THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1949
NW
.4
MODEL 11 FC
was a
Custom Slaughtering
Beef $1 per head Hogs Dressed 25c Cwt.
Hogs dressed and processed ready for
locker or home freezer $2.50 per cwt.
Also beef by thelquarter and hogs by the side at reason
11 able prices.
INK BROS.
QUALITY MEATS
9
Freezes and stores 385 lbs.
of delicious food full
11.1 cubic-foot cooacit''
Fashions have
changed since I860
when the first
NEW HOME sewing
machines were
produced. Today
there’s a “New Look"
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$
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Table Style
Shearton
627.
any
other
$292.
$177 in mahog
$172 in walnut
models $142 to
OTHER
ACTION
Easy terms, 20
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tG6^C
STIMULATES HIGHER
EGG PRODUCTION QUICKLY
AND ECONOMICALLY
Give “^low” layers Egg-Lac Pellets
at noon and watch how fast they
come into production. Egg-Lac
Pellets are just what you’ve been
looking for to giye good pullets a
oetter chance. Stop in soon. Get
Egg-Lac for extra egg profits.
MASTER FEED MILL
Leland W. Basinger, Mgr.
Feeds, Fertilizer, Grain and Custom Grinding
We Deliver Phone 317-W
ftftfioiVfWcesf
INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER
S
FREEZERS
I
Freezer buying-action now
means a happy family-reac
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better it savys time, work and waste!
C. F. Niswander
McCormick-Deering Dealer
Bluffton, Ohio
first party press’
We repair any make sewing machine
WALTERMIRE’S
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1
FOR
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PERFECT SPEED CONTROL BUILT-IN SEWING LAMP WEST
INGHOUSE MOTOR FULL SET OF ATTACHMENTS.
grain dry enough to
When is
combine?
Extension
State University say this question
can be quickly and easily answered
by any farmer by making a
test.
specialists at Ohio
simple
ounces
can be
All that is needed is a few
of ammonium chloride, which
obtained from any drugstore as
druggists use it in making cough
syrup. This chloride salt must be
kept in an
used.
Following his conviction Gara
denied bail pending appeal of
case to a higher court.
until
air-tight container
the test, place a
of the salt in a
To make
half
small
teaspoonful
dry bottle and cork it tightly, and
The intercollegiate Y. M. C. A.
conference in session at Lake Geneva,
Indiana, last w’eek sent a protest to
Attorney-General Tom Clark on the
handling of the case of Larry Gara,
Bluffton college instructor now serv
ing a term in the federal prison for
violation of the peacetime selective
service act.
Gara, who w’as convicted in the
Federal court in Toledo on a charge
of counselling Charles Rickert, Bluff
college student, not to register for
the peacetime drafti was sentenced to
18 months in Federal prison.
Used Equipment
See whatwe.hav
College Y. M. C. A. Conference Sends
Protest On Gara Case To Washington
was
his
dis-
The following petition was
patched to Attorney-General Clark:
“We, the undersigned, are con
cerned about the imprisonment of
Professor Larry Gara of Blufftoq
College, Bluffton, Ohio, on a charge
of counselling Charles Rickert, presi
dent of the college YMCA, not to
register for the Selective Service
Act of 1948. We wish to express
grave concern over the violation of
religious and civil liberties, and the
denial of the expression of conscien
tious conviction involved in this trial.
“We are members of many Christ
ian groups on many mid-west college
and university campuses. We repre
sent a great many different attitudes
toward
we do
about:
“(1)
military service. However,
unite in expressing concern
The sentencing of Larry Gara
to eighteen months in prison
for counselling Charles Rick
ert not to- register, even
though Rickert had already
informed his draft board of
his intention not to register
before he ever met Professor
Gara
The' right of any person to
discuss his religious beliefs
with another, and to advise
another to follow the dictates
of his conscience.
The denial of bail to Professor
Gara.
“The Toledo Blade commented
editorially on March 16, 1949, that
‘it seemed to us that a mighty nation
had gone out of its way to punish
a peace loving man.’ It seems in
credible that Mr.- Gara has been
denied bail in both the Toledo court
and the Court of Appeals in Cincin
nati, Ohio, when men guilty of serious
crimes are often allowed to be free
on bail.
“If a man who merely encourages
another to be true to his conscience
in relation to conscription is guilty
of breaking the law and subject to
imprisonment, then religious liberty
is a dead letter in this country.
“We shall be profoundly interested
in the outcome of this appeal of Lar
ry Gara, and we earnestly petition
your support concerning the above
three points in order that justice may
be secured to preserve the American
concepts of civil rights and religious
liberty."
(3)
THE BLUFFTON NEWS. BLUFFTON OHIO
Test Determines If
Grain Is Ready For Combine
take it to the field. Shell out a
handful of kernels from a head of
grain and fill the bottle about two
thirds full, and cork again.
Shake the bottle 50 times, or for
about half a minute, and watch
the ammonium chloride.
If it still runs freely after the
shaking, the grain is dry enough
to harvest with a combine.
Kolvas
Kolvas
guests
tore you buy
1 Model International
Tractor, good condition
1 Ford Ferguson Tractor
with plows and cultivator
1 David Bradley 7 foot
Power Mower
1 McCormick-Deering 6 ft.
Power Mower
BLUFFTON FARM
EQUIPMENT CO.
E. F. Schmidt, Prop.
Massey-Harris Sales & Service
Open Saturday evenings
Bluffton phone 260-W
105 E. Elm St.
of
If the salt sticks to the side
the bottle, the grain will spoil in
storage if harvested. To make the
test on soy beans, cut the beans in
half with a knife before putting
them in the bottle.
Richland Center
Mr. and Mrs. P. D. James and
sons Ronald and Victor of Columbus
and Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Gratz
and daughter Sharon were Siunday
evening supper guests of
Mrs. Earl Matter and
Carolyn.
Mr. and
daughter
of South
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bixler
Bend, Ind., were week end guests at
the Amos Gerber home. Sunday
dinner guests was Mrs. Frank Burk
holder. Evening callers were Mr.
and Mrs. Milton Lugibill and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Burkholder
and daughter Judy and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Gerber and family.
Mr. and
Jimmy of
guests at
Luginbuhl
Mrs. Chas. Sharp and son
Norwalk were week end
the Amos and Weldon
home.
Past week callers at
Gratz and Richard Core
Mr. and Mrs. Wilford
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr.
and
and
Mrs.,
the Ernest
home were:
Gratz and
Reno Gratz,
Mrs.
E. I
and
Mrs.
Mrs. Wm. Core of Mansfield and
Gratz, Mr.
of Lima, Mr.
Anna Core of Lima.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Amstutz spent
last Thursday and Friday with Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Smith of Lakeview.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hochstettler and
family of Allen
Monday evening
the Earl Matter
Park, Mich., were
supper guests at
home.
James Kolvas and
Mr. and Mrs.
daughter of Danville, Ill. and
Ruth Kolvas of Toledo were
end guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Amstutz and son Harold.
Miss
week
Wm.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schaublin
entertained at supper Friday even
ing in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Hilty of Arcadia, Calif., who were
visiting there a few days, the fol
lowing: Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ream of
Lima, Mr .and Mrs. Carey Niswand
er, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hilty and
Mrs. Mabel Hilty. Mr. and Mrs.
Chas.
Mabel Hilty.
Strahm were evening callers.
Wm.
and
were last Wednesday dinner
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Mrs.
Amstutz, Mrs. James
daughter Miss Ruth
and family of Cairo.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
family and Ernest Gratz
Monday evening
Lee Coon.
Federal grades
Choice, Good,
Utility—Grades
other letter de
federal grading
Olt
and
last
Core
called
and Mrs.
on Mr.
Wm. Amstutz and
Janies Kolvas and
Ruth Kolvas spent
evening with Mr.
Mr. and Mrs.
son Harold, Mrs.
daughter, Miss 1
last Wednesday
and Mrs. Wm.
sons. Ice cream
ed.
Amstutz, Jr.,
and cake
were serv-
Walter
Mr.
Acadia,
Walter
dinner
Emanuel
and Mr.
were
Mr.
and daughter,
was
of
shocked to
Mrs. Harry
This community
learn of the death
Wingate who passed away last Fri
day in Lima Memorial hospital. Mr.
and Mrs. Wingate were former own
ers of Swiss Inn and she was also
a member of Richland Grange.
of meat are Prime,
Commercial, and
such as A, AA, or
signations, are not
terms.
HAMMAN BROS
“TheSup-Erb Brush M^
FOR
Brushes Mops Dusters
Brooms Polishes Waxes
Combs Brushes -Rugs
Chamois Soap Powder
PHONE BLUFFTON 625R
or consult either
RAY HAMMAN
Bluffton, Ohio
or
BOB
Columbus Grove, R. D. 2
Nuptials Solemnized
In Home Ceremony
A pretty home wedding was the
setting for the marriage of Miss
Bonnie Marie Wertenberger, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A.
Wertenberger, Arlington, to Mr.
Melvin Ray Nusbaum, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jacob Nusbaum, of Bluff
ton, which took place in the home
of the bride’s parent s at 2:30
o’clock Sunday afternoon, June 26.
Rev. Carl Linder, pastor of Good
Hope Lutheran church, officiated at
the double ring ceremony in the
presence of the immediate families
and friends of the couple. The
home was decorated with garden
flowers.
Mrs. Samuel Fowler, Ft. Wayne,
cousin of the groom, played the fol
lowing nuptial music, “Because,” “Oh
Promise Me,” “I Love You Truly,"
and Lohengrin’s Bridal Chorus.
Dr. Fowler, the soloist sang "Al
ways.”
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride wore a pink taffeta street
length dress. Her fingertip veil fell
from a tiara of pink bows and white
jewelry included a double strand of
pearls and gold bracelet, which her
mother wore at her wedding forty
years ago.
Mrs. Robert Diller, Bluffton, a
sister of the groom, was the matron
of honor. She was attired in a
green taffeta dress and her corsage
was of yellow carnations. Miss
Edith Nusbaum, also sister of the
groom, was bridesmaid. She wore
a blue taffeta dress and a corsage of
pink carnations.
Little Jane Ann Gillespie, Arling
ton, cousin of the bride, was the
flower girl. She wore a pink frock
trimmed in lace. Ring bearers were
Jo Ann and Kay Wertenberger,
Dunkirk, nieces of the bride. They
wore yellow pinafores. Robert Dil
ler, of Bluffton, served as best man
for the groom.
Following the wedding a reception
was held for 50 guests. A three
tiered wedding cake, topped by a
miniature bride and groom and dec
orated with yellow and pink roses, I
centered the table. Assisting in the
serving were Mrs. Raymond Porter,
Misses Jane and June Cramer and
Mrs. Halle Turnbell, of Arlington
and Mrs. Orlin Wertenberger of
Dunkirk.
The couple took a trip to Jackson,
Michigan, and are now making
their home with the bride’s parents.
The bride is a graduate of Ar
lington high school and is employed
at the National Automotive Fibres,
Findlay. The groom is a graduate
of Mt. Cory high school and is a
veteran of three years service in
the army. He is employed by the
Nickel Plate railroad at Bluffton.
LEGAL NOTICE
In the Common Pleas Court of
Allen County, Ohio.
Case No. 38908
Enos P. Steiner. Plaintiff.
Mary E. Sommers, et al., Defendants.
The defendants, Mary E. Sommers. 2308
East 6th Street. Spokane. Washington. Noah
N. Steiner, Tuleta. Bee County. Texas, Harold
M. Steiner, Flora Dale. Pennsylvania, Loren
F. Steiner. 14l| St. Clair Street. Vincennes,
Indiana, Anna" E. Steiner, an incompetent
person. State Hospital North, Orofino, Idaho,
and Dr. E. L, Berry. Superintendent of the
State Hospital North. Orofino, Idaho, the
person having/ the custody of the Defendant,
Anna E. Sterner, will take notice that on
the 6th day of May, 1949, the plaintiff, Enos
P. Steiner, filed his petition against them in
the Court of Common Pleas of Allen County.
Ohio, the sar ie being Case No. 38908 in said
Court, for th
in said petit on described, to-wit:
"Inlot num ie
five (275) ir
Partition of certain real estate
ed Two Hundred Seventy
the J. M. Eaton’s Sixth
the Village of Bluffton,
Addition o
Allen Coupt:
The prayer
of court for
and for oth
fendants are e
on the 30th a
will be taker
and
Ohio.’’
said petition is for an order
partition of said real estate
equitable relief. Said de
tuned to answer said petition
of July. 1949, or judgment
igainst them,
os P. Steiner,
Plaintiff.
By
Hilty of
an dMrg.
Saturday
and Mrs.
and is.
Calif.
Schaublin
guests of
o But well
•wight C. Murray
and
hn K. Romey,
lis Attorneys.
13
Have more fun this summer
witl a LAUSON
OUTBJARD MOTOR
Single Outboard $132.10
Twin Outboard $182.70
ELLENBERGER BROS.
Hotpoint Sales & Service
Phone 255-T 105 S. Main St.
•i
o'k
AMBULANCE SERVICE
I
hone 222-W 239 S. Main
Cherries
Trucked rect from Northern Michigan
Fine for Canning or Freezing
Sour 25 lb. lug .,. $4.50
Sweet 25 lb. lug $5.50
Cherries ripe about July 12
Place your order now. You will be notified when cherries
arrive.
HILTY’S FARM MARKET
2*4 miles north of Pandora on Crawfis College Road
Phone 97-A Pandora Exchange
Buy Your (fed Car
NOWand Save
fifYw
FordDealers
"BRIKADIER" Typifies
The Brikcrete for All
Exterior Walls of this
Home Costs Only .. 1
PAGE THREE
Brikcrete
Economy
And for all partition walls onli
Same low prices per square foot:
you may be planning to build.
Brikcrete combines colorful bet
of masonry at its best—with a 1
Designed and proportioned to fit modem styling. Laid*
up face size, 12 inches long by 3^2 inches high. Two
thicknesses 8-inch and 4-inch.
Self-contained insulation values because of a 43% void.
Strength and endurance combine with light weight and
low absorption.
Local processing of local materials effect large saving* in
manufacturing—passed along in the form of better
quality and lower prices.
Visit our plant. See the product. Get estimate. Or writ*
for literature.
Blueprints of the "Brikadier” now available.
$178.28
•r any size or type noma
ty—and all the values
/er-than-lumber price.
Bluffton Cement Block’lnc.,
305 East Cherry St. Phone 365-W
Bluffton, Ohio
nni^rDETr
UpIII
I Lm I
Ibb