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THURSDAY, JAN. 10, 1946 Snowy Owls in Bluffton Area The invasion of Artic or snowy owls this year seems to be one of the largest in history from reports com ing in from about all the northern states. None had been reported in the Bluffton locality until the last fev days when John A. Diller and Albert Steiner saw one of the big wide-wing ers north of town while the two men were hunting rabbits. The huge bird seemed unafraid and would fly short distances and then alight on a fence post. The adult male snowy owl is al most pure white and has a wing spread of about five feet. The bird is 24 inches in length. The imma ture male has some brown flecks in its plumage as does the adult female while the immature female is so heav ily flecked it is dark in appearance. The owls are beneficial and rank along with barn owls in their useful ness to man. Their migration into Ohio is prompted by a shortage of mice and lemmings in the far North. The owls feed entirely on rodents and only in cases of extreme hunger will be driv en to feed on small game. The migration this year had been predicted months in advance by or nithologists. As a rule the migra tion comes in 4 year cycles and starts as a result of acute food shortage in the barren -north country. Dr. Larry Hicks, secretary’ of the A.O.U. at Columbus said, over 75 of the big birds have been reported principally in the nortwestern part Ohio moving in from Michigan. of Order Tree Units Now is The Conservation department again offering tree units free charge to land owners, is has been the custom in past years. The units this year will contain sufficient trees to plant one-quarter acre and will con sist of red pines only. The trees will range from a half in height stock. A limit owner will be unit will probably contain around 125 trees/ foot to a foot and a and are good sturdy of two units per land authorized and each The tree units are very uaexui windbieaks, for erosion control and as protection areas for song birds and other wild life. MUNSON R. BIXEL Hours Office 1-3 P. M. Office, 118 M. e^py St. Phone 120-Y Bluflton, Ohio D. C. BIXEL, (HD GORDON BIXEL, D. 122 South Main St., Bluffton EYESIGHT SPECIALISTS Office Hours: 9:00 A. M.—5:3» P. M. Evenings: Mon., Wed., Fri., to 8:00 P. M. Closed Thursday at. 7:00 temoon. CONSERVATION AFFAIRS Happenings Affecting Woods, Waters and Wildlife By THE BLUFFTON COMMUNITY SPORTSMEN’S CLUB, INC. club was unable to units of trees from to fill all requests. Last year the obtain sufficient the department This was due to the fact that so many orders were received late in the spring and the labor situation at the nurser ies made it impossible to fill all orders. This year the Sportsmen’s club direc tors urge farmers and landowners to get in touch with Wilford Geiger or Harry Barnes immediately and have the application sent in early to avoid the rush. Findlay Outdoor Club Elects New officers of the United Conser vation and Outdoor Ass’n of Hancock county for 1916 are: Carl Jackson, pres. Howard Baldwin, vice pres. Willis Faber, treas. Robert Huff, re cording sec’y Homer Russel, mem bership sec’y and William Jacqua, corresponding sec’y. Membership Dues All memberships to the Bluffton Community Sportsmen’s Club are due on January 1 of each new year regardless of when written. To aid the directors in the task this year of getting in the membership, club mem bers are requested to apply for mem bership cards and not wait until sol icited. Sipce there are 1000 members in the club it takes a long time to make the rounds and contact every member personally. As a result some members are not contacted until late in the year and some are entirely overlooked. So make a point to your card at once from any of newly elected club directors. DELUXE MODEL ED WALTERMIRE Authorized Dealer The Friendly Store get the Warden Seeks Violators Allen County game warden A. J. J^ffferbein has been on the lookout for a party of hunters who have been road hunting killing pheasants out of season. A few days ago Ezra Moser in vestigated some shooting in his game refuge and discovered hunters killed at least four pheasants in reserve which he supervises. had the had Hearing the shots, Moser, who been working in the field nearby, hur ried over to the woods just in time to see a large blue-grey coupe speed away. Further investigation and tracking in the snow led to the dis- NOW ON DISPLAY Has Good Housekeeping and Under writer Approval. Electric light floor illumina tor. Large, dust-tight bag. 20 foot cord and 14 inch floor nozzle. Thumb screw nap adjust ment. Rubber bumper pro tects furniture. covery of the game violation. The pheasants apparently had all been shot while setting. Moser was able to see where the shot had pierced the snow and plenty of feathers scattered around indicated several of the birds were cocks. The game protector was immediate ly notified of the incident. Researchers Give Hunters Reasons For Bird Shortage Wild life researchers offered a be lated alibi to Ohio’s pheasant hunt ers, many of whom came home emp ty-handed during the season which officials of Conserva- the Ohio Department tion and the Cooperative Wild Life Research versity agreed that there was an ap proximate 25 per cent decline in the ring-necked pheasant population, and claimed it was due to: 1. Unfavorable weather during the 1943 and 1945 nesting season, a drought in 1944, combined with the severe 1944-45 winter 2. Changes in the use of land during the wartime whereby meadow acreage was reduced soy beans sup planted corn, and fence corners and roadsides were cleared sharply, cut ting down normal sources of cover and food. Officials cited these other factors which accounted in part for the small bag of pheasants: Scarcity of ammunition reduced control of the pheasants’ natural enemies lack of labor and food available at state game farms and night mowing of al falfa fields causing losses in birds and nests. Celina Cagers Beat Bluffton High, 52-30 Blufftoi^ High cagers ran into a team with too much height and power for them last Friday night and went down to defeat before Celina by a score of 52 to 30 in the Bluffton gymnasium. Except for a disastrous second quarter when the visitors ran wild the local outfit might have had a chance, but a 15-point advantage gained in that period alone was enough to as sure the visitors of an easy victory. At the close of the first quarter the Pirates were trailing by three points, with the count standing. 12 to 9. Then the locals’ offense completely bogged dbwn and they failed to score a single point in the second period while Celina was running the count to 27 to 9 at halftime. In the third stanza, the Burckymen came back into the thick of the fight again to practically match the offen sive efforts of the Celina the score at the close of standing at 40 to 21. Totals Celina team with the period bagged 18 All told, the visitors field goals and 16 free throws to ac count for their 52-point total. Bluff ton had to be content with 10 fielders and a like number of charity tosses. holdover forward from Grimm, last year’s flashy Celina outfit, was the sparkplug of his team’s attack with 19 points. Hilty, of Bluffton, and Bobenmoyer, of Celina, each had 12. The defeat was Bluffton's third in six games and it also was their in Western Buckeye league play. The box score: Bluffton Althaus Smucker Moser Lewis Hilty Sommer Howe Hartman Stonehill Basinger Lee Reagan first 1 5 0 1 0 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 0 1 3 0 12 0 0 0 3 30 52 10 16 10 18 H. S. Reserves Top Celina, 41-20 Score Scoring theft fifth victory in six starts, Bluffton High reserves trounc ed Celina seconds, 41 to 20, last Fri day night on the local court. The Pirate understudies led all the way: 7 to 1 at the quarter 19 to 3 at halftime, and 27 to 19 at the third quarter. In the fourth period the locals racked up 14 points while limit ing the vistors tf only one. Bluffton’s attack was paced by Kirtland with nine points, Bracy with eight R. L. Wilch, Moore and Pogue with six each. Water which comes into a building through a leaky roof spreads out un der the roofing to roof boards, the plates and studs, and into the walls and floors. In addition to damage to the building itself, there is loss of contents and the development of un favorable conditions for the livestock or human beings which the structure was supposed to protect. THE BLUFFTON NEWS, BLUFFTON, OHIO Men's clothing in general has proved entirely inadequate to meet the demand—with shirts, pajamas and underwear almost non-existent. Suits and overcoats are available in only some sizes, and those who are fortunate enough to find a deal er with stock have color, style, etc. It’s out in most instane uni- unit at Ohio Possibility of a new super-high way following the route of the Dixie thru Bluffton appeared one step nearer reliazation last week with an nouncement that the project has been included in a $500,000,000 Ohio highway recommendation made to Public Roads Administration Washington. Despite the fact that food con tinues quite scarce in Switzerland, the Swiss are caring for thousands of refugee children from war-torn sections of Europe. Information to that effect was in a letter from Mrs. Martha Weber, of Switzerland, to hex1 nephew, A. S. Brauen, of Pandora. The letter was made available to The Bluffton News this week when Brauen mentioned it while paying a visit to the office t? renew his subscription. Children cared for by the Swiss come into the country for three months’ visits during which they re ceive good food and clothing, Mrs. Weber writes. “More than 100,000 children have been cared for under the plan so far, and a few days ago 300 came from Holland and 500 from Genoa, Italy. A few days ago they took several hundred children back to France, and the city they came from had a welcoming celebration. In the parade they carried big signs, “Thanks to Switzerland” and both France and Italy have paid touching thanks for what Switzerland has done for them during the war and up to this time. “The food situation continues about the same, and shoes, suits, coffee, tea and the only Getting Out Of Army Is One Thing Find Clothes To Wear Is Another area discharges service others of the nation are next to impossible to fuK long-cherished dreams of “civies” unless Bluffton men with finding it fill their getting back into they can still wear the clothing they had on hand when they left civilian life to go into uniform. the Proposed modernization of Dixie highway was recommended State Highway Director Perry Ford as a part of Ohio’s projected improvements in a national inter regional highway system planned by the federal government. T. As far as Ohio is concerned, the Bluffton’s total tax duplicate for 1945 will net $42,320.01 in tax col lections, according to figures released last week by Allen County Auditor Floyd B. Griffin. Other estimated tax receipts in the 1945 collection period include $26, 767.89 for that part of Richland township in the Beaverdam school district and $4,965.10 for Beaverdam village. 1945 Tax Collections Will Net $42,320.01 For Bluffton Village Despite Food Shortages Swiss Care For Thousands Of Refugee Children English walnuts are items ration that are about free. “At ments per person jello, 250 grams a month per person chocolate, month per person grams macaroni, 500 barley, grams 200 grams o grams meat, eggs 14 pounds of our present are sugar, 500 0 grams 600 lard, 250 two allot- rationed grams a month 150 grams a cookies, 200 grams: f. ur, 250 grams butte", COO 250 cheese, grams cooking, trams bread 11 quarts of milk, and after two years of none, rice in the amount of 250 grams per person. “With 500 grams equal to one pound you can see what we get, and besides that we have to pay heavy taxes. However, we are not com plaining for we had war all around us and it was possible for us to keep out of it. “Practically all American soldiers who come to Switzerland are fine gentlemen, and we have a drawing now for the groups on tour at Biel, and the soldier with the lucky num ber 5000 gets a gold watch, compliments the soldiers have their papers about Switzerland are fine. “But there is another class soldiers. store and stole 50 alarm clocks after night. Then the police went after them and found them in the railroad station at Lau sanne, with the watches and clocks 1j- The in of In Brig they broke into a watches and pointed out, and all thi’u no fault of theirs. Manufacturers livering stocks time, and in quantities to mand. Men’s hats Meanwhile many consoling themselves ing they left behi they went that fails 1 so anxious selection of ?ase of tak- New Super-highway Through Bluffton In State-Federal Improvement Plan reported de- only a little at a no case in sufficient meet the rising de- ire on the scarc are beginning to with stocks at ity list, and shoes be difficult to buy their lowest levels are them et away follow almost exactly network established Department as needed the War national defense. Modern four-lane highways are to be constructed on all approved pro jects, with freedom from grade crossings, etc., and if the proposal is put into effect Bluffton will be on one of the nation’s deluxe motor five The proposed system puts radial freeways into Cleveland, plus a north-south route following the Dixie highway and an east-west route across the central part of the state thru Zanesville, Columbus, Springfield and Dayton. Monroe township in the Bluffton school district will have aggregate tax receipts of $1,092.96 the same area in the Beaverdam district will net $8, 102.24 in taxes and that part of the township in the Columbus Grove school district will yield $9,604.93. Jackson township will have collect ions of $34,770.34, and Lafayette vil lage will receive $4,313.59. on three soldiers. They now are serving 20 years prison terms in Prance.” NEW LOW PRICES! Any Magazine Listed and This Newspaper, Both for Price Shown American Fruit Grower------$2.75 American Girl _____ 3.50 American Poultry Journal— Aviation in Review_______ Capper’s Farmer-------------- Child Life .............................. Christian Herald Coronet .................................... Correct English Country Gentleman (5 Yrs.) Etude Music Magazine......... Farm JmL Sa Farmer’s Wife Flower Grower--------------- Household Hygeia .................................... Liberty (Weekly) Magazine Digest Movie Show National Digest Monthly.4.00 Nat’l Livestock Producer..._ 2.75 Nature (10 Issues, 12 Mos.). 4.00 Open Road (12 Is#., 14 Mo.) 8.50 Outdoors (12 Iss-. 14 Mos.).. 3.50 Parents’ Magazine-----— 8.75 Pathfinder_ .—....._______ 3.00 Photoplay Popular Mechanics 4.25 Popular Science Monthly_ 430 Poultry Tribune----------- 2.65 Reader’s Digest ___ 5.25 Red book __________________ 4.25 Scientific Detective________4.00 Screenland _______ _—-— 8.50 Silver Screen ___________ 3.50 Sports Afield............................830 Successful Farming ......... 2.75 QThe Homemaker 4.00 FltTHURU r’“ get BtfCAIN-COUm' FOR "iS NEWSPAPER A THESE 2.65 4.00 2.65 4.00 »30 4.50 4.00 3.00 4.50 2.65 8.75 2.75 8.75 4.25 4.00 8.50 3.50 The Woman —......... 8.50 OTnie Story 830 QU. 8. Camera_______ _____... 8.15 Four Life Health Used OOt hod W. H. Gratz Family Shoe Store Bluffton, Ohio Store hourf (except Saturday) 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. Saturday, 8 a. m. to 10:30 p. m. It isn’t a good thing to look for trouble—and that’s just about what you do when you neglect a cough or cold. Once they lay you low, colds can be miserable companions. At the first cough—get a bottle of NYALYPTUS the golden cough syrup which con tains eucalyptus oil to loosen phlegm, healing ingredients which soothe wracking coughs due to colds. Ask your Nyal Druggist for Nyal yptus A. Hauenstein & Son You can a I trays step at SWISS INN We’re open 24 hours daily—stop in for lunch— or gas and oil for your car AND DON’T FORGET THOSE SUNDAY CHICKEN DINNERS— they’re tops—real home cooking. MEALS AT ALL HOURS MEALS AT ALL HOURS—WE NEVER CLOSE CAR SERVICING—DAY ANITNIGHT SWISS INN 3 miles south of Bluffton on Route 25 HIRE S’ OUR «RY BEST ♦TRUE STORY _______L-----1 Yr. PATHFINDER --------------—1 Yr. SILVER SCREEN ^...6Mo. HOUSEHOLD ............... -1 Yr. POULTRY TRIBUNE ______1 Yr. FARM JOURNAL AND FARMER’S WIFE 4Yr. HERALD MOVIE SHOW CHILD LIFE COUNTRY S AFIELD------1 Yr. rjU. S. CAMERA--------- 1 Yr. CURRENT HISTORY PAGE THREE OFFERSMAGAZINES THE BIG 7 BAHGAIN SPECIAL! THIS NSWSFAPEH |1 YEARj AND SIX GREAT MAGAZINES ALL SEVEN FOR ONLY ★Check one of these in place of TRUE STORY^i AMERICAN GIRL__ 1 Yr. CHRISTIAN .6 Mo, FILL IN AND MAIL TO THIS NEWSPAPER TODAY ou prefer! (Boys), OPEN Issues)---------- 14 Mo. RENTS’ MAG. ........ 1 Yr. PROTESTANT VOICE (Weekly) _..l Yr. SCREEN'LAND_____ 1 Yr. THE WOMAN _____ 1 Yr. THE HOMEMAKER 6 Mo. CORRECT ENGLISH 6 Mo. OUTDOORS (12 In.) 14 Mo. .1 Yr. THE TOP VALUE OFFER This Newspaper, I Yr. AND FOUR BIG ALL FIVt FOR ONLY TRUE STORY ____________ .6 Mo. POULTRY TRIBUNE ..............1 Yr. QAMER. FRUIT GROWER..... 1 Yr. AMERICAN PLTRY. JRNL...1 Yr. FARM JOURNAL AND FARMER’S WIFE_1 Yr. NATIONAL LIVESTOCK PRODUCER______ lYr. MOTHER’S HOME LIFE.___ 1 Yr. SUCCESSFUL FARMING____lYr. HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE -lYr. PATHFINDER (Weekly) _._..26Im. CAPPER’S FARMER ................1 Yr. BREEDER’S GAZETTE 6 Mo. Check magazines desired and enclose with coupon. Gentlemen: I enclose $--------------- Please send me die offer with a year’s subscription to your paper. NAME----------- STREIT OR RJJL COO