan for any year  shall  not  exceed
   $200,000,  as adjusted by the Secretary at the same  time
   and  in  the same manner as under Section 415 (d) of  the
   Code.  In  determining the Compensation of a  Participant
   for purposes of this limitation, the rules of Section 414
   (q)(6)  of the Code shall apply, except in applying  such
   rules, the term "family" shall include only the spouse of
   the   Participant  and  any  lineal  descendants  of  the
   Participant who have not attained age 19 before the close
   of  the year. If, as a result of the application of  such
   rules the adjusted $200,000 limitation is exceeded,  then
   the  limitation  shall  be prorated  among  the  affected
   individuals  in  proportion  to  each  such  individual's
   Compensation  as determined under this Section  prior  to
   the application of this limitation.
     OBRA  '93  COMPENSATION LIMIT:  In  addition  to  other
   applicable  limitations  set  forth  in  the  Plan,   and
   notwithstanding any other provision of the  Plan  to  the
   contrary for Plan Years beginning on or after January  1,
   1994, the annual Compensation of each Employee taken into
   account  under  the Plan shall not exceed  the  OBRA  '93
   Annual   Compensation   Limit.  The   OBRA   '93   Annual
   Compensation  Limit  is  $150,000,  as  adjusted  by  the
   Commissioner  for  increases in the  cost  of  living  in
   accordance  with  Section 401(a)(17)(B) of  the  Internal
   Revenue Code. The cost-of-living adjustment in effect for
   a  calendar  year applies to any period not exceeding  12
   months,    over   which   Compensation   is    determined
   (determination  period) beginning in such calendar  year.
   If  a  determination period consists  of  fewer  than  12
   months,  the OBRA '93 Annual Compensation Limit  will  be
   multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which  is  the
   number  of  months in the determination period,  and  the
   denominator of which is 12.
     For  Plan Years beginning on or after January 1,  1994,
   any  reference  in  this  Plan to  the  limitation  under
   Section  401(a)(17) of the Code shall mean the  OBRA  '93
   Annual Compensation Limit set forth in this provision.
     If  Compensation for any prior determination period  is
   taken  into account in determining an employee's benefits
   accruing  in the current Plan Year, the Compensation  for
   that  prior determination period is subject to  the  OBRA
   '93  Annual  Compensation Limit in effect for that  prior
   determination period. For this purpose, for determination
   periods beginning before the first day of the first  Plan
   Year beginning on or after January 1, 1994, the OBRA  '93
   Annual Compensation Limit is $150,000.
     (f)  CUSTODIAL  AGREEMENT  shall  mean  the  instrument
   attached hereto, as amended from time to time subject  to
   the  conditions  of Section 13A of the  Plan,  which  the
   Employer shall be deemed to have adopted by executing the
   Participation Agreement.
     (g)  CUSTODIAN  shall  mean  the  bank  designated   as
   Custodian   under  the  Custodial  Agreement,   and   any
   successor  thereto. The Custodian shall  be  a  fiduciary
   under the Employee Retirement income Security Act of 1974
   (hereinafter referred to as "ERISA").
     (h) EARNED INCOME shall mean the net earnings from self-
   employment in the trade or business with respect to which
   the  Plan is established, for which personal services  of
   the  individual  are a material income-producing  factor.
   Net  earnings will be determined without regard to  items
   not included in gross income and the deductions allocable
   to  such items. Net earnings are reduced by contributions
   by  the  Employer  to  a qualified  plan  to  the  extent
   deductible  under Section 404 of the Code.  Net  earnings
   shall  be determined with regard to the deduction allowed
   to  the  Employer  by Section 164 (f)  of  the  Code  for
   taxable years beginning after December31, 1989.
     (i)  EMPLOYEE  shall mean any employee of the  Employer
   maintaining the Plan or f any other employer required  to
   be  aggregated with such Employer under Sections  414(b),
   (c), (m) or (o) of the Code. The term Employee shall also
   include  any Leased Employee deemed to be an employee  of
   any  employer described in the previous sentence  as  pro
   vided in Sections 414 (n) or (o) of the Code.
     
     (j)  EMPLOYER  shall mean the individual proprietor  or
   partnership that establishes or maintains the  Plan,  any
   "Affiliated   Employer"  and  any   successor   of   such
   establishing Employer.
     "Affiliated Employer" shall mean any corporation  which
   is  a  member  of a controlled group of corporations  (as
   defined in Section 414(b) of the Code) which includes the
   Employer;   any  trade  or  business  (whether   or   not
   incorporated) which is under common control  (as  defined
   in  Section  414(c) of the Code) with the  Employer;  any
   organization  (whether or not incorporated)  which  is  a
   member  of  an  affiliated service group (as  defined  in
   Section  414(m) of the Code) which includes the Employer;
   and  any other entity required to be aggregated with  the
   Employer pursuant to regulations under Section 414(o)  of
   the Code.
     (k)  FIVE PERCENT OWNER shall mean any person who  owns
   (or  is  considered to own within the meaning of  Section
   318 of the Code) five percent (5%) or more of the capital
   or profits interest in the Employer.
     (1)  HIGHLY  COMPENSATED EMPLOYEE shall include  highly
   compensated   active  Employees  and  highly  compensated
   former Employees.
     A  highly  compensated  active  Employee  includes  any
   Employee who performs service for the Employer during the
   determination  year and who, during the  look-back  year:
   (i) received compensation from the Employer in excess  of
   $75,000  (as adjusted pursuant to Section 415(d)  of  the
   Code);  (ii)  received compensation from the Employer  in
   excess of $50,000 (as adjusted pursuant to Section 415(d)
   of  the Code) and was a member of the top paid group  for
   such  year;  or (iii) was an officer of the Employer  and
   received  compensation during such year that  is  greater
   than  50 percent of the dollar limitation in effect under
   Section 415 (b) (1) (A) of the Code.
     The term Highly Compensated Employee also includes:
   (i)  Employees  who are both described in  the  preceding
   sentence  if the term "determination year" is substituted
   for the term "look-back year" and the Employee is one  of
   the 100 Employees who received the most compensation from
   the  Employer  during the determination  year;  and  (ii)
   Employees who are Five Percent Owners at any time  during
   the look- back year or determination year.
     If   no   officer   has  satisfied   the   compensation
   requirement of sub paragraph (iii) above during either  a
   determination  year or look-back year, the  highest  paid
   officer  for  such  year shall be  treated  as  a  Highly
   Compensated Employee.
     For  this purpose, the determination year shall be  the
   Plan  Year.  The look-back year shall be the twelve-month
   period immediately preceding the determination year.
     A  highly  compensated  former  Employee  includes  any
   Employee  who  separated from service (or was  deemed  to
   have separated) prior to the determination year, performs
   no  service  for  the Employer during  the  determination
   year,  and  was a highly compensated active Employee  for
   either  the  separation  year or any  determination  year
   ending on or after the Employee's 55th birthday.
     
     If an Employee is, during a determination year or look-
   back year, a family member of either a Five Percent Owner
   who   is  an  active  or  former  Employee  or  a  Highly
   Compensated  Employee who is one of the  10  most  highly
   compensated Employees ranked on the basis of compensation
   paid  by  the Employer during such year, then the  family
   member  and  the  Five Percent Owner  or  top-ten  highly
   compensated Employee shall be aggregated. In  such  case,
   the  family  member  and Five Percent  Owner  or  top-ten
   highly  compensated Employee shall be treated as a single
   Employee receiving compensation and Plan contributions or
   benefits  equal  to  the  sum of  such  compensation  and
   contributions or benefits of the family member  and  Five
   Percent Owner or top-ten highly compensated Employee. For
   purposes  of  this  section, family member  includes  the
   spouse, lineal ascendants and descendants of the Employee
   or  former  Employee  and  the  spouses  of  such  lineal
   ascendants and descendants.
     The  determination  of  who  is  a  Highly  Compensated
   Employee, including the determinations of the number  and
   identity of Employees in the top-paid group, the top  100
   Employees,  the number of Employees treated  as  officers
   and the compensation that is considered, will be made  in
   accordance  with  Section 414(q)  of  the  Code  and  the
   regulations thereunder.
       (m) HOUR OF SERVICE shall mean:
          (i)  Each  hour for which an Employee is paid,  or
       entitled  to payment, for the performance  of  duties
       for the Employer. These hours will be credited to the
       Employee  for  the computation period  in  which  the
       duties are per- formed; and
          (ii)  Each hour for which an Employee is paid,  or
       entitled to payment, by the Employer on account of  a
       period  of  time during which no duties are performed
       (irrespective of whether the employment  relationship
       has  terminated)  due to vacation, holiday,  illness,
       incapacity (including disability), layoff, jury duty,
       military  duty or leave of absence. No more than  501
       hours   of  service  will  be  credited  under   this
       paragraph  for any single continuous period  (whether
       or  not  such  period occurs in a single  computation
       period).   Hours   under  this  paragraph   will   be
       calculated and credited pursuant to Section 2530.200b-
       2  of  the  Department of Labor Regulations which  is
       incorporated herein by this reference; and
       (iii)  Each hour for which back pay, irrespective  of
       mitigation of damages, is either awarded or agreed to
       by  the Employer. The same hours of service will  not
       be   credited   both   under  subparagraph   (i)   or
       subparagraph (ii), as the case may be, and under this
       subparagraph (iii). These hours will be  credited  to
       the Employee for the computation period or periods to
       which the award or agreement pertains rather than the
       computation  period in which the award, agreement  or
       payment is made.
       
     Hours  of service will be credited for employment  with
other  members of an affiliated service group (under Section
414(m)  of  the  Code), a controlled group  of  corporations
(under Section 414(b) of the Code), or a group of trades  or
businesses under common control (under Section 414(c) of the
Code)  of which the adopting Employer is a member,  and  any
other  entity  required to be aggregated with  the  Employer
pursuant  to  Section 414(o) of the Code and the regulations
thereunder.
   Hours of service will also be credited for any individual
considered  an  Employee for purposes  of  this  Plan  under
Section  414(n)  or  Section 414(o)  of  the  Code  and  the
regulations thereunder.
   Solely  for  purposes of determining whether a  Break  in
Service,  as  defined in Section 2(c),  has  occurred  in  a
computation  period, an individual who is absent  from  work
for  maternity or paternity reasons shall receive credit for
the  Hours  of  Service  which  would  otherwise  have  been
credited to such individual but for such absence, or in  any
case  in  which such hours cannot be determined,  eight  (8)
Hours  of  Service per day of such absence. For purposes  of
this  paragraph,  an  absence from  work  for  maternity  or
paternity  reasons means an absence (i)  by  reason  of  the
pregnancy of the individual, (ii) by reason of a birth of  a
child of the individual, (iii) by reason of the placement of
a  child with the individual in connection with the adoption
of  such  child by such individual, or (iv) for purposes  of
caring  for  such  child for a period beginning  immediately
following  such  birth  or placement The  Hours  of  Service
credited under this paragraph shall be credited (i)  in  the
computation  period  in  which the  absence  begins  if  the
crediting is necessary to prevent a Break in Service in that
period,  or  (ii)  in  all  other cases,  in  the  following
computation period.
   (n)  INVESTMENT COMPANY shall mean an investment  company
as  defined  in  Internal Revenue Code Section  851(a),  for
which Nicholas Company, Inc. serves as an investment adviser
and  which  has agreed to offer shares for investment  under
this  Plan.  Investment Company Shares or Shares shall  mean
shares of capital stock of the Investment Company.
   (o)  KEY  EMPLOYEE  shall  mean any  Employee  or  former
Employee (and the Beneficiaries of such Employee) who at any
time  during the Determination Period was an officer of  the
Employer if such individual's Annual Compensation exceeds 50
percent  of the dollar limitation under Section 415(b)(1)(A)
of  the Code, an owner (or considered an owner under Section
318  of the Code) of one of the ten largest interests in the
Employer  if  such  individual's  compensation  exceeds  100
percent  of the dollar limitation under Section 415(c)(l)(A)
of  the Code, a Five Percent owner of the Employer, or a one
percent owner of the Employer who has an Annual Compensation
of   more   than   $150,000.   Annual   Compensation   means
compensation  as defined in Section 415(c)(3) of  the  Code,
but  including amounts contributed by the Employer  pursuant
to  a  salary reduction agreement which are excludible  from
the  Employee's  gross  income under  Section  125,  Section
402(a)  (8), Section 402(h) or Section 403(b) of  the  Code.
The  Determination  Period is the Plan Year  containing  the
Determination  Date and the four (4) preceding  Plan  Years.
The  determination of who is a Key Employee will be made  in
accordance  with  Section 416(i)(1)  of  the  Code  and  the
regulations thereunder.
   The  Determination Date for any Plan Year  subsequent  to
the  first  Plan Year is the last day of the preceding  Plan
Year. For the first Plan Year of the Plan, the Determination
Date is the last day of that year.
   (p) LEASED EMPLOYEE shall mean any person (other than  an
employee  of  the  recipient) who pursuant to  an  agreement
between   the  recipient  and  any  other  person  ("leasing
organization") has performed services for the recipient  (or
for  the  recipient  and  related persons  deter-  mined  in
accordance  with  Section  414(n)(6)  of  the  Code)  on   a
substantially full time basis for a period of at  least  one
year, and such services are of a type historically performed
by   employees  in  the  business  field  of  the  recipient
employer.  Contributions  or  benefits  provided  a   leased
employee  by the leasing organization which are attributable
to  services performed for the recipient employer  shall  be
treated as provided by the recipient employer.
   A  leased employee shall not be considered an employee of
the  recipient if: (i) such employee is covered by  a  money
purchase   pension  plan  providing:  (A)  a   nonintegrated
employer contribution rate of at least ten percent (10%)  of
compensation, as 4efined in Section 415(c)(3) of  the  Code,
but  including  amounts contributed  pursuant  to  a  salary
reduction agreement which are excludable from the employee's
gross  income under Section 125, Section 402(a)(8),  Section
402(h)   or  Section  403(b)  of  the  Code,  (B)  immediate
participation, and (C) full and immediate vesting; and  (ii)
leased  employees do not constitute more than twenty percent
(20%) of the recipient's nonhighly compensated workforce.
   (q)   MONEY  PURCHASE  ACCOUNT  shall  mean  the  account
established  and maintained by the Custodian  under  Section
5.1   of  the  Plan  consisting  of  that  portion  of   all
contributions of the Employer under the Money Purchase  Plan
Participation Agreement.
   (r)  NET INCOME OF THE EMPLOYER shall mean the net income
   determined  from the Employer's books in accordance  with
   generally  accepted  accounting  principles,  but  before
   deduction  for  state  and  federal  net  income   taxes,
   surtaxes and excess profits taxes and contributions under
   this  Plan, or under any other pension or retirement plan
   to which the Employer contributes.
   (s) NON-OWNER PARTNER shall mean a partner who is not  an
Owner or self-employed Individual.
   (t)      NORMAL RETIREMENT AGE shall be the age  selected
in  the Participation Agreement. If the Employer enforces  a
mandatory retirement age, the Normal Retirement Age  is  the
lesser  of  the  mandatory age or the age specified  in  the
Participation Agreement.
   (u)  OWNER shall mean a person who is the sole proprietor
of the Employer or a partner having an interest of more than
10% in the capital or profits of the Employer.
   (v)  PARTICIPANT shall mean an Employee who has satisfied
the  participation requirements established under Section  3
of this Plan.
   (w)  PARTICIPANT'S  ACCOUNT  AND/OR  PARTISIPANT  ACCOUNT
shall mean the individual investment accounts maintained  by
the   Custodian  pursuant  to  Section  5  containing   each
Participant's entire interest in the Plan.
   (x) PARTICIPATION AGREEMENT shall mean the instruments by
which the Employer adopts the Plan.
   (y)  PLAN shall mean the Nicholas Master Retirement  Plan
for  Self- Employed Individuals set forth herein, as it  may
be amended from time to time.
   (z)  PLAN  ADMINISTRATOR shall mean the  Employer  unless
other-  wise  indicated in Paragraph 6 of the  Participation
Agreement.  The  Plan  Administrator  shall  be  the   named
fiduciary under ERISA.
   (aa) PLAN YEAR means the calendar year.
   (bb)  PROFIT  SHARING  ACCOUNT  shall  mean  the  account
established  and maintained by the Custodian  under  Section
5.1 of the Plan consisting of that portion of the Employer's
contributions  under the Profit Sharing  Plan  Participation
Agreement.
   (cc)  ROLLOVER CONTRIBUTION ACCOUNT shall mean an account
established  and maintained by the Custodian under  Sections
4.6   and  5.1  of  the  Plan  consisting  of  any  rollover
contributions of the Participant as described in Section 4.6
of  the Plan. An ADEC Rollover Account shall mean a separate
Rollover  Contribution Account consisting solely of  amounts
which     represent    accumulated    deductible    employee
contributions  within the meaning of Section 72(o)(5)(B)  of
the Code.
   (dd)  SELF-EMPLOYED INDIVIDUAL shall mean  an  individual
who has Earned Income for the taxable year from the trade or
business  for  which  the  Plan  is  established;  also   an
individual who would have had Earned Income but for the fact
that  the  trade  or  business had no net  profits  for  the
taxable year.
   (ee)  VOLUNTARY  CONTRIBUTION  ACCOUNT  shall  mean   the
account  established and maintained by the  Custodian  under
Section   5.1  of  the  Plan  consisting  of  the  voluntary
contributions made by each Participant.
   (ff)  YEAR  OF SERVICE shall mean a l2 consecutive  month
period (computation period), computed with reference to  the
Employee's  date  of  employment or  anniversaries  thereof,
during which the Employee has completed at least 1000  Hours
of Service (or such lesser number of Hours of Service as the
Employer designates in the Participation Agreement).
   (gg) YEARS OF CREDITED SERVICE shall mean the total Years
of  Service  of an Employee; provided that Years of  Service
accumulated prior to a Break in Service shall not  be  given
credit  in  determining  Years of Credited  Service  for  an
Employee   who   has   not   satisfied   the   participation
requirements  established under Section 3 of this  Plan.  In
the  event  the Employer maintains the plan of a predecessor
Employer,  service for such predecessor shall be treated  as
service for the Employer.
                              
                          SECTION 3
                              
                        PARTICIPATION

     3.1 AN EMPLOYEE WHO HAS COMPLETED THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF
YEARS  OF  CREDITED  SERVICE AND  REACHED  THE  MINIMUM  AGE
REQUIRED UNDER SECTION 3(A)(I) AND (II) OF THE PARTICIPATION
AGREEMENT SHALL BECOME A PARTICIPANT ON THE FIRST DAY OF THE
PLAN  YEAR DURING WHICH HE OR SHE MEETS THE SERVICE AND  AGE
REQUIREMENTS. A FORMER PARTICIPANT WILL BECOME A PARTICIPANT
IMMEDIATELY UPON RETURNING TO THE EMPLOY OF THE EMPLOYER.
      3.2   If  this Plan provides contributions or benefits
for  one  or  more Owners who control both the business  for
which  this Plan is established and one or more other trades
or  businesses, this Plan and the plan established for  such
other  trades or businesses must, when looked at as a single
plan,  satisfy Sections 401(a) and (d) of the Code  for  the
Employees of this and all other trades or businesses.
     If this Plan provides contributions or benefits for one
or  more  Owners  who control one or more  other  trades  or
businesses, the Employees of the other trades or  businesses
must  be included in a plan which satisfies Section 401  (a)
and  (d)  of  the Code and which provides contributions  and
benefits  not less favorable than provided for  such  Owners
under this Plan.
   If  an  individual is covered as an Owner under the plans
of two or more trades or businesses which are controlled and
such  individual  controls a trade  or  business,  then  the
contributions or benefits of the Employees under the plan of
the  trades  or businesses which are controlled must  be  as
favorable as those provided for him under the most favorable
plan of the trade or business which is not controlled.
   For purposes of the preceding paragraphs, an Owner or two
or  more  Owners shall be considered to control a  trade  or
business if such Owner or such two or more Owners together:
     (i)  own the entire interest in an unincorporated trade
or business, or
     (ii)  in the case of a partnership, own more than fifty
percent  (50%) of either the capital interest or the profits
interest in such partnership.
     For  purposes of the preceding sentence, an  Owner,  or
two  or  more Owners shall be treated as owning any interest
in  a partnership which is owned, directly or indirectly, by
a  partnership which such Owner, or such two or more Owners,
are   considered  to  control  within  the  meaning  of  the
preceding sentence.
     3.3 In the event a Participant is no longer a member of
an  eligible  class of Employees and becomes  ineligible  to
participate  but has not incurred a Break in  Service,  such
Employee will participate immediately upon returning  to  an
eligible  class of Employees. If such Participant  incurs  a
Break  in Service, eligibility will be determined under  the
Break in Service rules of the Plan.
     In  the  event  an Employee who is not a member  of  an
eligible  class of Employees becomes a member of an eligible
class,  such Employee will participate immediately  if  such
Employee   has  satisfied  the  minimum  age   and   service
requirements  and would have otherwise previously  become  a
Participant
                              
                          SECTION 4
                        CONTRIBUTIONS
                              
     4.1  The Employer shall make contributions as set forth
in  paragraph 5 of the Participation Agreement  and  deliver
the  contributions to the Custodian not later than  the  due
date  for filing the Employer's income tax return, including
extensions thereof. All contributions shall be in cash.
In  the case of contributions to Profit Sharing Accounts, if
the   Employer  has  elected  in  paragraph  5(b)   of   the
Participation Agreement to have this provision  apply,  then
notwithstanding any other provisions of the  Plan,  Employer
contributions for Plan Years specified in paragraph 5(b)  of
the  Participation  Agreement shall  be  made  to  the  Plan
without  regard  to  current  or  accumulated  earnings  and
profits for the taxable year or years ending with or  within
such  Plan  Year. The Plan with respect to which the  Profit
Sharing  Account is maintained shall continue to be designed
to qualify as a profit sharing plan for purposes of Sections
401(a), 402, 412 and 417 of the Code. In the absence of such
an   election,  Employer  contributions  to  Profit  Sharing
Accounts  shall  be made out of current or  accumulated  Net
Income.
   4.2  Except  as  otherwise provided below,  the  Employer
contributions allocated on behalf of any Participant who  is
not  a Key Employee for any Plan Year shall not be less than
the  lesser  of  three  percent (3%) of  such  Participant's
Compensation  or  in  the case where  the  Employer  has  no
defined  benefit plan which designates this Plan to  satisfy
Section  401 of the Code, the largest percentage of Employer
contributions, as a percentage of the first $200,000 of  the
Key  Employee's Compensation, allocated on behalf of any Key
Employee for that year. The minimum allocation is determined
without  regard  to  any Social Security  contribution.  For
purposes  of  computing the minimum allocation, Compensation
shall  mean Compensation as defined in Section 2(e)  of  the
Plan. This Section shall not apply to any Participant to the
extent  the Participant is covered under any other  plan  or
plans  of  the  Employer and the Employer  has  provided  in
paragraph 13 of the Participation Agreement that the minimum
allocation or benefit requirement will be met in  the  other
plan or plans.
   4.3  During any Plan Year prior to January 1,  1988,  any
Participant may voluntarily contribute to the Plan an amount
equal to not more than ten percent (10%) of his Compensation
or  Earned  Income. This limitation applies in the aggregate
to voluntary contributions by any Participant to two or more
plans maintained by the same Employer.
   If  an  Owner  is  covered under any other  self-employed
retirement plan qualified under Section 401 of the  Internal
Revenue Code to which he makes voluntary contributions,  the
total   amount  of  voluntary  contributions  to  all   such
qualified  plans shall be taken into account in  determining
the maximum voluntary contributions for such Owner under the
preceding paragraph.
   This    Plan   will   not   accept   voluntary   Employee
contributions  for Plan Years beginning after  December  31,
1987.  Employee contributions for Plan Years beginning after
December  31,  1986,  will be limited  so  as  to  meet  the
nondiscrimination test of Section 401(m) of the Code.
   4.4 A Participant may at any time withdraw the amount  of
his  Voluntary  Contributions  Account,  provided  that  the
entire amount in such Voluntary Contributions Account (based
upon  the  published market value of the Investment  Company
shares  on  the  close  of trading on  the  day  before  the
withdrawal is accomplished) is withdrawn at such  time,  and
also provided that if the Participant is married, his or her
spouse   consents   in  writing  to  the   withdrawal.   Any
Participant  who  shall  elect  to  withdraw  his  voluntary
contributions  shall  not  be  permitted  to  make   further
voluntary contributions for a period of one year.
   4.5  Except as provided in Section 6.1 of this  Plan  and
Section  4.3  of  the Custodial Agreement, no  contributions
made  by  the Employer nor any assets held by the  Custodian
shall  ever  revert to the Employer or ever be  diverted  to
purposes  other  than  for  the  exclusive  benefit  of  the
Participants and their beneficiaries.
   4.6 An Employee may transfer to the Plan accrued benefits
attributable  to employer contributions, or  to  accumulated
deductible  employee  contributions within  the  meaning  of
Section  72(o)(5)(B) of the Code, from  another  plan  which
meets  the  requirements  of Section  401(a)  of  the  Code,
provided  that  the distribution of such benefits  qualifies
under the requirements of Section 402(a)(5) of the Code  for
treatment  as  a  tax-flee rollover. The Plan  Administrator
shall   develop  such  procedures,  and  may  require   such
information  from  an  Employee  desiring  to  make  such  a
transfer,  as  the  Plan Administrator  deems  necessary  to
determine   that  the  proposed  transfer  will   meet   the
requirements  of  the  Code.  Upon  approval  by  the   Plan
Administrator the amount transferred shall be deposited with
the   Custodian  and  shall  be  credited  to   a   Rollover
Contribution Account, or in the case of amounts representing
accumulated  deductible  employee contributions  within  the
meaning of Section 72(o)(5)(B), to an ADEC Rollover Account,
which  shall be established and maintained by the  Custodian
for  that purpose. An Employee shall at all times have a one
hundred  percent  (100%)  vested interest  in  his  Rollover
Contribution Account or ADEC Rollover Account, but shall not
share  in Employer contributions hereunder by reason of  the
Employee's  Rollover Contribution Account or  ADEC  Rollover
Account  Subject to Section 7 relating to Joint and Survivor
Annuity  requirements (if applicable), the  Participant  may
withdraw  any part of the ADEC Rollover Account by making  a
written   application   to  the  Plan  Administrator.   Upon
termination   of  employment,  the  total  amount   of   the
Employee's  Rollover Contribution Account or  ADEC  Rollover
Account shall be distributed in accordance with Section 7.
                              
                          SECTION 5
                              
                   ACCOUNTS OF PARTICIPANT
                              
     5.1 The Custodian shall cause to be maintained for each
Participant  (a)  a  separate Profit Sharing  Account  which
shall  consist of that portion of all contributions  of  the
Employer   under   the   Employer's  Profit   Sharing   Plan
Participation  Agreement allocated to a Participant;  (b)  a
separate Money Purchase Account which shall consist of  that
portion  of  all  contributions of the  Employer  under  the
Employer's  Money  Purchase  Plan  Participation   Agreement
allocated   to  a  Participant;  (c)  a  separate  Voluntary
Contribution Account for the voluntary contributions made by
each  Participant;  and  (d) in the event  of  any  rollover
contributions as described in Section 4.6, separate Rollover
Contribution and/or ADEC Rollover Accounts for such rollover
contributions.
     5.2  Contributions by or on behalf of all  Participants
under the Plan shall be transferred to the Custodian by  the
Employer and shall be invested by the Custodian in whole  or
fractional  Investment  Company  Shares.  All  contributions
transferred to the Custodian shall be allocated, pursuant to
the  written  instructions  of  the  Plan  Administrator  as
provided  under  the  Custodial Agreement,  to  accounts  of
Employees eligible to participate in the Plan as defined  in
paragraph  3(a)  of  the Participation Agreement  (including
eligible Employees who have died or retired during such Plan
Year), provided that for the Plan Year beginning January  1,
1989, no such allocation shall be made to the account of any
Employee  (a  "1989 Terminee") who is otherwise eligible  to
participate  under  Paragraph  3(a)(i)  and  (ii)   of   the
Participation Agreement and who terminates employment during
such Plan Year (other than by reason of death or retirement)
and is not an Employee as of the last day of such Plan Year.
All   1989  Terminees  shall  nevertheless  be  treated   as
benefiting  under  the  Plan pursuant to  Proposed  Treasury
Regulations  Sections  1.401(a)(26)-8(b)(6)  and   1.410(b)-
10(b)(2). Employer contributions under Paragraph  5  of  the
Profit Sharing Plan Participation Agreement (Paired Plan 01-
001)  shall  be allocated to each Participant in  the  ratio
that   such   Participant's  Compensation   bears   to   the
Compensation  of  all  Participants. Employer  contributions
under   the  Money  Purchase  Plan  Participation  Agreement
(Paired  Plan 01-002) shall be allocated to each Participant
in  an  amount equal to the amount contributed on behalf  of
such  Participant under Paragraph 5(a) of the Money Purchase
Plan  Participation Agreement Each Participant shall  direct
the Plan Administrator as to the specific Investment Company
Shares to be purchased for the Participant's Account(s). The
Plan  Administrator shall then provide written  instructions
to  the  Custodian,  in form acceptable  to  the  Custodian,
designating  the specific Investment Company  Shares  to  be
purchased for each Participant's Account(s), as directed  by
the  Participant  All  income, dividends  and  capital  gain
distributions received on the Investment Company Shares held
in  each  Participant Account shall be  reinvested  in  such
Shares,  which  shall  be  credited  to  such  Account.  All
contributions  made by or on behalf of each Participant  and
all  investments  made  with  such  contributions,  and  the
earnings thereon, shall immediately become and at all  times
remain fully vested and nonforteitable.
   5.3  Investment Company Shares acquired by the  Custodian
   shall  be registered in the name of the Custodian or  its
   nominee.  The  Participant  for  whom  such  shares   are
   acquired shall be the beneficial owner of all such shares
   held in the Custodial Account and shall have the right to
   diect the manner of voting such stock.
   5.4  At  the  close of each calendar year  the  Custodian
   shall, taking into account the contributions during  said
   calendar  year, determine as of the end of such  calendar
   year the fair market value of each Participant account.
   5.5  In the event the Employer's plan fails to attain  or
   retain  its  status  as a qualified plan,  the  Custodian
   shall  segregate  the assets affected  thereby  from  the
   assets  of  the  master  custodial  account  as  soon  as
   administratively feasible.

                          SECTION 6
                              
                 LIMITATIONS ON ALLOCATIONS

   6.1 PARTICIPANTS NOT COVERED BY OTHER PLANS.
   
     (a) If the Participant does not participate in, and has
   never  participated in another qualified plan  maintained
   by  the Employer or a welfare benefit fund, as defined in
   Section 419(e) of the Cede maintained by the Employer, or
   an  individual  medical account, as  defined  in  Section
   415(1)(2) of the Code, maintained by the Employer,  which
   provides  an  Annual  Addition as defined  in  Subsection
   6.5(a) of this Plan, the amount of Annual Additions which
   may  be  credited  to the Participant's account  for  any
   Limitation Year will not exceed the lesser of the Maximum
   Permissible  Amount or any other limitation contained  in
   this  Plan.  If  the  Employer  contribution  that  would
   otherwise   be   contributed   or   allocated   to    the
   Participant's  account would cause the  Annual  Additions
   for the Limitation Year to exceed the Maximum Permissible
   Amount,  the  amount  contributed or  allocated  will  be
   reduced  so  that the Annual Additions for the limitation
   Year will equal the Maximum Permissible Amount
     (b)  Prior  to  determining  the  Participant's  actual
   Compensation  for the Limitation Year, the  Employer  may
   determine   the   Maximum  Permissible   Amount   for   a
   Participant  on the basis of a reasonable  estimation  of
   the  Participant's Compensation for the Limitation  Year,
   uniformly   determined  for  all  Participants  similarly
   situated.
     (c)  As soon as is administratively feasible after  the
   end  of  the  Limitation  Year, the  Maximum  Permissible
   Amount for the Limitation Year will be determined on  the
   basis  of the Participant's actual Compensation  for  the
   Limitation Year.
     (d) If pursuant to Subsection 6.1(c) there is an excess
   amount, the excess will be disposed of as follows:
       (i)     Any    nondeductible    voluntary    Employee
       contributions,  to the extent they would  reduce  the
       excess amount, will be returned to the Participant;
       (ii) If after the application of subparagraph (i)  an
       excess  amount  still exists, and the Participant  is
       covered  by  the  Plan at the end of  the  Limitation
       Year,  the excess amount in the Participant's account
       will  be  used  to reduce Employer contributions  for
       such  Participant  in the next Limitation  Year,  and
       each succeeding Limitation Year if necessary.
       (iii)  If after the application of paragraph  (i)  an
       excess  amount  still exists, and the Participant  is
       not  covered  by the Plan at the end of a  Limitation
       Year, the excess amount will be held unallocated in a
       suspense account The suspense account will be applied
       to  reduce  future  Employer  contributions  for  all
       remaining  Participants in the next Limitation  Year,
       and each succeeding Limitation Year if necessary.
       (iv)  If  a suspense account is in existence  at  any
       time  during  a  Limitation  Year  pursuant  to  this
       section,  the suspense account shall be  invested  by
       the  Custodian  in  whole  or  fractional  Investment
       Company Shares. If a suspense account is in existence
       at  any time during a particular Limitation Year, all
       amounts in the suspense account must be allocated and
       reallocated  to  Participants'  accounts  before  any
       Employer or any Employee contributions may be made to
       the Plan for that Limitation Year. Excess amounts may
       not   be   distributed  to  Participants  or   former
       Participants. In the event of termination of the Plan
       the suspense account shall revert to the Employer  to
       the  extent  it  may  not then be  allocated  to  any
       Participant's account.
       
       6.2 PARTICIPANTS COVERED BY OTHER MASTER OR  PROTOTYPE
           DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLANS.
       
     (a) This subsection applies if, in addition to this
   Plan, the Participant is covered under another qualified
   master or prototype defined contribution plan maintained
   by the Employer, a welfare benefit fund, as defined in
   Section 419(e) of the Code maintained by the Employer, or
   an individual medical account, as defined in Section
   415(1)(2) of the Code, maintained by the Employer, which
   provides an Annual Addition as defined in Subsection
   6.5(a), during any Limitation Year. The Annual Additions
   which maybe credited to a Participant's Account under
   this Plan for any such Limitation Year will not exceed
   the Maximum Permissible Amount reduced by the Annual
   Additions credited to a Participant's account under the
   other plans and welfare benefit funds for the same
   Limitation Year. If the Annual Additions with respect to
   the Participant under other defined contribution plans
   and welfare benefit funds maintained by the Employer are
   less than the Maximum Permissible Amount and the Employer
   contribution that would otherwise be contributed or
   allocated to the Participant's account under this Plan
   would cause the Annual Additions for the Limitation Year
   to exceed this limitation, the amount contributed or
   allocated will be reduced so that the Annual Additions
   under all such plans and funds for the Limitation Year
   will equal the Maximum Permissible Amount If the Annual
   Additions with respect to the Participant under such
   other defined contribution plans and welfare benefit
   funds in the aggregate are equal to or greater than the
   Maximum Permissible Amount, no amount will be contributed
   or allocated to the Participant's account under this Plan
   for the Limitation Year.
     (b) Prior to determining the Participant's actual
   Compensation for the Limitation Year, the Employer may
   determine the Maximum Permissible Amount for a
   Participant in the manner described in Subsection 6.1(b).
     (c)  As soon as is administratively feasible after  the
   end  of  the  Limitation  Year, the  Maximum  Permissible
   Amount for the Limitation Year will be determined on  the
   basis  of the Participant's actual Compensation  for  the
   Limitation Year.
     (d) If, pursuant to Subsection 6.2(c) or as a result of
   the  allocation  of  forfeitures, a Participant's  Annual
   Additions  under  this Plan and such  other  plans  would
   result  in  an excess amount for a Limitation  Year,  the
   excess  amount  will be deemed to consist of  the  Annual
   Additions  last  allocated, except that Annual  Additions
   attributable  to  a  welfare benefit fund  or  individual
   medical  account  will be deemed to have  been  allocated
   first regardless of the actual allocation date.
     (e)  If an excess amount was allocated to a Participant
   on  an allocation date of this Plan which coincides  with
   an  allocation  date of another plan, the  excess  amount
   attributed to this Plan will be the product of:
       (i)   the  total excess amount allocated as  of  such
       date, times
       (ii)  the ratio of (A) the Annual Additions allocated
       to the Participant for the Limitation Year as of such
       date   under  this  Plan  to  (B)  the  total  Annual
       Additions  allocated  to  the  Participant  for   the
       Limitation  Year as of such date under this  and  all
       the  other  qualified  master  or  prototype  defined
       contribution plans.
   (f)  Any  excess amount attributed to this plan  will  be
   disposed in the manner described in Subsection 6.1(d).
   
      6.3 PARTICIPANTS COVERED BY OTHER NON-MASTER  OR  NON-
          PROTOTYPE DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLANS.

     If  the  Participant is covered under another qualified
defined  contribution plan maintained by the Employer  which
is  not  a master or prototype plan, Annual Additions  which
may be credited to the Participant's
account  under  this Plan for any Limitation  Year  will  be
limited in accordance with Subsections 6.2(a) through  62(f)
as  though  the  other plan were a master or prototype  plan
unless  the Employer provides other limitations in paragraph
10(a) of the Participation Agreement.

      6.4 EMPLOYERS WITH DEFINED BENEFIT PLAN.
   
   If the Employer maintains, or at any time maintained, a
qualified defined benefit plan covering any Participant in
this Plan, the sum of the Participant's Defined Benefit Plan
Fraction and Defined Contribution Plan Fraction will not
exceed 1.0 in any Limitation Year. The Annual Additions
which may be credited to the Participant's account under
this Plan for any Limitation Year will be limited in
accordance with paragraph 10(0) of the Participation
Agreement
   
   6.5 DEFINITIONS.
   (A)  ANNUAL  ADDITIONS: The sum of the following  amounts
   credited  to  a Participant's account for the  Limitation
   Year:
       (i)  Employer contributions,
       (ii) Employee contributions,
       (iii) forfeitures, and
       (iv)  amounts allocated, after March 31, 1984, to  an
       individual medical account, as defined in Section 415
       (1)  (2)  of the Code, which is part of a pension  or
       annuity  plan maintained by the Employer are  treated
       as  Annual Additions to a defined contribution  plan.
       Also,  amounts  derived  from contributions  paid  or
       accrued  after  December 31, 1985, in  taxable  years
       ending  after  such date, which are  attributable  to
       post-retirement  medical benefits, allocated  to  the
       separate  account of a Key Employee,  as  defined  in
       Section  419A(d)  (3) of the Code,  under  a  welfare
       benefit  fund,  as defined in Section 419(e)  of  the
       Code,  maintained  by  the Employer  are  treated  as
       Annual Additions to a defined contribution plan.
     For  this  purpose,  any excess  amount  applied  under
   Subsections  6.1(d)  or 62(f) in the Limitation  Year  to
   reduce  Employer contributions will be considered  Annual
   Additions for such Limitation Year.
     (b) COMPENSATION: A Participant's Earned Income, wages,
   salaries,  and fees for professional services  and  other
   amounts  received for personal services actually rendered
   in the course of employment with the Employer maintaining
   the Plan (including, but not limited to, commissions paid
   salesmen,  compensation for services on the  basis  of  a
   percentage of profits, commissions on insurance premiums,
   tips and bonuses), and excluding the following:
       (i)   Employer  contributions to a plan  of  deferred
       compensation   which  are  not  includible   in   the
       Employee's gross income for the taxable year in which
       contributed,  or  Employer  contributions   under   a
       simplified  employee pension plan to the extent  such
       contributions are deductible by the Employee, or  any
       distributions from a plan of deferred compensation;
       (ii)   Amounts  realized  from  the  exercise  of   a
       nonqualified  stock option, or when restricted  stock
       (or  property)  held by the Employee  either  becomes
       freely  transferable  or is no longer  subject  to  a
       substantial risk of forfeiture;
       (iii)  Amounts  realized from the sale,  exchange  or
       other disposition of stock acquired under a qualified
       stock option; and
       (iv)   other  amounts  which  received  special   tax
       benefits,  or  contributions  made  by  the  Employer
       (whether  or not under a salary reduction  agreement)
       towards  the  purchase  of an  annuity  described  in
       Section  403(0) of the Internal Revenue Code (whether
       or  not the amounts are actually excludible from  the
       gross income of the Employee).
   For purposes of applying the limitations of this section,
   Compensation  for  a Limitation Year is the  Compensation
   actually  paid or includible in gross income during  such
   Limitation Year.
     (c) DEFINED BENEFIT FRACTION: A fraction, the numerator
of  which  is the sum of the Participant's projected  annual
benefits under all the defined benefit plans (whether or not
terminated)  maintained by the Employer, and the denominator
of  which  is  the  lesser  of 125  percent  of  the  dollar
limitation determined for the Limitation Year under Sections
415(0)  and  (d) of the Code or 140 percent of  the  Highest
Average   Compensation,  including  any  adjustments   under
Section 415(0) of the Code.
     Notwithstanding  the above, if the  Participant  was  a
   Participant  as of the first day of the first  Limitation
   Year  beginning after December31, 1986, in  one  or  more
   defined  benefit plans maintained by the  Employer  which
   were in existence on May 6, 1986, the denominator of this
   fraction will not be less than 125 percent of the sum  of
   the   annual   benefits  under  such  plans   which   the
   Participant  had  accrued as of the  close  of  the  last
   Limitation  Year  beginning  before  January   1,   1987,
   disregarding  any changes in the terms and conditions  of
   the  plan  after  May  5,  1986. The  preceding  sentence
   applies  only  if the defined benefit plans  individually
   and  in  the  aggregate  satisfied  the  requirements  of
   Section  415  of  the  Code  for  all  Limitation   Years
   beginning before January 1, 1987.
     (d) DEFINED CONTRIBUTION DOLLAR LIMITATION: $30,000  or
if   greater,  one-fourth  of  the  defined  benefit  dollar
limitation set forth in Section 415(0)(1) of the Code as  in
effect for the Limitation Year.
     (e)  DEFINED  CONTRIBUTION FRACTION:  A  fraction,  the
numerator of which is the sum of the Annual Additions to the
Participant's  account  under all the  defined  contribution
plans (whether or not terminated) maintained by the Employer
for  the  current and all prior Limitation Years  (including
the  Annual  Additions  attributable  to  the  Participant's
nondeductible employee contributions to all defined  benefit
plans,   whether  or  not  terminated,  maintained  by   the
Employer,  and  the  Annual Additions  attributable  to  all
welfare benefit funds, as defined in Section 419(e)  of  the
Code, and individual medical accounts, as defined in Section
415(1)(2) of the Code, maintained by the Employer), and  the
denominator  of  which is the sum of the  maximum  aggregate
amounts  for the current and all prior Limitation  Years  of
service  with the Employer (regardless of whether a  defined
contribution  plan  was  maintained by  the  Employer).  The
maximum  aggregate  amount in any  Limitation  Year  is  the
lesser  of  125 percent of the dollar limitation  determined
under  Sections 415(0) and (d) of the Code in  effect  under
Section  415(c)(1)(A)  of the Code  or  35  percent  of  the
Participant's Compensation for such year.
     If  the Employee was a Participant as of the end of the
first  day  of  the  first Limitation Year  beginning  after
December 31, 1986, in one or more defined contribution plans
maintained by the Employer which were m existence on May  6,
1986, the numerator of this fraction will be adjusted if the
sum  of this fraction and the Defined Benefit Fraction would
otherwise exceed 1.0 under the terms of this Plan. Under the
adjustment, an amount equal to the product of (1) the excess
of  the  sum  of  the  fractions  over  1.0  times  (2)  the
denominator of this fraction, will be permanently subtracted
from  the  numerator  of this fraction.  The  adjustment  is
calculated using the fractions as they would be computed  as
of  the  end  of  the last Limitation Year beginning  before
January  1, 1987, and disregarding any changes in the  terms
and conditions of the Plan made after May 5, 1986, but using
the   Section  415  limitation  applicable  to   the   first
Limitation Year beginning on or after January 1, 1987.
     The  Annual Addition for any Limitation Year  beginning
before January 1, 1987, shall not be recomputed to treat all
Employee contributions as Annual Additions.
     (f)  EMPLOYER: For purposes of this Section 6, Employer
shall  mean  the  Employer that adopts this  Plan,  and  all
members of a controlled group of corporations (as defined in
Section  414(0) of the Code as modified by Section  415(0)),
all commonly controlled trades or businesses (as defined  in
Section  414(c) as modified by Section 415(0)) or affiliated
service  groups (as defined in Section 414(m)) of which  the
adopting  Employer is a part, and any other entity  required
to  be  aggregated with the Employer pursuant to regulations
under Section 414(0) of the Code.
     (g)  EXCESS  AMOUNT:  The excess of  the  Participant's
Annual  Additions for the Limitation Year over  the  Maximum
Permissible Amount
     (h)   HIGHEST   AVERAGE   COMPENSATION:   The   average
Compensation for the three consecutive Years of Service with
the  Employer that produces the highest average. A  Year  of
Service  with  the  Employer is the  12-  consecutive  month
period defined in Section 2(gg) of this Plan.
     (i)   LIMITATION  YEAR:  A  calendar   year,   or   the
12~onsecutive  month  period  elected  by  the  Employer  in
paragraph  12 of the Participation Agreement. All  qualified
plans   maintained  by  the  Employer  must  use  the   same
Limitation  Year. If the Limitation Year  is  amended  to  a
different  12~onaecutive month period,  the  new  Limitation
Year  must  begin  on a date within the Limitation  Year  in
which the amendment is made.
     (j)  Master or Prototype Plan: A plan the form of which
is  the  subject  of  a favorable opinion  letter  from  the
Internal Revenue Service.
     (k)   Maximum  Permissible Amount: The  maximum  Annual
Addition  that  may  be  contributed  or  allocated   to   a
Participant's account under the Plan for any Limitation Year
shall not exceed the lesser of:
     (i)  the Defined Contribution Dollar Limitation, or
    (ii)  25 percent of the Participant's Compensation for
the Limitation Year.
   The  Compensation limitation referred to in  Subparagraph
(ii)  shall  not  apply  to  any  contribution  for  medical
benefits  (within the meaning of Section 401(h)  or  Section
419A(f)(2)  of  the Code which is otherwise  treated  as  an
Annual Addition under Section 415(l)(l) or 419A(d)(2) of the
Code.
If  a  short  Limitation  Year  is  created  because  of  an
amendment  changing  the  Limitation  Year  to  a  different
l2consecutive  month period, the Maximum Permissible  Amount
will  not  exceed the Defined Contribution Dollar Limitation
multiplied by the following fraction:

        NUMBER OF MONTHS IN THE SHORT LIMITATION YEAR
                             12

     (1)  PROJECTED  ANNUAL BENEFIT: The  annual  retirement
benefit (adjusted to an actuarially equivalent straight life
annuity if such benefit is expressed in a form other than  a
straight  life  annuity  or  qualified  joint  and  survivor
annuity)  to  which the Participant would be entitled  under
the terms of the Plan assuming:
       (i)   the Participant will continue employment  until
       Normal Retirement Age under the Plan (or current age,
       if later), and
       (ii)  the Participant's Compensation for the  current
       Limitation  Year and all other relevant factors  used
       to  determine  benefits under the  Plan  will  remain
       constant for all future Limitation Years.

                          SECTION 7
                              
                     PAYMENT OF BENEFFIS

     7.1   For   purposes   of  this   Section,   the   term
"Participant"  shall mean an Employee  who  has  received  a
contribution  to his Participant account and who  retains  a
balance  in  such account A Participant who  dies,  retires,
terminates service with the Employer or who is a Participant
on the date the Plan terminates shall have the right to have
the  balance  of his account(s) applied for his benefit  For
purposes  of  making lump sum distributions,  or  purchasing
annuity   contracts,   the  value  of   such   Participant's
account(s) shall be based upon the published market value of
the Investment Company Shares on the close of trading on the
day before the distribution is made.
     7.2   (a)  Upon  retirement  or  termination   of   the
Participant's services with the Employer if the value of the
Participant's Account Balance(s) derived from  Employer  and
Participant  contributions is not greater than  $3,500,  the
Participant will receive a distribution of the value of  his
Account  Balance(s). However, no distribution shall be  made
pursuant  to the preceding sentence after the first  day  of
the  first  period  for which an amount is  received  as  an
annuity  unless the Participant and his or tier  Spouse  (or
the  Participant's Surviving Spouse) consent in  writing  to
such distribution.
     (b)  If the value of a Participant's Account Balance(s)
derived  from Employer and Participant contributions exceeds
(or  at the time of any prior distribution exceeded) $3,000,
and  the  Account Balance(s) are Immediately  Distributable,
the  Participant  and  the Participant's  Spouse  (or  where
either the Participant or the Spouse has died, the survivor)
must consent to any distribution of such Account Balance(s).
The  consent of the Participant and the Participant's Spouse
shall be obtained in writing within the 90-day period ending
on  the Annuity Starting Date. The Annuity Starting Date  is
the  first  day of the first period for which an  amount  is
paid as an annuity or any other form. The Plan Administrator
shall notify the Participant and the Participant's Spouse of
the  right to defer any distribution until the Participant's
Account  Balance(s) are no longer Immediately Distributable.
Such notification shall include a general description of the
material features, and an explanation of the relative values
of,  the optional forms of benefit available under the  Plan
in  a  manner that would satisfy the notice requirements  of
Section 417(a)(3) of the Code, and shall be provided no less
than  30  days and no more than 90 days prior to the Annuity
Starting  Date.  If a distribution is one to which  Sections
401(a)(11)  and  417  of the Internal Revenue  Code  do  not
apply,  such  distribution may commence less  thin  30  days
after  the  notice required under Section 1.411(a)-11(c)  of
the Income Tax Regulations is given, provided that:
       (i)   the  Plan  Administrator  clearly  informs  the
       Participant  that the Participant has a  right  to  a
       period of at least 30 days after receiving the notice
       to consider the decision of whether or not to elect a
       distribution   (and,  if  applicable,  a   particular
       distribution option), and
       (ii)  the  Participant, after receiving  the  notice,
       affirmatively elects a distribution.
     Notwithstanding  the  foregoing, only  the  Participant
need  consent to the commencement of a distribution  in  the
form  of  a  Qualified Joint and Survivor Annuity while  the
Account    Balance(s)    are   Immediately    Distributable.
(Furthermore,  with  respect  to  any  Profit  Sharing  Plan
Account Balance(s), only the Participant need consent to the
distribution  of  Account Balance(s)  that  are  Immediately
Distributable.)  Neither the consent of the Participant  nor
the  Participant's Spouse shall be required  to  the  extent
that a distribution is required to satisfy Section 401(a)(9)
or Section 415 of the Code. In addition, upon termination of
this  Plan  if  the  Plan does not offer an  annuity  option
(purchased  from  a commercial provider), the  Participant's
Account  Balance(s) may, without the Participant's  consent,
be  distributed to the Participant or transferred to another
defined  contribution  plan (other thin  an  employee  stock
ownership plan as defined in Section 4975(e)(7) of the Code)
within the same controlled group.
     An  account balance is Immediately Distributable if any
part  of  the  account balance could be distributed  to  the
Participant  (or  Surviving Spouse) before  the  Participant
attains  (or would have attained if not deceased) the  later
of Normal Retirement Age or age 62.
     For  purposes of determining the applicability  of  the
foregoing consent requirements to distributions made  before
January 1, 1989, the Participant's Account Balance(s)  shall
not  include amounts attributable to accumulated  deductible
employee   contributions  within  the  meaning  of   Section
72(o)(5)(B) of the Code.
     7.3  (a) TIME OF PAYMENT Unless the Participant  elects
otherwise, distribution of benefits will begin no later than
the  60th day after the latest of the close of the Plan Year
in which:
       (i)   the  Participant  attains  age  65  (or  Normal
       Retirement Age, if earlier);
       (ii) occurs the 10th anniversary of the year in which
       the  Participant commenced participation in the Plan;
       or,
       (iii)  the  Participant terminates service  with  the
       Employer.
     (b)  ELECTION. A Participant may elect to have  benefit
   payments  commence at a date later thin that  allowed  by
   Subparagraph  (a), pr~ vided that benefit payments  shall
   commence  not  later  thin  the Required  Beginning  Date
   specified  in Section 7.9. The Participant may make  such
   an  election by submitting to the Plan Administrator  for
   transmittal to the Custodian, a signed written  statement
   describing the benefit and the date on which the  payment
   of such benefit shall commence.
     Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  the  failure   of   a
   Participant and Spouse to consent to a distribution while
   a   benefit  is  Immediately  Distributable,  within  the
   meaning of Section 7.2(b) of the Plan, shall be deemed to
   be  an  election to defer commencement of payment of  any
   benefit sufficient to satisfy this Section 7.3(b).
     7.4 RETIREMENT BENEFITS. The provisions of Sections 7.4
   and  7.5  shall apply to any Participant who is  credited
   with at least one Hour of Service with the Employer on or
   after  August  23, 1984, and such other  Participants  as
   provided in Section 7.8.
     (a) MONEY PURCHASE PLAN RETIREMENT BENEFITS. Unless  an
   optional  form  of  benefit is  selected  pursuant  to  a
   Qualified  Election with-in the ninety  (90)  day  period
   ending   on   the  Annuity  Starting  Date,   a   married
   Participant's  Money  Purchase  Plan  Account  Balance(s)
   shall  be  paid  in  the form of a  Qualified  Joint  and
   Survivor  Annuity  and an unmarried  Participant's  Money
   Purchase  Plan Account Balance(s) shall be  paid  in  the
   form of a life annuity. The Participant may elect to have
   such  annuity distributed upon attainment of the Earliest
   Retirement Age under the Plan.
     A Participant in the Money Purchase Plan who has made a
   Qualified Election, will receive his Money Purchase  Plan
   Account Balance(s) in one of the following optional forms
   of distribution as selected by the Participant
       (i)  By a single payment in cash; or
       (ii)   By   equal  or  substantially   equal   annual
       installments over a period certain not to exceed  the
       life  expectancy of the Participant or the joint life
       or   life  expectancy  of  the  Participant  and  his
       Beneficiary.
     (b) PROFIT SHARING PLAN RETIREMENT BENEFITS. The Profit
   Sharing Plan Account Balance(s) of each Participant shall
   be  distributed upon direction of the Participant by  one
   or a combination of the following methods:
       (i)  By a single payment in cash; or
       (ii)   By   equal  or  substantially   equal   annual
       installments over a period certain not to exceed  the
       life  expectancy of the Participant or the joint life
       or   life  expectancy  of  the  Participant  and  his
       Beneficiary.
A  Participant may not elect payments in the form of a  life
annuity  with  respect  to any Profit Sharing  Plan  Account
Balance(s).
   7.5  DEATH BENEFITS.
     (a) Qualified Preretirement Survivor Annuity. Unless an
optional  form  of benefit identified in Section  7.4(a)  is
selected  within the Election Period pursuant to a Qualified
Election, if a Participant dies before the Annuity  Starting
Date  then  the  Participant's Money Purchase  Plan  Account
Balance(s)  shall  be  applied toward  the  purchase  of  an
annuity  for the life of the Surviving Spouse. The Surviving
Spouse  may elect to have such annuity distributed within  a
reasonable period after the Participant's death.
     (b)  BENEFITS  TO PROFIT SHARING PLAN PARTICIPANTS  AND
UNMARRIED MONEY PURCHASE PLAN PARTICIPANTS. In the event  of
the death of a Participant, the Participant's Profit Sharing
Plan  Account  Balance(s)  (and/or the  Participant's  Money
Purchase  Plan  Account Balance(s), if  the  Participant  is
unmarried)   shall  be  distributed  to  the   Participant's
Surviving Spouse, but if there is no Surviving Spouse, or if
the Surviving Spouse has consented in a manner conforming to
a  Qualified Election, then to the Beneficiaries  designated
in  the  Beneficiary  Designation Form.  In  the  event  the
Participant has not designated any Beneficiaries, or all  of
the  designated Beneficiaries are deceased, then the  Profit
Sharing Plan Account Balance(s) (and/or Money Purchase  Plan
Account  Balance(s)) shall be distributed to  the  following
persons, to take in the order named:
(i)  Spouse  of  the Participant; (ii) if the  Spouse  shall
predecease  the  Participant, then in equal  shares  to  any
children  surviving the Participant and to  the  descendants
then living of a deceased child, by right of representation;
(iii)  if  the  Participant shall leave neither  Spouse  nor
descendants surviving then to the personal representative of
the Participant's estate.
     The  Surviving  Spouse  (if  any)  may  elect  to  have
distribution  of any Profit Slating Plan Account  Balance(s)
commence within the ninety (9O-day period following the date
of the Participant's death. The Profit Sharing Plan or Money
Purchase Plan Account Balance(s) (as the case may be)  shall
be   adjusted  for  gains  or  losses  occurring  after  the
Participant's  death in accordance with  the  provisions  of
this  Plan governing the adjustment of Account Balances  for
other types of distributions.
     The  Participant  may waive the spousal  death  benefit
described in this Section at any time provided that no  such
waiver shall be effective unless it satisfies the conditions
of  Section  7.6(c) (other than the notification requirement
referred  to  therein) that would apply to the Participant's
waiver of the Qualified Preretirement Survivor Annuity
     (c)  DEATH  CERTIFICATE. Before making any distribution
upon  the  death  of  a Participant, the Plan  Administrator
shall  furnish the Custodian with a certified  copy  of  the
death certificate of the Participant.
     7.6  DEFINITIONS. For purposes of this Section  7,  the
following  terms  shall have their respective  meanings  set
forth  below, unless a different meaning is clearly required
by the context:
     (a)  ELECTION PERIOD means the period which  begins  on
the  first  day  of the Plan Year in which  the  Participant
attains  age  thirty-five (35) and ends on the date  of  the
Participant's death. If a Participant separates from service
prior to the first day of the Plan Year in which age thirty-
five  (35)  is  attained, with respect to the  Participant's
Account  balance(s)  as  of  the  date  of  separation,  the
Election Period shall begin on the date of separation.
     Pre-age  35  waiver: A Participant  who  will  not  yet
attain  age  35 as of the end of any current Plan  Year  may
make  a  special Qualified Election to waive  the  Qualified
Preretirement Survivor Annuity for the period  beginning  on
the date of such election and ending on the first day of the
Plan  Year in which the Participant will attain age 35. Such
election  shall not be valid unless the Participant receives
a   written   explanation  of  the  Qualified  Preretirement
Survivor  Annuity  in such terms as are  comparable  to  the
explanation   required  under  Section   7.7(a).   Qualified
Preretirement    Survivor   Annuity   coverage    will    be
automatically  reinstated as of the first day  of  the  Plan
Year in which the Participant attains age 35. Any new waiver
on  or  after  such  date  shall  be  subject  to  the  hall
requirements of this Section 7.
     (b) EARLIEST RETIREMENT AGE means the earliest date  on
which,  under  the  Plan,  the Participant  could  elect  to
receive retirement benefits.
(c)  QUALIFIED ELECTION means a waiver of a Qualified  Joint
and
Survivor  Annuity  or  a  Qualified  Preretirement  Survivor
Annuity.  Any  waiver  of  a Qualified  Joint  and  Survivor
Annuity or a Qualified Preretirement Survivor Annuity  shall
not be effective unless:
       (i)  the Participant's Spouse consents in writing  to
       the election;
       (ii)  the election designates a specific Beneficiary,
       including   any   class  of  Beneficiaries   or   any
       contingent  Beneficiaries, which may not  be  changed
       without  Spousal  consent (or  the  Spouse  expressly
       permits  designations by the Participant without  any
       further Spousal consent);
       (iii) the Spouse's consent acknowledges the effect of
       the election; and
       (iv)  the  Spouse's consent is witnessed  by  a  Plan
       representative  or  notary  public.  Additionally,  a
       Participant's  waiver  of  the  Qualified  Joint  and
       Survivor  Annuity shall not be effective  unless  the
       election  designates a form of benefit payment  which
       may  not  be changed without Spousal consent (or  the
       Spouse   expressly   permits  designations   by   the
       Participant without any further Spousal consent).
  If  it  is  established  to the  satisfaction  of  a  Plan
representative  that there is no Spouse or that  the  Spouse
cannot  be  located,  a waiver will be  deemed  a  Qualified
Election.
  Any  consent by a Spouse obtained under this provision (or
establishment  that  the consent of  a  Spouse  may  not  be
obtained)  shall  be  effective only with  respect  to  such
Spouse.   A  consent  that  permits  designations   by   the
Participant  without any requirement of further  consent  by
such  Spouse must acknowledge that the Spouse has the  right
to  limit  consent to a specific Beneficiary, and a specific
form  of  benefit  where applicable,  and  that  the  Spouse
voluntarily  elects to relinquish either  or  both  of  such
rights.  A  revocation of a prior waiver  maybe  made  by  a
Participant  without the consent of the Spouse at  any  time
before   the  commencement  of  benefits.  The   number   of
revocations shall not be limited. No consent obtained  under
this  provision  shall be valid unless the  Participant  has
received notice as provided in Section 7.7 below.
     (d)  QUALIFIED  JOINT  AND SURVIVOR  ANNUITY  means  an
immediate  annuity  for the life of the Participant  with  a
survivor  annuity for the life of the Spouse which is  fifty
percent  (50%) of the amount of the annuity which is payable
during the joint lives of the Participant and the Spouse and
which  is the amount of benefit which can be purchased  with
the Participant's Account Balance(s).
     (e)  SPOUSE  OR  SURVIVING SPOUSE means the  Spouse  or
Surviving Spouse of the Participant, provided that a  former
Spouse will be treated as the Spouse or Surviving Spouse and
a  current  Spouse  will not be treated  as  the  Spouse  or
Surviving  Spouse  only  to  the  extent  provided  under  a
qualified  domestic relations order as described in  Section
414(p) of the Code.
  (f) ANNUITY STARTING DATE means the first day of the first
period  for  which an amount is paid as an  annuity  or  any
other form.
  (g)  ACCOUNT BALANCE(S) means the aggregate value  of  the
Participant's  Account balances derived  from  Employer  and
Participant contributions (including rollovers).
  7.7  NOTICE REQUIREMENTS.
     (a)  In  the  case  of a Qualified Joint  and  Survivor
Annuity,  the Plan Administrator shall no less  than  thirty
(30)  days  and no more than ninety (90) days prior  to  the
Annuity  Starting  Date provide each Participant  a  written
explanation of: (i) the terms and conditions of a  Qualified
Joint and Survivor Annuity; (ii) the Participant's right  to
make  and  the effect of an election to waive the  Qualified
Joint and Survivor Annuity form of benefit; (iii) the rights
of  a  Participant's Spouse; and (iv) the right to make  and
the  effect of a revocation of a previous election to  waive
the Qualified Joint and Survivor Annuity.
     (b)  In  the case of a Qualified Preretirement Survivor
Annuity   as   described  in  Section   7.5(a),   the   Plan
Administrator  shall  provide each  Participant  within  the
Applicable Period for such Participant a written explanation
of  the  Qualified Preretirement Survivor  Annuity  in  such
terms  and  in  such  manner as would be comparable  to  the
explanation provided for meeting the requirements of Section
7.7(a) applicable to a Qualified Joint and Survivor Annuity.
     The Applicable Period for a Participant is whichever of
the  following  periods ends last: (i) the period  beginning
with the first day of the Plan Year in which the Participant
attains  age 32 and ending with the close of the  Plan  Year
preceding the Plan Year in which the Participant attains age
35;  (ii)  a  reasonable period ending after the  individual
becomes  a  Participant;  (iii) a reasonable  period  ending
after  Section  7.7(c) ceases to apply to  the  Participant;
(iv)  a reasonable period ending after this Section 7  first
applies  to  the Participant Notwithstanding the  foregoing,
notice  must  be provided within a reasonable period  ending
after  separation from service in the case of a  Participant
who separates from service before attaining age 35.
     For  purposes  of applying the preceding  paragraph,  a
reasonable   period  ending  after  the  enumerated   events
described in subparagraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) is  the  end
of  the two-year period beginning one year prior to the date
the  applicable event occurs, and ending one year after that
date.  In  the  case  of a Participant  who  separates  from
service  before the Plan Year in which age 35  is  attained,
notice   shall  be  provided  within  the  two-year   period
beginninng one year prior to separation and ending one  year
after  separation. If such a Participant thereafter  returns
to  employment with the Employer, the Applicable Period  for
such Participant shall be redetermined.
     (c)  Notwithstanding  the other  requirements  of  this
Section  7.7,  the  respective notices  prescribed  by  this
Section need not be given to a Participant if: (i) the  Plan
"fully  subsidizes"  the  costs of  a  Qualified  Joint  and
Survivor   Annuity   or  Qualified  Preretirement   Survivor
Annuity; and (ii) the Plan does not allow the Participant to
waive  the Qualified Joint and Survivor Annuity or Qualified
Preretirement Survivor Annuity and does not allow a  married
Participant  to  designate  a  nonspouse  Beneficiary.   For
purposes of this Section 7.7(c), a Plan fully subsidizes the
costs  of  a benefit if no increase in cost, or decrease  in
benefits   to   the   Participant  may   result   from   the
Participant's failure to elect another benefit.
     7.8 TRANSITIONAL RULES.
     (a)  Any  living Participant not receiving benefits  on
August  23,  1984,  who  would  otherwise  not  receive  the
benefits prescribed by the previous sections of this Section
7  must be given the opportunity to elect to have the  prior
sections  of  this  Section 7 apply if such  Participant  is
credited  with at least one Hour of Service under this  Plan
or  a  predecessor Plan in a Plan Year beginning on or after
January 1, 1976, and such Participant had at least ten  (10)
years  of  vesting  service when he or  she  separated  from
service.
     (b)  Any  living Participant not receiving benefits  on
August 23, 1984, who was credited with at least one Hour  of
Service  under this Plan or a predecessor plan on  or  after
September  2,  1974, and who is not otherwise credited  with
any service in a Plan Year beginning on or after January  1,
1976,  must  be  given the opportunity to have  his  or  her
benefits paid in accordance with Section 7.8(d).
     (c) The respective opportunities to elect (as described
   in  Sections 7.8(a) and 7.8(b) above) must be afforded to
   the appropriate Participants during the period commencing
   on August 23, 1984, and ending on the date benefits would
   otherwise commence to said Participant
     (d) Any Participant who has elected pursuant to Section
   7.8(b)  and  any  Participant who does  not  elect  under
   Section  7.8(a) or who meets the requirements of  Section
   7.8(a)  except  that such Participant does  not  have  at
   least  ten (10) years of vesting service when he  or  she
   separates  from service, shall have his or  her  benefits
   distributed  in  accordance with  all  of  the  following
   requirements if benefits would have been payable  in  the
   form of a life annuity:
       (i)   AUTOMATIC  JOINT  AND  SURVIVOR  ANNUITY.    If
     benefits  in the form of a life annuity become  payable
     to a married Participant who:
          (A)  begins to receive payments under the Plan  on
          or after Normal Retirement Age; or
          (B)   dies on or after Normal Retirement Age while
          still working for the Employer; or
          (C)   begins to receive payments on or  after  the
          Qualified Early Retirement Age; or
          (D)   separates from service on or after attaining
          Normal  Retirement  Age (or  the  Qualified  Early
          Retirement   Age)   and   after   satisfying   the
          eligibility  requirements  for  the   payment   of
          benefits under the Plan and thereafter dies before
          beginning to receive such benefits;
   then  such benefits will be received under this  Plan  in
   the  form  of  a  Qualified Joint and  Survivor  Annuity,
   unless  the Participant his elected otherwise during  the
   Election Period. The Election Period must begin at  least
   six  (6)  months before the Participant attains Qualified
   Early  Retirement Age and end not more than  ninety  (90)
   days  before  the commencement of benefits. Any  election
   hereunder  will  be in writing and maybe changed  by  the
   Participant at any time.
     (ii)  ELECTION OF EARLY SURVIVOR ANNUITY. A Participant
   who  is  employed  after attaining  the  Qualified  Early
   Retirement  Age will be given the opportunity  to  elect,
   during  the  Election Period, to have a survivor  annuity
   payable  on death. Ii the Participant elects the survivor
   annuity,  payments under such annuity must  not  be  less
   than  the  payments which would have  been  made  to  the
   Spouse under the Qualified Joint and Survivor Annuity  if
   the  Participant had retired on the day before his or her
   death.  Any  election  under this provision  will  be  in
   writing and maybe changed by the Participant at any time.
   The  Election Period begins on the later of (1) the  9Oth
   day  before  the Participant attains the Qualified  Early
   Retirement  Age,  or (2) the date on which  participation
   begins,  and ends on the date the Participant  terminates
   employment.
       (iii) For purposes of this Section 7.8(d):
          (A)   QUALIFIED EARLY RETIREMENT AGE is the latest
          of:
               (1)  the  earliest date, under the  Plan,  on
          which   the  Participant  may  elect  to   receive
          retirement benefits;
               (2)   the  first  day  of  the  12Oth   month
          beginning  before the Participant  reaches  Normal
          Retirement Age, or
               (3)   the   date   the   Participant   begins
          participation.
          (B)   Qualified Joint and Survivor Annuity  is  an
          annuity  for  the life of the Participant  with  a
          survivor  annuity for the life of  the  Spouse  as
          described in Section 7.6(d).
   7.9  DISTRIBUTION REQUIREMENTS.
   (a)  GENERAL RULES.
       (i)   Subject  to Sections 7.4 through  7.8  of  this
       Plan,  the  requirements of this  Section  7.9  shall
       apply to any distribution of a Participant's interest
       and   will  take  precedence  over  any  inconsistent
       provisions  of this Plan. Unless otherwise specified,
       the  provisions of this Section 7.9 apply to calendar
       years beginning after December 31, 1984.
       (ii)  All  distributions required under this  Section
       7.9  shall be determined and made in accordance  with
       the  Proposed Regulations under Section 401(a)(9)  of
       the   Code,   including   the  minimum   distribution
       incidental benefit requirement of Section 1.401(a)(9)-
       2 of the Proposed Regulations.
     (b)  Required Beginning Date. The entire interest of  a
Participant  must be distributed or begin to be  distributed
no later than the Participant's Required Beginning Date.
     (c)  Limits  on Distribution Periods. As of  the  first
Distribution Calendar Year, distributions, if not made in  a
single  sum,  may  only be made over one  of  the  following
periods (or a combination thereof):
       (i)  the life of the Participant,
       (ii)  the  life of the Participant and  a  Designated
       Beneficiary;
       (iii) a period certain not extending beyond the  Life
       Expectancy of the Participant, or
       (iv)  a period certain not extending beyond the Joint
       and Last Survivor Expectancy of the Participant and a
       Designated Beneficiary.
     (d)  DETERMINATION  OF AMOUNT TO  BE  DISTRIBUTED  EACH
YEAR. if the Participant's interest is to be distributed  in
other  than a single sum, the following minimum distribution
rules shall apply on or after the Required Beginning Date:
       (i)  INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNT
          (A)    If  a  Participant's  Benefit  is   to   be
          distributed over (1) a period not extending beyond
          the  Life  Expectancy of the  Participant  or  the
          Joint  Life  and Last Survivor Expectancy  of  the
          Participant   and  the  Participant's   designated
          Beneficiary  or (2) a period not extending  beyond
          the Life Expectancy of the Designated Beneficiary;
          the  amount  required to be distributed  for  each
          calendar  year,  beginning with distributions  for
          the  first  Distribution Calendar  Year,  must  at
          least equal the quotient obtained by dividing  the
          Participant's  Benefit  by  the  Applicable   Life
          Expectancy.
          (B)   For  calendar years beginning before January
          1,  1989, if the Participant's Spouse is  not  the
          Designated Beneficiary; the method of distribution
          selected  must  assure that at least  50%  of  the
          present   value   of  the  amount  available   for
          distribution is paid within the Life Expectancy of
          the Participant
          (C)   For  calendar years beginning after December
          31,  1988, the amount to be distributed each year;
          beginning   with  distributions  for   the   first
          Distribution Calendar Year shall not be less  than
          the    quotient    obtained   by   dividing    the
          Participant's  Benefit by the lesser  of  (1)  the
          Applicable   Life  Expectancy  or   (2)   if   the
          Participant's   Spouse  is  not   the   Designated
          Beneficiary,  the  applicable  divisor  determined
          from  the  table  set forth in  Q&A-4  of  Section
          1.401(a)(9)-2   of   the   Proposed   Regulations.
          Distributions  after the death of the  Participant
          shall  be  distributed using the  applicable  life
          expectancy  in Section 7.9(d)(i)(A) above  as  the
          relevant   divisor  without  regard  to   Proposed
          Regulations Section 1.401(a)(9)-2.
          (D)   The  minimum  distribution required for  the
          Participant's  first  Distribution  Calendar  Year
          must  be  made  on  or  before  the  Participant's
          Required  Beginning Date. The minimum distribution
          for  other  calendar years, including the  minimum
          distribution for the Distribution Calendar Year in
          which  the  Participant's Required Beginning  Date
          occurs, must be made on or before December  31  of
          that Distribution Calendar Year.
     (ii)         OTHER FORMS.
          (A)   If  the Participant's Benefit is distributed
          in  the  form  of  an  annuity purchased  from  an
          insurance company, distributions thereunder  shall
          be  made  in  accordance with the requirements  of
          Section  401(a)(9) of the Code  and  the  Proposed
          Regulations thereunder.
(e)    DEATH DISTRIBUTION PROVISIONS.
             (i) DISTRIBUTION BEGINNING BEFORE DEATH. If the
   Participant  dies  after  distribution  of  his  or   her
   interest  has  begun,  the  remaining  portion  of   such
   interest  will  continue to be distributed  at  least  as
   rapidly  as  under the method of distribution being  used
   prior to the Participant's death.
             (ii) DISTRIBUTION BEGINNING AFTER DEATH. If the
   Participant  dies  before  distribution  of  his  or  her
   interest begins, distribution of the Participant's entire
   interest  shall  be  completed  by  December  31  of  the
   calendar  year  containing the fifth anniversary  of  the
   Participant's death except to the extent that an election
   is  made to receive distributions in accordance with  (A)
   or (B) below:
              (A)   if  any  portion  of  the  Participant's
       interest  is  payable  to  a  Designated  Beneficiary
       distributions  may be made over the life  or  over  a
       period  certain not greater than the Life  Expectancy
       of the Designated Beneficiary commencing on or before
       December   31   of  the  calendar  year   immediately
       following  the calendar year in which the Participant
       died;
             (B)   if  the  Designated  Beneficiary  is  the
       Participant's    Surviving    Spouse,    the     date
       distributions  are  required to begin  in  accordance
       with (A) above shall not be earlier than the later of
       (1)  December  31  of the calendar  year  immediately
       following  the calendar year in which the Participant
       died  and  (2)  December 31 of the calendar  year  in
       which the Participant would have attained age 70-1/2.
              If  the  Participant has not made an  election
   pursuant to this subparagraph (ii) by the time of his  or
   her  death, the Participant's Designated Beneficiary must
   elect  the  method  of distribution  no  later  than  the
   earlier of (1) December 31 of the calendar year in  which
   distributions  would  be required  to  begin  under  this
   subparagraph  (ii), or (2) December 31  of  the  calendar
   year which contains the fifth anniversary of the date  of
   death  of  the  Participant If  the  Participant  has  no
   Designated  Beneficiary or if the Designated  Beneficiary
   does not elect a method of distribution, distribution  of
   the  Participant's entire interest must be  completed  by
   December  31  of the calendar year containing  the  fifth
   anniversary of the Participant's death.
              (iii) For purposes of subparagraph (ii) above,
   if  the Surviving Spouse dies after the Participant,  but
   before  payments to such Spouse begin, the provisions  of
   subparagraph  (ii),  with  the exception  of  clause  (B)
   therein, shall be applied as if the Surviving Spouse were
   the Participant.
              (iv)  For purposes of this paragraph (e),  any
   amount paid to a child of the Participant will be treated
   as  if  it had been paid to the Surviving Spouse  if  the
   amount  becomes payable to the Surviving Spouse when  the
   child reaches the age of majority.
              (v)  For  the purposes of this paragraph  (e),
   distribution of a Participant's interest is considered to
   begin  on the Participant's Required Beginning Date  (or,
   if  subparagraph  (iii)  above is  applicable,  the  date
   distribution is required to begin to the Surviving Spouse
   pursuant to su~ paragraph (li) above). If distribution in
   the  form  of  an  annuity irrevocably commences  to  the
   Participant before the Required Beginning Date, the  date
   distribution  is  considered  to  begin   is   the   date
   distribution actually commences.
   (f)   DEFINITIONS.
              (i)  APPLICABLE LIFE EXPECTANCY means the Life
   Expectancy   (or  Joint  and  Last  Survivor  Expectancy)
   calculated using the attained age of the Participant  (or
   Designated  Beneficiary)  as  of  the  Participant's  (or
   Designated  Beneficiary's)  birthday  in  the  Applicable
   Calendar Year reduced by one for each calendar year which
   has  elapsed  since  the date Life Expectancy  was  first
   calculated. If Life Expectancy is being recalculated, the
   Applicable  Life Expectancy shall be the Life  Expectancy
   as so recalculated. The Applicable Calendar Year shall be
   the   first  Distribution  Calendar  Year  and  if   Life
   Expectancy is being recalculated such succeeding calendar
   year.
               (ii)   DESIGNATED   BENEFICIARY   means   the
   individual who is designated as the Beneficiary under the
   Plan in accordance with Section 401(a)(9) of the Code and
   the Proposed Regulations thereunder.
               (iii)  DISTRIBUTION  CALENDAR  YEAR  means  a
   calendar  year  for  which  a  minimum  distribution   is
   required.   For   distributions  beginning   before   the
   Participant's death, the first Distribution Calendar Year
   is  the  calendar year immediately preceding the calendar
   year  which contains the Participant's Required Beginning
   Date. For distributions beginning after the Participant's
   death,  the  first  Distribution  Calendar  Year  is  the
   calendar  year  in which distributions  are  required  to
   begin pursuant to paragraph (e).
             (iv) LIFE EXPECTANCY. Life Expectancy and Joint
   and  Last Survivor Expectancy are computed by use of  the
   expected  return multiples in Tables V and VI of  Section
   1.72-9 of the Income Tax Regulations.
             Unless otherwise elected by the Participant (or
   Spouse,  in  the  case  of  distributions  described   in
   paragraph (e)(ii)(B) above) by the time distributions are
   required   to   begin,   Life   Expectancies   shall   be
   recalculated annually. Such election shall be irrevocable
   as  to the Participant (or Spouse) and shall apply to all
   subsequent  years. The Life Expectancy  of  a  non-Spouse
   Beneficiary may not be recalculated.
             (v) PARTICIPANT'S BENEFIT.
          (A)  The account balance as of the last valuation date in
            the calendar year immediately preceding the Distribution
            Calendar Year (Valuation Calendar Year) increased by the
            amount of any contributions allocated to the account balance
            as of dates in the Valuation Calendar Year after the
            valuation date and decreased by distributions made in the
            Valuation Calendar Year after the valuation date.
          (B)  Exception for second Distribution Calendar Year. For
            purposes of clause (A) above, if any portion of the minimum
            distribution for the first Distribution Calendar Year is
            made in the second Distribution Calendar Year on or before
            the Required Beginning Date, the amount of the minimum
            distribution made in the second Distribution Calendar Year
            shall be treated as if it had been made in the immediately
            preceding Distribution Calendar Year.
             (vi) REQUIRED BEGINNING DATE.
          (A) GENERAL RULE. The Required Beginning Date of a
     Participant  is the first day of April of the  calendar
     year   following  the  calendar  year  in   which   the
     Participant attains age 70-1/2.
           (B)  TRANSITIONAL  RULES. The Required  Beginning
     Date  of  a  Participant who attains age 70-1/2  before
     January  1,  1988, shall be deter- mined in  accordance
     with (1) or (2) below:
                (1)  Non-Five Percent Owners.  The  Required
          Begin-  ding Date of a Participant who  is  not  a
          Five  Percent Owner is the first day of  April  of
          the  calendar year following the calendar year  in
          which the later of retirement or attainment of age
          70-1/2 occurs.
                 (2)   Five  Percent  Owners.  The  Required
          Beginning  Date of a Participant  who  is  a  Five
          Percent  Owner  during  any year  beginning  after
          December  31,  1979,  is the first  day  of  April
          following the later of: (I) the calendar  year  in
          which the Participant attains age 70-1/2, or  (II)
          the  earlier of the calendar year with  or  within
          which  ends the Plan Year in which the Participant
          becomes a Five Percent Owner, or the calendar year
          in which the Participant retires.
            The Required Beginning Date of a Participant who
       is  not  a Five Percent Owner who attains age  70-1/2
       during 1988 and who has not retired as of January  1,
       1989, is April 1,1990.
            (C) Five Percent Owner. A Participant is treated
       as   a  Five  Percent  Owner  for  purposes  of  this
       paragraph  (f) if such Participant is a Five  Percent
       Owner  as  defined  in Section  416(i)  of  the  Code
       (determined  in  accordance  with  Section  416   but
       without  regard to whether the Plan is top heavy)  at
       any  time during the Plan Year ending with or  within
       the calendar year in which such Owner attains age 66-
       1/2 or any subsequent Plan Year.
             (D)  Once  distributions have begun to  a  Five
       Percent  Owner  under this paragraph (f),  they  must
       continue  to  be distributed, even if the Participant
       ceases  to  be  a Five Percent Owner in a  subsequent
       year.
(g)    TRANSITIONAL RULE.
    (i)  Notwithstanding  the  other  requirements  of  this
Section 7.9 and subject to the requirements of Sections  7.4
through  7.8,  distribution on behalf  of  any  Participant,
including  a  Five Percent Owner, may be made in  accordance
with  all of the following requirements (regardless of  when
such distribution commences):
            (A) The distribution is one which would not have
       disqualified the Plan under Section 401(a)(9) of  the
       Internal Revenue Code as in effect prior to amendment
       by the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984.
             (B)  The distribution is in accordance  with  a
       method  of distribution designated by the Participant
       whose  interest  is  being  distributed  or,  if  the
       Participant  is  deceased, by a Beneficiary  of  such
       Participant.
             (C) Such designation was in writing, was signed
       by  the Participant or the Beneficiary; and was  made
       before January 1, 1984.
             (D) The Participant had accrued a benefit under
       the Plan as of December 31, 1983.
            (E) The method of distribution designated by the
       Participant or the Beneficiary specifies the time  at
       which  distribution will commence,  the  period  over
       which distributions will be made, and in the case  of
       any  distribution upon the Participant's  death,  the
       Beneficiaries of the Participant listed in  order  of
       priority.
          (ii) A distribution upon death will not be covered
     by this transitional rule unless the information in the
     designation contains the required information described
     above with respect to the distributions to be made upon
     the death of the Participant.
           (iii) For any distribution which commences before
     January  1,1984, but continues after December31,  1983,
     the  Participant,  or  the Beneficiary,  to  whom  such
     distribution  is being made, will be presumed  to  have
     designated the method of distribution under  which  the
     distribution   is   being  made  if   the   method   of
     distribution   was  specified  in   writing   and   the
     distribution    satisfies    the    requirements     in
     subparagraphs (g)(i)(A) and (E).
           (iv)  If  a designation is revoked any subsequent
     distribution must satisfy the requirements  of  Section
     401(a)(9)  of  the  Code and the  Proposed  Regulations
     thereunder.  if a designation is revoked subsequent  to
     the  date  distributions  are required  to  begin,  the
     Custodian  must distribute by the end of  the  calendar
     year   following  the  calendar  year  in   which   the
     revocation  occurs the total amount not yet distributed
     which would have been required to have been distributed
     to  satisfy  Section  401(a)(9) of  the  Code  and  the
     Proposed  Regulations thereunder, but for  the  Section
     242(b)(2) election. For calendar years beginning  after
     December  31,  1988, such distributions must  meet  the
     minimum distribution incidental benefit requirements in
     Section 1.401(a)(9)-2 of the Proposed Regulations.  Any
     changes in the designation will be considered to  be  a
     revocation  of  the  designation.  However,  the   mere
     substitution  or  addition of another Beneficiary  (one
     not  named  in  the designation) under the  designation
     will  not  be  considered to be  a  revocation  of  the
     designation, so long as such substitution  or  addition
     does not after the period over which distributions  are
     to   be   made  under  the  designation,  directly   or
     indirectly  (for  example,  by  altering  the  relevant
     measuring  life).  In the case in which  an  amount  is
     transferred  or  rolled over from one plan  to  another
     plan, the rules in Q&A J-2 and Q&A J-3 shall apply.
           7.10  ANNUITY  CONTRACTS.  Any  annuity  contract
     distributed  under  this Plan must be  nontransferable.
     The   terms  of  any  annuity  contract  purchased  and
     distributed  by  the  Plan to a Participant  or  Spouse
     shall  comply with the requirements of this  Plan.  The
     Custodian  will not issue annuity contracts.  The  Plan
     Administrator shall be responsible for the purchase  of
     any  annuity contracts required to be distributed under
     the  terms of this Plan. The Custodian shall  pay  over
     the  amount required to purchase such annuity  contract
     to  the  Plan Administrator or directly to the  annuity
     issuer   designated  by  the  Plan  Administrator,   as
     directed   by   the  Plan  Administrator   in   written
     instructions to the Custodian.
           7.11(a)  DIRECT ROLLOVER ELECTION.  This  Section
     applies  to  distributions made on or after January  1,
     1993. Notwithstanding any provision of the Plan to  the
     contrary  that  would otherwise limit  a  distributee's
     election  under this Section, a distributee may  elect,
     at  the  time and in the manner prescribed by the  Plan
     Administrator,  to  have  any portion  of  an  eligible
     rollover  distribution  paid directly  to  an  eligible
     retirement  plan  specified by  the  distributes  in  a
     direct rollover.
                  (b) DEFINITIONS.
                 (i)  ELIGIBLE  ROLLOVER  DISTRIBUTION:   An
          eligible rollover distribution is any distribution
          of all or any portion of the balance to the credit
          of   the  distributee,  except  that  an  eligible
          rollover   distribution  does  not  include:   any
          distribution   that  is  one  of   a   series   of
          substantially  equal periodic payments  (not  less
          frequently  than annually) made for the  life  (or
          life  expectancy) of the distributee or the  joint
          lives   (or  joint  life  expectancies)   of   the
          distributes   and  the  distributee's   designated
          beneficiary,  or  for a specified  period  of  ten
          years or more; any distribution to the extent such
          distribution  is required under Section  401(a)(9)
          of  the  Code; and the portion of any distribution
          that is not includible in gross income (determined
          without regard to the exclusion for net unrealized
          appreciation with respect to employer securities).
                (ii)  ELIGIBLE RETIREMENT PLAN: An  eligible
          retirement   plan  is  an  individual   retirement
          account  described in Section 408(a) of the  Code,
          an  individual  retirement  annuity  described  in
          Section  408(b)  of  the  Code,  an  annuity  plan
          described  in  Section 403(a) of the  Code,  or  a
          qualified trust described in Section 401(a) of the
          Code,  that  accepts  the  distributee's  eligible
          rollover distribution However, in the case  of  an
          eligible  rollover distribution to  the  surviving
          spouse,   an  eligible  retirement  plan   is   an
          individual   retir~  ment  account  or  individual
          retirement annuity.
                (iii) DISTRIBUTEE: A distributee includes an
          employee  or  former employee.  In  addition,  the
          employee's  or former employee's surviving  spouse
          and the employee's or former employee's spouse  or
          former  spouse who is the alternate payee under  a
          qualified domestic relations order, as defined  in
          Section 414(p) of the Code, are distributees  with
          regard  to  the interest of the spouse  or  former
          spouse.
                (iv) DIRECT ROLLOVER: A direct rollover is a
          payment  by  the  Plan to the eligible  retirement
          plan specified by the distributee.

                          SECTION B
                              
                     PLAN ADMINISTRATOR

                   (a)  The Plan Administrator shall be  the
   Employer  unless  the  Employer  has  designated  another
   person or business entity as the Plan Administrator under
   paragraph  6 of the Participation Agreement. A designated
   Plan  Administrator may resign at any time  by  filing  a
   written  notice of resignation with the Employer and  may
   be removed at any time by the Employer. In the event of a
   vacancy in the office of Plan Administrator, the Employer
   may  appoint  a successor, in which event,  the  Employer
   shall notify the Custodian of the change in the office of
   Plan  Administrator by delivering a signed and  completed
   copy  of  an  amended  Participation  Agreement  to   the
   Custodian  prior to the end of the Plan  Year  for  which
   such   change  is  effective.  The  Custodian  shall   be
   protected  in  acting  upon the directions  of  the  Plan
   Administrator designated in the most recent Participation
   Agreement of the Employer filed with the Custodian  until
   receipt  of  the  amended Participation Agreement  giving
   notice of the change in Plan Administrator.
                    (b)   The   Plan   Administrator   shall
   administer  the  Plan in accordance with  its  terms  and
   shall  have  all  powers  necessary  to  effectuate   the
   provisions  of  the  Plan. The Plan  Administrator  shall
   interpret the Plan and determine all questions arising in
   the administration, interpretation and application of the
   Plan,  and shall, from time to time, formulate and  issue
   such  rules and regulations as may be necessary  for  the
   purpose  of  administering the Plan.  Any  determination,
   rule or regulation issued by the Plan Administrator shall
   be  conclusive and binding on all persons, except as  may
   otherwise be provided herein.
                   (c)  Except as may otherwise be provided,
   whenever  under the provisions of the Plan  the  Employer
   shall  have authority right or power to act, such  action
   shall  be evidenced by a written document signed  by  the
   Plan Administrator. The Plan Administrator shall have the
   authority to give to the Custodian, in writing, any other
   notice  or direction permitted by the terms of the  Plan,
   and  the  Custodian shall be entitled to rely  upon  such
   writing  until such time as the Plan Administrator  shall
   file a written revocation of the notice or direction with
   the Custodian.
                   (d)  The Plan Administrator shall keep  a
   record  of all his actions, and shall keep such books  of
   account,  records and other data as may be necessary  for
   the   proper  administration  of  the  Plan.   The   Plan
   Administrator shall notify the Custodian and the Employer
   of  any action taken and, when required, shall notify any
   other interested person or persons.
                   (e)  The Plan Administrator shall  timely
   file,  or  cause to be timely filed, all annual  reports,
   financial and other statements as may be required of  the
   Plan  Administrator  by  any federal  or  state  statute,
   agency  or authority. The Plan Administrator shall timely
   furnish,  or  cause  to be furnished, all  such  reports,
   statements and other documents as may be required by  any
   federal  or  state  statute, agency or  authority  to  be
   furnished  by  the Plan Administrator to any Participant,
   Beneficiary or interested party.
                   (f) The Plan Administrator shall have the
   authority to accept service of process on behalf  of  the
   Plan.
                   (g)  If  the  Plan  Administrator  is  an
   Employee, he shall not be compensated.
                   (h)  In the event of the death of a  sole
   proprietor   Employer   who   was   serving    as    Plan
   Administrator, the estate of the sole proprietor shall be
   deemed  the  Plan  Administrator. In  the  event  of  the
   dissolution of a partnership Employer that was serving as
   Plan   Administrator,  the  remaining  ex-partners  shall
   collectively be deemed the Plan Administrator.

                          SECTION 9
                              
            FIDUCIARY DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

           9.1  All fiduciaries shall discharge their duties
with respect to the Plan and/or Trust solely in the interest
of  the  Participants and Beneficiaries; for  the  exclusive
purpose of providing benefits to participating Employees and
their  Beneficiaries, and defraying reasonable  expenses  of
administering the Plan and/or Trust; with the  care,  skill,
prudence   and   diligence  under  the  circumstances   then
prevailing  that a prudent person acting in a like  capacity
and  familiar with such matters would use; and in accordance
with  the  Plan  documents and instruments insofar  as  such
documents and instruments are consistent with the provisions
of the Self-Employed Individuals Retirement Act of 1962, and
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, and any
acts amendatory thereof.
          9.2 To the extent that a fiduciary may be relieved
of liability under Section 410(a) of ERISA for breach of any
responsibility, obligation or duty provided for by Title  I,
Part 4 of ERISA, no fiduciary shall be liable for any action
or  failure to act hereunder, except for bad faith,  willful
misconduct  or  gross  negligence.  To  the  extent  that  a
fiduciary may be relieved of liability under Section  410(a)
of   ERISA  for  a  breach  by  another  fiduciary  of   any
responsibility, obligation or duty provided for by Title  I,
Part  4  of ERISA, no fiduciary shall be liable for a breach
committed by any other fiduciary unless the fiduciary:
                  (a) Knowingly participated in or knowingly
   concealed a breach by such other fiduciary;
                   (b)  By  its failure to comply  with  the
   fiduciary  duties set out in Section 9.1, it has  enabled
   such other fiduciary to commit a breach; or,
                   (c)  It  has  failed to  make  reasonable
   efforts  under the circumstances to remedy the breach  of
   another fiduciary of which it has knowledge.
                   To the same extent, no fiduciary shall be
   personally  liable  for  the acts  or  omissions  of  any
   attorney  or agency employed by the fiduciary  hereunder,
   if  such attorney or agent shall have been selected  with
   reasonable care.

                         SECTION 10
                              
                      CLAIMS PROCEDURE
                   10.1  If  an Employee, or his Beneficiary
   shall make a claim for Benefits under the Plan, the clain
   shall   be   referred  to  the  Plan  Administrator   for
   resolution.  Within thirty (30) days after receipt  of  a
   claim  the  Plan  Administrator shall  render  a  written
   decision  concerning the merits of  the  request  If  the
   claim is denied, the written decision shall set forth:
                  (a) The specific reason or reasons for the
   denial;
                   (b)  Specific reference to pertinent Plan
   provisions on which the denial is based;
                    (c)  A  description  of  any  additional
   material or information; and
                   (d)  An  explanation of the Plan's  claim
   review procedure.
   If  a  claimant  is  not  furnished  a  written  decision
   containing such information within thirty (30) days,  the
   claim shall be deemed denied and automatically proceed to
   the review stage.
                   10.2  The  claimant may  file  a  written
   request with the Plan Administrator for a review  of  the
   decision rendered under paragraph 10.1 within sixty  (60)
   days  after  receiving  a written  decision  denying  the
   claim,  or,  if  no written decision is rendered,  within
   ninety (90) days after filing the claim. The claimant may
   review  pertinent Plan documents prior to  such  request,
   and   submit  written  issues  and  comments.  The   Plan
   Administrator  shall  render a  written  decision  within
   thirty (30) days after receipt of the request for review,
   setting  forth the specific reasons for the  decision  in
   language  calculated to be understood  by  the  claimant,
   with  specific reference to the pertinent Plan provisions
   on which the decision is based.

                         SECTION 11
                              
                  AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION

     11.1 The Plan may be amended at anytime by the Board of
Directors of Nicholas Company, Inc., provided that  no  such
amendment shall be effective which shall cause or permit:
           (a)  Any  portion  of  the  assets  held  by  the
Custodian  to  be diverted to purposes other  than  for  the
exclusive   benefit   of   the   Participants    or    their
Beneficiaries; or
           (b) Any portion of such assets to revert to or to
become the property of the Employer.
          No such amendment shall take effect until at least
ten (10) days after the mailing of notice by regular mall to
the last known address of each Employer affected thereby.
      11.2 The Employer may (a) change the choice of options
in   the  Participation  Agreement  for  any  Plan  Year  by
delivering  a  signed  and completed copy  of  such  amended
Participation Agreement to the Custodian prior to the end of
such   Plan  Year,  (b)  add  overriding  language  in   the
Participation Agreement when such language is  necessary  to
satisfy  Section 415 or Section 416 of the Code  because  of
the  required  aggregation of multiple plans,  and  (c)  add
certain  model amendments published by the Internal  Revenue
Service which specifically provide that their adoption  will
not  cause  the Plan to be treated as individually designed.
An  Employer  that  amends the Plan for  any  other  reason,
including a waiver of the minimum funding requirement  under
Section  412(d)  of the Code, will no longer participate  in
this  Master  Plan  and  will  be  considered  to  have   an
individually designed plan.
      11.3  No  amendment to the Plan or  the  Participation
Agreement shall be effective to the extent that it  has  the
effect   of  decreasing  a  Participant's  accrued  benefit.
Notwithstanding  the  preceding  sentence,  a  Participant's
account balance may be reduced to the extent permitted under
Section  412(c)(8)  of  the  Code.  For  purposes  of   this
paragraph,  a  Plan  amendment  which  has  the  effect   of
decreasing a Participant's account balance or eliminating an
optional   form  of  benefit,  with  respect   to   benefits
attributable  to  service  before  the  amendment  shall  be
treated as reducing an accrued benefit. Furthermore, if  the
vesting schedule of the Plan is amended, in the case  of  an
Employee  who is a Participant as of the later of  the  date
such  amendment is adopted or the date it becomes effective,
the  nonforfeitable percentage (determined as of such  date)
of  such  Employee's  right to his Employer-derived  accrued
benefit will not be less than his percentage computed  under
the Plan without regard to such amendment.
      11.4 If the Plan's vesting schedule is amended, or the
Plan  is  amended  in  any way that directly  or  indirectly
affects  the computation of the Participant's nonforfeitable
percentage,  each  Participant with  at  least  3  Years  of
Service  with  the Employer may elect, within  a  reasonable
period  after  the adoption of the amendment or  change,  to
have  the non-forfeitable percentage computed under the Plan
without regard to such amendment or change. For Participants
who  do not have at least 1 Hour of Service in any Plan Year
beginning  after  December 31, 1988, the preceding  sentence
shall be applied by substituting "5 Years of Service" for "3
Years of Service" where such language appears.
      The period during which the election may be made shall
commence with the date the amendment is adopted or deemed to
be made and shall end on the latest of:
   (1) 60 days after the amendment is adopted;
   (2) 60 days after the amendment becomes effective; or
   (3)  60  days  after  the Participant is  issued  written
     notice  of  the  amendment  by  the  Employer  or  Plan
     Administrator.
     11.5 The Employer shall have the right to terminate the
Plan  upon  sixty  (60)  days  notice  in  writing  to   the
Custodian.  The  Plan shall automatically terminate  on  the
death of the Employer, if the Employer is a sole proprietor,
or  upon the termination of the partnership, if the Employer
is a partnership, unless provision is made by a successor to
the  business  of the Employer for the continuation  of  the
Plan.
      11.6 Upon termination of the Plan, all assets held  by
the   Custodian  shall  be  distributed  as   soon   as   is
administratively  feasible to the Participants  pursuant  to
the provisions of Section 7 hereof.

                         SECTION 12
                              
         TRANSFERS TO AND FROM OTHER QUALIFIED PLANS

      12.1 The Employer may cause to be transferred in  cash
to  the  Custodian the assets held (whether  by  a  trustee,
Custodian,  or  otherwise) in respect  of  any  other  self-
employed  retirement  plan  which satisfies  the  applicable
requirements  of  the Internal Revenue  Code  and  which  is
maintained  by the Employer for the benefit of  any  of  the
Participants.  Any cash so transferred shall be  accompanied
by  written instructions from the Plan Administrator  naming
the persons for whose benefit such cash has been transferred
and  showing separately the respective contributions by  the
Employer  and  by the Participants and the  amount  of  cash
attributable thereto.
      12.2  Upon  receipt  of  any cash  transferred  to  it
pursuant  to  Section 12.1, the Custodian shall  immediately
invest   such  moneys  in  designated  whole  or  fractional
Investment  Company  Shares  and,  in  accordance  with  the
instructions  of  the Plan Administrator,  make  appropriate
credits  to  the accounts of the persons for  whose  benefit
such  cash  has  been  transferred. Provided,  however,  the
Employer  may not cause to be transferred to this  Plan  and
credited  to  the Profit Sharing Plan Account Balance(s)  of
Participants  any assets held in respect of  any  retirement
plan  which  is a defined benefit plan, money purchase  plan
(including  a target benefit plan), stock bonus,  or  profit
sharing  plan  which  is  subject to  the  survivor  annuity
requirements  of Sections 401(a)(11) and 417  of  the  Code.
Provided  further  that  the Plan  Administrator  shall  not
permit  any  transfer  to  this  Plan,  and  no  transaction
amending or having the effect of amending a plan or plans to
transfer benefits to this Plan shall be permitted,  if  such
transfer  or similar transaction would result in elimination
or   reduction  of:  any  benefits  described   in   Section
411(d)(6)(A) of the Code; any early retirement  benefits  or
retirement-type    subsidies    described     in     Section
411(d)(6)(B)(i)  of  the  Code; or  any  optional  forms  of
benefit  described in Section 411(d)(6)(B)(ii) of the  Code.
The  preceding sentence shall not apply to the  extent  that
any  such  benefits have not accrued or that elimination  or
reduction  of such benefits would be permitted by applicable
regulations  under  the  Code. Any amounts  so  credited  as
contributions  previously made by the Employer  or  by  such
persons  under  such other Plan, as specified  by  the  Plan
Administrator, shall be treated as contributions  previously
made  under the Plan by the Employer or by such persons,  as
the   case   may   be.   Transferred  amounts   representing
accumulated  deductible  employee contributions  within  the
meaning of Section 72(o)(5)(B) of the Code shall be credited
to  a separate ADEC Rollover Account as described in Section
4.6.
     12.3 The Employer may request the Custodian to transfer
Plan  assets held by the Custodian to itself or any bank  as
Custodian  or  trustee of any other plan maintained  by  the
Employer  which satisfies the requirements of  the  Internal
Revenue  Code, provided that such transfer is  permitted  by
such  other  plan and the Custodian is provided with  (a)  a
letter  of  direction signed by the Owner  or  all  partners
directing  the transfer of Plan assets, which  letter  shall
indicate the name of the successor trustee or Custodian  and
verify  that a new qualified plan has been established  with
such  successor;  (b) a signed acceptance by  the  successor
Custodian or trustee of the new plan verifying that the plan
is  a qualified retirement trust and indicating the date  of
qualification  and  Internal Revenue  Service  qualification
number; and (c) such other information as the Custodian  may
require.
     12.4 In the event of a merger or consolidation with, or
transfer  of assets or liabilities to, any other plan,  each
Participant  shall, if the plan then terminates,  receive  a
benefit  immediately  after  the  merger,  consolidation  or
transfer, which is equal to or greater than the benefit  the
Participant  would have been entitled to receive immediately
before the merger, consolidation or transfer, assuming  that
the plan had then terminated.

                         SECTION 13
                              
                        MISCELLANEOUS

      13.1  Neither the establishment of the Plan, including
the   execution   of   the  Custodial  Agreement   and   the
Participation Agreement, nor any modification  or  amendment
thereof,  nor the creation of any fund or account,  nor  the
payment of any benefit, shall be construed as giving to  any
Participant  or  other person any legal or  equitable  right
against  the  Employer  or the Custodian  except  as  herein
provided;  and in no event shall the terms of employment  of
any  Participant  be  modified or enlarged  or  in  any  way
affected hereby.
      13.2  The  benefits provided hereunder  shall  not  be
subject   to   any  voluntary  or  involuntary   alienation,
assignment, garnishment, attachment, execution  or  levy  of
any  kind, and any attempt to cause such benefits to  be  so
subjected  shall  not be recognized. The preceding  sentence
shall also apply to the creation, assignment, or recognition
of  a  right  to  any  benefit payable  with  respect  to  a
Participant  pursuant to a domestic relations order,  unless
such  order is determined by the Plan Administrator to be  a
"qualified domestic relations order," as defined in  Section
4l4(p)  of the Code or is a domestic relations order entered
before January 1985.
      13.3  The masculine gender wherever used in this  Plan
shall  include  the  feminine as well;  the  singular  shall
include  the  plural, and the plural the  singular  wherever
appropriate for the proper interpretation of this Plan.
      13.4  This  Plan shall be construed, administered  and
enforced  according  to the laws of the State  of  Wisconsin
where  not  superseded by federal law. In  the  event  of  a
conflict  between the terms of this Plan and  those  of  the
Custodial Agreement, the former shall prevail.

                         SECTION 14
                              
                       EFFECTIVE DATE

     This Plan, as amended, is declared effective commencing
with  the  Plan Year commencing January 1, 1989, subject  to
the  Employer  obtaining a determination from  the  Internal
Revenue  Service  ("IRS") that the Plan and  its  supporting
documents  meet the requirements for qualification contained
in  the Code (unless the Employer is permitted by applicable
IRS  rulings or procedures to rely on the IRS opinion letter
approving  the form of this master Plan without obtaining  a
determination with respect to the Employer's plan).  If  the
Employer's  plan  fails  to attain or retain  qualification,
such plan will no longer participate in this master plan and
will be considered an individually designed plan.

               NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN
                FOR SELF-EMPLOYED INDIVIDUALS
                     CUSTODIAL AGREEMENT
                              
SECTION 1. PURPOSE AND APPLICATION OF AGREEMENT
   The purpose of this Custodial Agreement is to provide for
   the  receipt  of  contributions made under  the  Nicholas
   Master  Retirement  Plan  for  Self-Employed  Individuals
   hereinafter   "Plan")   and   the   investment   of   the
   contributions  and  the  earnings thereon  in  Investment
   Company   Shares  for  the  exclusive  benefit   of   the
   Participants in said Plan.

SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS.
   All terms defined in the Plan shall have the same meaning
   when  used in the Custodial Agreement unless the contrary
   is   specifically   expressed  or  the  context   clearly
   indicates otherwise.

SECTION 3. PARTICIPANTS' ACCOUNTS.
   The  Custodian  shall  open and  maintain  the  following
   accounts  for  each individual as the Plan  Administrator
   shall  from  time to time certify to the Custodian  as  a
   Participant in the Plan:
       (a)  a Profit Sharing Account which shall consist  of
       that  portion  of all contributions of  the  Employer
       under    the    Employer's   Profit   Sharing    Plan
       Participation Agreement allocated to the Participant,
       and earnings thereon;
       (b)   a  Money  Purchase  Plan  Account  which  shall
       consist of that portion of all contributions  of  the
       Employer  under  the Employer's Money  Purchase  Plan
       Participation Agreement allocated to the Participant,
       and earnings thereon;
       (c)    a  Voluntary  Contribution  Account  for   the
       voluntary  contributions made by the Participant  and
       earnings thereon; and
       (d)  a Rollover Contribution Account or ADEC Rollover
       Account   for   any  rollover  contributions   of   a
       Participant as described in Section 4.6 of the  Plan,
       and earnings thereon.

SECTION 4. RECEIPT AND INVESTMENT OF CONTRIBUTIONS.
              4.1 All contributions shall be made only by or
   through   the  Employer.  Notwithstanding  the  preceding
   sentence, rollover contributions as described in  Section
   4.6  of  the  Plan  may be transferred  directly  to  the
   Custodian  from the distributing plan. All  contributions
   shall be in cash. Each Participant shall direct the  Plan
   Administrator  as  to  the  specific  Investment  Company
   Shares to be purchased with such contributions.
              4.2  All  contributions shall be in accordance
   with  the  terms of the Plan and shall be accompanied  by
   signed  written instructions from the Plan  Administrator
   to  the Custodian indicating the amount thereof which  is
   to  be  allocated to each Participant's Account  and  any
   portion  thereof  which  is the  Participant's  voluntary
   contribution. In addition, each set of such  instructions
   shall  designate  for  each  Participant  the  Investment
   Company(ies)  in which the Participant has  directed  the
   Plan  Administrator to cause the contribution made by  or
   on behalf of the Participant to be invested.
             4.3 In the event that the Custodian in its sole
   discretion  shall determine that the Plan Administrator's
   instructions are inadequate, the Custodian may return the
   contribution  to  the  Plan  Administrator  without   any
   liability Immediately upon receipt of contributions by or
   on  behalf  of a Participant, the Custodian shall  invest
   such  contributions in whole or fractional Shares of  the
   Investment  Company designated by the Plan Administrator,
   pursuant  to  the  direction of the Participant,  at  the
   price  and  in the manner in which such Shares  are  then
   being  publicly offered by the Investment Company,  which
   shares  shall  then  be  appropriately  credited  to  the
   Participant's  Account.  All  distributions  received  on
   Investment Company Shares held in a Participant's Account
   shall  be reinvested in such Shares and credited to  such
   Participant's Account. If any distribution of  Investment
   Company  Shares  may be received at the election  of  the
   shareholder  in  additional shares or in  cash  or  other
   property  the  Custodian  shall  elect  to  receive  such
   distribution in additional Investment Company Shares.
              4.4 The minimum initial contribution which the
   Custodian  shall  be required to accept with  respect  to
   either the Profit Sharing Plan or the Money Purchase Plan
   shall be $500 per Participant if either the Nicholas Fund
   or  Nicholas Income Fund is designated as the  Investment
   Company,  $1,000  per  Participant  if  Nicholas  II   is
   designated  as  the Investment Company,  and  $2,000  per
   Participant   if  Nicholas  Limited  Edition,   Inc.   is
   designated   as  the  Investment  Company.  The   minimum
   contribution  which  the Custodian  shall  thereafter  be
   required to accept shall be $100 per Participant.

SECTION 5. DISTRIBUTIONS.
             Distributions and repayments shall be made only
   as  authorized  or  required by the Plan.  The  Custodian
   shall make such distributions on the basis of information
   supplied  in writing by the Plan Administrator and  shall
   be fully protected in so doing.

SECTION 6. BENEFICIARY DESIGNATION.
              If  a  Participant, as permitted by the  Plan,
   designates  a  beneficiary to receive  any  undistributed
   balance   of   the   Participant's  Account(s)   on   the
   Participant's  death, the Plan Administrator  shall  file
   such designation with the Custodian. In the absence of an
   effective  designation so filed, any  such  undistributed
   balance  shall,  on  the  Participant's  death,  be  paid
   pursuant to Section 7.5 of the Plan.

SECTION 7. RELIANCE UPON RECORDS, CERTIFICATES, ETC.
              7.1  Notices and communications from the  Plan
   Administrator  or  Employer to  the  Custodian  shall  be
   considered  to have been made only upon delivery  to  the
   main office of the Custodian in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. All
   notices  and  other communications from the Custodian  to
   the  Employer, the Plan Administrator or any  Participant
   shall be considered sufficient if mailed by regular first
   class  mail (unless other- wise required herein)  to  the
   Employer's  last  address as listed  on  the  Custodian's
   records.
              7.2 The Custodian may rely upon any affidavit,
   certificate, letter, notice, telegram or other  paper  or
   document  believed  by  it to be genuine,  and  upon  any
   evidence  believed by it to be sufficient, and  it  shall
   not  be liable for any payment made hereunder if made  in
   good faith and without actual notice or knowledge of  any
   fact   which  would  make  such  payment  improper.   The
   Custodian  may  rely upon any instructions received  from
   the  Plan  Administrator  and may  conclusively  presume,
   without any duty to inquire, that all instructions of the
   Plan  Administrator regarding specific Investment Company
   Shares  to  be  purchased for a Participant's  Account(s)
   reflect  the directions of such Participant in accordance
   with the Plan.
              7.3  The Custodian shall be under no  duty  to
   examine  the  records of the Employer  to  determine  the
   accuracy thereof or whether any certification has been or
   should have been made, or the accuracy of any information
   which   shall   have   been  received   from   the   Plan
   Administrator  or  Employer, or whether any  contribution
   under  the  Plan  has  been properly  determined  by  the
   Employer,  nor  shall  the Custodian  have  any  duty  or
   responsibility to enforce contributions.
              7.4 The Custodian shall not be liable for  any
   action  taken upon any certification or direction of  the
   Plan  Administrator or Employer, or for acting  upon  any
   written  notice,  certification  or  other  document   or
   writing  believed by it to be genuine and  to  have  been
   signed  and  delivered by proper person or  persons.  The
   Custodian   shall   be  under  no  duty   to   make   any
   investigation  or inquiry as to statements  contained  in
   any  such  notice,  certification or  other  document  in
   writing,  and may accept the same as conclusive  evidence
   of  the  truth  and  accuracy of the  statements  therein
   contained  but, in its sole and absolute discretion,  the
   Custodian may require such further or additional evidence
   as to it may seem reasonable.
              7.5 The approval by the Employer of any report
   or accounting by the Custodian, including but not limited
   to an account by any resigned or removed Custodian, shall
   be  a complete release and discharge of the Custodian  or
   of  such  resigned or removed Custodian (as the case  may
   be),  if  not prohibited by section 410(a) of ERISA,  and
   shall  be  binding upon all Participants and all  persons
   claiming under them. No successor Custodian shall  be  in
   any  way  liable  or  responsible for  anything  done  or
   omitted   in  the  administration  of  the  Participant's
   Accounts  prior  to  the  date it  becomes  a  Custodian.
   Anything  herein  to  the contrary  notwithstanding,  the
   Employer  shall  be without power to approve  any  action
   taken  by the Custodian which is in contravention of  any
   of  the  terms  or  provisions of the Plan  or  Custodial
   Agreements.

SECTION 8. ACCOUNTING, RECORDS AND RETURNS.
   
             8.1 Within 90 days after the close of each Plan
   Year  or  the  date  of its removal or  resignation,  the
   Custodian shall file with the Employer an account of  its
   administration of all transactions hereunder  during  the
   preceding year or from the close of the last Plan Year to
   the  date  of removal or resignation. If the Employer  or
   the Plan Administrator has not objected to any accounting
   by  the Custodian within 90 days of receipt thereof, such
   accounting shall be deemed to have been approved  by  the
   Employer  and  the  Plan Administrator. All  transactions
   hereunder  shall be recorded by the Custodian in  records
   open  to inspection by the Employer or persons designated
   by the Employer.
              8.2 The Custodian shall file with the Internal
   Revenue   Service  such  returns  and  other  information
   required of it pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code.
              8.3  The  Custodian shall mail to the Employer
   all  notices, prospectuses, financial statements, proxies
   and  proxy  soliciting  material relating  to  Investment
   Company Shares held hereunder, which notices, etc.  shall
   be   distributed  by  the  Plan  Administrator   to   the
   appropriate Participants.

SECTION 9. COMPENSATION OF THE CUSTODIAN.
              The  Custodian shall receive compensation  for
   its  services  hereunder in accordance with  the  current
   schedule  of rates as agreed to between Nicholas Company,
   Inc. and the Custodian.

SECTION 10. RESIGNATION AND REMOVAL OF THE CUSTODIAN.
             10.1 The Custodian may resign by giving written
   notice   to  Nicholas  Company,  Inc.  by  certified   or
   registered mail, which resignation shall be effective  no
   less  than  sixty  (60) days after  receipt  by  Nicholas
   Company, Inc. of such notice, unless otherwise agreed  by
   the Custodian and Nicholas Company, Inc. In the event  of
   resignation  by  the  Custodian, Nicholas  Company,  Inc.
   shall  amend the Plan in accordance with Section 11.1  of
   the  Plan and create a new trust or other funding vehicle
   within  sixty  (60) days after receipt of the  notice  of
   resignation.  Should Nicholas Company, Inc.  fail  so  to
   act,  the  Plan  shall  terminate and  the  Participant's
   Accounts shall be distributed in accordance with  Section
   11.5 of the Plan.
               10.2  The  Board  of  Directors  of  Nicholas
   Company, Inc. may remove the Custodian by giving  written
   notice  by  certified or registered mail,  which  removal
   shall  be  effective no less than sixty (60)  days  after
   receipt by the Custodian of such notice, unless otherwise
   agreed by the Custodian and Nicholas Company, Inc. In the
   event of removal of the Custodian, Nicholas Company, Inc.
   shall  amend the Plan in accordance with Section 11.1  of
   the  Plan and create a new trust or other funding vehicle
   within  sixty (60) days after the Custodian's receipt  of
   the notice of removal. Should Nicholas Company, Inc. fall
   so to act, the Plan shall terminate and the Participant's
   Accounts shall be distributed in accordance with  Section
   11.5 of the Plan.

SECTION 11. CONCERNING THE CUSTODIAN.
               11.1   The  Custodian  need  not  engage   in
   litigation  unless first indemnified against  expense  by
   the  Employer  or unless the litigation is occasioned  by
   the  fault of the Custodian or involves a question of its
   fault.
          11.2   Nothing  contained  in  the  Plan,   either
   expressly  or by implication, shall be deemed  to  impose
   any  powers, duties or responsibilities on the  Custodian
   other  than  those  set  forth  in  this  Agreement   The
   Custodian  shall  be  under no duty  to  take  any  other
   action  unless  the Employer or Plan Administrator  shall
   furnish  the  Custodian with instructions in proper  form
   and   such  instructions  shall  have  been  specifically
   agreed to by the Custodian in writing.
             11.3 The Employer shall have the sole authority
   to  enforce  this  Agreement on behalf  of  any  and  all
   persons   having   or  claiming  any  interest   in   the
   Participant's  Account(s)  by  virtue  of  the  Custodial
   Agreement   or   Plan.  To  protect   the   Participant's
   Account(s)   from  expenses  which  might  otherwise   be
   incurred, it is imposed as a condition to the acquisition
   of  any interest in the Participant's Account(s), and  it
   is  hereby agreed, that no person other than the Employer
   may  institute  or  maintain  any  action  or  proceeding
   against the Custodian in the absence of written authority
   from  the  Employer  or a determination  of  a  court  of
   competent  jurisdiction that in refusing  such  authority
   the Employer has acted fraudulently or in bad faith
              11.4  The  Custodian shall have the  following
   specific powers:
       (a)  To hold securities in its name or the name of  a
       nominee;
       (b)  To employ suitable agents or counsel;
       (c)   To  continue to have the powers  granted  under
       this  Agreement  until final distribution  of  assets
       regardless  of termination of the Plan  or  Custodial
       Agreements; and
       (d)   To  act in any jurisdiction without bond unless
       otherwise required by law.

SECTION 12. RULES AND REGUMTIONS.
   The  Custodian  shall, from time to time,  formulate  and
   issue such rules and regulations as it may deem necessary
   for the purpose of its administration of the Plan, but no
   such  rule  or regulation shall be effective which  shall
   attempt  to  divest any Participant from  any  beneficial
   interest or right accruing to him under the terms hereof,
   or  which  shall attempt to vest in the Employer  at  any
   time  any property rights in or to funds or property held
   by the Custodian.

SECTION 13. AMENDMENT
   The  Custodian may with the approval of Nicholas Company,
   Inc.  amend  the provisions of this Custodial Account  at
   any  time.  Amendments  may be retroactive,  and  may  be
   applicable  to  existing  as  well  as  future  Custodial
   Agreements of which this Custodial Agreement is  a  part,
   but  no amendment, whether or not retroactive, shall take
   effect  until ten (10) days subsequent to the mailing  of
   notice thereof by the Custodian to each Employer, if any,
   whose Custodial Agreement will be affected thereby.
   
   
   EXHIBIT B


               NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN
                              
                     GENERAL INFORMATION

             In 1962, the Federal Government established the
   Self-Employed  Individual  Tax  Retirement  Act.  It   is
   commonly  called the Keogh Act in honor of  the  sponsor.
   The   purpose   of  the  Act  is  to  help  self-employed
   individuals   provide  for  their   own   retirement   by
   establishing  retirement plans. Your yearly contributions
   to  a  Keogh plan are a tax deductible expense,  and  the
   earnings   of   the   fund  accumulate   tax-free   until
   retirement.
              The  Nicholas Master Retirement Plan for Self-
   Employed  Individuals includes two types  of  plans  -  a
   profit   sharing  plan  allowing  a  flexible   rate   of
   contributions  from year to year, and  a  money  purchase
   plan  requiring the same fixed rate of contributions each
   year.  You  can adopt either or both plans. If you  adopt
   both, you will be considered as having two Keogh plans.
              The  Nicholas Company, Inc. provides you  with
   IRS  approved  master plan documents (consisting  of  the
   Basic  Plan  Document  Number 01  and  the  Participation
   Agreement or Agreements you complete and sign), and  also
   provides  professional investment management through  the
   Nicholas Family of Mutual Funds.
              You are responsible for administering the plan
   or  plans you adopt in accordance with the terms  of  the
   plan  documents and applicable laws and regulations,  and
   for   preparing  any  notices,  descriptions,  elections,
   consents,  beneficiary designations, reports  or  similar
   materials   that  may  be  required  in  the  course   of
   administering  your  plan(s).  Failure  to  operate  your
   plan(s) in accordance with the master plan documents  may
   result  in disqualification of your plan(s) by  the  IRS,
   even   though  the  IRS  has  approved  the  master  plan
   documents.  You  should work in close  consultation  with
   your   own   professional  advisors   in   adopting   and
   administering a plan or plans.
              The  following  questions and answers  address
   questions that are frequently asked about Keogh plans.
              Many  facets of life have their own "language"
   and   Keogh   plans   are   no  exception.   A   complete
   understanding of the terms and definitions of Keogh plans
   is   necessary  Defined  terms  used  in  the   following
   "question  and  answer  section"  and  the  other   Keogh
   documents  are  explained in Section 2  of  the  Nicholas
   Master  Retirement  Plan  for Self-Employed  Individuals.
   Please refer to these definitions frequently as you  read
   this.

I. GENERAL
   (1)  WHO MAY ESTABLISH A KEOGH PLAN?
              Incorporated  businesses  cannot  establish  a
   Nicholas Plan. Generally, anyone who receives income  for
   personal  services in an unincorporated business  may  do
   so. Examples include persons running small commercial  or
   industrial  unincorporated  businesses  and  professional
   people   in   private  practice.  Eligibility   in   some
   situations  can  be  more difficult  to  determine.  Many
   individuals   who   work  with   a   company,   such   as
   manufacturers' representatives, may still  be  considered
   self-employed and eligible for a Keogh plan on their own.
   Another example would be that some real estate agents are
   deemed independent contractors even though they work  for
   a  realtor organization. Where there is a question,  your
   tax  adviser or the IRS can usually clarify the situation
   quickly.
             Many people who work for corporations engage in
   part-time work for themselves and may set up a Keogh plan
   for that portion of their income.
   (2)  DO ALL YOUR EMPLOYEES HAVE TO BE COVERED?
               All   regular   "employees"  and   "non-owner
   partners" must be covered subject to the conditions noted
   below  These  people  may  not  exclude  themselves  from
   coverage.
     (a)  You may establish a waiting period of up to two years
       of service before entering the plan. You may establish a
       minimum age requirement for participation, but the minimum
       age may not be later than age 21. All owners must satisfy
       the same waiting period as their employees.
     (b)  Part-time employees do not have to be covered. For
       example, a person who never works over 1,000 hours in a year
       may be considered a part-time employee. If 1,000 hours is
       established as the cutoff point, owners will not get credit
       for a "year of service" if they do not accumulate 1,000
       hours of service. The cutoff point for a year of service can
       be set lower than 1,000 hours, but not higher. Refer to
       paragraph 3(b) of the Participation Agreement.
   (3)  MUST ALL "OWNERS" BE COVERED?
              All employees, including owner-employees, must
   be covered by the same rules governing participation.
   (4)    HOW   MUCH  MAY  BE  CONTRIBUTED  ON   BEHALF   OF
   PARTICIPANTS UNDER A KEOGH PLAN?
              An owner who maintains one or more Keogh plans
   for  his business or who maintains a defined contribution
   plan   may  contribute  up  to  the  lesser  of  25%   of
   compensation or $30,000 for each participant. The maximum
   deductible  contribution  to  any  profit  sharing  plan,
   however,   is   15%   of   compensation,   not   counting
   compensation  in  excess of $150,000.  (The  $30,000  and
   $150,000  limits are subject to cost of living  increases
   announced  by  the IRS from time to time.  See  your  tax
   adviser   for  further  information  on  the   applicable
   limits.)
               You  should  be  aware  that  the  percentage
   limitation  on  the  deductible  contribution   must   be
   computed  for owners by reducing the owner's compensation
   by the amount of the contribution made by the employer on
   behalf  of  the owner to the Plan (or any other qualified
   plan)  and also by the amount of any self-employment  tax
   deduction. The formula to determine the dollar amount  of
   your  contribution  is  to  multiply  the  percentage  of
   compensation  you  want to contribute  within  the  above
   limits  by the following amount: [Your Net Profits  minus
   1/2  Self-Employment Tax] divided by [1  +  Your  Desired
   Contribution Percentage]. Please consult your tax adviser
   to  determine the exact amount of the maximum  deductible
   contribution you may make each year.
   Only  the first $150,000 of earned income or compensation
   is  considered  under  the Nicholas Plan  in  determining
   contributions. The $150,000 limit applies, in many cases,
   to  the combined compensation of the owner and any spouse
   or children who are also employed by the business.
               Part-time,  self-employed  persons  can  also
   contribute  to a Keogh plan subject to the above  limits.
   It  is  recommended  that  the  part-time,  self-employed
   consult   their   tax   advisers   before   making    any
   contributions.
              The  percentage contributed for your employees
   is  determined  by  the formula of your  plan.  You  must
   contribute to each employee no less of a percentage  than
   you contribute for yourself.
   (5)  WHAT IS A PARTICIPANT'S "COMPENSATION"?
              For  owners, "compensation" means the  owner's
   earned  income  (see  Section  2(h)  of  the  Plan).   In
   determining  earned income, any deductible  contributions
   made  by the employer on behalf of the owner to this Plan
   or any other qualified plan, and any deduction allowed to
   the   employer   for  self-employment  taxes,   must   be
   subtracted from the total earnings of the owner.
              For  other  participants, "compensation"  will
   mean either W-2 earnings or "compensation" as defined  in
   Section 415(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. You  must
   select  the  applicable definition in  the  Participation
   Agreement.
              IRS  regulations identify W-2 compensation  as
   compensation  received by the employee from the  employer
   that  is  required  to  be  reported  as  wages  on   the
   employee's  Form  W-2  for income tax  purposes.  Section
   415(c)(3)(A)   of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code   defines
   "compensation" for any year to mean "the compensation  of
   the  participant  from the employer for  the  year."  IRS
   regulations    specify    that    Section    415(c)(3)(A)
   compensation  does  not  include:  contributions   to   a
   deferred  compensation plan that are not taxable  to  the
   employee  in  the year of contribution; amounts  realized
   upon  the  exercise  of  a  non-qualified  stock  option;
   amounts realized upon the sale of stock acquired under  a
   qualified  stock  option;  other  amounts  that   receive
   special  tax benefits (such as group term life  insurance
   premiums or amounts realized when restricted property  is
   no   longer   subject  to  a  risk  of  forfeiture);   or
   distributions from a deferred compensation plan  (whether
   or not includable in the employee's gross income).
              You  must  also  elect  in  the  Participation
   Agreement whether "compensation" will include or  exclude
   contributions   made  pursuant  to  a  salary   reduction
   agreement  and which are not includable in the employee's
   gross  income  because  of Code Sections  125  [cafeteria
   plans],   402(a)(8)  [now  402(e)(3),  cash  or  deferred
   arrangements],  402(h)  [SEPs]  or  403(b)  [tax-deferred
   annuities].
              Employers  should consult their  tax  advisers
   regarding  which  definition of  "compensation"  is  most
   suitable to them.
   (6)   AM I LOCKED INTO THE SAME ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION  EACH
   YEAR?
              The  annual  contribution percentages  to  the
   profit  sharing  plan may be changed by the  employer  to
   allow for changes in business conditions. If you wish  to
   change  your annual contribution percentage to the profit
   sharing  plan,  you must submit an amended  Participation
   Agreement  to  the  custodian.  Fluctuations  in   annual
   contributions must not discriminate in favor of owners or
   be used as an income averaging device by owners.
   The  annual contribution percentage to the money purchase
   plan may not be varied from year to year because that may
   adversely affect the plan's tax status.
   (7)  WHAT ABOUT EMPLOYERS WITH OTHER KEOGH PLANS OR OTHER
   EMPLOYEE BENIFT PLANS?
             Generally, limits on contributions apply to the
   sum  of all plans maintained by a single employer. Please
   refer to Sections 6.2, 6.3 and 6.4 of the Nicholas Master
   Retirement Plan for Self-Employed lndividuals.  Employers
   in  the situation described in Sections 6.3 or 6.4 of the
   Plan  should consult their tax advisers regarding  proper
   allocation to more than one Keogh plan.
   (8)   HOW LONG MAY CONTRIBUTIONS BE MADE ON BEHALF OF  AN
   OWNER?
             The owner may continue to make contributions to
   the plan as long as he continues to work.
   (9)  WHAT BENEFITS IS AN EMPLOYEE ENTITLED TO RECEIVE  IF
   HE LEAVES THE EMPLOYER?
              The Nicholas Plan provides that the account of
   a  participant  is  100% "vested"  at  all  times  (i.e.,
   nonforfeitable, whether or not he continues to  work  for
   the employer). Consequently, a participant who leaves the
   employer would be entitled to receive 100% of his or  her
   account.
   (10) WHEN CAN THE PAYMENT OF BENEFITS BEGIN?
              Payment of benefits generally may begin when a
   participant's employment terminates (including retirement
   or  death). However, the participant and, in some  cases,
   the participant's spouse, must sign a written consent  to
   any  payment  of benefits before the participant  reaches
   age  62  or,  if  later, the normal  retirement  age  you
   specify in the participation agreement
              A  10%  additional tax (in addition to regular
   income taxes) is imposed on distributions before a  self-
   employed  participant  reaches  age  59-1/2,  unless  the
   participant  makes a tax-free rollover or  in  situations
   where   certain  other  limited  exceptions  apply.   See
   question (12) for more information on rollovers.
               Generally,  benefit  distribution   for   all
   participants  must  begin by the April  1  following  the
   calendar  year in which the participant reaches  age  70-
   1/2.  For  participants who attained  age  70-1/2  before
   January  1,  1989, special rules apply.   Please  consult
   your  tax adviser and Section 1.401(a)(9) of the Proposed
   Income  Tax Regulations concerning the timing and  amount
   of any required minimum distributions.
   (11) HOW MAY DISTRIBUTIONS BE MADE?
              In  the  case of married participants  in  the
   money purchase plan who die prior to the commencement  of
   benefits, distributions from the money purchase plan must
   be made to the participant's surviving spouse in the form
   of  a  pre-retirement survivor annuity unless the married
   participant  makes a qualified election to have  benefits
   distributed in an optional form.
              In  addition, retirement benefits to a married
   participant in the money purchase plan must  be  paid  in
   the form of a qualified joint and survivor annuity and in
   the  form  of a life annuity to an unmarried participant,
   unless the participant makes a qualified election to have
   benefits distributed in an optional form.
             Distributions from the profit sharing plan to a
   participant  or his beneficiary may be made in  a  single
   payment or in installments.
               If  a  participant  dies  before  his  entire
   interest  in  the profit sharing plan is  distributed  to
   him,  his  remaining interest may have to be  distributed
   within five (5) years. The five-year rule may also  apply
   to post-death distributions from the money purchase plan,
   if  the  participant  was  single  or  made  a  qualified
   election  not  to have benefits paid as a  pre-retirement
   survivor annuity. Please refer to Section 7.9(e)  of  the
   Plan for additional details.
              The plan administrator (see question (24))  is
   responsible  for  making sure that  distributions  comply
   with  the  consent procedures and other requirements  and
   restrictions described in Section 7 of the Plan.
   (12) HOW IS THE DISTRIBUTION TAXED?
              Unless  part of your distribution has resulted
   from assets transferred to the Nicholas Master Retirement
   Plan  for  Self-Employed Individuals from an older  plan,
   all distributions are taxed as ordinary income.
              If the entire amount is paid in one year it is
   considered  ordinary income. Participants who  turned  50
   before  January  1,  1986 may elect a  form  of  ten-year
   averaging. Other participants may be eligible to elect  a
   special   five-year  forward  averaging  for   lump   sum
   distributions however, a distribution before  age  59-1/2
   to  a  self-employed individual on account of  separation
   from  service does not qualify). Distributions  taken  in
   installments are taxed as ordinary income as received.
               Distributions   generally  are   subject   to
   mandatory  20%  withholding  for  federal  income  taxes.
   Participants can avoid this withholding and  defer  taxes
   by electing to have the distribution paid directly to the
   trustee  or  custodian of an IRA or of another retirement
   plan that accepts rollovers. This type of transaction  is
   sometimes   called   a   "Direct  Rollover."   The   plan
   administrator (see question (24)) is required to  provide
   a  written  explanation of the mandatory withholding  and
   direct rollover rules before the distribution is made.
              Please  consult  your  tax  adviser  before  a
   distribution is made to review the alternatives  and  the
   tax.   Be   particularly  careful   if   you   made   any
   contributions to a Keogh plan before December  31,  1973.
   Your  tax adviser can determine, in such a situation,  if
   part  of  any  distribution is eligible for capital  gain
   treatment.
   (13) MAY VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS BE MADE?
             No.
   (14)   ARE   THERE   PENALTIES  IMPOSED   UNDER   CERTAIN
   SITUATIONS?
              There  may  be  a 10% penalty on distributions
   before age 59-1/2, as described in the answer to question
   (10)  above.  An individual receiving distributions  from
   qualified  retirement plans, tax sheltered annuities  and
   IRAs in excess of $150,000 may be subject to a 15% excise
   tax. There are exceptions, however, for payments: (a)  to
   a  beneficiary after a participant's death; (b)  directed
   by a qualified domestic relations order; (c) of after-tax
   employee contributions; or (d) rolled over to an  IRA  or
   another qualified plan.
   (15)  WHAT  GOVERNMENT  FORMS  MUST  BE  FILED  AND  WHAT
   INFORMATION MUST BE DISTRIBUTED TO PARTICIPANTS?
               Most  adopting  employers  may  rely  on  the
   favorable opinion letters issued by the Internal  Revenue
   Service  to the Nicholas Company on the qualification  of
   the Master Plan. The following employers may not rely  on
   the  opinion  letters issued by the IRS on  the  Nicholas
   Plan,   and  must  apply  to  the  IRS  for  a   separate
   determination  that their participation in  the  Nicholas
   Plan qualifies for favorable tax treatment:
              (a)  An  employer who maintains  or  ever  has
   maintained  another  qualified  plan  for  one  or   more
   employees who are covered by the Nicholas Plan(s),  other
   than  a  specified  paired plan  within  the  meaning  of
   Section 7 of Rev. Proc. 89-9, 1989-6 I.R.B. 14; or
             (b) An employer who maintains a welfare benefit
   fund  defined  in  Internal Revenue Code Section  419(e),
   which provides post retirement medical benefits allocated
   to separate accounts for key employees as defined in Code
   Section 419A(d)(3).
              If  either  of the two exceptions  apply,  the
   employer  should  request a determination  letter  as  to
   whether the Nicholas Plan(s), considered with all related
   qualified  plans  and,  if appropriate,  welfare  benefit
   funds,   satisfies  the  requirements  of  Code   Section
   401(a)(16)   as   to   limitations   on   benefits    and
   contributions in Code Section 415.
             An adopting employer must provide notice of the
   adoption  (or amendment) of the Nicholas Plan(s)  or,  if
   applicable,  of  the intent to apply for a  determination
   letter,  to  interested parties in  accordance  with  the
   requirements of Sections 16, 17 and 18 of IRS Rev.  Proc.
   94-6,  I.R.B.  1994-1, 142 (or any successor instructions
   from the IRS).
              The Internal Revenue Service and Department of
   Labor  require certain forms to be filed each  year.  The
   plan  administrator (which is normally the  employer)  is
   responsible  for  filing these forms on a  timely  basis.
   These forms may be obtained directly from either of these
   agencies. Nicholas Company and the custodian will provide
   certain  data  each year that the employer  or  his  plan
   administrator, can insert on the applicable forms. In the
   initial plan year and every third year, the employer must
   file  a  form number 5500C. In the intervening two  years
   the  employer must file a shorter, less complicated  Form
   5500R.  One-participant  plans  may  generally  use  Form
   5500EZ,  and  may not need to file at all if  total  plan
   assets are $100,OOO or less.
              A  summary plan description, which is a "plain
   language"  description of the Plan must also be  prepared
   and  submitted to the Department of Labor and to each new
   participant.  A summary description of any amendments  to
   the  Plan  must  also  be prepared, distributed  to  Plan
   participants, and filed with the Department of Labor each
   time the Plan is amended. In addition, each year the plan
   administrator must also distribute to each participant  a
   summary  of the annual report filed on the IRS Form  5500
   series.
              Certain notices, elections and consents may be
   required in connection with beneficiary designations  and
   benefit distributions. These requirements are detailed in
   specific Plan Document sections, especially Section 7.
              The IRS and Department of Labor may change the
   filing  and  notice  requirements  from  time  to   time.
   Employers,  or  their administrators, should  check  with
   their  legal tax advisers before the end of each calendar
   year. These functions are the responsibility of the  plan
   administrator and neither Nicholas nor the custodian will
   monitor the employer's compliance.
   (16)  HOW MANY INVESTMENT COMPANIES CURRENTLY ADVISED  BY
   NICHOLAS COMPANY ARE AVAILABLE FOR CONTRIBUTIONS?
              Currently  Nicholas offers  a  choice  of  six
   mutual funds:
       -     Nicholas Fund
       -     Nicholas II
       -     Nicholas Limited Edition
       -     Nicholas Equity Income Fund
       -     Nicholas Income Fund
       -     Nicholas Money Market Fund
             See question (19) for information regarding the
   investment objectives of these funds. If you do not  have
   the   applicable  fund  prospectus,  please  contact  the
   Nicholas  Family of Funds. The prospectus  contains  more
   complete information regarding charges and expenses. Read
   it carefully before you invest.
   (17)  MUST  ALL  MY CONTRIBUTIONS BE MADE  TO  INVESTMENT
   COMPANIES ADVISED BY NICHOLAS COMPANY?
              All  contributions to this self-employed  plan
   must  be  invested  in  investment companies  advised  by
   Nicholas  Company. However, employers may also contribute
   to other qualified retirement plans. Contributions to all
   plans  are  added together in regards to  maximum  limits
   allowed per year.
   (18)  WHY  SHOULD I CONSIDER A MUTUAL FUND FOR  MY  KEOGH
   ACCOUNT?
              A  mutual fund, through its adviser,  provides
   its investors with professional investment management. It
   also  provides  the  investor  with  diversification   of
   portfolio investments.
   (19)  WHAT  ARE THE INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES OF THE  VARIOUS
   MUTUAL FUNDS OFFERED BY NICHOLAS COMPANY?
              The  primary investment objective of  Nicholas
   Fund is capital appreciation, and securities are selected
   for  its portfolio on this basis. Current income will  be
   only  a secondary factor in considering the selection  of
   investments  and incidental to the primary  objective  of
   appreciation. Nicholas II has an investment objective  of
   long-term   growth  in  which  income  is   a   secondary
   consideration. Nicholas Limited Edition,  a  growth  fund
   with  a  similar objective of long-term growth  in  which
   income  is a secondary consideration, is limited  in  the
   amount  and scope of its offering. The primary investment
   objective  of Nicholas Equity Income Fund is  to  produce
   reasonable  income, with moderate long-term growth  as  a
   secondary consideration. Nicholas Income Fund seeks  high
   current  income  consistent  with  the  conservation   of
   capital  values. There are market risks inherent  in  any
   equity  investment and there can be no assurance  against
   possible  loss  in  the  value of the  Fund's  portfolio.
   Nicholas Money Market Fund has an investment objective of
   achieving  as  high  a  level of  current  income  as  is
   consistent   with   preserving  capital   and   providing
   liquidity.
   (20) WHEN MUST THE PLAN BE STARTED?
                The    Nicholas   Master   Retirement   Plan
   Participation  Agreement  must  be  signed  by  both  the
   employer  and  the  custodian  before  the  end  of   the
   employer's tax year (generally December 31). The  minimum
   contribution  is  $500  for the  Nicholas  Fund  and  the
   Nicholas Income Fund, $1,000 for Nicholas II, and  $2,000
   for  Nicolas Limited Edition, Nicholas Equity Income Fund
   and Nicholas Money Market Fund. This contribution must be
   received  by  the  custodian at  the  time  the  plan  is
   started.
             The balance of the employer's contribution must
   be received by the custodian prior to the due date of the
   employer's  tax  return  (generally  April  15)  or   any
   extension thereof.
   (21) WHAT FEES MUST BE PAID?
   Please refer to the enclosed fee schedule for a list  and
   explanation of the current custodian fees.

II. PROCEDURES
   (22)  HOW DO I ESTABLISH MY SELF EMPLOYED RETIREMENT PLAN
   AND MAKE MY INITIAL CONTRIBUTION?
              The  employer  must complete and  execute  two
   copies  of  the Participation Agreement and forward  them
   directly to the custodian at the following address:
   Nicholas Master HR-10 Plan
   c/o Firstar Trust Company
   P0. Box 2944
   Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201-2944
Along  with the Participation Agreements, the employer  must
also  forward  to  the  custodian a completed  and  executed
Application   for   Participation  for   each   participant,
including  each owner or partner. Each application  must  be
approved  by  the plan administrator. The plan administrator
must also obtain directions from each participant as to  the
investment  fund(s) the participant desires the contribution
on  his or her behalf to be invested in. A completed initial
Contribution  Summary  Form must be sent  to  the  custodian
indicating  the  amount  contributed  on  behalf   of   each
participant  and  the  investment  fund(s)  in   which   the
participant  has directed the contribution  on  his  or  her
behalf  to  be  invested. To establish a valid self-employed
retirement plan, the above documents must be received by the
custodian  prior to the end of the employer's  taxable  year
(generally December 31).
   (23)  WHAT IF A PARTICIPANT MAKES AN IMPRUDENT INVESTMENT
   DECISION?
      Department  of Labor regulations under a  federal  law
referred  to  as  "ERISA 404(c)" describe  conditions  under
which  you (or any other administrator of your plan) may  be
relieved of responsibility or potential legal liability that
might   otherwise  apply  in  connection  with   participant
investment decisions.
     To   qualify  for  this  special  protection,  the  new
regulations   will   require   that   you   follow   certain
administrative procedures. Generally speaking,  participants
must  be  allowed to change investments at least  quarterly,
and  they  must  be given certain disclosures regarding  the
investment options, how to give investment instructions, and
whether  the  plan is intended to qualify for  ERISA  404(c)
protection.
              Please  consult an attorney with expertise  in
   this  area  for specific guidance on how to  qualify  for
   this protection.
   (24) WHAT IS A "PLAN ADMINISTRATOR"?
    Section  2(z)  of  the  Plan  and  Paragraph  6  of  the
Participation   Agreement  name  the   employer   as   "plan
administrator."  An employer is permitted to  delegate  that
duty to someone else (but not to the Nicholas Company or  to
the  custodian)  if  he  chooses. A  plan  administrator  is
generally   responsible   for  transmitting   contributions,
payments  and information between the employer, participants
and   the  custodian.  The  specific  duties  of  the   plan
administrator are found in Section 8 of the Plan. There  are
additional  duties and responsibilities placed on  the  plan
administrator by regulations issued by the Internal  Revenue
Service and the U.S. Department of Labor, some of which  are
described  in the answer to question (15) above. You  should
consult  with  your attorney or other counsel  to  determine
those additional responsibilities.
   (25) HOW DO I MAKE ADDITIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS?
    You  should  forward  to  the custodian  a  Contribution
Summary  Form  with  each  contribution  submitted  to   the
custodian. The Contribution Summary Form should indicate the
name  of  each participant for whom a contribution is  being
made,  the amounts contributed and whether they are employer
or  rollover contributions, and the account number to  which
the additional contributions are being made. The form should
also   designate  the  investment  fund(s)  in   which   the
participant has directed the contribution for him or her  to
be   invested.  The  form  must  be  signed  by   the   plan
administrator. The minimum additional contribution is  $100.
Please  notify  Nicholas Company if you  require  additional
Contribution Summary Forms.
(26)  HOW  WILL  I  KNOW  WHAT HAS  BEEN  INVESTED  FOR  THE
PARTICIPANTS' ACCOUNTS?
      Upon  receipt of your Contribution Summary  Form,  the
custodian   will  invest  contributions  in  the   specified
investment  funds and will forward to the plan administrator
a  confirmation for each amount invested showing the  dollar
amount  invested and the number of shares purchased  by  the
contribution.  At  the end of the year, the  custodian  will
forward  to the plan administrator annual statements showing
the contributions and dividend reinvestments for the account
for the entire year.
(27)  WHAT  HAPPENS WHEN A NEW PARTICIPANT BECOMES  ELIGIBLE
FOR THE PLAN?
     When a new participant first becomes eligible he should
execute  an  Application for Participation. At  the  time  a
contribution  is first made for that participant,  the  plan
administrator should approve his application and forward  it
to  the  custodian along with the Contribution Summary  Form
indicating  his initial contribution. The plan administrator
should   also   have  the  participant   direct   the   plan
administrator   as   to   which   investment   fund(s)   the
contribution for that participant is to be invested in,  and
the  plan  administrator  must designate  the  participant's
investment choice on the Contribution Summary Form.
(28) WHAT HAPPENS WHEN A PARTICIPANT TERMINATES EMPLOYMENT?
      As  soon  as  possible after a participant  terminates
employment with the employer, the plan administrator  should
complete the Benefit Payment Authorization Form, a sample of
which  is  enclosed.  The  plan  administrator  should  make
additional  copies of this form as necessary. If the  reason
for  payment  of  benefit is death  of  the  participant,  a
participant's   certified  death  certificate,   beneficiary
designation  (and/or  survivor annuity  benefit  waiver  and
spousal consent) must be forwarded to the custodian with the
Payment Authorization Form. If termination of employment  is
due   to   disability,  a  doctor's  certification  of   the
disability  must also be forwarded to the custodian.  Please
note  that  both the participant's signature  and  the  plan
administrator's signature must appear on the Benefit Payment
Authorization Form.
       Your  plan  administrator  is  also  responsible  for
complying  with  any  notice,  election,  consent  or  other
requirements specified in the plan documents (especially  in
Section 7) relating to distributions.
(29) WHAT HAPPENS IF THE EMPLOYER INCORPORATES?
     If the employer incorporates, contributions to his self-
employed  plan must cease. You should consult your legal  or
tax  advisers regarding the disposition of your  Keogh  plan
before incorporating your business.
(30)  MAY  I  TRANSFER MY CONTRIBUTIONS  FROM  ONE  FUND  TO
ANOTHER AFTER THEY HAVE BEEN INVESTED?
      Yes,  if  you  are interested in this, please  contact
Nicholas Company for details.
(31)  MAY  I ROLLOVER A DISTRIBUTION I RECEIVE FROM  ANOTHER
QUALIFIED RETIREMENT PLAN INTO EITHER OF THE NICHOLAS PLANS?
      Yes.  The  Internal Revenue Code was amended effective
beginning in 1987 to remove certain restrictions on rollover
contributions  by  key  employees. Therefore,  beginning  in
1987,  the  Nicholas Plan will accept rollover contributions
which  qualify as tax-free rollovers under the  requirements
of  the  Internal Revenue Code. You should consult your  tax
adviser  for  more information and guidance about  making  a
rollover   contribution.  Please  note  that,  among   other
requirements, a rollover must be accomplished  within  sixty
(60)  days  of  receipt of the distribution to  qualify.  In
order  to  avoid mandatory tax withholding on a distribution
from a qualified plan, a rollover should be made by means of
a   direct  payment  from  the  distributing  plan  to   the
custodian.
(32)  WHERE  CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION ABOUT  THE  NICHOLAS
MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN FOR SELF-EMPLOYED INDIVIDUALS?
      If  your  question deals with general,  legal  or  tax
aspects  of a self-employed retirement plan, you may  obtain
additional  information  from your  local  Internal  Revenue
Service  office. Your attorney or other professional adviser
should   be   consulted  regarding   the   legal   and   tax
considerations of your using the Nicholas Master  Retirement
Plan.


NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN

                      CHECKLIST OF ENCLOSURES

A. TO  BE FILLED OUT AND FILED WITH THE CUSTODIAN - FIRSTAR TRUST COMPANY


   1.  Participation  Agreements (Profit Sharing, Money  Purchase
       Plan or both) DUPLICATE - FORMS 1 and 2
   2.  Contribution Summary Form - FORM 3
   3.  Application for Participation (ONE FOR EACH PARTICIPANT) - FORM 4



B. TO  BE  FILED  WITH THE PLAN ADMINISTRATOR FOR FUTURE  USE  OR REFERENCE


   1.  Nicholas Company Master Retirement Plan - EXHIBIT A
   2.  Custodial Agreement - EXHIBIT A
   3.  General Information - EXHIBIT B
   4.  Benefit Payment Authorization - FORM 5


                                        CUSTODIAN FEES*
   
Annual Maintenance Fee per Participant**

   Account  Maintained                                     $12.50
   Transfer to Successor Trustee                            15.00
   Lump Sum or Partial Distribution to a Participant        15.00
   Systematic Withdrawal Plan Distributions                 No Fee
   Refund of Excess Contribution                            15.00
   Any Outgoing Wire                                         7.50

*THESE FEES MAY BE SUBJECT TO CHANGE
**DUE BY SETTEMBER 15th EACH YEAR OR DEDUCTED AUTOMATICALLY


700  North Water Street . Milwaukee Wisconsin . 53202-4276 . 414-272-6133
                                
                             [logo]                                12/94


<PAGE>

                                                              Form 1
NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN
                                                                 

                                                        [ ] New
                                                        [ ] Amended

                        PARTICIPATION AGREEMENT
                         (PROFIT-SHARING PLAN)
                         (PAIRED PLAN 01-001)

   The _________________________________________ Retirement Plan
   The  Sole  Proprietor or Partnership named below  (hereinafter
called  "Employer") hereby agrees to participate in the  Nicholas
Master  Retirement Plan for Self-Employed Individuals (consisting
of  this  Participation Agreement and Basic Plan Document  Number
01)  and  the  Nicholas  Custodial Agreement  effective  for  the
calendar  year ending December 31, 1 9__. (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS:  If
you are adopting this Plan as an amendment to an existing Profit-
Sharing Plan in order to comply with the Tax Reform Act of  1986,
insert "89" in this blank, or if later, the first year for  which
the  existing  plan was effective. The terms of this  replacement
Plan will be effective retroactively for all Plan Years beginning
after  1988,  except as otherwise specified in this Participation
Agreement  or  in  the Basic Plan Document.)  The  Employer  also
hereby  agrees to be bound by said Plan and Custodial  Agreement,
as  from  time  to  time  amended, and all  terms  and  provision
thereof.  All  words or terms defined in the Basic Plan  Document
shall  have  the same definition in this Participation Agreement.
Participation  by  the  Employer  in  said  Plan  and   Custodial
Agreement  shall  be  upon  the following  additional  terms  and
conditions:

   1.__________________________________________________________
                        Name of Employer
   
     __________________________________________________________
                        Street Address
   
     __________________________________________________________
     City                            State             Zip Code
   
     ___________________________________________________________
                 Nature of Business or Profession


      _________________________________________________________
           Employer's  Federal  Tax Identification Number

          (Enter  your  9-digit  employer  identification  number
          (EIN)  assigned by IRS. If you do not have  one,  enter
          "applied for" and apply for one on Form SS-4, available
          from  your local IRS office. This number will be needed
          for  your  Form 5500 CIR annual reports and  other  IRS
          filings.  Notify  us of your EIN  as  soon  as  one  is
          assigned to you.)

Employer's Taxable Year for Federal Income Tax Purposes:

(    ) Calendar Year

(    ) Fiscal Year Ending

Serial  Number  of  the  Plan ___________________________________
(You should  assign  a  three-digit number, beginning  with "001"
and  continuing  in   numerical sequence,  to  each tax-qualified
retirement plan you adopt. This numbering will differentiate your
plans on reports or returns you file with IRS and other agencies.
For instance, if this Plan  is the only plan you maintain,  enter
"001", or if this Plan is the second plan you have adopted, enter
"002".)

   2.   EMPLOYER  APPOINTS  FIRST  WISCONSIN  TRUST  COMPANY   AS
   CUSTODIAN.  Custodian shall invest all contributions  received
   under the Plan in Investment Company Shares designated by  the
   Plan  Administrator  and  in  accordance  with  the  Custodial
   Agreement.

   3.   ELIGIBILITY.
   (a) Each Employee will be eligible to participate in this Plan
in  accordance with Section 3 of the Basic Plan Document,  except
the following:
         (i)   Employees  who  have  not  attained  the  age   of
         __________ (cannot exceed 21).

         (ii)  Employees who have not completed ___________ Years
         of  Credited  Service  (as defined  in  the  Basic  Plan
         Document).  This requirement shall not be  greater  than
         two  (2)  years and shall be deemed to be two (2)  years
         unless  otherwise  indicated.  Employers  may  not   use
         fractional Years of Credited Service.

         (iii) Employees who terminate employment (other than  by
         reason of death or retirement) during the Plan Year with
         not  more  than  500 Hours of Service and  who  are  not
         Employees as of the last day of the Plan Year. (NOTE  TO
         EMPLOYERS: Under a special transition rule reflected  in
         Section  5.2  of  the Basic Plan Document,  Participants
         whose employment terminates during 1989 and who are  not
         Employees as of December 31, 1989 other than because  of
         death   or   retirement  do  not   share   in   employer
         contributions  to the Plan for 1989, even  if  they  had
         more  than  500  Hours of Service  for  1989.  All  such
         Participants must nevertheless be treated as  benefiting
         under  the  Plan  in 1989 for purposes  of  the  minimum
         participation and coverage rules under IRC Sections  401
         (a)(26)  and  410(b). See Proposed Treasury  Regulations
         Sections 1.401 (a) (26)-8(b) (6) and 1.410(b)-10(b)(2).)
For  purposes of this Section, the term "Employee" shall  include
all  employees  of this Employer or any employee aggregated  with
this  Employer  under IRC Sections 414(b), (c), (m)  or  (o)  and
leased employees required to be considered employees of any  such
Employer under IRC Section 414(n) or (0).

   (b) The number of Hours of Service, as that term is defined in
the Basic Plan Document, which shall constitute a Year of Service
shall be ___________ hours. This amount shall be no greater  than
1,000  hours  and shall be deemed to read 1,000  hours  unless  a
smaller  number is filled in. (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS: The number  you
fill  in  is  the  number of Hours of Service  an  Employee  must
complete  within the 12 month period after he or she is hired  or
after  an anniversary of that date in order to receive a Year  of
Credited  Service towards eligibility to participate in the  Plan
under paragraph 3(a) (ii) above. A former Participant will become
a  Participant  immediately upon returning to the employ  of  the
Employer.)

   4.  COMPENSATION.  (NOTE  TO EMPLOYERS:  The  Nicholas  Master
Retirement  Plan  for Self-Employed Individuals formerly  defined
"Compensation" to mean a Participant's total W-2 earnings for the
Plan  Year. If you are adopting this Plan as an amendment  to  an
existing  Profit-Sharing Plan in order to  comply  with  the  Tax
Reform  Act  of 1986, and the definition of Compensation  elected
below  replaces  another  definition of  Compensation  under  the
existing plan, the definition elected below will be effective  as
of January 1 of the year after the year in which this Participant
Agreement is executed. Employers also note: For any Self-Employed
Individual  covered  under  the Plan, Compensation  means  Earned
Income, regardless of the definition selected below.)

Compensation will mean all of each Participant's (check one):

[ ] W-2 earnings
[ ] compensation (as that term is defined in Section 415(c)(3) of
   the Code - see Question 5 of your General Information form)

which is actually paid to the Participant during (check one):

[ ] the Plan Year
[ ] the taxable year ending with or within the Plan Year
[ ] the Limitation Year ending with or within the Plan Year.

Compensation (check one):

[ ] shall include
[ ] shall not include

Employer  contributions  made  pursuant  to  a  salary  reduction
agreement  which are not includible in the gross  income  of  the
Employee  under Section 125, 402(a)(8), 402(h) or 403(b)  of  the
Code.

   5. CONTRIBUTIONS
   (a) Subject to the limitations contained in Section 6 (and the
minimum  contribution requirements of Section 4.2) of  the  Basic
Plan  Document, the Employer shall contribute on behalf  of  each
Participant  an  amount  equal  to ___________  percent  of  such
individual's Compensation (limited to Earned Income for an  Owner
or  Self-Employed  Individual). Unless otherwise  indicated,  the
percent  of Compensation (or Earned Income for an Owner or  Self-
Employed Individual) shall be deemed to be 15%. The Employer  may
change  the percentage of Compensation (or Earned Income  for  an
Owner  or Self-Employed Individual) to be contributed for a  Plan
Year  by  delivering a signed and completed copy  of  an  amended
Participation Agreement to the Custodian prior to the end of such
Plan Year.
   (b)     If  checked  here [ ] by the adopting  Employer;  then
effective  beginning with the first calendar year for which  this
Participation Agreement is effective (as specified in  the  first
paragraph of this Participation Agreement), or effective  instead
beginning  with the Plan Year ending December 31, 19__ (insert  a
year  only  if you want to delay the effective date  to  a  later
year),  and notwithstanding any other provision of the Plan,  the
Employer contributions under subparagraph (a) above shall be made
without regard to current or accumulated earnings and profits for
the taxable year or years ending with or within the Plan Year for
which  the  contribution is made. If the preceding sentence  does
not  apply  for  a  Plan Year; then Employer contributions  under
subparagraph  (a)  above  shall  be  made  out  of   current   or
accumulated Net Income and shall be ratably reduced in the  event
the   Net  Income  of  the  Employer  is  less  than  the   total
contributions  required  to be made  for  such  Plan  Year  under
subparagraph (a) above. (Note to Employers: If you choose to have
this  subparagraph (b) apply, then you will be required  to  make
the  full  contribution specified in subparagraph (a)  each  year
whether  or not you have any current or accumulated profits,  and
this Plan will still be considered a Profit-Sharing Plan.)
   (c)     The Annual Addition for each Participant, as described
in  Section  6.5(a) of the Basic Plan Document, shall not  exceed
for  any  Limitation Year the lesser of the Defined  Contribution
Dollar  Limitation ($30,000 or one4ourth of the  defined  benefit
dollar limitation in effect for the Limitation Year under Section
415(b)(1)  of  the  Code, whichever is greater)  or  25%  of  the
Participant's  Compensation (limited  to  Earned  Income  for  an
Owner) for such Limitation Year.

   6. PLAN ADMINISTRATOR. The Plan Administrator is_____________.
The  Plan  Administrator  must  not  be   the  Custodian  or  the
sponsoring    organization   identified     in          paragraph
15,  and  shall  be  deemed to be the Employer  unless  otherwise
indicated. The Employer shall notify the Custodian of any  change
in  the  Plan Administrator by delivering a signed and  completed
copy of an Amended Participation Agreement to the Custodian prior
to  the  end of the Plan Year for which such change is effective.
(Note  to Employers: The Plan Administrator is the party who  has
the  legal responsibility for administering and interpreting  the
Plan,  as  detailed  more fully in Section 8 of  the  Basic  Plan
Document.  The Plan Administrator must, among other things,  keep
all necessary books and records relating to the Plan, file annual
reports  and  other  forms required by government  agencies,  and
provide   to   or   obtain  from  Participants  or  beneficiaries
appropriate summaries, notices and elections regarding  the  Plan
and  benefits to be distributed under the Plan. The Custodian and
Nicholas   Company,  Inc.  do  not  provide  plan  administration
services.  Such  services are available for a fee  through  other
professional consultants and advisers.)

   7.      CUSTODIAN'S FEES. The Custodian shall receive fees for
its  services  in  respect  to  each  Participant's  account   in
accordance  with the attached fee schedule, which may be  changed
by  the  Custodian with advance notice from time to time. lf  not
separately  included, any acceptance fee listed in  the  attached
schedule  will be deducted from the initial contribution received
from  the  Employer.  Any  acceptance  or  other  Custodian  fees
excluding  annual  maintenance or activity  fees  not  separately
included  will be deducted equally from each Owner's contribution
or  account.  Annual  maintenance  fees  for  each  Participant's
account  and  any  fees  directly related  to  activity  in  that
Participant's account shall be deducted from his account.  Annual
maintenance  fees will be deducted on the last  business  day  in
September of each year and activity fees will be deducted at  the
time  incurred.  Sufficient Investment  Company  Shares  will  be
redeemed to cover this fee.
   Extraordinary  services resulting from unusual  administrative
responsibilities  not  contemplated  by  this  schedule  will  be
subject  to such additional charges as will reasonably compensate
the Custodian for the services performed.

   8.      EMPLOYER'S DUTIES. The Employer hereby agrees that  it
will   distribute  copies  of  the  current  prospectus  of   the
appropriate  Investment  Company or  Companies,  the  Basic  Plan
Document,   the   Custodial   Agreement,   and   this   completed
Participation Agreement, to each and every Participant  on  whose
behalf a contribution is made. The Employer or Plan Administrator
also  agrees  to distribute to Participants, and  file  with  the
appropriate  government  agency,  such  forms  (including  annual
reports, summary plan descriptions and any other forms) as may be
required by the Internal Revenue Service, Department of Labor  or
any other government agency.

  9.  AUTOMATIC TERMINATION OF PLAN. If the Employer's plan fails
to  attain  or  retain qualification, such plan  will  no  longer
participate  in  this  Master Plan  and  will  be  considered  an
individually designed plan.

  10.      LIMITATIONS  ON ALLOCATIONS. If you maintain  or  ever
maintained another qualified plan (other than paired plan 01-002)
in  which  any Participant in this Plan is (or was) a participant
or  could  possibly become a participant, you must complete  this
paragraph. You must also complete this paragraph if you  maintain
a welfare benefit fund, as defined in Section 419(e) of the Code,
or an individual medical account, as defined in Section 415(1)(2)
of  the Code, under which amounts are treated as Annual Additions
with respect to any Participant in this Plan. (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS:
You do not need to complete this paragraph unless either: (a) you
are  currently maintaining another qualified defined contribution
plan  which  is not a master or prototype plan; or  (b)  you  are
currently  maintaining  or  have  ever  previously  maintained  a
qualified defined benefit plan.)
  (a)      If you maintain a qualified defined contribution plan,
other  than a master or prototype plan, the provisions of Section
6.2  of  the Basic Plan Document will apply as if the other  plan
were  a  master  or  prototype plan, unless you  provide  another
method  below  under  which the plans will properly  limit  total
Annual  Additions  to the Maximum Permissible  Amount,  and  will
properly  reduce any excess amounts, in a manner  that  precludes
Employer discretion (see your legal or tax counsel for guidance):

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

  (b)     If the Participant is or ever has been a participant in
a  defined benefit plan maintained by you, provide language  that
will  satisfy the 1.0 limitation of Section 415(e) of  the  Code.
Such  language  must  preclude employer discretion.  See  Section
1.415)1 of the Treasury Regulations and consult your legal or tax
counsel for guidance:

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

  11.   NORMAL  RETIREMENT  AGE.  For  each  Participant   Normal
Retirement Age is age ___ (not to exceed 65). (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS:
If no age is specified, Normal Retirement Age shall be age 65. If
the  Employer  enforces a mandatory retirement  age,  the  Normal
Retirement Age is the lesser of that mandatory retirement age  or
the age specified in this paragraph).
  12.      LIMITATION YEAR. The Limitation Year for  purposes  of
the Plan shall be the 12-consecutive month period ending on _____
(Note to Employers: The Limitation  Year  is  the period used for
purposes of applying the annual limits on Plan contributions  and
allocations under paragraphs 5(c) and 10 above and Section  6  of
the  Basic Plan Document. If no Limitation Year is specified, the
Limitation  Year shall be the calendar year. All qualified  plans
maintained by the Employer must use the same limitation year.)

  13.      MINIMUM  ALLOCATION.  Complete  (a)  or  (b)  of  this
paragraph (as appropriate) only if you maintain another qualified
plan  or  plans  (including Paired Plan 01-002) and  any  non-Key
Employee  is or could possibly become a Participant in this  Plan
and  any of the other plans at the same time. Otherwise go on  to
paragraph 14. See Section 2(o) of the Basic Plan Document  for  a
definition of who are Key Employees.
  (a)      ALL  OTHER PLANS ARE ALSO DEFINED CONTRIBUTION  PLANS.
(NOTE  TO EMPLOYERS: Paired Plan 01-002, the Money Purchase Plan,
is  a  defined contribution plan). This Profit-Sharing Plan is  a
"deemed  top-heavy' plan" designed to operate as though  it  were
always  "top-heavy"  under IRC Section 416,  whether  or  not  it
actually  would  be  "top-heavy" under  the  provisions  of  that
Section.  Section 4.2 of the Basic Plan Document and IRC  Section
416(c)(2) require certain non-Key Employees to receive a  minimum
allocation  of  contributions (generally 3% of Compensation)  for
each  year  they  are  Participants in the  Plan  and  would  not
otherwise  be  entitled  to  receive  a  greater  allocation   of
contributions  under  the Plan. lf you  maintain  more  than  one
qualified  defined contribution plan covering  the  same  non-Key
Employee, only one of the plans must provide the required minimum
allocation. In such a case (check one):

   [  ]  the required minimum allocation specified in Section 4.2
     of the Basic Plan Document will be provided by this Plan.

   [ ]     the  required minimum allocation specified in  Section
     4.2  of  the Basic Plan Document will be provided by  Paired
     Plan  01-002, the Nicholas Money Purchase Plan (this  option
     is  available only if the Employer has adopted that plan and
     the non-Key Employee is a Participant in that plan).

   [ ]     the  method  under which the plans  will  provide  the
     required  minimum allocation in a manner that will  preclude
     Employer discretion and avoid inappropriate omissions is  as
     follows  (see IRC Section 416(c)(2) and Treasury Regulations
     Section  1.416-1,  Part M, and consult  your  legal  or  tax
     counsel before completing the blanks below):

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________


     (b)  EMPLOYER  ALSO  MAINTAINS ONE OR MORE  DEFINED  BENEFIT
PLANS. If you maintain a defined benefit plan in addition to this
Plan  (which is a defined contribution plan), specify the  method
by  which  the  plans will satisfy the minimum allocation  and/or
benefit  requirements of IRC Section 416(c), as modified  by  IRC
Section  416(h), including any required adjustments in  computing
the  denominators of the Defined Benefit and Defined Contribution
Fractions, in a manner that will preclude Employer discretion and
avoid inappropriate omissions (see IRC Sections 416(c) and 416(h)
and  Treasury Regulations Section 1 .416-1, Part M,  and  consult
your legal or tax counsel before completing the blanks below):

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________


     (c)    The Employer may change the method specified in (a)  or
(b) above only by executing a new Participation Agreement setting
forth the new method that is to apply.

   14.    CAUTION TO ADOPTING EMPLOYERS: Failure to properly fill
out  this  Participation Agreement may result in disqualification
of the Plan.

   15.     SPONSORING  ORGANIZATION. The sponsoring  organization
for   the  Nicholas  Master  Retirement  Plan  for  Self-Employed
Individuals  is  the  Nicholas Company,  Inc.,  700  North  Water
Street,  Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202, telephone number (414)  272-
6133.  The  sponsoring  organization  will  inform  you  of   any
amendments  made  to  the  Plan  or  of  the  discontinuance   or
abandonment of the Plan.
   
AN  EMPLOYER WHO HAS EVER MAINTAINED OR WHO LATER ADOPTS ANY PLAN
(INCLUDING  A  WELFARE BENEFIT FUND, AS DEFINED  IN  IRC  SECTION
419(e), WHICH PROVIDES POST RETIREMENT MEDICAL BENEFITS ALLOCATED
TO SEPARATE ACCOUNTS FOR KEY EMPLOYEES, AS DEFINED IN IRC SECTION
419(d)(3)  OR  AN  INDIVIDUAL MEDICAL  ACCOUNTS  DEFINED  IN  IRC
SECTION 415(1)(2)) IN ADDITION  TO  THIS PLAN (OTHER  THAN PAIRED
PLAN NO.01-002) MAY  NOT  RELY  ON THE OPINION  LETTER  ISSUED BY
THE NATIONAL OFFICE  OF  THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE AS EVIDENCE
THAT  THIS  PLAN  IS  QUALIFIED  UNDER IRC SECTION  401.  IF  THE
EMPLOYER WHO ADOPTS OR MAINTAINS MULTIPLE PLANS WISHES TO  OBTAIN
RELIANCE THAT HIS OR  HER  PLAN(S) ARE QUALIFIED, APPLICATION FOR
A DETERMINATION LETTER SHOULD BE  MADE  TO  THE  APPROPRIATE  KEY
DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF  INTERNAL   REVENUE  SERVICE.  THIS ADOPTION
AGREEMENT MAY BE USED ONLY IN CONNECTION WITH BASIC PLAN DOCUMENT
NUMBER 01.


   The  Participation Agreement has been signed by  the  Employer
   this _______ day of  19__.


                            _____________________________________
                                   (Print Name of Employer -
                                    Specify if a Partnership)

                        By: _____________________________________
                              (Signature of Employer. If Employer
                               is a Partnership, must be   signed
                               by authorized general partner.)

Appointment as Plan Administrator accepted:

___________________________________________
(Signature of Plan Administrator)

___________________________________________
Address (If different from Employer's)

Date: ____________________

Appointment as Custodian accepted:

By:________________________________________

Date: ____________________




                                                        Form 2
NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN
                                                                  
                                                                             
                                             [ ] New
                                             [ ] Amended

                     PARTICIPATION AGREEMENT
                      (Money Purchase Plan)
                      (Paired Plan 01-002)
                                
The ____________________________________________   Retirement Plan
The Sole  Proprietor  or  Partnership named   below   (hereinafter
called  "Employer") hereby agrees to participate  in the  Nicholas
Master  Retirement Plan for Self-Employed  Individuals (consisting
of  this  Participation Agreement and Basic  Plan Document  Number
01)  and  the  Nicholas  Custodial Agreement   effective  for  the
calendar year ending December 31, 19__. (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS: If you
are  adopting  this  Plan as an amendment to   an  existing  Money
Purchase Plan in order to comply with the Tax  Reform Act of 1985,
insert "89" in this blank, or if later; the first  year for  which
the  existing  plan was effective. The terms of  this  replacement
Plan will be effective retroactively for all Plan  Years beginning
after  1988,  except as otherwise specified in this  Participation
Agreement  or  in  the Basic Plan Document.)  The   Employer  also
hereby  agrees to be bound by said Plan and Custodial   Agreement,
as  from  time  to  time  amended, and all  terms  and   provision
thereof.  All  words or terms defined in the Basic Plan   Document
shall  have  the same definition in this Participation  Agreement.
Participation  by  the  Employer  in  said  Plan  and    Custodial
Agreement  shall  be  upon  the following  additional   terms  and
conditions:

   1.__________________________________________________________
                        Name of Employer
   
     __________________________________________________________
                        Street Address
   
     __________________________________________________________
     City                            State             Zip Code
   
     ___________________________________________________________
                 Nature of Business or Profession


      _________________________________________________________
           Employer's  Federal  Tax Identification Number

          Employer's  Federal  Tax Identification  Number  (Enter
          your   9-digit  employer  identification  number  (EIN)
          assigned by IRS. If you do not have one, enter "applied
          for"  and  apply  for one on Form SS-4, available  from
          your  local IRS office. This number will be needed  for
          your  Form  5500  C/R  annual  reports  and  other  IRS
          filings.  Notify  us of your EIN  as  soon  as  one  is
          assigned to you.)

Employer's Taxable Year for Federal Income Tax Purposes:
[ ] Calendar Year
[ ] Fiscal Year Ending

Serial  Number  of  the  Plan ______________________________ (you
should  assign  a three-digit number; beginning  with  "001"  and
continuing   in   numerical  sequence,  to   each   tax-qualified
retirement plan you adopt This numbering will differentiate  your
plans on reports or returns you file with IRS and other agencies.
For  instance, if this Plan is the only plan you maintain,  enter
"001", or if this Plan is the second plan you have adopted, enter
"002".)

     2.  Employer  appoints  First  Wisconsin  Trust  Company  as
Custodian.  Custodian  shall  invest all  contributions  received
under  the  Plan in Investment Company Shares designated  by  the
Plan   Administrator  and  in  accordance  with   the   Custodial
Agreement.

     3.   ELIGIBILITY.
(a)   Each Employee will be eligible to participate in this  Plan
in  accordance with Section 3 of the Basic Plan Document,  except
the following:
     (i)   Employees who have not attained the age of  __________
     (cannot exceed 21).

     (ii)  Employees who have not completed ___________ Years  of
     Credited  Service (as defined in the Basic  Plan  Document).
     This requirement shall not be greater than two (2) years and
     shall  be  deemed  to  be  two (2)  years  unless  otherwise
     indicated.  Employers  may  not  use  fractional  Years   of
     Credited Service.

     (iii)  Employees  who terminate employment  (other  than  by
     reason of death or retirement) during the Plan Year with not
     more than 500 Hours of Service and who are not Employees  as
     of  the last day of the Plan Year. (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS: Under
     a  special transition rule reflected in Section 5.2  of  the
     Basic   Plan   Document,   Participants   whose   employment
     terminates  during  1989 and who are  not  Employees  as  of
     December  31, 1989 other than because of death or retirement
     do not share in employer contributions to the Plan for 1989,
     even  lf  they had more than 500 Hours of Service for  1989.
     All  such  Participants  must  nevertheless  be  treated  as
     benefiting  under  the  Plan in 1989  for  purposes  of  the
     minimum  participation and coverage rules under IRC Sections
     401(a)  (26)  and 410(b). See Proposed Treasury  Regulations
     Sections 1.401 (a)(26)-8(b)(6) and 1.410(b)-10(b)(2).)

For  purposes of this Section, the term "Employee" shall  include
all  employees  of this Employer or any employee aggregated  with
this  Employer  under IRC Sections 414(b), (c), (m)  or  (o)  and
leased employees required to be considered employees of any  such
Employer under IRC Section 414(n) or (o).

     (b)  The number of Hours of Service, as that term is defined
in  the  Basic Plan Document, which shall constitute  a  Year  of
Service shall be _________ hours. This amount shall be no greater
than  1,000 hours and shall be deemed to read 1 ,000 hours unless
a smaller number is filled in. (Note to Employers: The number you
fill  in  is  the  number of Hours of Service  an  Employee  must
complete  within the 12 month period after he or she is hired  or
after  an anniversary of that date in order to receive a Year  of
Credited  Service towards eligibility to participate in the  Plan
under  paragraph 3(a)(ii) above. A former Participant will become
a  Participant  immediately upon returning to the employ  of  the
Employer.)

     4.  COMPENSATION.  (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS: The  Nicholas  Master
Retirement  Plan  for Self-Employed Individuals formerly  defined
"Compensation" to mean a Participant's total W-2 earnings for the
Plan  Year. If you are adopting this Plan as an amendment  to  an
existing  Money  Purchase Plan in order to comply  with  the  Tax
Reform  Act  of 1986, and the definition of Compensation  elected
below  replaces  another  definition of  Compensation  under  the
existing plan, the definition elected below will be effective  as
of January 1 of the year after the year in which this Participant
Agreement is executed. Employers also note: For any Self-Employed
Individual  covered  under  the Plan, Compensation  means  Earned
Income, regardless of the definition selected below.)

Compensation will mean all of each Participant's (check one):

[ ] W-2 earnings
[ ] compensation (as that term is defined in Section 415(c)(3) of
   the Code - see Question 5 of your General Information form)

which is actually paid to the Participant during (check one):
[ ] the Plan Year
[ ] the taxable year ending with or within the Plan Year
[ ] the Limitation Year ending with or within the Plan Year.

Compensation (check one):
[ ] shall include
[ ] shall not include
Employer  contributions  made  pursuant  to  a  salary  reduction
agreement  which are not includible in the gross  income  of  the
Employee  under Section 125, 402(a)(8), 402(h) or 403(b)  of  the
Code.

   5.   CONTRIBUTIONS
   (a)     Subject to the limitations contained in Section 6 (and
the  minimum  contribution requirements of Section  4.2)  of  the
Basic Plan Document, the Employer shall contribute for each  Plan
Year on behalf of each Participant an amount equal  to __________
(not  to  exceed  25)  percent of such individual's  Compensation
(limited   to   Earned  Income  for  an  Owner  or  Self-Employed
Individual). In the event the Net Income of the Employer is  less
than the total contributions required to be made during such Plan
Year  on behalf of all Plan Participants, the Employer will  make
contributions regardless of the amount of Net Income.
   (b)    The Annual Addition for each Participant, as defined in
Section  6.5(a) of the Basic Plan Document, shall not exceed  for
any Limitation Year the lesser of the Defined Contribution Dollar
Limitation  ($30,000 or one4ourth of the defined  benefit  dollar
limitation in effect for the Limitation Year under Section 415(b)
(1)   of   the  Code,  whichever  is  greater)  or  25%  of   the
Participant's Compensation (limited to Earned Income for an Owner
or Self-Employed Individual) for such Limitation Year.

   6. PLAN ADMINISTRATOR. The Plan Administrator is_____________.
The  Plan  Administrator  must  not  be   the  Custodian  or  the
sponsoring    organization   identified     in          paragraph
15,  and  shall  be  deemed to be the Employer  unless  otherwise
indicated. The Employer shall notify the Custodian of any  change
in  the  Plan Administrator by delivering a signed and  completed
copy of an Amended Participation Agreement to the Custodian prior
to  the  end of the Plan Year for which such change is effective.
(Note  to Employers: The Plan Administrator is the party who  has
the  legal responsibility for administering and interpreting  the
Plan,  as  detailed  more fully in Section 8 of  the  Basic  Plan
Document.  The Plan Administrator must, among other things,  keep
all necessary books and records relating to the Plan, file annual
reports  and  other  forms required by government  agencies,  and
provide   to   or   obtain  from  Participants  or  beneficiaries
appropriate summaries, notices and elections regarding  the  Plan
and  benefits to be distributed under the Plan. The Custodian and
Nicholas   Company,  Inc.  do  not  provide  plan  administration
services.  Such  services are available for a fee  through  other
professional consultants and advisers.)

   7.      CUSTODIAN'S FEES. The Custodian shall receive fees for
its  services  in  respect  to  each  Participant's  account   in
accordance  with the attached fee schedule, which may be  changed
by  the  Custodian with advance notice from time to time. If  not
separately  included, any acceptance fee listed in  the  attached
schedule  will be deducted from the initial contribution received
from  the  Employer.  Any  acceptance  or  other  Custodian  fees
excluding  annual  maintenance or activity  fees  not  separately
included  will be deducted equally from each Owner's contribution
or  account.  Annual  maintenance  fees  for  each  Participant's
account  and  any  fees  directly related  to  activity  in  that
Participant's account shall be deducted from his account.  Annual
maintenance  fees will be deducted on the last  business  day  in
September of each year and activity fees will be deducted at  the
time  incurred.  Sufficient Investment  Company  Shares  will  be
redeemed to cover this fee.
   Extraordinary  services resulting from unusual  administrative
responsibilities  not  contemplated  by  this  schedule  will  be
subject  to such additional charges as will reasonably compensate
the Custodian for the services performed.

   8.  EMPLOYER'S DUTIES. The Employer hereby agrees that it will
distribute  copies of the current prospectus of  the  appropriate
Investment  Company  or Companies, the Basic Plan  Document,  the
Custodial  Agreement, and this completed Participation Agreement,
to  each and every Participant on whose behalf a contribution  is
made.   The  Employer  or  Plan  Administrator  also  agrees   to
distribute   to  Participants,  and  file  with  the  appropriate
government agency, such forms (including annual reports,  summary
plan descriptions and any other forms) as may be required by  the
Internal  Revenue  Service, Department  of  Labor  or  any  other
government agency.

   9.      AUTOMATIC TERMINATION OF PLAN. If the Employer's  plan
fails to attain or retain qualification, such plan will no longer
participate  in  this  Master Plan  and  will  be  considered  an
individually designed plan.

   10.     LIMITATIONS  ON ALLOCATIONS. If you maintain  or  ever
maintained another qualified plan (other than paired plan 01-001)
in  which  any Participant in this Plan is (Or was) a participant
or  could  possibly become a participant, you must complete  this
paragraph. You must also complete this paragraph if you  maintain
a welfare benefit fund, as defined in Section 419(e) of the Code,
or an individual medical account, as defined in Section 415(1)(2)
of  the Code, under which amounts are treated as Annual Additions
with respect to any Participant in this Plan. (Note to Employers:
You do not need to complete this paragraph unless either: (a) you
are  currently maintaining another qualified defined contribution
plan  which  is not a master or prototype plan; or  (b)  you  are
currently  maintaining  or  have  ever  previously  maintained  a
qualified defined benefit plan.)
   (a)     If you maintain a qualified defined contribution plan,
other  than a master or prototype plan, the provisions of Section
6.2  of  the Basic Plan Document will apply as if the other  plan
were  a  master  or  prototype plan, unless you  provide  another
method  below  under  which the plans will properly  limit  total
Annual  Additions  to the Maximum Permissible  Amount,  and  will
properly  reduce any excess amounts, in a manner  that  precludes
Employer discretion (see your legal or tax counsel for guidance):

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

   (b)    If the Participant is or ever has been a participant in
a  defined benefit plan maintained by you, provide language  that
will  satisfy the 1.0 limitation of Section 415(e) of  the  Code.
Such  language  must  preclude employer discretion.  See  Section
1.415-1 of the Treasury Regulations and consult your legal or tax
counsel for guidance:

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

   11.   NORMAL  RETIREMENT  AGE.  For  each  Participant  Normal
Retirement Age is age ___ (not to exceed 65). (NOTE TO EMPLOYERS:
If no age is specified, Normal Retirement Age shall be age 65. If
the  Employer  enforces a mandatory retirement  age,  the  Normal
Retirement Age is the lesser of that mandatory retirement age  or
the age specified in this paragraph).

   12.     LIMITATION YEAR. The Limitation Year for  purposes  of
the Plan shall be the 12-consecutive month period ending on _____
(Note to  Employers:  The  Limitation Year is the period used for
purposes of appyling the annual limits on Plan contributions  and
allocations under paragraphs 5(c) and 10 above and Section  6  of
the  Basic Plan Document. If no Limitation Year is specified, the
Limitation  Year shall be the calendar year. All qualified  plans
maintained by the Employer must use the same limitation year.)
   13.     MINIMIUM ALLOCATION.  Complete  (a)  or  (b)  of  this
paragraph (as appropriate) only lf you maintain another qualified
plan  or  plans  (including Paired Plan 01-001) and  any  non-Key
Employee  is or could possibly become a Participant in this  Plan
and any of the other plans at the same time. Otherwise, go on  to
paragraph 14. See Section 2(0) of the Basic Plan Document  for  a
definition of who are Key Employees.
   (a)     ALL  OTHER PLANS ARE ALSO DEFINED CONTRIBUTION  PLANS.
(Note  to Employers: Paired Plan 01-001, the Profit-Sharing Plan,
is  a  defined contribution plan). This Money Purchase Plan is  a
"deemed  top-heavy plan" designed to operate as  though  it  were
always  "top-heavy"  under IRC Section 416,  whether  or  not  it
actually  would  be  "top-heavy" under  the  provisions  of  that
Section.  Section 4.2 of the Basic Plan Document and IRC  Section
416(c)(2) require certain non-Key Employees to receive a  minimum
allocation  of  contributions (generally 3% of Compensation)  for
each  year  they  are  Participants in the  Plan  and  would  not
otherwise  be  entitled  to  receive  a  greater  allocation   of
contributions  under  the Plan. If you  maintain  more  than  one
qualified  defined contribution plan covering  the  same  non-Key
Employee, only one of the plans must provide the required minimum
allocation. In such a case (check one):

[  ] the required minimum allocation specified in Section 4.2  of
the Basic Plan Document will be provided by this Plan.

[  ] the required minimum allocation specified in Section 4.2  of
the  Basic Plan Document will be provided by Paired Plan  01-001,
the  Nicholas Profit-Sharing Plan (this option is available  only
if the Employer has adopted that plan and the non-Key Employee is
a Participant in that plan).

[  ]  the  method under which the plans will provide the required
minimum  allocation  in  a  manner that  will  preclude  Employer
discretion  and avoid inappropriate omissions is as follows  (see
IRC  Section 41 6(c)(2) and Treasury Regulations Section 1.416-1,
Part  M,  and consult your legal or tax counsel before completing
the blanks below):
_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________


     (b)  EMPLOYER  ALSO  MAINTAINS ONE OR MORE  DEFINED  BENEFIT
PLANS. If you maintain a defined benefit plan in addition to this
Plan  (which is a defined contribution plan), specify the  method
by  which  the  plans will satisfy the minimum allocation  and/or
benefit  requirements of IRC Section 416(c), as modified  by  IRC
Section  416(h), including any required adjustments in  computing
the  denominators of the Defined Benefit and Defined Contribution
Fractions, in a manner that will preclude Employer discretion and
avoid inappropriate omissions (see IRC Sections 416(c) and 416(h)
and  Treasury Regulations Section 1 .416-1, Part M,  and  consult
your legal or tax counsel before completing the blanks below):

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________


   (c)    The Employer may change the method specified in (a)  or
(b) above only by executing a new Participation Agreement setting
forth the new method that is to apply.

   14.    CAUTION TO ADOPTING EMPLOYERS: Failure to properly fill
out  this  Participation Agreement may result in disqualification
of the Plan.

   15.     SPONSORING  ORGANIZATION. The sponsoring  organization
for   the  Nicholas  Master  Retirement  Plan  for  Self-Employed
Individuals  is  the  Nicholas Company,  Inc.,  700  North  Water
Street,  Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202, telephone number (414)  272-
6133.  The  sponsoring  organization  will  inform  you  of   any
amendments  made  to  the  Plan  or  of  the  discontinuance   or
abandonment of the Plan.

AN  EMPLOYER WHO HAS EVER MAINTAINED OR WHO LATER ADOPTS ANY PLAN
(INCLUDING  A  WELFARE BENEFIT FUND, AS DEFINED  IN  IRC  SECTION
419(e), WHICH PROVIDES POST RETIREMENT MEDICAL BENEFITS ALLOCATED
TO SEPARATE ACCOUNTS FOR KEY EMPLOYEES, AS DEFINED IN IRC SECTION
419(d)(3)  OR  AN INDIVIDUAL MEDICAL ACCOUNT AS  DEFINED  IN  IRC
SECTION  415(1)(2)) IN ADDITION TO THIS PLAN (OTHER  THAN  PAIRED
PLAN NO.01-001) MAY NOT RELY ON THE OPINION LETTER ISSUED BY  THE
NATIONAL OFFICE OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE AS EVIDENCE  THAT
THIS PLAN IS QUALIFIED UNDER IRC SECTION 401. IF THE EMPLOYER WHO
ADOPTS OR MAINTAINS MULTIPLE PLANS WISHES TO OBTAIN RELIANCE THAT
HIS OR HER PLAN(S) ARE QUALIFIED, APPLICATION FOR A DETERMINATION
LETTER SHOULD BE MADE TO THE APPROPRIATE KEY DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF
INTERNAL  REVENUE SERVICE. THIS ADOPTION AGREEMENT  MAY  BE  USED
ONLY IN CONNECTION WITH BASIC PLAN DOCUMENT NUMBER 01.


   The  Participation Agreement has been signed by  the  Employer
   this _______ day of  19__.


                            _____________________________________
                                   (Print Name of Employer -
                                    Specify if a Partnership)

                        By: _____________________________________
                              (Signature of Employer. If Employer
                               is a Partnership, must be   signed
                               by authorized general partner.)

Appointment as Plan Administrator accepted:

___________________________________________
(Signature of Plan Administrator)

___________________________________________
Address (If different from Employer's)

Date: ____________________

Appointment as Custodian accepted:

By:________________________________________

Date: ____________________

<PAGE>

NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN                         Form 3

                 CONTRIBUTION SUMMARY FORM

The following contribution enclosed herewith is to be credited to the
respective accounts of the following Participants in the amounts  set
forth opposite their names, and each Participant has chosen  to  have
such amount(s) invested in the fund(s) indicated.

<TABLE>
                                         Social                          Nicholas    Nicholas        Nicholas    Nicholas
                                        Security   Nicholas    Nicholas   Limited   Equity Income    Income       Money 
                 Name of Participant     Number     Fund         II      Edition*     Fund            Fund        Market

<S>              <C>                    <C>        <C>         <C>       <C>        <C>             <C>          <C>
Employer Profit  ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
Sharing          
Contributions    ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______

===================================

Employer Money   ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
Purchase         
Contributions    ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______

===================================

Qualified        ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
Non-ADEC**       
Rollover         ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
Contributions
(Designate "PS"  ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
by name ifto
Profit Sharing
Plan, "MP" if
to Money
Purchase Plan)
===================================
Qualified        ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
ADEC**
Rollover         ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
Contributions
(Designate "PS"  ___________________    ________   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
by name ifto
Profit Sharing   Subtotals......................   $_______    $_______  $_______   $________       $________    $_______
Plan, "MP" if
to Money         Total custodian Charges.....................................................................    $_______
Purchase Plan)
                 Total Contribution (Employer, Rollover and Custodian Charges)
                 NOTE: MINIMUM - $500 for Nicholas Fund and Niholas Income Fund, $1,000 for Nicholas II, Inc.,$2000 for Nicholas
                 Equity Income Fund, Nicholas Limited Edition and Nicholas Money Market Fund. If you do not have the  applicable
                 Fund propsectus, please contact the Nicholas Family of Funds. The prospectus contains more complete information
                 regarding charges and expenses. Read it carefully before you invest.                            $_______  

The Custodian will not bill any employer for its fees; therefore, any Custodian charges not seperately included with this
participation agreement will be deducted in equal amounts from the contributions made on behalf of each Owner. Owners must be
identified as such on this form. If additional space is required to report contributions, please attach a seperate sheet hereto.

A completely-executed and approved "Application for Participation" form for each Participant (including Owners/Pertners) must
be attached to this summary contribution Form or the Custodian cannot accept this form. This form and all application forms must
be signed and dated by the Plan Administrator.

                                            _________________________________
                                               (Print name of Employer)
                Date _____________________
                                            by:______________________________
                                               Plan Administrator Signature
                                               Approved: FIRSTAR TRUST CO.
               Date ______________________
                                           by:_______________________________

*See Share Limitation in the current edition of this Fund's prospectus. Investments received after the Fund is closed will be
 returned.  If you are up against a tax deadline, please call our offices to check on the status of Nicholas Limted Edtion

**ADEC refers to amounts attributable to accumulated deductable employee contributions within the meaning of
  IRC Section 72(0)(5)(B), See Section 2.cc and 4.6 of Plan Document.
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
                                                         Form 4
NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN

                Application  For  Participation
                (This form to be  filed  with
                 Custodian after  approval by
                 Plan Administrator.)


(Please Print)

Name of Employer ____________________________________________________

Name of Participant _________________________________________________

Current Address _____________________________________________________

Social Security Number ______________________________________________

Date of Birth _______________________________________________________

Date of Employment __________________________________________________

Date of Participation January 1, 19__.


Owner (as defined in Plan) (check one): ____Yes ____No


I  have  completed the eligibility requirements for participation
in the above-named self-employed retirement plan and hereby apply
to become a participant in that plan. I agree to furnish the Plan
Administrator  (the  employer or its  delegate)  all  information
necessary to implement my initial and continuing participation in
the  plan.  I agree to be bound by all terms of the plan  and  to
keep the Plan Administrator advised of my current address at  all
times when there is an account balance being held in my name.  If
I  am  not  an  Owner  or Partner, I agree  to  notify  the  Plan
Administrator and Custodian if I should at any later date  become
an Owner or Partner.

I  acknowledge  that I have received a copy of the  summary  plan
description for the above-named self-employed retirement plan and
that  the Plan Administrator has explained to my satisfaction  my
rights and duties under the plan.

_____________  ______________________________________________________
     (Date)    (Signature of Participant)

_____________  ______________________________________________________
     (Date)    Approval by Plan Administrator


               
                                                                 5/90

<PAGE>
NICHOLAS MASTER RETIREMENT PLAN                       Form 5
BENEFIT PAYMENT AUTHORIZATION




                                          
Name of Employer:_______________________________________________

1. Participant's Name __________________________________________

2. Current Mailing Address______________________________________
                                    Street Address

                          ______________________________________
                          City                State     Zip Code

3.    Social Security No.________________    4.   Date of Birth______________


5. Date of Employment ___________________    6. Date of Termination__________

7. Date of Initial Participation in Plan ____________________

8. Reason for Payment (check appropriate line)

[ ] Employment Terminated  [ ] Death
[ ] Retirement             [ ] Other (Explain) ___________________________
                                               
(If  "Death,"  include a certified copy of the death certificate,
beneficiary's  full  name, address, social  security  number  and
copies  of Beneficiary Designation and/or required Benefit Waiver
and Spousal Consent, if any)

9. Method of distribution of benefits (check appropriate line):

(A  Participant's benefits under the Money Purchase Plan  can  be
paid  in  a  f6rm  other than Survivor Annuity only  if  a  valid
Benefit  Waiver  and  Spousal Consent  is  filed  with  the  Plan
Administrator.)

[ ] Single lump-sum cash payment (See Item 10 Below)
[ ] Equal annual installment over a period of ____ years (See Item 10 Below)
[ ] Qualified Joint and Survivor Annuity
[ ] Pre-retirement Survivor Annuity
[ ] Other (Explain)

 10. Direct Rollover: Is all or part of the distribution to be
paid  directly  to  an eligible retirement plan  in  a  Direct
Rollover?  (CAUTION: a Direct Rollover normally  is  available
only   for   a  lump  sum  distribution  or  distribution   in
installments  over less than 10 years. Certain  distributions,
such  as  distributions of after-tax contributions or  minimum
required distributions under Code Section 401(a) (9),  do  not
qualify  for  a  Direct  Rollover. See  your  legal  or  other
professional  advisor  to make sure  the  distribution  is  an
"eligible  rollover  distribution"  and  that  all  applicable
requirements for such distributions, including the requirement
of a written explanation to the distributee, have been met.)

____ Yes        ____ No

If Yes, complete (a) and (b):

(a)  Provide  the  following  information  about  the  plan
     receiving the Rollover:

     Name of Plan: ______________________________________________

     Name and Address of Trustee or Custodian      

     ____________________________________________________________

     ____________________________________________________________

     ____________________________________________________________

(over please)
                                                                   
     Type of Plan (check one - if none applies, a Direct Rollover
     cannot be made):

     [ ] Qualified  IRA, described in Section 408(a)  of  the
         Internal Revenue Code.

     [ ] Qualified Individual Retirement Annuity (other  than
         endowment  contract),  described in  Code  Section  408~),
         issued by an insurance company
     
    *[ ] Qualified  Annuity  Plan  of  employer  for employees, described
         in Code Section 408(a).

    *[ ] Qualified employer pension, profit sharing or stock
         bonus  plan and trust described in Code Sections 401(a)  and
         501(a),  that  is  a defined contribution plan  and  accepts
         rollover contributions.

   _____________________

     *Surviving  spouse cannot elect a Direct Rollover  to  these
     types of plans.

   (b)   Amount of Direct Rollover (if less than entire
         distribution): $_______________________________

11.   Does Participant participate in another pension or profit
      sharing plan maintained by the Employer?     ___Yes     ____No

12.   Participant  invested  in these investment  funds  (give
      names and account numbers):

   (a)

   (b)

   (c)

   (d)
   
13.  BY SIGNING BELOW, THE PLAN ADMINISTRATOR CERTIFIES that any
     and all explanations, notices and election forms required by the
     plan and by applicable Internal Revenue Code provisions and
     Treasury Regulations to be given to the Participant in connection
     with the benefit distribution requested have been or will be
     provided within the required time periods.


Payment approved by ______________________________________  (Date) _________
                      (Plan Administrator's Signature)



BY  SIGNING  BELOW, THE DISTRIBUTEE CERTIFIES that  if  a  Direct
Rollover  is  selected at Item 10, the name, type  of  plan,  and
other information shown about the plan to receive the Rollover is
correct.

Payment requested by _____________________________________  (Date) _________
                        (Distributee's Signature)

                        [LOGO]                             12/94


<PAGE>
                                   Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service           Washington DC 20224

Plan Description: Master Standardized Profit Sharing Plan & Trust
FFN:    50271590001-00l  Case 9000951  EIN: 39-1091673
BPD:  0l  Plan: 001  Letter Serial No: D245323a





                              
                                         Person to Contact:   Mr. Westry
Nicholas  Co  Inc                        Telephone  Number (2O2) 535-4972
700  North  Water  Street                Refer  Reply  to E:EP:Q:4
Suite 1010
Milwaukee        WI       53202                    Date: 04/04/90

               



   Dear Applicant:

   In  our  opinion.  the  form of the plan identified  above  is
   acceptable under section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code  for
   use  by  employers  for  the benefit of their employees.  This
   opinion relates only to the acceptability of the form  of  the
   plan under the Internal Revenue Code. It is not an opinion  of
   the effect of other Federal or local statutes.

   We have determined that the related trust or custodial account
   under  this Master plan is exempt from income tax under   Code
   section 501(a).

   You  must  furnish a copy of this letter to each employer  who
   adopts  this plan.  You are also required to send a  copy   of
   the  approved  form of the plan, any approved  amendments  and
   related  documents to each  Key District Director of  Internal
   Revenue  Service  in  whose jurisdiction  there  are  adopting
   employers.

   Our  opinion on the acceptability of the form of the  plan  is
   not  a  ruling  or determination as to whether  an  employer's
   plan  qualifies  under Code  section 401(a).  an employer  who
   adopts  this plan will be considered to have a plan  qualified
   under  Code section 401(a) provided all the terms of the  plan
   are   followed)   and   the   eligibility   requirements   and
   contribution   or benefit  provisions  are not More  favorable
   for officers, owners, or highly compensated employees than for
   other  employees.  Except as stated below)  the  Key  District
   Director will not issue a determination letter with regard  to
   this plan.

   Our  opinion  does  not  apply to the form  of  the  plan  for
   purposes of Code section 401(a)(16) if: (1) an employer   ever
   maintained  another qualified  plan for one or more  employees
   who  are covered by this plan, other than a  specified  paired
   plan within the Meaning of section 7 of Rev. Proc. 89-9,  1989-
   6  I.R.B.  14;  or (2) after December 3I, 1985,  the  employer
   Maintains   a   welfare  benefit fund defined in Code  section
   419(e),   which   provides  postretirement  medical   benefits
   allocated to separate accounts for key employees as defined in
   Code  section  419A(d)(3).  In such situations,  the  employer
   should  request  a  determination as to  whether   the   plan,
   considered   with  all  related  qualified   plans   and,   if
   appropriate1    welfare   benefit   funds,    satisfies    the
   requirements  of  Code section  401(a)(16) as  to  limitations
   on benefits  and contributions  in  Code section 415.

   If  you,  the pan sponsor,  have any questions concerning  the
   IRS  processing of this case,  please call the above telephone
   number.   This  number is only for use of  the  plan  sponsor.
   Individual   participants  and/or  adopting   employers   with
   questions concerning the plan should contact the plan sponsor.
   The  plan's  adoption  agreement Must  include  the  sponsor's
   address   and  telephone  number  for  inquiries  by  adopting
   employers.

   If you write to the  IRS  regarding this plan,  please provide
   your  telephone number and the Most convenient time for us  to
   call  in  case we need more information.  Whether you call  or
   write,  please  refer  to the Letter Serial  Number  and  File
   Folder number shown in the heading of this letter.

   You  should  keep  this letter as a permanent  record.  Please
   notify  us  if you modify or discontinue sponsorship  of  this
   plan.




                              Sincerely yours,
                              
                              
                              
                              Chief, Employee Plan Qualifications Branch
                              
<PAGE>

Internal Revenue Service
Plan Description: Master Standardized Money Purchase Pension Plan
& Trust
FFN:    50271590001-001  Case: 9000954  EIN: 39-1091673
BPD:    0l  Plan: 002  Letter Serial No: D245324a





                              
                                         Person to Contact:   Mr. Westry
Nicholas  Co  Inc                        Telephone  Number (2O2) 535-4972
700  North  Water  Street                Refer  Reply  to E:EP:Q:4
Suite 1010
Milwaukee        WI       53202                    Date: 04/04/90




   Dear Applicant:

   In  our  opinion  the  form of the plan  identified  above  is
   acceptable under section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code  for
   use  by  employers  for  the benefit of their employees   This
   opinion relates only to the acceptability of the form  of  the
   plan under the Internal Revenue Code. It is not an opinion  of
   the effect of other Federal or local  statutes.

   We have determined that the related trust or custodial account
   under  this master plan is exempt from income tax under   Code
   section 501(a).

   You  Must  furnish a copy of this letter to each employer  who
   adopts  this plan.  You are also required to send a  copy   of
   the  approved  form of the plan, any approved  amendments  and
   related  documents to each  Key District Director of  Internal
   Revenue  Service  in  whose jurisdiction  there  are  adopting
   employers.

   Our  opinion on the acceptability of the form of the  plan  is
   not  a  ruling  or determination as to whether  an  employer's
   plan  qualifies  under Code  section 401(a).  an employer  who
   adopts  this plan will be considered to have a plan  qualified
   under  Code section 401(a) provided all the terms of the  plan
   are   followed,   and   the   eligibility   requirements   and
   contribution   or benefit  provisions  are not more  favorable
   for officers, owners, or highly compensated employees than for
   other  employees.  Except as stated below,  the  Key  District
   Director will not issue a determination letter with regard  to
   this plan.

   Our  opinion  does  not  apply to the form  of  the  plan  for
   purposes of Code section 401(a)(16) if: (I) an employer   ever
   maintained  another qualified  plan for one or More  employees
   who  are  covered by this plan, other than a specified  paired
   plan within the meaning of section 7 of Rev. Proc. 89-9,  1989-
   6  I.R.B.  14;  or (2) after December 31, 1985  the   employer
   maintains   a   welfare  benefit fund defined in Code  section
   419(e),   which   provides  postretirement  medical   benefits
   allocated to separate accounts for key employees as defined in
   Code  section  419A(d)(3).  In such situations,  the  employer
   should  request  a  determination as to  whether   the   plan,
   considered   with  all  related  qualified   plans   and,   if
   appropriate,    welfare   benefit   funds,    satisfies    the
   requirements  of  Code section  401(a)(16) as  to  limitations
   on benefits  and contributions  in  Code section 415.

   If  you,  the plan sponsor,  have any questions concerning the
   IRS   processing  of  this   case,   please  call   the  above
   telephone  number.  This number  is only for use of  the  plan
   sponsor.   Individual participants and/or  adopting  employers
   with  questions  concerning the plan should contact  the  plan
   sponsor.    The  plan's adoption agreement  must  include  the
   sponsor's  address  and  telephone  number  for  inquiries  by
   adopting employers.

   If you write to the  IRS  regarding this plan,  please provide
   your  telephone number and the most convenient time to  us  to
   call  in  case we need more information.  Whether you call  or
   write,   please  refer to the Letter  Serial Number  and  File
   Folder Number shown in the heading of this letter.

   You  should  keep  this letter as a permanent  record.  Please
   notify  us  if you modify or discontinue sponsorship  of  this
   plan.

                              Sincerely yours,




                              Chief, Employee Plans Qualifications Branch
<PAGE>
        



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