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BLUFFTON NEWS The Advertising Medium for Bluffton Trade Territory VOLUME NO. LXV IADTF FYPAN^IAN PROGRAM PLANNED1 FOR UTILITY PLANT First Steps in $828,000 Plan for Additions and Improve ments Announced Size of Building to be Doubled And One-third Added to Output, Report First steps in an expansion pro gram for the Bluffton generating plant of the Central Ohio Light and Power company were announced Tues-, day by Francis K. Godwin of Findlay, western division manager for the company. The plant here is officially known as the Woodcock generating station. The expansion plan, aggregating more than three-quarters of a million dollars is still in the embryo state, ac cording to Godwin who stated that no I date had been set for starting con struction work. Broad outlines of the plan, accord-1 ing to well informed sources how ever, will include doubling the size of pr(W?ram the present plant on the Allen-Han cock county line road at the eastern] S1OH edge of Bluffton’s city limits. This] will be followed by installation of ad-| ditional equipment which will increaser by one-third the plant’s generating] Institute capacity. This As a preliminary step to financing] the program estimateed at $828,000,( the company has been authorized by] the Ohio Public Utility commission to| sell $400,000 worth of per Peter C. Steiner He was the son of (Lugibihl) married to vives. entI bonds and 1,000 shares of six per cent Wed"“day .“d Thursday, Jan. ... I and 23, will feature discussion ’Current output of the Bluffton plant rural problems and talks has increased steadily since it was by "“‘standing agricultural author put into operation nearly three years I dies. lai An independent institute will be ago and the expansion program is I understood to be a result of growing beld here thls year' was announced demand from the territory thruout th» fir8‘ °f "eek this part of the state served by the *’lans for ‘he two-day affair are company near*n# completion. On the opening Experts who viewed the plant here daJr men’s and women’s organizations have declared its location to be ideal win hold Joint sessions, with the for electric generating purposes and (groups meeting separately on Thurs the station has been given one of the day highest efficiency ratings in the| Speakers include Edgar Herr, hy country corn sPecia^st» Windau, (former farm agent (county J. H. Warner, Allen county -re I woman. following a five weeks’ illness. I Also surviving are three sons:] Sidney of Charleston, W. Va. Haydn of Toledo and Myron of Barberton.] Four daughters surviving are: Miss-| es Irma and Selina Steiner of Pan-1 dora, I of Cridersville. Brothers and sisters surviving are] Samuel and Elias Steiner and Misses] Barbara and Mary Steiner all of] Pandora. The body is at the Lehman & Ba-| singer funeral home in Pandora and] will be taken to the residence Wed-| nesday evening Bluffton, and 21 vive. Mrs. X». y The robin was first sighted by Mrs. Beidler and later some neighbors also saw the bird. Whether the feathered visitor arriving here in the midst of January winter weather was any portent of an early spring is not known however, many Bluffton residents are hoping so. BLUFFTON FARM INSTITUTE TO BE HELD JAN. 22-23 for Two Days’ Ses Here is Nearing Completion to be Independent Year Speakers Are Listed (farm agent C. Clyde Jones, Ohio I City livestock farmer, and Mrs. Pearl Dies In Pandora E y ol. prominent Stark county farm Peter C. Steiner 72, prominent offlccrs of are: Mcns Pandora farmer and business man I ... rwuuiffiau I group—Albert Augsburger, presi died at his home at that place Wed-1 ., dent Homer Gratz, vice-president nesday morning at 5:20 o clock. I ,6. ,. Quinten Burkholder, secretary-treas Death was due to a heart attack,!^ T, ... A nZLJ urer Harry F. Barnes, Albert .„ I Geiger, William Althaus and Henry Funeral services will be held bat-1 urday afternoon at 3 o’clock at the executive committee. Wo Grace Mennonite ehurch, Rev. Paul ™en P?81* Whitmer officiating. Interment will|dent'’ Mrs. Ray Marshall, Mrs. Har be in Pleasant Ridge cemetery. ,ey Marquart, Mrs. Chris Gratz and He was a lifelong resident of Riley Mrs. C. F. Miller, local hostess. township and a former school teach er of that district. He was also a former director of the First National bank of Pandora and at the time of his death was director of the Pan dora Dry Goods & Clothing company. Following two months illness with! bachelor farmer, heart disease and complications, Mrs. I a. m. Monday in Catherine Balmer, 85, lifelong resi-l ship home where he was bom. He dent of Richland township, died! had been bedfast four days. her home on I Rayl was known to many Bluffton Sunday morning at Lawn avenue. Mrs. Balmer was a Emmanuel Reformed funeral services were held Tuesday I ways welcome, afternoon. Rev. Emil Burrichter of-1 Funeral services were conducted ficiated. Burial was at the Emman-I Wednesday afternoon in the Diller uel cemetery. I funeral home at Bluffton. Rev. C. THE BLUF Rehabilitation Work Among Juvenile unirn Delinquents Described At Lions Meet First Robin Of Spring Is Seen Here Tuesday piRST robin of the coming spring paid a call to Bluff ton residents Tuesday morning when the bird was seen in the garden of Harvey Beidler on South Jackson street. on 22 of rar™fs JnSt,t“te of Putnam tt Two Seeking Post To Distribute Auto Tags Two Bluffton men are seeking the bom December 7, 1868,1 Positi“n of dcl'uty rePst™r the Christian and Magdalena p^nbubon of autoreob.te 1.cense Steiner. In 1893 he was £ere k,th'8 Spr,ngr, ™n.’ Elizabeth Bixel who sur. both Republicans are Clayton Bixel and Robert Lewis. Contest for the place which has developed into a factional party squabble, came into th^ open over the week end. Lewis, who has been dep uty registrar here for the past two LilHan rf Wolter‘»d*SteUa|yea" 'i*-culated petitions locally, 1 seeking reappointment, while Bixel was endorsed by the Republican county ways and means committee in a meeting at Lima, Saturday. Appointment is in the hands of State Registrar Wallace in Columbus and is expected to be made within the next sixty days. William Rayl RitCS Funeral For Mrs. Held OnWednesday Catherine Baimer Heart disease was the cause of the Joseph Rayl, 71, who died at 10 the Orange town- I death of Wiliam four days. I people as owner of Rayl’s quarry a member of the! popular summer picnic and recrea church where! tion spot to which visitors were al Survivors include two daughters, I Kauffman, of Mt. Cory, officiated. Mrs. Elmer Lauby, of Bluffton and I Burial was in the Candler cemetery Mrs. J. E. Morrison, of Elwood City, I near Ada. Pa. one son, Austin, of Toledo one! Born June 6, 1870, Rayl was a life sister, Mrs. Lydia Stettler, of Bluff-1 long resident of Orange township, ton, and a brother, Isaac Stauffer, of I Surviving is a brother, John Calvin Fourteen grandchildren I Rayl and a sister, Mary Jane Rayl. great-grandchildren also sure I The three lived on the Rayl farm I one mile east of Bluffton. Balmer’s husband preceded! Rayl was a member of the Bluff death 22 yean ago. ton Odd" Fellows lodge. Rehabilitation work among juve nile delinquent boys at the Boys In dustrial School at Lancaster, was de scribed by Gerald Stahley, supervisor of education at the school, at a meet ing of the Lions club in the Walnut Grill Tuesday night. Stahley is a graduate of Bluffton college in the class of 1926. Preceding the address was a series of musical selections by a group of five boys from the school who sang and played musical instruments. The main purpose of the school is rehabilitation and preparing the boy to go back into normal participation in society. The boy comes to school with a court commitment presents a definite problem. the and the The family plan is used in treatment instead of confinement in cells. This permits more normal re lationships and the lads build up at titudes more consistent with the wel fare of the group, the speaker stated. Of all of the delinquent boys in A stir of excitement was caused in the town Tuesday night when a group of five boys was seen on the streets attired in natty uniforms. The mystery was solved when members of the Lions club leaving the Walnut Grill explained that the youths were musicians from the Boys Industrial School at Lancaster and had performed for the club earlier in the evening. the institution only three to five per cent of them have had any religious training, which fact shows that church influence is lacking among many boys who run afoul of the law. The educational program is set up not in terms of the traditional, ap proach but from the point of view of meeting the individual human prob lems and needs of the growing boy. A combination of work and schooling has been found to be the most satis factory approach. The boy goes to school one day and works the next, following this alternate plan thru out the entire year. The per capita cost of the school is $275 per year which is consider ably under most institutions of this size and type, the speaker pointed out in conclusion. A Capella Choir At Presbyterian Church Appearing in a sacred concert will be the Bluffton College A Capella choir at the Presbyterian church, Sunday night at 7:30 o’clock. Prof. Russell Lantz, head of the depart ment of music, will direct the or ganization. Announcement of the concert was made by Rev. Charles Armentrout, pastor of the church. The is invited. public Red Cross Asks For Volunteers Volunteers for knitting of sweat ers and general sewing work are wanted by the local chapter of the Red Cross, according to announce ment by the organization this week. Supervision of the sewing will be provided by Mrs. J. S. Steiner, of South Main street, and the knitting by Mrs. Paul Studler of South Jack son street. Materials and instruc tion will be furnished by either of these persons. Accept Resignation Of Rev. Kliewer Resignation of Rev. P. A. Kliwer as pastor of the Ebenezer Mennonite church, west of Bluffton, was ac cepted last Wednesday at the an nual meeting of the church congre gation. Rev. Kliewer presented his resig nation to the church several months ago, to become effective on Easter Sunday. His successor has nut yet been named. Church officers elected for the present year include: Waldo Hof stetter, president D. J. Basinger, secretary W. J. Luginbuhl, deacon Chris A. Gratz, deacon Geraldine Grismore, pianist Mabel Amstutz, assistant Chris A. Gratz, chorister Francis Niswander, assistant Clif ton Diller, treasurer of church aux iliaries Albert Diller, William Alt haus, Eldon Tschiegg and Clayton Bucher, ushers. Three Volunteer For Year's Army Service Three Bluffton youths, Willard Dillman, James and Joe Birchnaugh, volunteered for a year of army training, it was announced the first of the week. The three have taken their preliminary physical examina tions and are*awaiting directions as to where to report for induction into the service. A NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INT OF BLUFFTON AND VICINITY BLUFFTON, OHIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1941 1 1 .-■■■ MAYOR MAKES APPOINTMENTS FOR NEW YEAR All Municipal Officers Will Con tinue in Office of Bluffton’s Appointive Mayor’s Appointment of Night Police Limited to One Month By Council All of Bluffton’s munkipal appoin tees will be continued in ofiice, it was determined at the first council meet ing of the year v nich was held Monday night. Appointments were uade by Mayor W. A. Howe and ere confirmed unanimously by the council. The mayor’s appointment of Albert Reich enbach as night watch was limited by action of the council to one month. All other appointments were for one year. The confirmation of Reichenbach’s appointment for a year was refused when it was charged at the council meeting that he violated the intent of a municipal building ordinance in the erection of a garage last summer on the rear of his lot. Wi/hin Ordinance Claim It was stated at the meeting, how ever, that Reichenbach had consulted an attorney on the matter and was advised that he was within the pro visions of the law. The council gave no indication as to what disposition of the case will be made at the expiration of the month’s appointment. Appointees named at the session in clude: Lee Coon, street commissioner, $100 per month. Albert Reichenbach, nightwatch. 3100 per month. Named for one month from three applicants. Members of the fire department— H. E. Augsburger, Isaac Bro^eck, Ed. Badertscher, Fred Martin, Les wander, C. V. Stonehill. Haro1 hill and Charles Young, two_^__ per month and tw- .a •Pars p'e'AR’ri/' Albert Benroth, caretaker of the town clock, $50 per year.' Appointments Remains One other appointment remains to be made, that of the caretaker of the Maple Grove cemetery. This appoint ment will be made by the trustees of the cemetery. Sveral appointments made last year were for two years and no action by i the council or mayor was necessary to continue them in office. These in cluded: Guy Corson, fire cheif, per year. $200 $100 Francis Durbin, city solicitor, i per year retainer. Standing committees of the council will continue in the capacity as last year, Mayor Howe announced. town These are: Finance committee—E. W. Basinger and Armin Hauenstein. Street and roads committee—Menno Badertscher and Ralph Patterson. Fire and light committee—Munson Bixel a'nd Cleon Triplett. Mrs. Rilla Marshall Rites Hdld Tuesday Funeral service® were held Tues day afternoon at the Stanley Ba singer funeral home for Mrs. Rilla Burns Marshall, 83, who died at 3 p. m. Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Ralph D. Rainey, in Findlay. Mrs. Marshall was born Sept. 25, 1857, in Iowa township with was six years the township when she moved to Bluffton. Coon and moved to Orange her parents when old. She lived in until 20 years she the ago Surviving are a son, Charles Burns, of Bluffton, and two daugh ters. Mrs. Goldie Battles, Orange township, and Mrs. Rainey at whose home she died following an illness of seven months. Mrs. Marshall was married to George Burns, and later to Robert Marshall. Both are deceased. She was a member of the Olive Branch United Brethren church of Orange township. Rev. Paul Zimmerman, of Rawson, officiated Tuesday. Burial was in the Clymer cemetery. at the funeral services Church Speaker Presentation of the results of re searches into Mennonite activities will be made by J. Winfield Fretz, of Chicago, who will speak at the First Mennonite church Sunday night at 7:45 o’clock, it was announced by Rev. H. T. Unruh, pastor. Fretz graduated from Bluffton col lege in the class of 1934 and is fin ishing a graduate course at the Uni versity of Chicago thia year. ’Ians Are Made For Ice Rink At Harmon Field Ice skating may be a winter sports attraction at Harmon field this year if plans outlined Monday night at a meeting of the municipal council are put into effect. A proposal to flood a section of the recreation center for skating in case of a prolonged cold wave was ap proved by the council men at Monday meeting. the Tentative plans were laid to put the program into effect, with Fire Chief Guy Corson consenting to use the fire pumper and a fog-nozzle spray in flooding the field and pro viding a smooth skating surface. iecord of Number Stopping in Bluffton Kept by Marshal Lee Coon of 134 in April was ‘otal Largest Number in Any One Month Few law violators are placed be hind the bars, however, the Bluff ton jail serves as a busy hostelry throughout the year for all of that, Marshal Lee Coon reported Tuesday. During 1940 more than 800 trans ients stopped at the lockup for over night lodging, doing their cooking on the jail stove and sleeping on the hard floor of the building. Sometimes the “knights of the road” carry their bedding with them, but more often they sleep on the floor with only a few scattered newspapers between them and the boards. Some use lumps of coal for their pillows and the group would appear to be anything but comfort-1 able when night. On some iter Nis ei Stone- at ... Births P. T. A. Meet Changed! Winter This procedure is the same as thatlQE PL onn tt i T. Iside and outside of the over 80U Transients Had Night’ I v i A *1 tt vr I Lodging At Jail Here In Past Year Seen and Heard at Bluffton Post Office Dedication Ceremonies New Year’s Day they bed down for the| piece construction. Most flag of this size are sectional. occasions all of them will| foodstuffs and put them| Hats off to the snappy band pool their on one table, eating picnic style.| provided music for both the Other times they eat separately, ft 1 with winter weather breaking up I I c,. vn i XL I .. land Mrs. Clarence Stonehill, left for they dnft north dur,ng the two Almost every available square foot his „ew Tues(1 ay aftCTnMn. early spring months. of space was taken inside the build- N„ r6ason ivcn for Complete summary of the yearLng during the ceremonies. Most of transf according t0 the letter re follows: January, 76 February, 96 the people present stood during the received by his parents Wednesday Marsh, 128 April, 134 May, 40 I entire ceremony although some of mornjnK June, 12 July, 4 August, 5 Septem-|the kiddies were seen sitting on the1 ber, 24 October, 50 November, 103,| edges of tobies and desks. The over and December, 80. flow crowd was located in the lobby. During the hot months of the sum-| mer most of them sleep outside, ini Many people were puzzled as to the fields or barns, accounting for the] meanjng of the black stripes at the| First week of 1941 at the Bluffton low figures during July and August,] cornjce on the north end of the work] hospital ushered in something of a Coon said. I room. These served to partially con-| record when it was announced that ceal the peep holes through which in-1 nine infants were being cared for spectors may observe the work of the on Tuesday. post office when they pay un-announc-1 This figure represents the largest Mr. and Mrs. Francis Kempf, Pan-| other as they went from peep hole to| dora, a girl, Janice Lane, Sunday. peep hole. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Borkofky, Williamstown, a girl, Monday. The following births at the Bluff-|ed visits to the Bluffton office. number of babies ever in the insti ton hospital: The observation room is located at] tution in any one day, according to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Herr, Beaver-] an elevation which will give a view of Miss Helen Maxwell, superintendent, dam, a girl, Donna Mae, Thursday.] the entire work room and the person r. and girl, Mary r. and Beaverdam, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Merrit I Jenera, a boy, Tuesday. I■ Announcement has been made of] tion of the post office, in supervising] the birth of a daughter to Mr. and] the setting up of the equipment and| Mrs. Cleon Henry, formerly of| certain details of the dedication cere-| Bluffton and now of Covington, Ohio,| mony. Thursday. Mrs. Henry was form-| erly Miss Della Groman. record for holiday cancelling was! A son was born Saturday morning] set jjew Year’s day with a total of| in Miller-McComb hospital at Me-] §47 gy way Comb to Mr. and Mrs. Pratt Rey*|were 157 On Thanksgiving day and| nolds. He has been named Thomas] ^74 on Christmas day. Larry. Mrs. Reynolds is the former’ Miss Grace Augsburger. They re side at Findlay. To Wednesday Night *ndlpou,:he“the railroai depoU Change of date of the Parent] Teachers Association meeting from| Tuesday to Wednesday night of next] week, was announced this week by| Mrs. Charles Hankish president of| the organization. The meeting wi be held in the high school auditor-] ium at 7:30 p. m. I The following program has been] arranged: Invocation, Rev. E. G.| Steiner music, instrumental depart-] ment plays, “One Man’s Family” and “Another Man’s Family” under direction of P. W. Stauffer discus sion, Family Relationships by Orden Mrs. Nelson Steiner, a( nel of the post office may be observed hospital in the year 1941 came to Margaret, Friday. (without their knowledge. The obser-| Mr. and Mrs. Roy Herr of Beaver Mrs. W. H. Bridges,| vation room is sound proof and has| dam on Thursday when a girl, Don a boy, Jerry Michael,( no lights. Access to the room is( na Mae, was born. Closely following (gained through the office of the post-| Jusi midnight Friday morning, another baby girl, Mary Margaret, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Neuenschwan-| master. der, a girl, Mary Stager, Sunday. Visitors who visited the observation] was b°rn to Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Zimmerman,] room complained about the darkness] Steiner of Bluffton. a girl, Marcene Jane, Sunday. (and occasionally bumped- into each] Credit should be given to Assist-1 M/ “nd Mr?, Marvm Bartz, Colure Shaller, ant Postmaster Ralph Stearns, who buK ove Mr. and Mrs. Roy Herr assisted in advising on the construe-1 and and Mrs. W 1 Beaverdam Mr. and Kempf of Pandora of comparison there] The spacious drive way and mail| rural man carriers and to Howard I Stager, who transports the mail sacks! I to the post office. i POST used by hockey clubs in icing their|^" w w arenas. Members of the Bluffton Ameri can Legion post have volunteered to (Large Attendance at Cere assist in making a section of the monies Opening New Fed field ready for the ice rink, Mayor oral RniMinw Wilbur A. Howe told the council. Should the experiment prove a success, it is likely to be continued, in future years as an addition to (Structure Typically American the community’s winter sports pro-| With Architecture of Early gram. Bluffton has many skating Colonial Era enthusiasts, young and old alike, and the venture is expected to prove a popular one. Despite an overcast sky, porten- (building during the afternoon. tious of inclement weather, a siz-] It was an interesting exhibition of able crowd turned out to witness (typical democratic American partici ceremonies dedicating Bluffton’s new Ipation in an event whose interest $80,000 post office New Year’s Day. (shared by old and young, men boys and girls, officials consisting (citizens alike. In impressive ceremonies held in- women, The outside program, of flag raising ceremonies, was in charge of the Bluffton post of the Also American Legion. Officiating in this (architecture of the building, pattem part of the ceremony were Ralph |ed after the early American structur Stearns, commander Quinten Burk-|®® the Colonial era. The whole holder, chaplain Millen Geiger and Irvin (monies seemed to be fused with the Woods, color guards. (wholesome American spirit of free |dom and beauty—all combining to lend The flag pole, all in one piece of 11° Die occasion a fest tapered tubing, is one of the few (a sense of dignity and solemnity, one piece poles in the country. The| The program was carried out on architects and builders indicated that (schedule with precision which in itself this was their first contact with one|8P°^e ^or efforts of the various poles| (Continued on page 8) which last year was the peak! was a select gre,.,. of mu£ici.nJLentl for seM|cl. month for overn.ght callers. Dur,ng p.cxed from recent graduates of the sutes armv, ha8 been transferred he month 34 took advantage of h.gh school and directed by Prof from Ft Benjamin Harrison in In hejad s shelter, topp,ng a mark of Sidney Hauenstein, veteran hand|dja n In() Ft. K„o Ke„. 128 set in March. It is believed thatl leader. I insidel times they eat separately. land autside ceremonies. The bandl johnStonehilUwhov0lunt«redre ”KpnlI I building, Bluffton’s recently completed $80,000 post office, located at South Main and Franklin streets, was formally ldedicated on New Year’s Day, Wed nesday afternoon. I Climaxing nearly three years of ne gotiations and building, the new I handsome structure makes an impres Isive addition to the buidings of the I community. I A large crowd, estimated at about 12,000, attended the dedication exer Icises and were conducted through the was and and Colonial Architecture typically American is adjutant Ralph Henry, I setting of the building and the cere- the a air perxaded i Bluff ton Volunteer Transf erred Tuesday I tucky. Stonehill, the son of Mr. Nine Infants At Hospital Tuesday The marble walls of the lobby at-1 deputy in the office of the clerk of tracted considerable attention among (courts Monday morning. the visitors, as the post office here is Huber took office as part of the one of the very few in the country, so staff of the incoming clerk of courts, equipped. The material used in phan-| Ernest Mills, republican, who was (tasia rose from the Tennessee quar- eicetea to that post last November. ries. Mills succeeds Leonard Schnabel, democrat. The special cachet, symbolic of the| dedication, stimulated stamp sales. Many people in the community, who| had no previous interest or exper-| iutlj ience in collecting “covers” took ad-| First arrival in Bluffton at the In the hospital on Tuesday, the peak day, were the babies of the following parents: Mr. and Mrs. Lester Wilch, Jenera —j -_j Bridges of Mrs. Francis Mr. and Mrs. Williamstown Vergil Borkofky of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Steiner, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Zimmerman and Mrs. Edgar Neuenschwander, of Bluffton Mr. and Mrs. Merrit Shaller, of Jenera. The entire group of babies was photographed by Mr. Neuenschwand er, Bluffton photographer, and father I of one of the infants. Deputy County Clerk Joy K. Huber, residing south of Bluffton, assumed duties as chief Real Estate Deal a. S. Faze fam vantage of the opportunity in obtain-1 Monroe township. (Continued on page 2) copied by Conner Stewart unloading area will be a boon to the The farm is oc-