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PAGE TEN Henry Habe omas Amos •125 a Miss Nithbi Mrs A. Ha Mr. ed vis Mrs. News Our Grandfathers Read From Issue Of November 2, 1911 gger bought the farm arr, to be vacated by Marth a Schumacher left for ario, Canada to assist her brother El i and family in moving uenstein returned from sit to Salem, Oregon. s. E. C. Romey will re- and Mr turn Rapids, Iowa, next mey enjoyed an extend her parents, Mr. and ilty. Mrs. Ro John A. Chari id, W. C. Augsburger. ert and C. P. Doty re- T__ turoet a hunt in the Maine a moose and four They bagged Misses Goldie and Sylvia Augs- pany. burger entertained a young folks at their Augsburger next week. He paid near Beaverdam for music and games. A’.tending BABY BEEF SPECIALS THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Babij Beef ROASTS lb. 59c Baby Beef Your Choice LUNCHEON MEATS Minced Ham Dutch Loaf Pickle & Pimento Veal Loaf Cheese Loaf Souse. All For lb. 49c MILK BREAD jolly crowd of country home an evening of wore: Misses Hazel Augs Steele, Bessie Morts burger, Ruth Hazel B. Augsburger and Wesley Eversole, at 5:00 A. M. instead property of Mrs. Tho the St. John’s church, the property soon. Theo. I). Sh ?id was one of the lucky Will Steiner purchased a load of drawe ing a rs in th* govmment land draw ening of the Rosebud Indiar resen’ ation in South Dakota. new clerk for the Gratz Sto Ethel Lewis, Mess Don Roy and Arnold. Harry Yant, Hermar 1 now hahv tnrl their burger, and Leonard Hedges. Gallant boucht the 40 Mrs Xbbv Main Roily James Coon purchased the •16 acre body a half hour of rest. 1 win daughters we and Mrs. Frank Marl Ed McHenry plans gasoline and coal nil Hiram Sutter ha n extra to Mr. to sell out his outfit ed the Basinj lie wil er near occupy feeding horses in Indiana. Miss Corinna Sutter will be the fyfacteA, ^ehMce. Home Killed Meats BEEF PORK VEAL LAMB Everyone knows beef is high, but good judgment of. our buyers has made it pos sible for a Real Milk Fed Baby Beef Special for the Holidays. Baby Beef T-Bone Round Sirloin STEAKS lb. 75c Lean and Fresh RIB BOIL lb. 45c Beef Ground lb. 59c BABY BEEF Bl/ THE QUARTER Fores lb. 45c Hinds ... Ib. 47c NORDIC/ICE CREAM ALL FLAVORS YOUR CHOICE Gallons, $1.50 yPints, 25c Quarts, 45c SHERBETS—All Flavors Pints, 19c AUTHORIZED DEALER BIRDS EYE Nu-Maid DIXIE W* mRRCRRinE Your Choke Is your home Freezer or locker getting low? See us for replacement of Beef Pork- Veal Poultry or Frozen Foods. Sitrne 'p Coni- FOODS Our Own Make Fresh or Smoked Sausage^ Ring Bologna. OLEO 3 lbs. $1.00 MILLER’S MODEL DAIRY’ Homogenized Plain Buttermilk Chocolate Your Choice Large Bologna in Piece lb. 29c Skinless Weiners lb. 45c Limburger Cheese lb. 65c Quart 20c Sliced—No Rind BACON lb. 69c 6 to 8 lb. Avg. Long Horn Cheese lb. 55c kz or whol? FRESH RAY’S BREAD FRESH loaf 13c Tl I 1 OH (n landscaped site ghway riffht-of-wav Thomas J. Her gram of traffic s Register in Lima THE BLUFFTON NEWS, BLUFFTON, OHIO OHIO WELCOMES YOU .1..-._. OHIO DEPARTMENT OF TMOMfcS KCBWCRT like the above are to be wi I serve a th ref ccted by the Ohio Dejartment of Registration Months Draft Starts mairk me s on all principal routes tering Ohio to bid motorists wel- MlTv well as to remind them to those Allen Allen county men, including from Bluffton, must register at county selective service headqu in the old post office building at Lima. Hancock county registration is Findlay. After registration is completed, comprehensive eight-page question naires will be mailed to registrants by age groups, again starting with the older men first. Five Classes On the basis of answered question naires, local boards will classify re gistrants in one of five classes. If in Class I he is available for military service, or else in the armed forces or a student taking military training. Class II is deferred because of occupational status and Class III be cause of dependency. Class IV in cludes those exempted specifiically by law, or because they are physically unfit for service. The fifth class is for those who reach the age of 26 before being inducted. The Army is expected to ask for the induction of only 10,000 men in the November draft call because of a lack of training facilities. In Decem ber, the call probably will be stepped up to a total of 15,000 men. SHORTS & MIDDLING where Mr. Stein business. Ezra Schun Washington an to spend some home of his In Willis A. Schui and their relati to of Registrants are asked to reply 16 questions, including age, place birth, occupation, marriage status, previous military service, and whether the registrant ever has been rejected for military service. the A new method of detecting presence of weevils in grain permits elevator operators or grain buyers to determine within a few minutes whether or not weevils are present even when no evidence is apparent to the eye. Grain kernels soaked in a stain of acid fuchsin show red dots if the kernels con tain weevil larvae. now The government support price for 1948 northern grown alfalfa seed will be 25 cents a pound. The price is the same as that paid in 1947, when the Commodity Credit Corporation bought very little alfalfa seed because the open market price was higher than the support price. County AAA com mittees will have purchase and loan forms. The U. S. 1948 hay crop is expected to be the smallest since 1939, which would make the tonnage 2.5 per cent less than the average. The carry-over of bigger than normal so there enough to carry the reduced of livestock through the feeding season, ages other than hay are lik more plentiful than usual, and the prospects of a record tonnage of feed grains harvested in 1948 will take up supplies. of hay 10-year hay is will be number 1948-49 Supplies of rough to be slack in hay allocated $2,344,66 Ohio has been from federal funds used to partially reimburse school boards for lunches served to pupils, but the federal al lottment is available only if it is matched by a similar amount from within the state. The lunch program is intended to improve the diet of school children and also to provide an outlet for foods bought by govem available ?n absorbed by ment agencies or those amounts larger than are normal market demand. -fold pur pose: (1) the state line, (2) n of Traffic io Department YA will be in an oroxi matFl v vc* c* pnlnr C(P is part of •ert’s state afetv. They How and white rhey will be re about three nn For 21 Settlement Week for youths i their 18t gister withi must ■hieving of i noun hdav Many fror e Ohio St Mr and Mr an- welcome and (3) p* Ohio week here visiting in the I r, Mr. and Mrs. ter and family and friends. ho attended the Among those 60th anniversar afternoon, the present who had attended the service I when the church was dedicated. I St. John Sunday w’ere thirty-two Harold Boaz expects to leave Fri-I day for Iowa City, whore he is to be I an instructor in chemistry in thel State University of Iowa. I Rev. and Mrs. D. J. Unruh and! family left for their home in New-| ton, Kansas, Monday. Enroute they expect to spend two days in Chica go in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kuglin. Rolland Burkhart is spending the w'eek in Columbus where he is serv ing as one of the team of judges at the shearing contests held each morning at the Ohio State Fair. missionary Mary Ellen Gerber, from Africa, arrived at the home of her parents, Mr. and Gerber. Thursday. Mrs. Manes (Concluded from page 1) considered acceptable. Pupils Slighted, Charge Because they refused to participate in dancing at high school social func tions, these pupils have been subject to embarrassment and slighting re marks from teachers and pupils, the committee charged. they They also asked that permission to dance and play cards be accorded only to those pupils whose parents personally sign a written request therefor at the superintendent’s of fice. In answer to charges that dancing and card playing were taught in the home economics department during class periods, school administrators pointed out that both are mentioned in the text book in connection with the preparation and serving of form al dinners, but there was no instruc tion given in either during regular class periods. However, they added that the home economics instructor, Miss Elizabeth Mohr, explained the rudiments 'of both outside the class period to those pupils requesting such information. ARD OF THANKS was a pleasure to receive so beautiful anniversary greet md gifts in honor of our golden an wedding, only once thank all Bluffton Man Hurt In Mishap On Lincoln Kenneth Bowyer, 19, of Route 1, Bluffton, received a broken right leg in an automobile crash at 7:30- p. m. last Thursday at the intersection of the Swaney road and the Lincoln highway, which resulted in the death of a Washington, D. C., man. Donald G. Taylor, 25, died Satur day morning in Lima Memorial hospital of injuries received in the mishap, one mile east of Beaverdam. Taylor’s death reportedly was caused by a skull fracture. Taylor’s .wife, Ruth, 25, also is a patient in the Lima hospital, where she is recovering from fractures of the right arm and right ankle and cuts about.the head and face. Bowyer also was taken to the Lima hospital. He is the son of Bert Bowyer, who lives two and one i half miles east of Bluffton. The state highway patrol reported Ithat Bowyer’s car had turned from I the Swaney road onto the Lincoln (highway. The Taylors were driving least on the Lincoln. A 15 per cent decrease in the num ber of chicks raised in the United States in 1948 means there are 279,- a safetv tn 000,000 fewer of those birds available The sierns si the Divi- for Sunday dinners than were raised nd ^qfet of HighA v of the in 1944. U. S. farmers raised 914,793, 000 chickens in 1944 and the number and will raised has been successively smaller iina* ton ot niue, each year since then. High feed costs istallation high labor costs, and only moderate The New KING-SIZE COOLERATOR ELECTRIC /vow- MpTURt society girls The Women’s Missionary John is to entertain the congregation. of St. of the Mrs. ton is week. Can th is Llewellyn Zimmerly of visiting relatives here Dancing And Card Playing At H. S. Draws Fire all OF THE GOODNESS OF FOODS IB HOME FREEZER OtiEK IS ca. ft CAwe/ry/ ^4 ST0RAGt ARRANGEMENT Just one of many special fea tures, this storage basket arrangement helps you find what you want—when you w’ant it! With this handsome, big freezer, you liave your own “market” at your finger-tips! Come in today and let us shou you the many other features that make Coolerator your best huv in home freezers! TW that We stings those sending Habegger Mr. & Mrs. Henry excellence some one Those who attain any commonly spend life in single pursuit, for excellence is not often gained upon easier terms. “Fcm-O-Mw1 Fr..ting vr»» it becked by a 5-y»ar warranty. Select FREEZERS Wai term ire's Your Friendly Store Fred Bixel died at Camp Sherman. Death was due to pneumonia which he had suffered for 10 weeks. He was the first Bluffton boy to lay down his life for the cause of the nation. Willard Fisher passed the exam for Uncle Sam’s Army. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gorby are the parents of a new baby boy at Chicago. The We Mean Business class of the Church of Christ met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Long. George Woods, who passed the ex am for Chief Yeoman, has been ap pointed chief petty officer on the U. S. S. Eagle. T. G. Scheid was elected president, and Lysle Baumgartner, sec’y of the Bluffton Tennis Ass’n. P. B. Amstutz and sons will rebuild his sawmill destroyed by fire. Albert Deppler left for camp last Friday from Toledo. You can paint HERE year. Com count by Leaver Phone 175-221. kshk NEWS OUR FATHERS READ FROM ISSUE OF May 2,1918 Jay Mumma has been transferred to Camp Perry from Baltimore. Your Copies Are Here Over 68,000 of these booklets were requested by agricultural teachers and county agents for educational work. POULTRY MANAGEMENT wienval re, management, and to boost your profits. ?eeding lives you ca hints BEEF CALF weight-estimi 9 ch ind fi ts" of end ng. 1 COME llA FOR THURSDAY, SEPT. 2. 1948 3Iask!! No Price Advance L. S. Dukes moved to Findlay where he will occupy a fine new home. His son will be in charge of the big farm north of town. An eleven pound son was bom to Mr. and Mrs. John Reichenbach. Clifton (Wifty) Sprunger left for Camp Taylor at Louisville, Ky. Frauen Verein will meet with Mrs. Sam Stepleton. Pres. S. K. Mosiman returned from a business trip to Minnesota in inter est of the College. Earl Good was appointed captain of the county contingent during the trip to Camp Sherman. J. E. Steiners’ 'put out the fire at their home before the fire laddies got there, much to the chagrin of the firefighters and assembled crowd. Two buckets of water did the trick. The Ladie’s Aid of the Catholic church met and surprised Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Owens in honor of their Golden wedding. YOUR FREE COPIES MASTLIE FEED MILL Leland W. Basinger, Mgr. PHONE 317-W Feeds, Fertilizer, Grain and Custom Grinding on e jy the regular KURFEES quality at the same prices you paid last in today and make your dollars buying KURFEES quality paints a reasonable price. dam tiardujare Co. Wow SISALKRAFT CM a&c FARM BETTER MAKE MORE MONEY K*"*" ?ios,.‘.u^ Beaverdam, Ohio ...__ ,^4»$»IOJJe.COViMt tileee and matey oticen. MONEY-SAVING FARM USES KEEP A SUPPLY OF GENUINE SISALKRAFT ON YOUR FARM ALWAYS FREE SAMPLE frdt btjwai&a* Steinman Bros. Lumber Co. “Ask Steinmans” Hours: 7:30 a. m. to 5 p. m.—Saturday 7:30 a. in. to 3 p. m. 236 Cherry Street Phone 360-W