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                    <text>[page 1]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of Conger School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
DEDICATION PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
The James A. Conger Elementary School&#13;
&#13;
Friday May 11, 1956</text>
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                    <text>[page 2]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 2 of Conger School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
Dedication Program&#13;
&#13;
CONGER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
[photo of Conger School]&#13;
&#13;
"Today's Youth, Tomorrow's Citizens;&#13;
&#13;
Build Today for Tomorrow"&#13;
&#13;
FRIDAY MAY 11, 1956&#13;
&#13;
8:00 P.M.</text>
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                    <text>[page 3]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 3 of Conger School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
THE JAMES A. CONGER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
The idea of giving a name to what had long been known as "East" School had its&#13;
&#13;
origin among the people of the school community. The process by which the change of&#13;
&#13;
names came about was long, as is always the case where democratic action prevails.&#13;
&#13;
But out of the total process came the voice and the will of the people. And it was&#13;
&#13;
quite natural for the people to want their school named for the principal who had&#13;
&#13;
served them so long and so well, who was loved by so many, and whose loss is still&#13;
&#13;
deeply felt. The late James A. Conger, better known as "Jim," would have wanted&#13;
&#13;
no better monument to his name than this fine modern educational plant, proudly&#13;
&#13;
serving the children and youth of a grateful community.&#13;
&#13;
THE CONSTRUCTION PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Construction of the new addition to Conger Elementary School began on April&#13;
&#13;
20, 1955, and the building was first used for school purposes on March 5, 1956. It is&#13;
&#13;
of masonry, reinforced conccrete, and structural steel construction, the exterior being&#13;
&#13;
bricks of red Delaware clay.&#13;
&#13;
The addition contains four classrooms, modern toilet facilities, kitchen, chair&#13;
&#13;
storage room, and an enlargement to the gymnasium auditorium. All ceilings in the&#13;
&#13;
new construction are finished in eggshell tone accoustical plaster; floors throughout&#13;
&#13;
are of asbestos tile in harmonious colors which give an overall effect of pleasantness&#13;
&#13;
and relaxation. Classroom lighting is accomplished by two 28-foot banks of fluores-&#13;
&#13;
cent fixtures, and a special light-diffusing glass in the upper sash of the windows. &#13;
&#13;
Woodwork is natural-finished birch; chalkboards are green clearsite composition and&#13;
&#13;
tackboards are green cork composition.&#13;
&#13;
Each classroom is equipped with a sink and drinking fountain, as well as metal&#13;
&#13;
lockers for pupil coat storage. Heating is by pressurized hot water, fired by automatic&#13;
&#13;
gas burner, and classroom heating units are the Nesbitt book-shelf type for greater&#13;
&#13;
utility and space economy.&#13;
&#13;
The original building was completely redecorated and remodeled, and the original&#13;
&#13;
furniture has been almost completely replaced with modern movable furniture in blond&#13;
&#13;
finish. The installation of a centralized time-control system; an electrically operated&#13;
&#13;
fire alarm system; a public address system equipped with inter-com, AM-FM radio, &#13;
&#13;
and phonograph; and a 9-foot cyclone-type fence around the play areas, add further&#13;
&#13;
to the convenience, safety, and efficiency of the entire school plant.&#13;
&#13;
Cost of the project has been established at $90,000 for construction; $60,000 for&#13;
&#13;
remodeling; and $15,000 for furnishing.&#13;
&#13;
THE GLEE CLUB&#13;
&#13;
Beginning in 1952 the school has had a glee club, made up largely of fifth and&#13;
&#13;
sixth grade pupils. During the 1954-55 school year, when space for rehearsals during&#13;
&#13;
school time was completely lacking, and again during the 1955-56 school year until&#13;
&#13;
completion of the building program, it was necessary to abandon the glee club as a part&#13;
&#13;
of the regular curriculum. It was re-activated in March, 1956, and has nearly 40&#13;
&#13;
members from the 4th, 5th, and 6th grades, all admitted to membership as a result of&#13;
&#13;
try-outs. The addition to our school program is made possible by the splendid co-&#13;
&#13;
operation of teachers, pupils, and parents with the director, Miss Mack.</text>
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                    <text>[page 4]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 4 of Conger School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
Dedication Program&#13;
&#13;
CONGER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 11, 1956 -- 8:00 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
(The yellow roses have been placed in memory of Mr. Conger by the school faculty)&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL ANTHEM (Directed by Mr. Eugene Ross)		Audience&#13;
&#13;
Audience please remain standing for invocation&#13;
&#13;
INVOCATION						The Rev. Father William C. O'Brian&#13;
&#13;
							Pastor, St. Mary's Catholic Church&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC							Conger School Glee Club&#13;
&#13;
1. Still, Still With Thee . . . . . Mendelssohn&#13;
&#13;
2. To Thee, O Country . . . . . . . Eichberg&#13;
&#13;
3. Walking At Night . . . . . . . . Czech Folk Song&#13;
&#13;
Miss Joan Mack, Director; Miss Lila Howe, Accompanist&#13;
&#13;
PRESENTATION OF THE BUILDING BY THE CONTRACTOR&#13;
&#13;
					Mr. Orville E. Norris&#13;
&#13;
PRESENTATION OF THE BUILDING BY THE ARCHITECT&#13;
&#13;
					Mr. Galen Oman,&#13;
&#13;
					Oman &amp; Cleland, Architects&#13;
&#13;
					Columbus, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
ACCEPTANCE OF THE BUILDING BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION&#13;
&#13;
					Mr. Bob Burns, President&#13;
&#13;
					Delaware City Board of Education&#13;
&#13;
IN APPRECIATION				&#13;
		&#13;
					Mr. Leonard A. Brubaker, Principal, Conger&#13;
&#13;
					Elementary School&#13;
&#13;
					Mrs. J. H. Salisbury, President, Conger Ele-&#13;
&#13;
					mentary School Parent-Teacher Association&#13;
&#13;
INTRODUCTION OF GUESTS			&#13;
&#13;
					Mr. Carl L. Hopkins, Superintendent,&#13;
&#13;
					Delaware City Schools&#13;
&#13;
DEDICATION ADDRESS: "Education for Modern Living"&#13;
&#13;
					Dr. Lewis E. Harris, Executive Secretary,&#13;
&#13;
					The Ohio School Boards Association&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC					The Glee Club&#13;
&#13;
1. Holy, Holy, Holy . . . . . . Schubert&#13;
&#13;
2. Beautiful Dreamer . . . . .  Foster&#13;
&#13;
3. America the Beautiful . . .  Ward&#13;
&#13;
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE			Audience, standing&#13;
&#13;
BENEDICTION				The Rev. H. C. Heinlein&#13;
&#13;
					Minister, Grace Methodist Church&#13;
&#13;
Reception in Room 3 following the program. All children must be accompanied&#13;
&#13;
by adults.</text>
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                    <text>[page 5]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 5 of Conger School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
SUPERINTENDENT D. R. SMITH&#13;
&#13;
It is appropriate to mention the late Superintendent D. R. Smith as the person&#13;
&#13;
who was in large part responsible for the early planning stages of the project which&#13;
&#13;
we are tonight dedicating. Let us continue to remember him and pay tribute to him&#13;
&#13;
for the tireless energy and faithful service which he gave to the educational program of&#13;
&#13;
our community.&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF EDUCATION&#13;
&#13;
Bob Burns, President		Merle Law&#13;
&#13;
C. Eugene Peebles		Paul Kissner&#13;
&#13;
Harry Humes			Jean Virtue, Clerk&#13;
&#13;
Ervin F. Carlisle, Deceased September, 1954&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Collord, Retired December, 1955&#13;
&#13;
CARL L. HOPKINS, Superintendent of Schools&#13;
&#13;
CONGER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Leonard A. Brubaker, Principal&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Elmo Hall, First grade		Mrs. Mary Frohner, Third grade&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ruthella Sheets, First grade	Mrs. Helen Macmillan, Fourth grade&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Anne Ross, Second grade		Mrs. Katherine Jones, Fifth grade&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. May Sipe, Second grade		Mrs. Verrelle Reid, Sixth grade&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Criswell, Third grade	Mrs. Grace Mussard, Fifth &amp; Sixth grades&#13;
&#13;
Mr. George Blakeslee, Physical Education Supervisor&#13;
&#13;
Miss Joan Mack, Vocal Music Supervisor&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Eugene Ross, Instrumental Music Teacher&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Carolyn G. White, Religious Education Teacher&#13;
&#13;
Mr. William Curtis, Custodian&#13;
&#13;
ARCHITECTS&#13;
&#13;
Oman &amp; Cleland, Columbus, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
BUILDERS&#13;
&#13;
Orville E. Norris, General Contractor, Delaware&#13;
&#13;
J. F. Stephens, Heating Contractor, Columbus&#13;
&#13;
The Gestling Company, Plumbing Contractor, Columbus&#13;
&#13;
Fast Electric Company, Electric Contractor, Columbus&#13;
&#13;
Decorative plants have been furnished through the courtesy of Mr. Cyrus Breece,&#13;
&#13;
florist.</text>
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                    <text>[page 1]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of Carlisle School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
DEDICATION PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
April 28, 1957&#13;
&#13;
ERVIN F. CARLISLE SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
[photo of Carlisle School]&#13;
&#13;
Architects-- Galen F. Oman and Earl F. Cleland, Columbus, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
General Contractor-- The Knowlton Company, Bellefontaine, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Cost-- $12,000, site; $396,000, building; $17,500, furniture, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Number of rooms-- 13 classrooms, combination gym and auditorium, kitchen, clinic&#13;
&#13;
room, library, administrative suite, teachers' lounge, and appropriate main-&#13;
&#13;
tenance and storage rooms.&#13;
&#13;
Type of building-- A two-story building lying just outside of the Delaware Corpora-&#13;
&#13;
tion limits.&#13;
&#13;
Superintendent of Schools-- David R. Smith&#13;
&#13;
Board of Education--&#13;
&#13;
Charles E. Peebles, President&#13;
&#13;
Robert Burns, Vice President&#13;
&#13;
James Collord&#13;
&#13;
Harry Humes&#13;
&#13;
Paul Kissner&#13;
&#13;
Date ground was broken-- July 11, 1955&#13;
&#13;
Date building was opened for school-- September 3, 1956</text>
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                    <text>[page 2]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 2 of Carlisle School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
CARLISLE SCHOOL STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Custodian: William P. Curtis&#13;
&#13;
Maintenance Supervisor: Wilbert Gruber&#13;
&#13;
Bus Drivers: Harry Davis, Mike Bevan, Hayes Belt, Herbert Mitchell, Orville Tossey&#13;
&#13;
Cafeteria: Mrs. Raney Wynkoop, Manager; Mrs. William P. Curtis, Head Cook;&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Donald Murphy, Mrs. Edwin Starling, Cooks; Mrs. Lester G. Klee,&#13;
&#13;
Clerk; Mr. Neil Shadle, Supervisor&#13;
&#13;
Nurse: Mrs. Elda Jones&#13;
&#13;
Special Teacher: Mrs. Carolyn G. White, Religious Education&#13;
&#13;
Supervisors: Mrs. Stephen Lance, Music; Miss Dorothy Whitted, Curiculum&#13;
&#13;
Superintendent of Schools: Carl L. Hopkins&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Front row, left to right: Mrs. Evelyn Wood, Mrs. Melford McIntyre, Mrs. George&#13;
&#13;
T. Blydenburgh, Mrs. Hugh M. Macmillan, Mrs. Merlin Reid, Mrs. Albert Suthers&#13;
&#13;
Back row: Miss Juanita Randolph, Mrs. Eugene Ross, Miss Lyla Evans, Leonard&#13;
&#13;
A. Brubaker, Principal, Mrs. Ellis Halley, Mrs. Charles E. Thompson, Mrs. Charles&#13;
&#13;
W. Hall&#13;
&#13;
CARLISLE PTA OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Richard Sherman, President			Mrs. Arthur Ten Eyck, Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Frank E. Thompson, Vice President		Edwin Monks, Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF EDUCATION&#13;
&#13;
Paul Kissner, President		George Gauthier&#13;
&#13;
Harry Humes			Merle Law&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Peebles			Mrs. K. C. Virtue, Clerk</text>
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                    <text>[page 3]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 3 of Carlisle School Dedication Program]\&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
*AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL				Audience&#13;
&#13;
(Eugene Ross, Director; Miss Betty Hays, Accompanist)&#13;
&#13;
1							2&#13;
&#13;
Oh Beautiful for spacious skies			O beautiful for pilgrim feet&#13;
&#13;
For amber waves of grain			Whose stern, impassioned stress&#13;
&#13;
For purple mountain majesties			A thoroughfare for freedom beat&#13;
&#13;
Above the fruited plain				Across the wilderness:&#13;
&#13;
America! America!				America! America!&#13;
&#13;
God shed His grace on thee,			God mend thine every flaw,&#13;
&#13;
And crown thy good with brotherhood		Confirm thy soul in self-control,&#13;
&#13;
From sea to shining sea!			Thy liberty in law.&#13;
&#13;
3							4&#13;
&#13;
O beautiful for heroes proved			O beautiful for patriot dream&#13;
&#13;
In liberating strife,				That sees beyond the years&#13;
&#13;
Who more than self their country loved,		Thine alabaster cities gleam&#13;
&#13;
And mercy more than life.			Undim'd by human tears.&#13;
&#13;
America! America!				America! America!&#13;
&#13;
May God thy gold refine,			God shed his grace on thee,&#13;
&#13;
Till all success be nobleness,			And crown thy good with brotherhood&#13;
&#13;
And every gain divine.				From sea to shining sea.&#13;
&#13;
*INVOCATION					The Rev. Louis E. Campbell&#13;
&#13;
						Minister, First Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
MUSICAL SELECTIONS				Carlisle School Pupils&#13;
&#13;
Bells Above the Chapel				Polish Folk Tune&#13;
&#13;
Spring Has Come					Swiss Folk Song&#13;
&#13;
(Mrs. Stephen Lance, Director)&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION OF GUESTS		Carl L. Hopkins&#13;
&#13;
						Superintendent, Delaware City Schools&#13;
&#13;
IN APPRECIATION					Richard Sherman&#13;
&#13;
						President, Carlisle School PTA&#13;
&#13;
DEDICATORY PRAYER				The Rev. Robert Fichter&#13;
&#13;
						Professor of Religion, Ohio Wesleyan University&#13;
&#13;
INTRODUCTION OF SPEAKER				Leonard A. Brubaker&#13;
&#13;
						Principal, Carlisle Elementary School&#13;
&#13;
ADDRESS: Our Common Responsibility 		Dr. Arthur S. Flemming&#13;
&#13;
						President, Ohio Wesleyan University&#13;
&#13;
MUSICAL SELECTIONS				Willis High School Choral Ensemble&#13;
&#13;
American Panorama				Williams&#13;
&#13;
One God						Arr. Ringwald&#13;
&#13;
(Miss Eliza Plum, Director; Jeanne Felts, Accompanist)&#13;
&#13;
*BENEDICTION					The Rev. Ben King&#13;
&#13;
						Pastor, Souls Haven Community Church&#13;
&#13;
*Indicate audience standing.&#13;
&#13;
Carlisle School will be open for inspection from 3:30 to 4:40.</text>
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                    <text>[page 4]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 4 of Carlisle School Dedication Program]&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Ervin F. Carlisle, after whom this school is named, had an outstand-&#13;
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Mr. Carlisle's civic activities spanned all his years here since his graduation&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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From 1931 until 1934, Mr. Carlisle served as football coach and teacher.&#13;
&#13;
In 1934 he became principal of Willis High School and in 1937 received his M.A.&#13;
&#13;
degree from the Ohio State University.&#13;
&#13;
He served as acting superintendent of the Delaware City Schools while the&#13;
&#13;
present superintendent, David R. Smith, was in service during the war years. Mr.&#13;
&#13;
Carlisle was instrumental in the establishing and operation of a defense training school&#13;
&#13;
here during the early years of the World War II.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Carlisle left his school position in 1945 to enter the insurance business.&#13;
&#13;
Because of his valuable school experience and since he was needed, he agreed to run&#13;
&#13;
and was elected to the Board of Education in 1949. He served as president in 1953.&#13;
&#13;
His willingness to serve kept Mr. Carlisle very busy. He served as director&#13;
&#13;
of ushers at the Asbury Methodist Church for more than 15 years.&#13;
&#13;
While serving as chairman of the industrial division of the Community &#13;
&#13;
Chest, he developed the payroll deduction plan which greatly contributed to the&#13;
&#13;
success of the campaigns.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Carlisle headed the school division of the Jane M. Case Hospital ex-&#13;
&#13;
pansion campaign. He also served as chairman of industry in several Red Cross&#13;
&#13;
drives. Mr. Carlisle was the founder of the Youth Recreation Center, active in&#13;
&#13;
Boy Scout work, and was chairman for several years for the Scout financial drive.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Carlisle was a past director of the Chamber of Commerce. He was&#13;
&#13;
president of the Delaware Development Corporation which assisted in bringing new&#13;
&#13;
industries to Delaware. He was a member and past director of the local Kiwanis&#13;
&#13;
Club. He was also a member of Hiram Lodge Number 18, F. and A. M. and the&#13;
&#13;
Elks and Moose Lodges.&#13;
&#13;
It is only fitting that this new school, dedicated to the service of young&#13;
&#13;
people, is named the Ervin F. Carlisle School. Mr. Carlisle's life like the school&#13;
&#13;
was dedicated to both young and old in education and service. He was a dedicated&#13;
&#13;
man, unselfish to the end.</text>
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[corresponds to front cover of MTSO Apartments Dedication Service]&#13;
&#13;
METHODIST THEOLOGICAL SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
IN OHIO&#13;
&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
A Service of Dedication&#13;
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May 12, 1962</text>
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ORDER OF PROCESSION&#13;
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Marshals&#13;
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Trustees&#13;
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Faculty&#13;
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                    <text>[page 4]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 4 of MTSO Apartments Dedication Service]

DEDICATION COMMITTEE

DR. ROLAND G. CARTER, Chairman

DR. JOHN T. MOUNT

MRS. KENNETH B. COPE

DR. AUSTIN R. WHITMORE

DR. GEORGE A. FALLON

BUILDING COMMITTEE

DR. JOHN L. WILLIAMS, Chairman

PAUL W. HUENEFELD, Vice-Chairman

STEPHEN S. BEARD, Secretary and Counsel

JOHN ALFORD

DR. ROLAND G. CARTER

BURTON OHLEMACHER

(Mr. Huenefeld served as chairman during

the construction of the building)
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                    <text>[page 5]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 5 of MTSO Apartments Dedication Service]

THE SERVICE OF DEDICATION

THE THEOLOGICAL SCHOOL APARTMENTS

2:00 P.M.

BISHOP HAZEN G. WERNER, B.D., D.D., LL.D.

Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Presiding

THE SENTENCES

Minister: Our help is the name of the Lord, who made heaven and earth.

People: Honor and majesty are before him; strength and beauty are in his

sanctuary.

Minister: Give unto the Lord, O ye kindreds of the people, give unto the Lord

glory and strength.

People: Blessed be the name of the Lord from this time forth and for

evermore. Amen.

THE INVOCATION--Dr. Everett K. Seymour, S.T.B., M.A., D.D.

Almighty and eternal God, whose loving kindness never faileth, who rulest

both in heaven and on earth, keeping mercy for thy people who walk before

the presence of thy glory; graciously vouchsafe thy presence here as we dedicate

this building to thy service; grant that peace and prosperity may be found

within its walls, that the glory of God may be the light thereof, and that those

who dwell here, being always obedient to thy holy will, may continually abide

under thy care and protection; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

THE VERSICLES

Minister: O Lord, open thou our lips;

People: And our mouth shall show forth thy praise.

Minister: O God, make speed to save us;

People: O Lord, make haste to help us. Here let all stand.

Minister: Glory be to the Father, and to the son, and to the Holy Ghost;

People: As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world

without end. Amen.

Minister: Praise ye the Lord;

People: The Lord's name be praised.

THE HYMN: "The Lord's my Shepherd"	Psalm XXIII
					Scottish Psalter, 1650

The Lord's my Shepherd, I'll not want;

He makes me down to lie

In pastures green; He leadeth me

The quiet waters by.</text>
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                    <text>[page 6]

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My soul He doth restore again;

And me to walk doth make

Within the paths of righteousness,

E'en for His own name's sake.

Yea, though I walk in death's dark vale,

Yet will I fear no ill:

For Thou art with me, and Thy rod

And staff me comfort still.

My table Thou has furnished

In presence of my foes;

My head Thou dost with oil anoint,

And my cup overflows.

Goodness and mercy all my life

Shall surely follow me;

And in God's house for evermore

My dwelling place shall be.

Amen.

THE SCRIPTURE LESSON -- Dean Van Bogard Dunn, B.D., Ph.D., D.D.

Happy is the man that findeth wisdom, and the man that getteth understand-

ing. For the merchandise of it is better than the merchandise of silver, and the

gain thereof than fine gold. She is more precious than rubies; and all the things

thou canst desire are not to be compared unto her. Length of days is in her right

hand; and in her left hand riches and honor. Her ways are ways of pleasantness,

and all her paths are peace. She is a tree of life to them that lay hold upon her;

and happy is everyone that retaineth her. The Lord by wisdom hath founded the

earth; by understanding hath he established the heavens. By his knowledge the

depths are broken up, and the clouds drop down the dew. My son, let not them

depart from thine eyes; keep sound wisdom and discretion: so shall they be life

unto thy soul, and grace to thy neck. Then shalt thou walk in thy way, safely, and

thy foot shall not stumble.

Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that

leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: because strait is the

gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.

Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them, I will liken

him unto a wise man, which built his house upon a rock: and the rain descended,

and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell

not: for it was founded upon a rock. And everyone that heareth these sayings of

mine, and doeth them not, shall be likened unto a foolish man, which built his house

upon the sand: and the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew,

and beat upon that house; and it fell; and great was the fall of it.

THE ANTHEM: "Come Follow Me, the Savior Spake"

-J. Herman Schein, 1586-1630

The Seminary Singers of the Methodist Theological School

Professor Fred D. Gealy, Director</text>
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                    <text>[page 7]

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THE ADDRESS

Bishop Fred G. Holloway, B.D., D.D., LL.D.

THE ACT OF PRESENTATION

President John W. Dickhaut, B.D., D.D., S.T.D.

Dr. John L. Williams, B.D., D.D.

THE ACT OF DEDICATION

Dearly beloved, it is right and proper that buildings erected for such service

in the name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ should be formally and devoutly 

set apart for their special uses. For such a dedication we are now assembled. And,

as the dedication of this building is vain without the solemn consecration of those

whose gifts and labors it represents, let us now give ourselves anew to the service of

God: our souls, that they may be renewed after the image of Christ; our bodies,

that they may be fit temples for the indwelling of the Holy Spirit; and our labors

and business, that they may be according to God's holy will, and that their fruit

may tend to the glory of his name and the advancement of his kingdom.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, we dedicate

this building to the holy ministry of education.

Take fast hold of instruction; let her not go: keep her for she is thy life.

We dedicate this building to the spiritual enrichment of all who shall come here

in pursuit of knowledge.

Happy is the man that findeth wisdom, and the man that getteth understanding.

We dedicate this building to the care and nurture of the family, that those who

shall dwell here, being established in mutual love and affection, may abide in quiet-

ness and peace, in prayer and praise.

Thine, O Lord, is the greatness, and the power, and the glory, and the vic-

tory, and the majesty: for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is Thine.

THE PRAYER OF DEDICATION

Let us pray.

Almighty God, our heavenly Father, whose eyes are ever toward the righteous,

and whose ears are ever open unto their cry: graciously accept, we pray thee, this

building which we now dedicate to thee, to thy service, and to thy glory. Grant

that those who shall live here, being consecrated to the sacred office of the holy

ministry, may with pure minds, upright purpose, and steadfast endeavor, seek always

to learn and to do thy holy will, that thy name may be glorified and thy saving

health be made known to all men; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.</text>
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                    <text>[page 8]

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O God, who through thy Holy Spirit dost illumine the minds and sanctify the

lives of those whom thou does call to the work of pastors and teachers; look with

favor upon all schools for the instruction and discipline of those who are to serve

in the sacred ministry of thy Church. Bless those who teach and those who learn,

that they may apply themselves with such diligence to the knowledge which is able

to make men wise unto salvation, and submit themselves with such ready obedience

to the law of thy Son our Savior, that they may fulfill their ministry with joy;

through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

THE BENEDICTION -- Dr. George A. Fallon, S.T.B., D.D.</text>
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                    <text>[page 9]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 9 of MTSO Apartments Dedication Service]

ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS

THE REVEREND JOHN W. DICKHAUT, B.D., D.D., S.T.D., President

THE REVEREND VAN BOGARD DUNN, B.D., Ph.D., D.D., Dean

THE REVEREND HAROLD B. WILLIAMS, S.T.B., D.D., Director of Church Work

JOHN B. McTAGGART, B.A., M.S. IN L.S., Librarian

MRS. MARY O. FORRER, Registrar

FACULTY

THE REVEREND VAN BOGARD DUNN, B.D., Ph.D., D.D., Professor of New Testament

THE REVEREND FRED D. GEALY, S.T.B., S.T.M., Ph.D., D.D.,

Professor of New Testament

THE REVEREND CLYDE L. MANSCHRECK, B.D., M.A., Ph.D.,

Professor of Church History

THE REVEREND DAVID C. SHIPLEY, Th.M., M.A., Ph.D., Professor of Theology

THE REVEREND C. EVERETT TILSON, B.D., Ph.D., Professor of Old Testament

JOHN B. McTAGGART, B.A., M.S. in L.S., Associate Professor of Theological

Bibliography

THE REVEREND HAROLD B. WILLIAMS, S.T.B., D.D., Associate Professor of

Church Administration

THE REVEREND ROBERT L. BROWNING, B.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of

Christian Education

THE REVEREND D. MOODY SMITH, JR., B.D., M.A., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of

New Testament

THE REVEREND A. JEFFERY HOPPER, B.D., M.A., Ph.D., Instructor in Theology

THE REVEREND EDWARD C. MEYER, B.D., Th.M., Instructor in Preaching</text>
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                    <text>[page 10]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 10 of MTSO Apartments Dedication Service]

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

BISHOP HAZEN G. WERNER, Chairman

GEORGE A. FALLON, Vice Chairman

JOHN T. MOUNT, Vice Chairman

JOHN R. CHENEY, Secretary

O. A. DONNENWIRTH, Treasurer

John Alford			Robert Kegerreis

Stephen S. Beard		Theodore C. Mayer

R.Thornton Beeghly		W. Arthur Milne

Raoul C. Calkins		Burton Ohlemacher

Roland G. Carter		Andrew H. Phelps

				(Western Pennsylvania Area)

Gerald L. Clapsaddle		Seward D. Schooler

(Indiana Area)

Mrs. Kenneth B. Cope		Everett K. Seymour

				(Michigan Area)

Edward C. Crouch		Charles A. Talbert

				(St. Louis Area)

Raymond E. Dix			E. L. Tullis

				(Louisville Area)

Philip C. Ebeling		Russell S. Weatherwax

Homer J. R. Elford		Paul M. Ward

Martin Essex			Lance Webb

Arthur S. Flemming		S. Lee Whiteman

Claude Garrison			Austin R. Whitmore

Charles W. Hamilton		John L. Williams

Paul W. Huenefeld</text>
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[MTSO seal: THE METHODIST THEOLOGICAL SCHOOL IN OHIO 1958 To Preach the Word]</text>
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&#13;
Conferences&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
Methodist Episcopal Church&#13;
&#13;
SEPTEMBER 6 to 12, 1927&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE, OHIO</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 2 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
TABLE of CONTENTS&#13;
&#13;
						Page&#13;
&#13;
Foreword ........................................ 3&#13;
&#13;
Announcements ................................... 4&#13;
&#13;
Delaware and Methodism ......................... 5-6&#13;
&#13;
Tri-Conference Joint Sessions ................. 7-8-9&#13;
&#13;
Ohio Annual Conference ......................... 10&#13;
&#13;
North-East Ohio Conference ..................... 11&#13;
&#13;
West Ohio Conference ........................... 12&#13;
&#13;
Woman's White Cross, Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary&#13;
&#13;
Societies ...................................... 13&#13;
&#13;
Laymen's Meeting ............................... 14&#13;
&#13;
Junior Laymen's Conference ..................... 15&#13;
&#13;
Deaconess Conference ........................... 16&#13;
&#13;
2</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 3 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
FOREWORD&#13;
&#13;
THIS program is the culmination of the first attempt&#13;
&#13;
in America to hold three Methodist Episcopal Con-&#13;
&#13;
ferences at the same time and place. No amount&#13;
&#13;
of effort has been spared to make this event memorable.&#13;
&#13;
The Conference Program Committees of the West Ohio,&#13;
&#13;
the Ohio, and the North-East Ohio Conferences, the Presi-&#13;
&#13;
dent of Ohio Wesleyan University, the three district super-&#13;
&#13;
intendents and four entertaining pastors have been organized&#13;
&#13;
into one committee with Bishop Theodore S. Henderson,&#13;
&#13;
resident Bishop, as Chairman. The program presented&#13;
&#13;
herewith is the work of that committee.&#13;
&#13;
The invitation of the trustees of Ohio Wesleyan to the three&#13;
&#13;
conferences to hold their sessions in Delaware was first&#13;
&#13;
approved by Bishop Henderson who in turn presented the&#13;
&#13;
matter to the Area Council with recommendations that the &#13;
&#13;
invitation be accepted. The Chamber of Commerce, and &#13;
&#13;
all churches of Delaware united unanimously in supporting&#13;
&#13;
the invitation to the Annual Conferences in September 1926. &#13;
&#13;
As a result of this action, the city of Delaware has been&#13;
&#13;
organized into one General Entertainment Committee with&#13;
&#13;
the President of the Chamber of Commerce as its Chairman.&#13;
&#13;
There are eight sub-committees. Through this central&#13;
&#13;
organization plans have been formulated for the entertain-&#13;
&#13;
ment of the three Annual Conferences, the Laymen's Asso-&#13;
&#13;
ciations, the Junior Laymen's Associations and the Women's &#13;
&#13;
Organizations. &#13;
&#13;
It is the sincere desire of all who have had a share in the&#13;
&#13;
arrangements thus far, to make this the first Tri-Conference&#13;
&#13;
session of the Methodist Episcopal Churches of Ohio a &#13;
&#13;
success.&#13;
&#13;
Karl P. Meister&#13;
&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer of the Program and&#13;
&#13;
General Entertainment Committees.&#13;
&#13;
3</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 4 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
&#13;
General Headquarters for the three conferences are established in Gray Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Everything pertaining to the entertainment of the Annual Conferences, the Laymen's&#13;
&#13;
Associations, the Women's Day, the Deaconess Day, and Junior Laymen's Associations&#13;
&#13;
will be cared for by one general committee.&#13;
&#13;
All registrations and room assignments except those of the Junior Laymen will be&#13;
&#13;
made there.&#13;
&#13;
All rooms outside of hotels will rent for 50 cents per person per night with a minimum&#13;
&#13;
charge of $1.00 per room.&#13;
&#13;
Breakfast in the homes is optional with the hostess. The rate is 25 cents.&#13;
&#13;
Settlement for rooms and meals should be made by each individual with the hostess.&#13;
&#13;
Meals, morning, noon, and night, will be served in Monnett and Austin Halls; lunch&#13;
&#13;
and dinner in the churches.&#13;
&#13;
Persons rooming in Monnett or Austin will secure tickets in advance for meals there&#13;
&#13;
with the privilege of exchange for special banquets.&#13;
&#13;
All arrangements for committee or public meetings, places of holding the same and&#13;
&#13;
equipment should be referred to the general headquarters for assignment, to avoid&#13;
&#13;
confusion.&#13;
&#13;
Unlimited parking of autos is permitted on all Delaware streets. Special space with&#13;
&#13;
protection is provided for those who wish it.&#13;
&#13;
The Conference Post Office is in Gray Chapel basement. Mail for all conferences&#13;
&#13;
will be distributed there.&#13;
&#13;
Information desks have been established in Gray Chapel, St. Paul's Church, and&#13;
&#13;
William Street Church.&#13;
&#13;
Local and long distance telephone booths will be found in the three places mentioned&#13;
&#13;
above. The Western Union branch office is in Gray Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
All material for the press should be handled through the office of Douglass W. Miller,&#13;
&#13;
North Hall.&#13;
&#13;
4</text>
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                    <text>Tri-Conference Program (p. 6)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 5 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE AND METHODISM&#13;
&#13;
By PROF. ROLLIN H. WALKER&#13;
&#13;
It is a great thing for a church when it begins to have shrines that&#13;
&#13;
symbolize the faith and heroism of the fathers. Delaware is such a&#13;
&#13;
shrine.&#13;
&#13;
When a committee of preachers was sent from the Ohio Confer-&#13;
&#13;
ence sitting at Urbana, to decide whether Delaware would be a good&#13;
&#13;
place to start a college, like Caleb and Joshua of old they came&#13;
&#13;
back with a favorable report. But when they came to pay for the&#13;
&#13;
livery rig which they had used it was found that only one among&#13;
&#13;
them had money enough to meet it. Their poverty did not daunt&#13;
&#13;
them, however, and they persuaded the Conference, whose members&#13;
&#13;
were as poor as themselves, to embark in the adventure.&#13;
&#13;
The building in which the school was started is the frame struc-&#13;
&#13;
ture immediately behind the college library. Here for fifty years&#13;
&#13;
William G. Williams taught Greek, and here until the erection of&#13;
&#13;
Merrick Hall, L. D. McCabe with Celtic fire and daring taught&#13;
&#13;
philosophy.&#13;
&#13;
At 294 North Sandusky Street one sees the home of Edward&#13;
&#13;
Thomson, the first president of the university, and afterward Bishop&#13;
&#13;
of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He was a descendant of the&#13;
&#13;
poet Thomson who wrote "The Seasons". Around his name many&#13;
&#13;
traditions gathered, for he strangely gripped the imagination of the&#13;
&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
At 57 Oak Hill Avenue is the home of President Frederick&#13;
&#13;
Merrick, where he wore out the carpet by his bedside praying for&#13;
&#13;
the Ohio Wesleyan University. He was a New England Presby-&#13;
&#13;
terian Puritan touched with the old-fashioned Methodist fire, and&#13;
&#13;
the combination of granite and heat made an extraordinary character.&#13;
&#13;
The central building on campus is Gray Chapel, the money&#13;
&#13;
for which was for the most part raised by President James W.&#13;
&#13;
5</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 6 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
Bashford, in small sums and with great difficulty, before the days&#13;
&#13;
when people became accustomed to giving liberally to education.&#13;
&#13;
One evening in the gloaming President Bashford, pointing to its&#13;
&#13;
beautiful tower, said to a professor, "Every stone in that building&#13;
&#13;
represents a prayer." The chapel auditorium was the scene of the&#13;
&#13;
marvelous evangelistic meetings among the students that Bashford&#13;
&#13;
in his simple and unforced fashion was accustomed to conduct. And&#13;
&#13;
here also he gave the great monthly lectures that are outstanding&#13;
&#13;
memories among the old students.&#13;
&#13;
As an illustration of the love in which the college has been held&#13;
&#13;
by its children may be mentioned the portrait of Browning, by&#13;
&#13;
Moscheles, which hangs in the library reading room. Dr. Frank&#13;
&#13;
W. Gunsaulus saw it in Europe, and was told by one who knew&#13;
&#13;
Browning that he deemed it the best portrait of the poet in existence.&#13;
&#13;
For what price could it be purchased? asked Gunsaulus. The answer&#13;
&#13;
was, "A thousand dollars." "Pack it up," said he, "and ship it to&#13;
&#13;
the Ohio Wesleyan University, at Delaware." And after that he&#13;
&#13;
went out and earned the money to pay for it by lecturing.&#13;
&#13;
Gunsaulus' own wonderful portrait, by Nyholm, the Swedish artist,&#13;
&#13;
hangs near it in the reading room.&#13;
&#13;
The old church which stood on the site of the present William&#13;
&#13;
Street Church is the place where the two college friends, Gunsaulus&#13;
&#13;
and Bishop McDowell, felt so profoundly the grip of the evangelistic&#13;
&#13;
appeal.&#13;
&#13;
The Methodist Conferences of Ohio elect the majority of the trus-&#13;
&#13;
tees of the Ohio Wesleyan University, and hence can determine its&#13;
&#13;
policy. The college is a sacred trust that has been handed down to&#13;
&#13;
them by the great men of the past.&#13;
&#13;
Of national interest to lovers of temperance is the fact that in&#13;
&#13;
the old William Street Church was first organized the Women's&#13;
&#13;
Christian Temperance Union, a society that, under God, has been&#13;
&#13;
one of the most powerful influences in driving out the legalized saloon.&#13;
&#13;
6</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 7 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
TRI-CONFERENCE JOINT SESSIONS&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday--September Sixth&#13;
&#13;
12 Noon--Luncheon, Preachers Chorus...................Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Harold S. Clase, Director&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Harold S. Clase, Pianist&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Vernon H. Wagar, Organist&#13;
&#13;
5:30 P.M.--Banquet, Rural Life Associations of the Three Annual Confer-&#13;
&#13;
ences, St. Paul's Church.&#13;
&#13;
Addresses: Bishop Theodore S. Henderson,&#13;
&#13;
Dr. M. A. Dawber&#13;
&#13;
Prof. E. L. Tetreau&#13;
&#13;
Banquet, Veterans of All Wars ..........................G. A. R. Hall&#13;
&#13;
7:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel,......Bishop Theodore S. Henderson, D.D., LL.D.,&#13;
&#13;
Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Music, Preachers Chorus..........................Harold S. Clase, Director&#13;
&#13;
Invocation.......................Dr. C. S. Gee, Pastor Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
Address of Welcome.............Bruce C. Burgess, President of the Delaware&#13;
&#13;
Chamber of Commerce&#13;
&#13;
Response ...............................Bishop Joseph F. Berry, D.D., LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
Address, "Christian Education", Bishop William F. McDowell, D.D., LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday--September Seventh&#13;
&#13;
12:30 Noon--Inter-Conference Theological Seminary Luncheon, Reformed&#13;
&#13;
Church.&#13;
&#13;
2:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel...........................Dr. John W. Hoffman,&#13;
&#13;
President Ohio Wesleyan University, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Music ...............................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address......."Religious Education," Prof. Walter S. Athearn, Ph.D.,&#13;
&#13;
Dean Boston University School of Religious Education.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--Bishop Joseph F. Berry, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Lecture................Dr. T. R. Glover, M.A., LL.D., Public Orator,&#13;
&#13;
St. John's College, Cambridge, England.&#13;
&#13;
5:30 P.M.--Educational Banquet.....Mt. Union, Ohio Northern, Baldwin&#13;
&#13;
Wallace, Ohio Wesleyan, Asbury and other colleges, Edwards&#13;
&#13;
Gymnasium.&#13;
&#13;
The Rev. S. K. Mahon, D.D., Toledo, ......................Toastmaster&#13;
&#13;
Speaker........Hon. Charles F. Miller, State Superintendent of Public&#13;
&#13;
Instruction, Indianapolis, Indiana.&#13;
&#13;
7:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel...............................Dr. A. E. Smith,&#13;
&#13;
President Ohio Northern University, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Music ...............................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address............................."Christian Education and Reform,"&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes, D.D., LL.D., Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 8 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
TRI-CONFERENCE JOINT SESSIONS&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Thursday--September Eighth&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Gray Chapel...............Bishop Joseph F. Berry, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Joint Session of the Ohio, the West Ohio and North-East Ohio Conferences&#13;
&#13;
for the consideration of World Service.&#13;
&#13;
Address......Dr. R. E. Diffendorfer, Secretary Board of Foreign Missions.&#13;
&#13;
Address...................Dr. W. S. Bovard, Secertary Board of Education.&#13;
&#13;
2:30 P.M.--Rev. J. C. Bickel, D.D., Columbus, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Music ...................................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address ................................."The Church and State Education"&#13;
&#13;
Rev. J. C. Baker, D.D., Pastor First M.E. Church, Urbana, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--Bishop William F. McDowell, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Lecture .................................................Dr. T. R. Glover&#13;
&#13;
5:30 P.M.--Theological Seminary Banquets&#13;
&#13;
Drew, Episcopal Church.&#13;
&#13;
Boston, Reformed Church.&#13;
&#13;
Garrett, St. John's Church.&#13;
&#13;
7:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel............................Dr. William H. McMaster,&#13;
&#13;
President Mt. Union College, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Music ....................................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address,........................"Christian Education in Methodist History"&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Warren A. Candler, D.D., LL.D., M.E. Church South&#13;
&#13;
Friday--September Ninth&#13;
&#13;
2:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel..................Rev. E. A. Brown, Akron, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Address ........................."Christian Education and the Social Order"&#13;
&#13;
Dr. G. Brownley Oxnam, Boston University School of Theology&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--Bishop Luther B. Wilson, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Address ...................................................Dr. T. R. Glover&#13;
&#13;
5:30 P.M.--Edward Gymnasium..........................Father and Son Banquet,&#13;
&#13;
Dr. E. H. Cherrington, Toastmaster.&#13;
&#13;
Address .................................."Paying the Price"--Branch Rickey,&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President and Business Manager St. Louis Cardinals Baseball Club.&#13;
&#13;
7:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel...................Joint Meeting Ministers and Laymen,&#13;
&#13;
Dr. A. B. Storms, President Baldwin Wallace College, Presiding&#13;
&#13;
Music ......................................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address ........................."Christian Education and Spiritual Rebirth"&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Theodore S. Henderson.&#13;
&#13;
8</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 9 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
TRI-CONFERENCE JOINT SESSIONS&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Saturday--September Tenth&#13;
&#13;
11:00 A.M.--Gray Chapel, Joint Meeting of Laymen's Associations and Junior&#13;
&#13;
Laymen's Associations with the Three Annual Conferences.&#13;
&#13;
2:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel................................Hon. Chas. H. Lewis,&#13;
&#13;
Former Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Music ....................................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address......."The Relation of the Rural Church to the Life of the Nation"&#13;
&#13;
Dr. C. J. Galpin, Dept. of Agriculture, Washington, D.C.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--Dr. Rollin H. Walker, Delaware, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Lecture ..................................................Dr. T. R. Glover&#13;
&#13;
5:30 P.M.--Social Service Banquet .......................St. Mary's School&#13;
&#13;
Speaker .......................................Dr. James M. Yard, of China&#13;
&#13;
7:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel..........Senator Frank B. Willis of Ohio, Presiding&#13;
&#13;
Music ....................................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address.........."Christian Education and Church Educational Institutions"&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Thomas H. Lewis, President of the General Conference of the &#13;
&#13;
Methodist Protestant Church.&#13;
&#13;
Sunday--September Eleventh&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Gray Chapel, Morning Worship in charge of Dr. F. C. Anderson&#13;
&#13;
and Rev. L. E. Rush.&#13;
&#13;
Sermon ............................................Bishop Joseph F. Berry&#13;
&#13;
Music ...................................by Asbury and Grace Church Choirs&#13;
&#13;
2:30 P.M.--Gray Chapel...................Bishop Joseph F. Berry, Presiding&#13;
&#13;
Music ....................................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Ordination Address ................................Bishop Luther B. Wilson&#13;
&#13;
Ordination of Elders and Deacons.&#13;
&#13;
Consecration of Deaconesses.&#13;
&#13;
7:30 P.M.--Pageant...................................."The Tides of India"&#13;
&#13;
Director ................................Mrs. Lydia G. Deseo, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Manager .................................Prof. L. B. McNabb, Delawaere Ohio&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 10 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
The One Hundred and Sixteenth Session&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
OHIO ANNUAL CONFERENCE&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul's Church&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
September 6th to 12th, 1927&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Joseph F. Berry, D.D., LL.D.	Secretary, Rev. J. G. Laughlin&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday--September Sixth&#13;
&#13;
2:00 P.M.--Bishop Joseph F. Berry, D.D., LL.D., Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.&#13;
&#13;
Memorial Service ........................Sermon: Rev. James W. Blair&#13;
&#13;
Organization of Conference.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday--September Seventh&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotional Address.................Bishop Joseph F. Berry&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business.&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:40--Recess&#13;
&#13;
12:00 Noon--Adjournment.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday--September Eighth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotional Address .................Bishop Joseph F. Berry&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Joint Session of the Three Annual Conferences of Ohio in Gray Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S DAY&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--White Cross Association and Luncheon.............Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
1:30 P.M.--Joint Meeting of the W.F.M.S. and W.H.M.S.,&#13;
&#13;
William Street Church.&#13;
&#13;
4:30 P.M.--Reception for all Methodist Women,.....................Monnett Campus.&#13;
&#13;
Friday--September Ninth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotional Address ............................Bishop Joseph F. Berry&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:40--Recess.&#13;
&#13;
12:00 Noon--Adjournment&#13;
&#13;
Saturday--September Tenth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotional Address ............................Bishop Joseph F. Berry&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
11:00 A.M.--Joint Session of the Junior and Senior Laymen's Associations with the&#13;
&#13;
Three Annual Conferences of Ohio in Gray Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Sunday--September Eleventh&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Love Feast ..........................Dr. P. L. Mark, Leader&#13;
&#13;
Morning Worship in charge of Dr. E. K. Johnson and Rev. R. O. McRae&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Sermon............................Bishop Luther B. Wilson, D.D., LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
Music .........................................................by St. Paul's Choir&#13;
&#13;
Monday--September Twelfth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotional Address ..............................Bishop Joseph F. Berry&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:40--Recess&#13;
&#13;
12:00 Noon--Adjournment&#13;
&#13;
1:30 P.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 11 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
Sixteenth Annual Session&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
NORTH-EAST OHIO CONFERENCE&#13;
&#13;
Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
September 6 to 12, 1927&#13;
&#13;
Bishop William F. McDowell, D.D., LL.D.		Secretary, Dr. F. I. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday--September Sixth&#13;
&#13;
2:00 PM--Bishop William F. Mc Dowell, D.D., LL.D., Presiding&#13;
&#13;
Memorial Service&#13;
&#13;
Sermon ..................................................Dr. Frank G. Fowler&#13;
&#13;
Communion Service&#13;
&#13;
Organization of Conference&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday--September Seventh&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotions..............................Bishop William F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:40 A.M.--Recess&#13;
&#13;
12:00 Noon--Adjournment&#13;
&#13;
Thursday--September Eighth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotions..............................Bishop William F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Joint Session of the Three Annual Conferences of Ohio in Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S DAY&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--White Cross Association and Luncheon..........Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
1:30 P.M.--Joint Meeting of the W.F.M.S. and W.H.M.S.&#13;
&#13;
William Street Church&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--Reception for all Methodist Women..............Monnett Hall Campus&#13;
&#13;
Friday--September Ninth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotions................................Bishop William F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:40 A.M.--Recess&#13;
&#13;
12:00 Noon--Adjournment&#13;
&#13;
Saturday--September Tenth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotions................................Bishop William F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
11:00 A.M.--Joint Session of the Junior and Senior Laymen's Associations with the&#13;
&#13;
Annual Conferences in Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
12:00 Noon--Adjournment&#13;
&#13;
Sunday--September Eleventh&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M. Conference Love Feast ..................Dr. Austin Philpott, Leader&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Morning Worship in charge of Dr. F. C. Anderson and Rev. L. E. Rush&#13;
&#13;
Sermon.........................................Bishop Joseph F. Berry, D.D., LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
Music..........................................by Asbury and Grace Church Choirs&#13;
&#13;
Monday--September Twelfth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Devotions...........................Bishop William F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:4 A.M.--Recess&#13;
&#13;
12:00 Noon--Adjournment&#13;
&#13;
1:30 P.M.--Conference Business&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 12 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
Fifteenth Annual Session&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
WEST OHIO CONFERENCE&#13;
&#13;
William Street M.E. Church&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
September 6 to 12, 1927&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Luther B. Wilson, D.D., LL.D.	Secretary, Dr. Valourous F. Brown&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday--September Sixth&#13;
&#13;
2:00 P.M.--Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, Bishop Luther B. Wilson, D.D., LL.D&#13;
&#13;
3:00 P.M.--Roll Call&#13;
&#13;
3:30 P.M.--Memorial Sermon...............................Rev. Jacob A. Hoffman&#13;
&#13;
4:30 P.M.--Organization and Statistical Session&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday--September Seventh&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Conference Session&#13;
&#13;
10:00 A.M.--Cabinet Address&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:40 A.M.--Recess&#13;
&#13;
11:00 A.M.--Vote on Conference Boundary&#13;
&#13;
11:45 A.M.--Devotions .................................Bishop Luther B. Wilson&#13;
&#13;
2:00-4:00 P.M.--Retired Ministers Association..............Sunday School Room&#13;
&#13;
William Street Church&#13;
&#13;
6:30 P.M.--Annual Meeting Preachers Relief Society&#13;
&#13;
Thursday--September Eighth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Conference Session&#13;
&#13;
10:15 A.M.--Devotions...................................Bishop Luther B. Wilson&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Joint Session of three Annual Conferences of Ohio ......Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S DAY&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--White Cross Association and Luncheon............Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
1:30 P.M.--W.F.M.S. and W.H.M.S...........................William Street Church&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--Reception for all Methodist Women................Monnett Hall Campus&#13;
&#13;
5:30 P.M.--Banquet West Ohio Ministers Wives Association..William Street Church&#13;
&#13;
Friday--September Ninth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Conference Session&#13;
&#13;
10:30-10:40 A.M.--Recess&#13;
&#13;
11:45 A.M.--Devotions ..................................Bishop Luther B. Wilson&#13;
&#13;
Saturday--September Tenth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Conference Session&#13;
&#13;
10:45 A.M.--Devotions ..................................Bishop Luther B. Wilson&#13;
&#13;
11:00 A.M.--Joint Session of the Junior and Senior Laymen's Associations with the&#13;
&#13;
Three Annual Conferences, Gray Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Sunday--September Eleventh&#13;
&#13;
9:15 A.M.--Conference Love Feast ...............................Dr. J. F. Hoffman&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--Conference Sermon...........................Bishop William F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
Morning Worship, .........................in charge of Rev. F. Howard Callahan and&#13;
&#13;
Dr. H. E. Armacost&#13;
&#13;
2:30 P.M.--Joint Ordination&#13;
&#13;
Monday--September Twelfth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--Conference Session&#13;
&#13;
1:30 P.M.--Reading of Appointments and Adjournment, Bishop Luther B. Wilson&#13;
&#13;
12</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 13 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
A TRI-CONFERENCE MEETING&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
Woman's White Cross Association and the Woman's Home&#13;
&#13;
and Foreign Missionary Societies&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
Methodist Episcopal Church&#13;
&#13;
September 8th, 1927&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
10:30 A.M.--White Cross Association ................Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
Address ...................."Methodism's Ministry of Christian Healing"&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Theodore S. Henderson&#13;
&#13;
1:30 P.M.--Joint Meeting .........................William Street Church&#13;
&#13;
Woman's Home Missionary Society .........Mrs. W. H. C. Goode, Presiding&#13;
&#13;
Song Service ..................................................Ray Mohr&#13;
&#13;
Reports from Conferences...............Ohio, West Ohio, North-East Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Solo ................................................Mrs. E. K. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Woman's Foreign Missionary Society.......Mrs. O. N. Townsend, Presiding&#13;
&#13;
Reports from Conferences...............Ohio, West Ohio, North-East Ohio&#13;
&#13;
3:00 P.M.--Address.................................."Spiritual Rebirth"&#13;
&#13;
Rev. L. C. Wright, D.D., Pastor&#13;
&#13;
Epworth Euclid Church, Cleveland, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Offering&#13;
&#13;
Benediction&#13;
&#13;
"Enter into his gates with Thanksgiving&#13;
&#13;
And into his courts with praise."&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--Reception for all Methodist Women.........Monnett Hall Campus&#13;
&#13;
13</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 14 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
LAYMEN'S MEETING&#13;
&#13;
Friday--September Ninth&#13;
&#13;
10:00 A.M.--West Ohio Lay Electoral Conference...........Reformed Church&#13;
&#13;
Ohio Lay Electoral Conference..........................St. Mark's Church&#13;
&#13;
North-East Ohio Lay Electoral Conference.............Presbyterian Church&#13;
&#13;
1:45 P.M.--Joint Session of the West Ohio, the Ohio, and the North-East&#13;
&#13;
Ohio Laymen's Associations.........................William Street Church&#13;
&#13;
Address "Personal Spiritual Life"..........................Walter Frazer&#13;
&#13;
President of the Pittsburgh Laymen's Association.&#13;
&#13;
Address "The Christian Layman and His Time".............Geo. L. Morelock&#13;
&#13;
Executive Secretary of the Laymen's Work of the Methodist Episcopal&#13;
&#13;
Church, South.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 P.M.--All Laymen will join to hear Dr. T. R. Glover.....Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
5:30 P.M.--Father and Son Banquet......................Edwards Gymnasium&#13;
&#13;
Toastmaster........................................Dr. E. H. Cherrington&#13;
&#13;
Address, Branch Rickey, Vice President and Business Manager, St. Louis&#13;
&#13;
Cardinals Baseball Club.&#13;
&#13;
7:30 P.M.--Joint Meeting Ministers and Laymen...............Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
Music .................................................Preachers Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Address,...................................Bishop Theodore S. Henderson&#13;
&#13;
Saturday--September Tenth&#13;
&#13;
8:30 A.M.--West Ohio Conference Laymen's Association, Reformed Church&#13;
&#13;
Ohio Conference Laymen's Association................St. Mark's Church&#13;
&#13;
North-East Ohio Conference Laymen's Association, Presbyterian&#13;
&#13;
Church.&#13;
&#13;
11:00 A.M.--Joint Session of all Laymen's Associations, Junior Laymen's Asso-&#13;
&#13;
ciations and the Three Annual Conferences ..............Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 15 of Tri-Conference Program]&#13;
&#13;
JUNIOR LAYMEN'S CONFERENCE&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
North-East Ohio Conference&#13;
&#13;
West Ohio Conference&#13;
&#13;
Ohio Conference&#13;
&#13;
Asbury Methodist Episcopal Church&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
September 9-10-11, 1927&#13;
&#13;
CONFERENCE THEME: "Christ First and Christ Forever"&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Friday Morning&#13;
&#13;
9:00-12:00--Registration and Assignment of Delegates&#13;
&#13;
Friday Afternoon&#13;
&#13;
Mr. William N. Murray, President, North-East Ohio Conference, Presiding&#13;
&#13;
2:00-2:15--Song Service lead by Rev. O. A. Cheek&#13;
&#13;
2:15-2:45--Devotional Address......................Dr. Rollin H. Walker&#13;
&#13;
Department of English Bible, Ohio Wesleyan University&#13;
&#13;
2:45-3:15-"The Junior Layman and Prayer"&#13;
&#13;
"The Junior Layman and the Bible"&#13;
&#13;
"The Junior Layman and His Chum"&#13;
&#13;
Three ten minute addresses by three Conference Presidents&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Boyd C. Kohler, West Ohio Conference&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Paul Peed, Ohio Conference&#13;
&#13;
Mr. William N. Murray, North-East Ohio Conference&#13;
&#13;
3:15-3:30--Song Service&#13;
&#13;
3:30-4:00--Address.........................President William H. McMaster&#13;
&#13;
Mount Union College, Alliance, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
4:00-4:15--Closing Period&#13;
&#13;
Friday Evening&#13;
&#13;
5:30--Father and Son Banquet.........................Edward's Gymnasium&#13;
&#13;
Toastmaster, .....................................Dr. E. H. Cheerington&#13;
&#13;
Speaker, Mr. Branch Rickey, Vice President and Business Manager, St. Louis&#13;
&#13;
Cardinals' Baseball Club&#13;
&#13;
7:30--Joint Meeting with Senior Laymen.......................Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
Saturday Morning&#13;
&#13;
8:30-8:45--Devotional Service&#13;
&#13;
8:45-9:30--Address, "The Junior Layman Program"...Bishop Theodore S. Henderson&#13;
&#13;
9:30-10:45--Business in Separate Sessions&#13;
&#13;
11:00-12:00--Joint Session of the Junior Laymen with the Annual Conferences and&#13;
&#13;
the Senior Laymen's Conferences..............................Gray Chapel&#13;
&#13;
Saturday Afternoon&#13;
&#13;
2:00--Inter-Conference Field Meet in charge of Mr. George Gauthier, Director of&#13;
&#13;
Athletics, Ohio Wesleyan University.&#13;
&#13;
Saturday Evening&#13;
&#13;
7:30--Joint Meeting of Junior Laymen..........................Asbury Church&#13;
&#13;
Speaker to be announced&#13;
&#13;
Sunday Morning&#13;
&#13;
10:30--Junior Layman's Church Service.........................Asbury Church&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Otto Scott Steele, Presiding&#13;
&#13;
Sermon.........................................Bishop Theodore S. Henderson&#13;
&#13;
Conference Chief Counsellors&#13;
&#13;
North-East Ohio .....................Rev. Otto Scott Steele, Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
West Ohio ..............................Rev. R. E. Scully, Cincinatti, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Ohio................................Rev. Frank B. McIntosh, Granville, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
15</text>
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DEACONESS CONFERENCE&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
Combined Annual Conference Deaconess Boards representing the&#13;
&#13;
North-East Ohio, West Ohio and Ohio Annual Conferences&#13;
&#13;
First Baptist Church&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Friday, September 10, 1927&#13;
&#13;
Rev. N. E. Davis, Corresponding Secretary of the Board of Hospitals, Homes and&#13;
&#13;
Deaconess Work, Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
Morning Session--9:30 A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Devotional Service...........................Mrs. E. J. Rogers, Columbus, Ohio&#13;
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Report of the General Conference Commission on Deaconess Work Relative to&#13;
&#13;
Deaconess Legislation..................................Rev. N. E. Davis&#13;
&#13;
Consideration of problems in Relation to Annual Conference Deaconess Boards.&#13;
&#13;
Round Table Discussion of Deaconess Problems..........Miss Alice P. Thatcher,&#13;
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Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
Adjournment.&#13;
&#13;
Afternoon Session--2:00 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church&#13;
&#13;
Meetings of respective Annual Conference Deaconess Boards, places to be determined:&#13;
&#13;
North-East Ohio........................................Rev. J. R. Jacobs, Chairman&#13;
&#13;
West Ohio..............................................Rev. H. J. Jewett, Chairman&#13;
&#13;
Ohio...................................................Rev. L. C. Sparks, Chairman&#13;
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The regular business incident to the Annual Conference Deaconess Board will be&#13;
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Evening--Banquet--5:30 P.M.&#13;
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Toast Mistress.............Mrs. W. H. C. Goode, National President W.H.M.S.&#13;
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Invocation................................................Rev. J. R. Jacobs&#13;
&#13;
Reports from Deaconess Institutions,..........conducted by Rev. N. E. Davis&#13;
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Address .................................."The Deaconess' Educational Work"&#13;
&#13;
Miss Bertha Barber, Aurora, Illinois.&#13;
&#13;
Address ..................................."The Deaconess and the Hospital"&#13;
&#13;
Rev. J. A. Diekmann, D.D., Bethesda Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Songs...................................Miss Helen L. Rink, Cleveland, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Address......................."Deaconess Response to Persistent Human Needs"&#13;
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Mrs. Luella M. Evelisizer, West Side Community House, Cleveland, O.&#13;
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Adjournment.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
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[photo of Grace M.E. Church]&#13;
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Grace M.E. Church&#13;
&#13;
William Street&#13;
&#13;
M.E. Church&#13;
&#13;
below&#13;
&#13;
[photo of William Street M.E. Church]&#13;
&#13;
[photo of St. Paul M.E. Church]&#13;
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St. Paul M.E. Church&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Committee Chairman Bishop Theodore S. Henderson; Tri-Conference Program</text>
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&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]&#13;
&#13;
[image of church, trees, and people by Sulphur Spring]&#13;
&#13;
A FOUNTAIN OF GOOD&#13;
&#13;
IN THE WORLD&#13;
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[corresponds to inside of front cover of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

[blank]</text>
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                    <text>[page 5]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 5 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

A FOUNTAIN 

OF GOOD IN

THE WORLD

[smaller version of cover image]

Ohio Wesleyan is a fountain of

good from which a perennial

stream of national influence has

flowed for eighty years.

[OWU seal] OHIO WESLEYAN

UNIVERSITY~DELAWARE, O.</text>
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                    <text>[page 6]

[corresponds to page 2 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Ohio Wesleyan

The Founding of Ohio

Wesleyan

OHIO Wesleyan University was founded

in 1842 under the patronage of the

Methodist Episcopal Church. In 1841

Charles Elliott, Joseph M. Trimble and

W. P. Strickland drove from Urbana, Ohio

to Delaware, Ohio, to look at the grounds and

hotel building which the citizens of the latter

place had offered to the Methodist Church

for college purposes.

When the three preachers returned to the

seat of the Methodist conference, only one

of them had enough money with which to

pay for the carriage in which they made the

journey; and Dr. Trimble made the first 

contribution to the University by paying the

expenses of that historical visit.

Dr. Elliott's speech portraying the possibili-

ties of a college for Ohio Methodism awak-

ened great enthusiasm and led the conference

to accept the gift of the citizens of Delaware

and to undertake to launch a university upon

faith.

Pioneer Days

IN 1842 Delaware was a village of 900 in-

habitants, away from the lines of travel

and commerce. There were no railroads

in the state and but few good pikes. In bad

weather it took the tri-weekly stage a whole

day to plow its way hither from Columbus. 

There were no street lights and 

on dark nights pedestrians had

to carry lanterns.

[images of trees, houses, horses and buggies]

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                    <text>[page 7]

[corresponds to page 3 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

A Child of Faith

Columbus, now the closest large city, was

a straggling town of western type, with a 

population of 6048, while Cleveland, now the

nation's fifth city, could just muster 6070.

Mansion House and Sulphur 

Spring at Delaware

OHIO Wesleyan owes its location, if not

its establishment, to the famous White

Sulphur Spring in Delaware. In order

to accomodate tourists and seekers after

health, two enterprising citizens in 1833

erected a fine hotel on a spacious lot embrac-

ing the spring. This hotel soon became known 

to the citizens of Delaware and to tourists

as the Mansion House.

On account of the sparsely settled

state and the difficulties of traveling, it

seemed advisable in 1841 to give

up the idea of establishing a

western watering-place. The

spring property being thus

brought into the market, it was

suggested by Rev. Adam Poe,

the Methodist Pastor in Dela-

ware, that the citizens should

purchase it and 

offer it as a site

for a Methodist 

college. This sug-

gestion led to the

establishment of

a great 

univer-

sity.

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                    <text>[page 8]

[corresponds to page 4 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

80 Years of Education

THE founders of Ohio Wesleyan were stalwart pioneers who felt

the need of an institution that would develop in the youth of

their day a scholarly mind and a strong character.

Education supplemented with Character Building has been the

unswerving aim and ideal of the University for all these years.

That impress has been left upon the minds of more than 30,000

young men and women since 1842.

In addition to mental training every youth entering the Univer-

sity has his spiritual, physical and social welfare carefully guarded

and developed. Ohio Wesleyan's gift to civilization is a group of strong

upstanding, God-fearing men and women--youths trained intellec-

tually, inbred with a high moral sense and equipped physically to

meet the demands of life.

[photo]

University Hall and Gray Chapel

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                    <text>[page 9]

[corresponds to page 5 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

and Character Building

A

WELL BALANCED

EDUCATION

EDUCATION

(MENTAL TRAINING)

DEPARTMENT OF INSTRUCTION

COLLEGE COURSES

A. BUSINESS ADMIN.

B. ENGLISH

C. EDUCATION

D. FOREIGN LANG.

E. MATH. AND

ASTRONOMY

F. PHILOSOPHY AND

PSYCHO.


G. PHYSICS AND

ENGIN.

H. PHYSICAL ED.

I. RELIGIOUS ED.

J. SCIENCE

K. SOCIAL SCIENCES

SCHOOL OF MUSIC

SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS

SCHOOL OF ORATORY

MORE

PROFESSORS

PERMIT

SMALLER

CLASSES

PERSONAL CONTACT

WITH STUDENTS

FRESHMEN AND

SOPHS. GIVEN SAME

GRADE INSTRUC-

TION AS JUNIORS

AND SENIORS

WELL BALANCED

CULTURAL

EDUCATION

RELIGIOUS

TRAINING

AND

CHARACTER

BUILDING

(SPIRITUAL WELFARE)

DAILY CHAPEL

SUNDAY BIBLE

SCHOOL CLASSES

FOR STUDENTS

SERIES OF 

CONSECRATION

EVENTS

CONSULTATION WITH

STUDENTS ON

RELIGION AND LIFE

PROBLEMS

MERRICK LECTURES

ON EXPERIMENTAL

AND PRACTICAL

RELIGION

Y.M.C.A. AND Y.W.C.A.

STUDENT VOLUNTEER

BAND

OXFORD CLUB

PHYSICAL

AND SOCIAL

WELFARE

COMPULSORY

GYMNASIUM FOR

MEN AND WOMEN

PERIODICAL 

PHYSICAL EXAM. OF

STUDENTS

CONSULTATION WITH

DIRECTOR OF PHYS.

EDUCATION

(A PHYSICIAN)

SUPERVISION OF

STUDENT LIVING

CONDITIONS

DIRECTOR'S 

ATTENTION TO

PHYSICAL WELFARE

OF FACULTY

HOSPITAL AND

RELIEF ASSN.

SUPERVISED

RECREATION

STUDENT SOCIAL

ACTIVITIES

VOCATIONAL 

GUIDANCE

(FUTURE)

CONSULTATION 

HOURS WITH DEAN

AND PROF. FOR

VOCATIONAL

GUIDANCE

BUSINESS LECTURES

BY PROM. BUSINESS

MEN

LECTURES BY

LEADING ALUMNI

PSYCHOLOGICAL 

EXAMINATION AS

GUIDE TO MENTAL

APTITUDES

A graphic outline of

Ohio Wesleyan's 

aims, ideals and

educational policies

--showing the men-

tal training; the at-

tention given to the

spiritual, physical,

and social welfare of

all students and their

guidance for the fu-

ture.

5</text>
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                    <text>[page 10]

[corresponds to page 6 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Training the Youths of Today for

A Liberal Education

OHIO Wesleyan is a college of liberal arts that affords its students

a broad, cultural education. Its practice is to prepare men

and women for the responsibility of citizen-ship that they may fill

with credit any post to which they may be called and master with

facility any problem with which they are confronted.

Instead of directing the minds of its students into narrow, techni-

cal pursuits, Ohio Wesleyan provides a liberal education that frees

the mind of the limitation of special interests and makes it alert,

wide ranging and resourceful.

Such training fits men and women to deal with the difficult and un-

expected problems of life and business and instills into them many

things that a strictly professional training will not. For example:

(a) Open mind, (b) Judicial Temper, (c) Resourcefulness in sum-

moning related facts, (d) Breadth of Appreciation, (e) Orderly ar-

rangement of facts and thoughts, (f) Clear presentation in good

English.

[photo]

Entrance to Slocum Library

6</text>
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                    <text>[page 11]

[corresponds to page 7 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

the Responsibilities of Tomorrow

Cultural Training as a Foundation

WITH broad cultural training as a foundation, men will become

better engineers, better business men, better teachers, lawyers,

doctors, ministers, farmers and citizens, than they who cramp the

first development of the mind in narrow, technical pursuits.

A broad viewpoint once acquired, will last a lifetime. If a man wants to

be an engineer, by all means, let him get a liberal arts training, in whole or in

part before taking up the technicalities. By so doing, he will think more

clearly, write more accurately and speak more convincingly. This will enable

him to get his proposition before the public in better form and take and keep

for himself the place in the community to which his training entitles him.

To keep abreast of the times, Ohio Wesleyan has supplemented the cultural

studies, such as the Classics, Literature, Philosophy and the Languages with

the Arts and Sciences demanded by conditions of modern civilization.

The following list outlines the Departments of Instruction and College

Courses that constitute the University:

Business Administra-		Sciences			Social Sciences

tion				Botany--8 courses		Economics--7 courses

Education			Physics--9 courses		History-- 33 courses

English				Engineering--11			Political Science-- 10

Foreign Languages		courses				courses

Mathematics and As-		Geology--12			Sociology--17 courses

tronomy				courses				Home Economics--10

Philosophy and Psy-		Zoology--8 courses		courses

chology				Chemistry-- 21			School of Music

Physical Education		courses				School of Fine Arts

Religion							School of Oratory

[photo]

Sturges Hall--A Chemistry Building where many students have labored

to help solve the mysteries of science.

7

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                    <text>[page 12]

[corresponds to page 8 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Preparation for Life

Character Building at Ohio Wesleyan

PREPARATION of young men and women for life as well as

occupation has been a steadfast policy of Ohio Wesleyan since

1842. She has always recognized and met the great responsibility

that rests upon a University in directing its students through the

four critical and formative years of life. Ohio Wesleyan has so con-

sistently taught straight living as well as straight thinking that she

has often been called "The Character Moulder."

Personal Contact Between Faculty and Students

REALIZING the powerful influence that a professor exerts upon

the life of his students, the University has always fostered close

paternal contact between faculty and undergraduates. That policy

necessarily carries with it smaller classes and an aim to give the same

grade of instruction to freshmen and sophomores as to juniors and

seniors: A quality rather than a quantity production.

Daily Chapel

DAILY Chapel service is an important and unique part of student

life at Ohio Wesleyan. Two things stand out clearly in this dis-

tinctive exercise:--it encourages fellowship, solidarity and a demo-

cratic spirit.

[photo]

Daily Chapel Service at Ohio Wesleyan

8</text>
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                    <text>[page 13]

[corresponds to page 9 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

As well as Occupation

This is one time at which all students congregate. As they throng

through the corridors before and after the Chapel Service, there 

is a wholesomeness and frankness that is created by reason of this

daily mingling together. In the second place, the ideal thing is put

before them continuously and in the highest form. Even though

attendance is compulsory, the atmosphere is devotional and the pre-

sentation of the ideal things of life is made in such a simple and

superior way as to meet the approval of all types of minds.

Other Religious Activities

ALTHOUGH attendance is voluntary, the great interest that

students take in other religious activities reflects the intense

moral earnestness of these young people--The best professors in the

University lead the Sunday Bible School Classes for students. The

effort is to find and effectively interpret the Scriptures in their prac-

tical bearing upon every day life.

The Consecration Services, held twice a year; Consultation with

students on religious and life problems; The Merrick Lectures on 

Experimental and Practical Religion; The Y.M.C.A.; The Y.W.C.

A.; The Student Volunteer Band composed of students who are

preparing for service in the mission field, are all making a mighty

impress upon the minds of Ohio Wesleyan's young people.

Ohio Wesleyan Provides a Well Balanced Education.

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                    <text>[page 14]

[corresponds to page 10 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Keen Minds

A SCHOLARLY mind, a clean character, and a strong body is the 

heritage with which all conscientious and well-meaning students are

endowed by Ohio Wesleyan.

During the past eighty years, the University has given to civilization

more than 30,000 young men and women equipped physically for lives of

strenuous work--an army of Doers as well as Thinkers.

Physical Education

THE University Course, Gymnasium work and athletics are all part of

the Department of Physical Education.

The University Course prepares men and women to teach athletics,

gymnastics and playground activities in Colleges, High Schools, Y.M.

C.A.'s, Y.W.C.A.'s, and many other fields of physical endeavor. Ohio

Wesleyan has the best equipment in Ohio for this class of work, and its

graduates are able to compete with Physical Directors trained in specialized

schools.

[photo]

Edwards Gymnasium. One of the Finest in the State

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                    <text>[page 15]

[corresponds to page 11 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

In Strong Bodies

Keeping Entire Student Body Healthy and

Physically Fit

THE Director of Physical Education is not only an able Physical Direc-

tor but an experienced Physician who has built his department with

the object of bettering the student's health while educating him physically.

The aim of the Department is to bring the entire student body to a high

standard of physical fitness rather than the development of a few stars.

Physical defects are cured, muscles are co-ordinated and students are

taught the value of recreation. Boys and girls are taught health habits that

prove invaluable in after life.

The head of this department is ably assisted by capable leaders for

gymnasium classes and well known coaches for the several branches of

athletics.

An opportunity for all students to participate in some branch of athlet-

ics, compulsory gymnasium work, periodical physical examination of

students, supervision of student living conditions, consultation with

Director of Physical Education

(a Physician) are several of the

many ways in which Ohio

Wesleyan guards the physical

welfare of its students.

[images of swimming and track/hurdles]

Ohio Wesleyan Develops Doers as well as Thinkers

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                    <text>[page 16]

[corresponds to page 12 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

A Student Today

Helping the Student Find Himself

TO prevent the groping and floundering that often follows the sudden

transition from student life to the responsibilities of business life, Ohio

Wesleyan has adopted a definite policy of vocational guidance.

The Dean or Professor with whom the student has been so closely

associated during the most important years of life preparation, exerts a

powerful influence in shaping the future of the student. The Professor

during this formative period plays the important role of Teacher, Guide

and Friend. This personal contact is the saving grace of college life and a 

powerful inspiration for the future.

Consultation with Deans and Professors for vocational guidance is

supplemented with business lectures to undergraduates by Ohio Wesleyan

Alumni and other prominent business men brought to Delaware for that

purpose. Added to these helps, the University conducts psychological

examinations to determine the mental aptitude of its students.

Ohio Wesleyan gives studied attention to the mind, the heart, the body,

and the future of every student within her walls--a well balanced train-

ing that develops youths of promise into men and women of prominence.

[image of student talking to professor]

Personal contact between Professors and Students is the saving grace of college

life and a powerful inspiration for the future.

12
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                    <text>[page 17]

[corresponds to page 13 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

A Citizen Tomorrow

[photo of John Washington Hoffman]

JOHN WASHINGTON HOFFMAN

PRESIDENT

The Faculty of Ohio Wesleyan University

"ESSENTIAL as are buildings, elaborate equipment, and a beautiful

campus, much more so is a faculty composed of instructors of high

ideals, vigorous religious life, and attractive personality.

In Ohio Wesleyan we insist on skill in instruction, enthusiasm for culture,

devotion to learning, the pursuit of scholarship. We do not forget that

comradeship of life in class and on campus, and intimacy of contact be-

tween student and professor are indispensable.

The final problem with Ohio Wesleyan is a human one--scholars of

high moral purpose, minds trained to perceive the great religious values,

personality that is consecrated to the making of a better world.

At Ohio Wesleyan we insist that every instructor shall aim not only at

the development of high intellectual life and well balanced technical skill,

but also the realization of the most intelligent Christian ideal for every

student."

JOHN W. HOFFMAN.

13</text>
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                    <text>[page 18]

[corresponds to page 14 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Student Life

THE city of Delaware is comparatively small with a population of nine

thousand, and is largely dominated by the University life. The clean,

healthful atmosphere in which Ohio Wesleyan students live is that created

by themselves and would be impossible if the University were located in

a large city. THe lack of diverting influences engenders a democratic good-will and

heartiness among the students and creates an enduring class and college Spirit.

At Ohio Wesleyan there is a right balance between the delightful social life of the

Campus, the activities and amusements that go hand in hand with youth, and the

seriousness of the student's work. To develop individuality, executive ability and self-

reliance, the University encourages many student activities outside the regular cur-

riculum--Student Government, Athletics, College Publications and various societies,

Clubs and organizations.

Student Government and Honor Court

AN organization of the student body for self-government has been formed which

expresses its will through a Student Council in matters affecting the general

student interests. The Student Council has legislative functions while the Honor

Court is the judicial body which attends to all violations of the Honor Code.

Self-government by the women of the University is accomplished through the

Women's Student Government Association. It has legislative and executive power

in matters pertaining to decorum, exercise, and social life. The positive and constructive

end which the University seeks to attain in its college government is to impress its spirit

and ideals upon the young men and women who enter its halls, and to constitute them a 

self-governing body.

[photo of porch]

Monnett Porch--To dwell in shades like these is to be blest.

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                    <text>[page 19]

[corresponds to page 15 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

And Activities

Athletics

THE aim of the department of physical education to make the entire

student body physically fit rather than to develop a few star athletes,

has increased rather than decreased, Ohio Wesleyan's prowess in all

branches of athletics.

While many schools, by special effort, have been able to develop one or two branches

of sports to a high standard, Ohio Wesleyan's policy has permitted her to put into the

field, year after year, strong teams in all major and minor sports--football, basketball

and track, tennis, gymnasium team and swimming team. To furthur encourage mass

rather than individual athletic training the University has many intra-mural contests

in all branches of sports between its classes, fraternities and clubs.

An Enviable Record

IT is interesting to know that in 1892 Ohio Wesleyan participated in and won the

first intercollegiate football game played in Ohio, the first college soccer game in

Ohio in 1914 and the first Ohio intercollegiate swimming match in 1917. Ohio

Wesleyan has won four State Football Championships and three in Basketball. Besides

winning the state relay championship three times in four years, she holds the state

record in two events.

Ohio High School Basketball Tournament

at Delaware

BELIEVING that clean sports breed American victories for the future through

the training in judgment and avoidance of blunders that they give to participants,

Ohio Wesleyan each year conducts the Ohio High School Basketball Tournament

in her spacious gymnasium. In fourteen years this event has grown from 6 High School

teams to 160 Teams and state-wide interest has increased proportionately.

[images of sports]


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                    <text>[page 20]

[corresponds to page 16 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Student Life and Activities

LE BIJOU--An attractive publication issued annually by the Junior

Class to preserve a record of Undergraduate life and general College

Activities.

The Mirror--A literary and humorous magazine published five times a 

year. Positions on the editorial and business staffs are filled by competi-

tion open to all undergraduates.

The Ohio Wesleyan Transcript--Established in 1866, the official publica-

tion of the students of the University. Issued weekly by a board of edi-

tors appointed after a literary competition.

Fraternities, Clubs and Organizations for All

ABOUT half of the men in the student body belong to the thirteen

National Greek letter fraternities, while others belong to the Commons

Club and the Ohio Wesleyan Union.

Each of these organizations has its own house where its members live during the

four years of college life. Democracy is the keynote of the success of fraternity life at

Ohio Wesleyan and membership is valued more for association and companionship 

than as a social distinction.

There are special organizations for different Departments of Instruction--Science

Clubs, the English Writer's Club, The Histrionic Club, The Philosophical Club, The

Alliance Francais, The Spanish Club, The Oxford Club for prospective ministers, etc;

also four honorary fraternities organized to keep up the standards of oratory, gym-

nastics, journalism and music.

Ohio Wesleyan is one of 89 leading American Colleges that has been granted a 

Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.

Each year at Recognition Chapel, the last chapel service of the year, undergraduates,

alumni and friends listen breathlessly to hear the names of those who, by excellence in

scholarship, have won the right to wear the key of this most ancient of fraternities.

[photo of lake with swan]

Greenwood Lake, Delaware, Ohio

16</text>
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                    <text>[page 21]

[corresponds to page 17 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Ohio Wesleyan in National Life

THE country looks to its Universities and Colleges to produce men

trained for leadership--not only industrial, but moral, social and physi-

cal leadership.

For 80 years Ohio Wesleyan has contributed to the Country and the

World this well balanced trained leadership. Thirty thousand of her sons

and daughters have inscribed the name "Ohio Wesleyan" high on the re-

cord of professional, commercial, industrial and spiritual accomplishments.

Ohio Wesleyan's unswerving purpose is to graduate young men and

women of light and leading, of good character and impassioned devotion

to high ideals--graduates who have the ability to serve, as well as the will

to serve.

Ohio Wesleyan's Contribution to Public Education

RUSKIN says: "There is only one cure

for public distress and that is public

education." To provide public edu-

cation, schools, colleges and universities

need more and better teachers. During

its 80 years of public service Ohio Wes-

leyan has given the world thousands of

men and women taught to teach.

She has provided thirty College and 

University Presidents to such well known

schools as Penn. State, Uni-

versity of Kentucky, Univer-

sity of Nevada, Armour In-

stitute, De Pauw, Miami,

Ohio Northern, Iowa Wes-

leyan, Kansas Wesleyan and

others equally well known.

This educational influence

has extended to many for-

eign countries; one conspicu-

ous example being Peking

University, China, where

President Hiram H. Lowry,

'67 has exerted a powerful 

influence for good in the Far

East.

Over 400 Ohio Wesleyan 

Alumni are deans or Pro-

fessors in Colleges and Uni-

versities; upwards of 200 are

High School Principals and

more than 1200 are teachers

in grade and high schools.

[photo]

One of the many beauty spots on Ohio Wesleyan Campus]

17</text>
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                    <text>[page 22]

[corresponds to page 18 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Ohio Wesleyan

Ohio Wesleyan's Contribution to the Church

IN Methodism, Ohio Wesleyan is aptly called "The

Mother of Bishops." After Luccock and McCabe,

great men whose light still shines undimmed, come

Bishops Anderson, Hoss, Hughes, McConnell, McDowell 

and Thirkfield. Three of her Presidents, Thompson,

Bashford and Welch, have been elevated to the episcopacy.

For many years the late Bishop Bashford directed all

Methodist missionary work in China, while Ex-President

Welch is now Bishop of Korea and Japan.

John R. Mott says that Ohio Wesleyan has sent out 

more missionaries than any other American co-educational

school, yet only one-fifth of her students are preparing for

religious work. The number of theological students fur-

nished by the college is not surpassed by any other school.

The University has given the Church upwards of one 

thousand ministers of the Gospel; three hundred Foreign

Missionaries and hundreds of trained workers to the Y.

M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., and other religious organizations.

These Christian characters have made the name of

America blessed in the far corners of the Earth through

the message of human sympathy they bore and the lives

of service they lived.

Ohio Wesleyan in Political and

Official Life

OHIO Wesleyan has admirably met the ever present

demand for virile, upstanding, God-fearing men in

public life.

As Senator from Indiana and Vice-President of the

United States, the late Charles Warren Fairbanks, class

of 1872, was an exemplar of the Ohio Wesleyan tradition

of straight thinking and straight living--qualities so neces-

sary in steering our Nation through its great crises into

normal, well ordered life.

Ohio Wesleyan has the creditable record of providing

such distinguished men as Herrick, Pattison and Foraker

to serve a total of five terms as Chief Executive of Ohio;

in addition to Governors for six other states--Hamilton of

Illinois, Elbert of Colorado, Atkinson of West Virginia,

Hoyt of Wyoming, Cosgrove

of Washington and Steele,

the first Governor of Okla-

homa.

At least a dozen of the 

alumni have been elected to

the United States Senate and

House of Representatives, 

while many more have 

rendered distinguished ser-

vice as Ambassadors, Minis-

ters and Consuls in the foreign

service.

The record of Herrick in

France and Whitlock in Bel-

gium is typical of the Con-

sular Service that her sons

[image of professor teaching]

Education

[image of minister preaching]

Religion

[image of Capitol building]

Political and

Official

[image of bank]

Banking

18</text>
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                    <text>[page 23]

[corresponds to page 19 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

In National Life

have rendered in England, Scotland, Denmark, South

America, Porto Rico and Korea.

Ohio Wesleyan Prominent in

Many Lines of Endeavor

OHIO Wesleyan Alumni have not only distinguished

themselves in Education, Religion and Politics, but

they have an enviable record of accomplishments

in the fields of Business, Law, Journalism, Medicine and

other Professions.

Even an incomplete analysis of Wesleyan Alumni

indicates 1485 successfully engaged in business enterprises

such as Manufacturing, Banking, Engineering and Con-

struction; 721 in Medicine and 209 in Agriculture. Space

will not permit an enumeration in the hundreds who have

reached the top of the ladder in these several fields of

endeavor.

In addition to 404 alumni engaged in the practice

of Law, Ohio Wesleyan has supplied her own state with

two Attorney-Generals and a Chief Justice; the United

States with a Judge of the Supreme Court of Appeals;

Idaho with a Chief Justice of Supreme Court, Colorado

and Indiana with Judges of the Supreme Court.

Besides the 228 in Government Service, 60 alumni are

serving as Public Lecturers, Singers, Dramatists and Ac-

tors. Of the 200 in Journalism, several are editors of

Christian Advocates; Dr. George Gould of the Medical 

Journal; E. J. Wheeler, Editor of Current Opinion; W. F.

Bigelow, Editor of Good Housekeeping; Stella V. Roderick,

formerly Associate Editor of Everybody's, now Editor of

The Woman Citizen; Edward Keen is Manager of the

United Press for Europe and Melville E. Stone is inter-

nationally known as President of the Associated Press.

In the invention of the telephone, one of the greatest

contributions to modern progress, Prof. A. E. Dolbear,

class of 1866, is generally assigned a place as co-inventor

with Alexander Graham Bell.

In the development of X-Ray Photography, now so

necessary in diagnosis and surgery, H. Clyde Snook,

class of 1900, has played a most important part.

No record of alumni accomplishments would be com-

plete without including the name and good works of Frank

Wakeley Gunsaulus, class of 1875. In his dual role as

Pastor of the Central Con-

gregational Church of Chi-

cago and the founder and

President of the Armour In-

stitute, Chicago, he qualifies

as one of Ohio Wesleyan's 

distinguished men in both

religious and educational

work. In Charles E. Jefferson,

Pastor of Broadway Taber-

nacle, New York City, the

Congregational Church has

fallen heir to another noted

alumnus.

[image of construction site]

Engineering and

Construction

[image of courtroom]

Law

[image of newsroom]

Journalism

[image of man with sick person]

Medicine

19</text>
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                    <text>[page 24]

[corresponds to page 20 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Ohio Wesleyan

The School of Music

THE School of Music was established as part of Ohio Wesleyan in 1877

and has filled an important place in the University from that time to

the present. It is a complete school of Musical Culture and Learning.

Its scope has been enlarged to meet the needs of a growing institution and

the increasing importance of music in education.

The school is organized to serve two types of students--those who

expect to make music their vocation, and those seeking to broaden their

general culture. The Course covers theoretical and applied music in both

instrument and voice. In all musical work thoroughness of preparation

rather than superficial brilliance is encouraged.

With musical traditions and accomplishments extending back over 45

years--with a hundred students pursuing the full course in music and two

hundred twenty-five taking music in some form or another, is it any won-

der that the spirit of music permeates the entire student body. On the

campus, in the fraternities, at the games or wherever young folks assemble,

Ohio Wesleyan music is ever present and in demand.

[photo of Sanborn Hall]

Sanborn Hall, Home of the School of Music

20</text>
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                    <text>[page 25]

[corresponds to page 21 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

On the Platform

Student Musical Organizations

THE Men's Glee Club at Ohio Wesleyan has a local, state and even

a national reputation. It gives entertainments at the University, in

Ohio and neighboring states during vacations and week-ends. This Glee

Club in competition with the Clubs of Harvard, Yale and Princeton, was

selected by the United States Government for a trip to Panama Canal

Zone last summer. The Choral Club, a similar organization among the

women, gives an annual concert in Gray Chapel. The varsity male quartet

makes long tours and during the summer has been booked by Chautau-

qua Circuits.

The Ohio Wesleyan Band of 40 pieces is known throughout the state and

is especially prominent at games played in Delaware and at neighboring

colleges.

Membership in the several musical organizations is competitive, and

weekly training is given by 

members of the faculty in the

School of Music.

The programs of the Glee

and Choral Clubs offer oppor-

tunity for the entire student

body to hear the finest music

and to participate in its per-

formance.

[photos]

Glee Club and Band

21</text>
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                    <text>[page 26]

[corresponds to page 22 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Ohio Wesleyan on the Platform

School of Oratory

"WE would rather beat Ohio Wesleyan than any other school," wrote

Harvard Debate Coach to Professor Marshman on the eve of the

Ohio Wesleyan-Harvard Debate in March 1922. Wesleyan won. This

was Harvard's first appearance on an Ohio debating floor, and the state-

ment is typical of the esteem in which Ohio Wesleyan debating teams

have been held for many years. During the past year she has won all ten

debates in which her team has participated; sometimes on one side of the

question and sometimes on the other; against leading colleges and univer-

sities from Harvard, champions of the east, to Occidental, Los Angeles,

champions of the west.

Ohio Wesleyan's students have always received unusual training in the art of public

speech. They are taught to "think on their feet," and "stick to their text." The univer-

sity has insisted that its graduates shall be able to express themselves clearly, convinc-

ingly and logically; a sincere effort is made to develop in every student the power of

persuasive expression.

The value of Debate and Oratory in the student's life work is admirably expressed by

President Hoffman in the following words:

"To be able to think quickly, to organize one's materials hurriedly to meet the state-

ment of an opponent, to perceive clearly the fallacy of a conclusion, this is indispensible

in high achievement. This quality of mind translated in statesmanship, in business, in

medicine, in practical life means everywhere genius and honor and success.

At Ohio Wesleyan we constantly strive to prepare citizens who are competent to

make the best public sentiment, who are wise in moral and social leadership, whose

poise of mind and soul is equal to any emergency. No department contributes more

to this important purpose than our well-organized and splendidly equipped department

of Oratory.

[photo of Perkins Observatory]

The Perkins Observatory

With the completion of the new observatory and the installation of the new telescope, now

under construction, Ohio Wesleyan's Department of Astronomy will rank among the first

three in the World.

22</text>
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                    <text>[page 27]

[corresponds to page 25 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Ohio Wesleyan a Co-educational

University

BY reading the preceding pages, the reader has learned that Ohio Wes-

leyan is a Co-educational School. When it was founded in 1842, the

co-education of the sexes in the higher schools of learning was practically

unknown.

Even at that early day the advancing sentiment of the Country was

bringing women more and more prominently, not only into social life, but

into public and responsible positions in the educational, religious, profes-

sional and secular fields of labor. To meet this demand for higher educa-

tion for daughters as well as sons, the Ohio Wesleyan Female College was

established in Delaware in 1853. However, the debate for and against

University Co-education continued for many years, so it was not until

1877 that Ohio Wesleyan Female College became part of Ohio Wesleyan

University, and mixed classes were established. Today Ohio Wesleyan's

attendance of 1600 students is equally divided between men and women.

[photo of Monnett Hall]

Historic Old Monnett

25</text>
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                    <text>[page 28]

[corresponds to page 26 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Ohio Wesleyan

Historic Old Monnett

MONNETT HALL, the home of the girls attending Ohio Wesleyan,

is the second largest girl's dormitory in the Country. It is a romantic,

ivy covered old building, surrounded by a beautiful campus and shadowed

by stately oaks and tall maples, growing as nature planted them. Pending

the completion of the large girl's dormitory, now under construction, as

a unit of the Monnett group, many of the girls live out in town at the

various cottages, as they are called; yet, the women's life of the University

centers in historic "Old Monnett."

Its halls are hung with prints of the World's great pictures, and contain

many of the University's trophies and Art Treasures. It accommodates

the Y.W.C.A., the Library, many class rooms and the two literary

society halls, decorated in artistic style.

A charter member of the oldest society was Miss Lucy Webb, the first

student in the old Female Academy, and later the wife of President Ruther-

ford B. Hayes. A handsome full length mirror in the main corridor was

presented to Monnett by Mrs. Hayes while she was Mistress of the White

House.

[photos]

Procession on Monnett Day and Crowing of the "May Queen"

26</text>
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                    <text>[page 29]

[corresponds to page 27 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

A Co-educational University

The wholesome every day life at Monnett blossoms into impressive

and festive exercises on special occasions and holidays. Every day, three

hundred girls sit down together in the big dining room. One of the mem-

orable occasions is the breakfast on Easter morning, when the girls come

from the sunrise prayer meeting, all in white, two by two, into the dining

room. The tables are gay with ferns and daffodils and at each plate is a 

card of greeting from the Y.W.C.A.

On Monnett Day the girls form one long, white procession winding among

the trees to the music of the "Spring Song." Then comes the crowning of

the May Queen, the fantastic festive dances, the pageant, the play and the

May-pole. Imagine the sweetness, the color and the gayety of that day.

School of Fine Arts

ON the right of Monnett Campus we see Lyon Hall with its round, 

gray-stone tower. It contains the School of Fine Arts, in which,

besides regular courses in drawing and painting, a special study is made

of home decoration. The rear of the building contains the new labora-

tories for the courses in Home Economics. On the left, is Sanborn Hall,

a model of classical beauty within and without. It is the home of the

School of Music, fully described in other pages of this book.

University Records show that Wesleyan women have made their marks

in all fields of national endeavor and especially in one field that transcends

all others in its glory, its sacredness and its greatness--Home-Making.

3634 of the Alumnae are recorded as Home-Makers.

[photo of Austin Hall]

Austin Hall, Fine New Girls Dormitory

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                    <text>[page 30]

[corresponds to page 28 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

An Inspiring Message from William F. Anderson,

Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church

"By Their Fruits Ye Shall Know Them"

"THE most noteworthy thing about Ohio Wesleyan University is its output of men

and women for practical leadership in the various departments of human activity.

"By their fruits ye shall know them" is a standard of measurement which comes

to us upon the highest authority. Adjudged by this standard the old college at Delaware

stands in the very first rank. her ideals have gone out through all the earth and her men

and women to the end of the world.

Her sons and daughters have won the highest distinction in the classics, in science,

in philosophy, in literature, in the various professions, in business, in statesmanship,

in the Christian ministry and in all forms of social, philanthropic and missionary propa-

ganda.

To know the facts is to stand in admiration and wonderment at the human product

of this institution. I suspect that one of the chief reasons to be given in explanation

of the remarkable success which has attended those who have been trained here is to be 

found in the emphasis which has ever been placed upon the cultivation of vital religion

in the program of the University.

The institution itself is a monument to the spirit of sacrifice which has characterized

its progenitors and builders from the beginning. This is really the birthright of Ohio

Wesleyan University which has made it what it is and which is to be cherished now and

through all the future years with unwavering and ever increasing appreciation. Such

institutions are all too few even in America.

An investment in Ohio Wesleyan University is an investment for scholarship, for truth,

for broad culture, for human progress, for world betterment, for the Kingdom of God in

America and to the ends of the earth."

[image]

Architects Perspective Sketch of the New Women's Building--"Watson Hall"

on Monnett Campus

28</text>
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                    <text>[page 31]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 29 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

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                    <text>[page 32]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 30 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

Copyright 1922

by

Ohio Wesleyan University</text>
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                    <text>[page 33]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 31 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

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                  <elementText elementTextId="11957">
                    <text>[page 34]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 32 of OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]

[seal of OWU]

WESLEIANA UNIVERSITAS OHIOENSIS DELAWARENSI 1842</text>
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                    <text>[page 35]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to loose sheet from OWU "A Fountain of Good in the World" 1922]&#13;
&#13;
CARL EUGENE HINE		JOHN W. HOFFMAN, PRESIDENT		WALTER A. JONES&#13;
ASSISTANT TO PRESIDENT						PRESIDENT BOARD OF TRUSTEES&#13;
&#13;
OHIO&#13;
&#13;
WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Here's the&#13;
&#13;
Book You've&#13;
&#13;
Been Looking For ---&#13;
&#13;
"A Fountain of Good in the World"&#13;
&#13;
This book has been written to acquaint friends of&#13;
&#13;
Ohio Wesleyan with the important work that this Christian&#13;
&#13;
University is doing, and especially to remind alumni and&#13;
&#13;
former students of the fine traditions, the remarkable&#13;
&#13;
accomplishments, the ideals and aims of their Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
The folders that you have received, the consistent&#13;
&#13;
newspaper advertising that has been carried in Ohio papers&#13;
&#13;
and this book are several forms of dignified advertising&#13;
&#13;
that your University is employing to revivify in the minds&#13;
&#13;
of alumni that good old "Wesleyan spirit" that means so &#13;
&#13;
much to all of us.&#13;
&#13;
This educational advertising serves as a foundation &#13;
&#13;
for the active work that is now in progress on the Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Wesleyan Development Program. As this great task calls&#13;
&#13;
for the active support and cooperation of all alumni and&#13;
&#13;
former students, the University feels it desirable that&#13;
&#13;
everyone should have before him a clear up-to-date picture&#13;
&#13;
of the great school for which he is to GIVE AND GET. You&#13;
&#13;
will receive, at an early date, other literature specifi-&#13;
&#13;
cally covering the Development Program.&#13;
&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
&#13;
C. E. Hine&#13;
&#13;
OHIO WESLEYAN &#13;
&#13;
UNIVERSITY~DELAWARE, O.&#13;
&#13;
EDUCATION AND CHARACTER BUILDING SINCE 1842</text>
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Social aspects--Ohio Wesleyan University--Delaware--Delaware County--Ohio&#13;
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                <text>President: John W. Hoff; President Board of Trustees: Walter A. Jones</text>
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                    <text>[page 1]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of Delaware HS Bulletin 1922]&#13;
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BULLETIN&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE&#13;
&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
'22&#13;
&#13;
[seal reading "DELAWARE HIGH SCHOOL DELAWARE OHIO REX LEX DUX LUX" (trans. "my King, my Law, my Leader, my Light")]</text>
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                    <text>[page 2]

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The&#13;
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&#13;
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To the Team

Whose cleanness of sportsmanship, keenness 

of skill, and intense, earnest endeavor for the

glory of Delaware High inspired our loyalty and

our cheers;

Whose individual sacrifice and collective

effort led us to that Victory upon which our

minds and our hopes were concentrated;

Whose ability to maintain their superiority

in the face of great opposition won for us the

Championship of Southern Ohio;

The Basketball Team, 1922

We dedicate this issue of the

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[corresponds to unlabeled page 6 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Junior Bulletin

DELAWARE HIGH SCHOOL DELAWARE, OHIO, MAY, 1922

[images of DHS logo]

Table of Contents

BOOK I

Faculty

Seniors

Juniors

Sophomores

Freshmen

Alumni

BOOK II

Athletics

Dramatics

Debate

Bulletin Staff

Editorials

BOOK III

Literature

BOOK IV

Humor

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Book I

[image of school, clouds, trees]

Faculty

Seniors

Juniors

Sophomores

Alumni

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Bulletin

[unlabeled photographs of faculty]

DHS

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Bulletin

Senior Class Officers

1922

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William Turney, President

John Beal, Vice President

Robert Bush, Secretary

Elizabeth Hoffman, Treasurer

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[corresponds to page 8 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[photographs on left side]

Mary Frances Austin

College Entrance

Alvah Lee Baldwin

Glee Club

Cheer Leader '22

Joke Editor Bulletin '24

Binafore '21

Mikado '22

English Course

Dorothy Barney Barrett "Dot"

Literary Editor Bulletin '21

College Entrance

John R. Beal

Vice President Senior Class '22

Debate '22

Art Editor Bulletin '21

President Hi-Y

Glee Club

College Entrance

Paul David Bechtel "Beech-nut"

English Course

Margaret Morrison Bing "Bingey," "Peg"

College Entrance

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Bulletin

[photographs on right side]

Anne Kerns Booton

Glee Club

Bulletin Junior Reporter '21

College Entrance

William E. Brown, Jr. "Bill"

Glee Club

Mikado '22

College Entrance

Robert Edwin Bush "Bob"

Business Manager Bulletin '21

College Entrance

Mabel Carpenter

English Course

Irl M. Chambers

Radio

English Course

Martha Clark "Mart"

Basketball '19-'20

College Entrance

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[corresponds to page 10 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Elizabeth Amelia Cleaver "Betty"

Glee Club

College Entrance

Janet Dennis

Glee Club

Basketball '21-'22

English Course

Ruth Louise Drake

Glee Club

College Entrance

Mary Kathryn Forsyth "Kate"

Glee Club

English Course

Margaret Fox "Peggy"

Basketball '20-'21-'22

English Course

Ursula Zenobia Fleming

English Course

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[corresponds to page 11 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Ridley S. Gillespie 

College Entrance

Martha Josephine Gorsuch "Jo"

College Entrance

Harold Fredrick Gooding "Mercury"

College Entrance

Othello E. Hanawalt "Shorty"

English Course

Paul C. Harger

Advertising Manager of Bulletin '21

Football '21

English Course

Paul C. Harger

Advertising Manager of Bulletin '21

Football '21

English Course

Edward Bruce Highwarden

Football '20-'21

Basketball '21-'22

English Course

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Bulletin

Helen Margaret Hiteshew

College Entrance

Aura Elizabeth Hoffman "Betty"

Glee Club

Debate '21-'22

Mikado '22

Basketball Captain '19

College Entrance

Clifford Hughes "Deacon"

Basketball '22

English Course

Gladden Vincint Hull "Preacher"

Debate '21-'22

English Course

Martha Olive Hurlburt "Mike"

English Course

Ernestine Alma Irvine "Shrimp"

College Entrance

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Bulletin

William Emory Jones "Dopey"

English Course

Sylvia Kerr

College Entrance

Hilda Marie Kiessig

Glee Club

Basketball '20-'21-'22

English Course

Constance Violet Kishler "Conny"

English Course

Nevin Klotz "Preacher"

Glee Club

English Course

Christine Lucile Link

English Course

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                    <text>[page 16]

[corresponds to page 14 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Elsie Lucile Mason

College Entrance

John Patrick Moloney

English Course

Deltus Olen McCarty

English Course

Lillian Helen Murphy "Pat"

Debate '21-'22

Basketball '20-'21-'22

College Entrance

Frances Elizabeth Naylor "Fran"

Glee Club

Pinafore '21

Mikado '22

College Entrance

Harriet Alice Paschall "Birdie"

Glee Club

College Entrance

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Bulletin

Dorothy Marian Powell

Basketball '22

English Course

Bernice Elizabeth Price

College Entrance

Charlotte Rice

Editor Bulletin '21

Basketball '20-'21-'22

Captain '22

College Entrance

Mamie Jenetta Sampson

English Course

Beatrice Samson "Bebe"

English Course

Floyd Schaffner "Shaggy"

Football '21

English Course

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[corresponds to page 16 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Edward Anthony Schweitzer

Glee Club

English Course

Neva Doris Sheets

English Course

Lucile Augusta Sherwood

College Entrance

Samuel Corwin Siegfried

Basketball '22

English Course

Francis Burrell Smith "Smitty"

English Course

Robert K. Smith "Bob"

English Course

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                    <text>[page 19]

[corresponds to page 17 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Ruth Elizabeth Snider "Rufus"

English Course

Harold Ellis Spaulding "Hosea"

Athletic Editor Bulletin '21

Football '18-'19-'20-'21

Football Captain '20

Basketball '21-'22

Basketball Captain '22

English Course

Mary Emeline Spaulding

Glee Club

Athletic Editor Bulletin '21

Basketball Captain '21

English Course

Phyllis Stout

College Entrance

Walter Thurman Swearengin "Sweeney"

Glee Club

Pinafore '21

Mikado '22

Bulletin Ass't. Subscription Manager '21

College Entrance

Mary Gwendolyn Thomas

English Course

17</text>
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                    <text>[page 20]

[corresponds to page 18 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

William Watts Turney "Bill"

Glee Club

Football '19-'20-'21

Football Captain '21

Basketball '20-'21-'22

Basketball Captain '21

English Course

Vida Belle Van Meter

College Entrance

Franklin Louis Vining

English Course

Margaret Adeline Welch "Ad"

Glee Club

English Course

Dorothy Eilene Whipple "Dot"

Debate '21-'22

Basketball '19-'20

College Entrance

Kathryn Carolyn White "Kate"

Glee Club

College Entrance

Marox Young "Roxy"

Bulletin Alumni Editor '21

College Entrance

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                    <text>[page 21]

[corresponds to page 19 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[photo of a woman and man on bench facing opposite directions]

AW, YOU'RE KIDDING

[photo of four women]

FROM A FOTEY-GRAFF ALBUM

[photo of four men]

DUDES

DHS SNAPS

[photo of woman holding out a plate]

HAVE SOME

[photo of two women]

KATE 

AND 

RUTH

[photo of man]

OUR ORATOR

[photo of woman]

FOXY

ROXY

[photo of band with drummer, clarinetist, saxophonist, violinist, banjo, and piano players- Sid's Syncopated]

19

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                    <text>[page 22]

[corresponds to page 20 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[class photo]

Junior Class Officers

[photographs]

1923

Alice Rush, President

Abigail Semans, Vice President

Harold Stephens, Secretary and Treasurer

20</text>
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                    <text>[page 23]

[corresponds to page 21 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[photo of couple]

I DO

[photo of man]

FACULTY

ADVISOR

[photo of three men]

WANDERING JEWS

[photo of couple]

CHAPERONED

D.H.S

SNAPS

[photo of woman with sign that says "PLEASE DO NOT PARK HERE"]

LAW-BREAKER

[photo of three women]

SMILES

[photo of man]

MACK SENNETT

[photo of man with parrot]

TEACHING POLLY

TO SING

[photo of woman with dog]

NICE DOGGY

[photo of four men singing]

HOWLING SUCCESS

21</text>
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                    <text>[page 24]

[corresponds to page 22 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Class of 1924

[class photo]

Class of 1925

[class photo]

22</text>
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                    <text>[page 25]

[corresponds to page 23 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Alumni

CLASS OF 1918

Owen Abbott--Express messenger between Chicago

and Buffalo.

Martha Barrett--At home, W. Central Ave., City.

Grace Beebe--At home, North Columbus, O.

Carl Beecher--Standard Clothing Co., City.

Bernice Boner--Teacher, Martinsville, O.

Gladys Cleveland--Mrs. Ellis Lehner, Norton, O.

Hobart Darst--Farmer, Radnor, O., R. D. 2.

Blanche Davidson--Governess, New York City.

Gilbert Eagon--Employed at C. D. and M. office, Del-

aware, O.

Margaret Ehnes--Mrs. Connor, Newark, N.J.

Jennie June Fox--Mrs. Paschall, Columbus, O.

Bennet Gooding--At home, near Lewis Center, O.

Jeannette Gooding--Studying music, O.W.U.

Zennetta Gorsuch--Mrs. Kirby, attending Ohio Uni-

versity, Athens, O.

Anna Halliday--Detroit, Mich.

Harry Harter--Wilson's Tailor Shop, Delaware, O.

Lois Hillard--Mrs. Warner Elliott, Delaware, O.

Ralph Holcombe--Akron, O.

Wendell Hughes--Cadet at West Point, N.Y.

Richard Hunt--Married, Centerburg, O.

Dorrance James--Studying medicine, Cincinnati, O.

Catherine Jones--Nurse at Battle Creek Sanitarium,

Battle Creek, Mich.

Robert King--Insurance business, Delaware, O.

Pearl Link--Mrs. Baker, Columbus, O.

Helen Medick--Mrs. Rutherford, Powell, O., R. D.

Phoebe Morey--Employed at Hilf's Plumbing Store,

City.

Mary O'Connell--At home, E. Winter St., Delaware,

Ohio.

Wilma Porterfield--Washington, D.C.

George Reading--Bowling Green, O.

Dorothy Rhoades--Mrs. Norris Griffenstein, City.

Eliza Richey--Mrs. William David, Radnor R. D. 3.

Mary Schwartz--At home, Cheshire St., Delaware, O.

Norman Siegfried--Delaware Savings Bank, Dela-

ware O.

Roy Smith--Attending Ohio State University.

Winifred Smith--Attending Taylor University, Up-

land, Ind.

Helen Truxall--Stenographer, Columbus, O.

Mary Vergon--Mrs. Glenn Sonner, Delaware, O.

Emma Veley--Athens, O.

Roy Veley--Stillwater, O.

Florence Welch--Attending Taylor University, Up-

land, Ind.

Grace Williams--Attending O.W.U.

Max Wolgamot--Richwood, O.

Charles Simpson--Grocer, Tampa, Fla.

Those attending Ohio Wesleyan are: Florence

Avery, Marjorie Crimm, Frank Cross, Paul Eliot,

Robert Evans, Miriam Freshwater, Julia Harmount,

Robert Harmount, Dorothy Hooper, Elizabeth Klotz,

Lester Kurrley, Florence Leas, Harold Lucy, Eliza-

beth Noble, Helen Rodefer, June Rosebrook.

CLASS OF 1919

Warren Bieber--Working at postoffice, City.

Ruth Copeland--Dunkirk, O.

Benjamin Davenport--At home, W. William St., City.

Louise Griffith--Treasurer's office at Delaware

Courthouse.

Vreeland Hammond--Married, Steubenville, O.

George Heffner--C. and E. Shoe Factory, Dela-

ware, O.

William Held--Held Cab Co., Delaware, O.

William Herriott--At home, W. William St., Dela-

ware, O.

Elizabeth Keyes--Mrs. Vreeland Hammond, Steu-

benville, O.

Sylvia Kendrick--At home, W. Central Ave., Dela-

ware, O.

Mildred Kreamer--Stenographer, Columbus, O.

Ellouise Lenhart--Taking nurse's training course,

Delaware Springs Sanitarium.

Raymond Miller--At home, Delaware R. D. 6.

Helen Myers--Mrs. James Robinson, Toledo, O.

Robert Naylor--Employed in First National Bank,

Boise, Ida.

Bessie Owen--Mrs. Ervin Powell, Delaware, O.

Ted Pehrson--Working at Denison's Clay Manufac-

turing Co., City.

Oliver Petran--Attending University of Chicago.

Eunice Scott--Teacher, Covington, Ky.

Edward Starr--Employed at Z. L. White Co., Co-

lumbus, O.

Mable Veley--Mrs. John Marstrelli, Stillwater, O.

Gertrude Webster--Teacher in School for Blind, Co-

lumbus, O.

Theodore Wheeler--Manager of F. W. Woolworth

Store, Greenville, Pa.

Those attending Ohio Wesleyan are: Neal Artz,

23</text>
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                    <text>[page 26]

[corresponds to page 24 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Donald Beecher, Dorothea Boardman, Donald Coop-

er, Edward Follwell, Ollire Henders, Winifred Hook,

Elizabeth Hooper, Elizabeth Hormell, Amelia Lane,

Irma Lowry, Margaret Lowry, Grace Manly, Hester

Mettler, Francine Minnelli, Ada Radcliffe, Anne Se-

mans, Charles Shively, Walter Skatz, Leona Smith,

Margaret Taggart, Lawrence Thomson, Mary K.

Wallace, Edgar West, Sylvia West, Dorothy Willis,

Hamilton Smyser.

CLASS OF 1920

Dorothy Algin--Stenographer at Cook Motor Co.,

Delaware, O.

Beryl Aldrich--At home, N. Liberty St., Delaware, O.

Jessie Cellars--Office of George Snyder, lawyer, Del-

aware, O.

Margaret Cryder--Mrs. John Long, Deaware [sic], O.

Gladys Lavender--Attending Normal School, Rich-

wood, O.

Helen Ebenhack--Telephone operator, Kilbourne, O.

Frederick Fate--Proprietor of confectionery, Dela-

ware, O.

Thelma Flaherty--Telephone operator, Columbus, O.

Maurice Harter--Sunray Stove Co., Delaware, O.

Hallie House--At home, Delaware R. D., after vis-

iting in the West.

Pauline Jones--Office at Climax Rubber Co., Dela-

ware, O.

Mary Charlotte Jones--Miss Lear's Millinery Shop,

Delaware, O.

Leonard Kelchner--Working with contractor, Dela-

ware, O.

Marian Knight--Office at Climax Rubber Co., Dela-

ware, O.

Mayme Lambert--Sell Brothers, Delaware, O.

Bessie Lewis--Attending Ohio University, Athens, O.

Julia Magee--At home, Delaware, O.

Amos Main--At home, north of Delaware, O.

Clara Monesmith--Employed in office of O.W.U.

Dwight Penry--Hoffman's Bakery, Delaware, O.

Anne Pliickebaum--Morrison's Garment Co., Dela-

ware, O.

Ewing Potter--At home, Griswold St., Delaware, O.

Kathryn Powers--Young and Owen Jewelry Store,

Delaware, O.

Florence Price--Teacher, Delaware R. D.

William Sanderson--Pennsylvania freight office,

Delaware, O.

Lois Snedeker--Attending Business College, Colum-

bus, O.

Clara Spicer--Teacher, Urbana, O.

Florence Weiser--Mrs. Milton Harger, Delaware, O.

Guy Wheatcraft--At home, east of Delaware, O.

Norma Whipple--Teacher at East School Building,

Delaware, O.

Wesley Williams--Allen Coffee Shop, Delaware, O.

Those attending Ohio Wesleyan are: Charles Bo-

durtha, Bertha Bradford, Leo Boyer, Gladys Chal-

lenger, Royal Coburn, Harriet Connklin, Ian Cunning-

ham, Joe Donovan, Mildred Freshwater, Clarine 

Morehouse, Harold Noble, Wallace Oswald, William

Owen, Morgan Ruffner, Gertrude Siegfried, Olive

Sines, Ruth Smith, Mrgaret Smyser, Mary K. Thom-

son, Robert Thomson, Ted Turney.

CLASS OF 1921

Robert Nichols--Auld's Jewelry Store, Columbus, O.

Nan Miller--Attending O.S.U.

Grace Barrett--At home, W. Central Ave., Dela-

ware O.

Elizabeth Cleveland--Alumni office at O.W.U.

Nellie Cryder--Attending O.S.u.

Kathryn Dennis--Taking nurse's training course at

Grant Hospital, Columbus, O.

Charles Eliot--Sunray Stove Co., Delaware, O.

Mary Evans--At home, near Galena, O.

Kathleen Gardner--Alumni office at O.W.U.

Lura Hamilton--Alumni office at O.W.U.

Anna Belle Higgins--Office at Delaware Courthouse.

Bernita Hinton--Alumni office at O.W.U.

Addie Lavender--Attending Normal School, Rich-

wood, O.

Lucy Lusk--At home, S. Liberty St., Delaware, O.

Marian M. Miller--Office of Bern Jones, lawyer, City.

Lester Minnelli--At home, Belle Ave., Delaware, O.

Herbert Mitchell--At home, Delaware, O., R. D. 6.

Ellen Moore--Office  of Riddle, Graff and Co., Dea-

ware, O.

Ruth Nobe--Office of Dr. McCleery, Delaware, O.

Ruth Owen--Cashier at Boston Store, Columbus, O.

Helen Plotz--Employed in W. B. Main's Insurance

Office, City.

Helen Roberts--Attending Ohio University Athens, O.

Frances Schneider--Alumni office at O.W.U.

Edward Smith--At home, Delaware, O., R. D. 6.

Edward Slack--Employed at Chevrolet Co., Colum-

bus, O.

Ivadell Warren--At home, Delaware, O., R. D. 1.

Guy Dickey--Norwood's Drug Store, Delaware, O.

Max Green--Springfield, O.

Mildred Kissner--At home, N. Sandusky St., Dela-

ware, O.

Those attending Ohio Wesleyan are: Norman

Alexander, Paul Baldridge, Nellie Bargdill, Dunbar

Beck, Everett Bonnette, Mary Buckingham, Edgar

Buck, Norman Bukey, Griswold Campbell, Clark

Chidester, Harry Cooper, Joyce Crimm, Mary Cun-

ningham, Helen Duhamel, Vining Hale, Luverne

Hirsch, Dale Howard, Gladys Mansfield, Marian E.

Miller, Ernest Pollock, Everett Rolston, Ralph Rush,

Ralph Rutherford, Helen Smart, Amy L. Welch,

Martin Welch, Malinda Wells, Ruth Wilson, Helen

Waggoner, Harrison Houk.

24

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                    <text>[page 27]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 25 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Book II

Athletics

Dramatics

Debate

Bulletin Staff

Editorials

[Seal "DELAWARE HIGH SCHOOL" with book and torch]</text>
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                    <text>[page 28]

[corresponds to page 26 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Resolutions

We recognize that education must include three

phases of life, the physical, the mental, and the

moral. Each must be developed to make the perfect

man. The Board of Education has observed with

pleasure the splendid work of our basketball team

in the tournament just closed, and we desire at this

time to express our appreciation of their great

achievement in this, the greatest contest of its kind

ever held. We watched eagerly game after game

in which D.H.S. participated during the two days

and evenings of the southern division contest. With

enthusiasm unbounded we saw the Orange and Black

emerge victors over the crack teams of Piqua and

Xenia. At the end of the sixth round of contests,

with seventy-seven teams of this division defeated,

there remained but two undefeated teams, Delaware

and Greenfield. This of itself was a signal honor

for Delaware and for each member of the team.

Probably the hardest fought game of the tourna-

ment was the Delaware-Piqua game. Piqua came to 

Delaware with the season's record of unbroken vic-

tories. Having vanquished everything she met in 

southwestern Ohio, she came with high hopes of

state championship honors. Perhaps the greatest

exhibition of individual self-control and skill ever

seen in a high school basketball game was shown

by Captain Turney at the close of this battle. The

score was a tie. Piqua fouled Delaware. The pis-

tol cracked. Time up. And in the presence of 2500

people Captain Turney took his position in front of

the basket. The fate of Delaware rested on his

ability to drop the ball through the basket. Indif-

ferent to the breathless condition of his tense audi-

ence, and with the utmost skill and precision, he

dropped the ball through the center of the basket, 

thus winning the game for Delaware. 

The defeat of Greenfield by Delaware and the 

Mt. Vernon championship game are fresh in the

minds of all. To stand with one foot on the top-

most round of the ladder and have the vanquished

host of more than one hundred and fifty of the best

teams in Ohio look up at you with admiration, is an

enviable position for any team to attain. Every

member of the team deserves his full share of cred-

it. Such eminence in athletics can be attained only

by the best team work. We realize that no school 

can put such a team in the field without a faithful

second team ever ready and willing to scrimmage

with the first. With all these things our efforts

would come to naught without a competent, en-

thusiastic coach. This we have had in the person 

of Mr. Mahon. The loyal support of the student

body has also been an important factor.

You have brought honor to your high school and

to the city of Delaware. Therefore, be it resolved

by the Delaware City Board of Education, that we

extend to the Delaware High School basketball

team and Coach Mahon our heartiest congratula-

tions for the excellent record you made in the re-

cent basketball tournament. We want the boys and

girls to know that we are deeply interested in your

welfare and will do everything in our power to ad-

vance the interests of this high school and its in-

ter-school contests.

C. A. MORRISON, President.

CHAS. S. MASON, Vice President.

R. K. WILLIS, Clerk.

Next Year's Captain

Next year's football captain, Scott Radcliffe, was

chosen at a banquet given by Coach Mahon soon af-

ter the close of the season. Scott, who is well known

for his ability in breaking up the opponent's plays,

is a find selection for the captaincy, and, because he

is athletic editor of the Bulletin, nothing was said

about his good work. There will be five "D" men 

missing from the squad next year, but if everyone

takes the interest that I know the captain and coach

manifest, there will be another successful football

season. -HAROLD SPAULDING, '22.

26</text>
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                    <text>[page 29]

[corresponds to page 27 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[photograph of George Mahon]

GEORGE MAHON - COACH

[photograph of Turney with basketball]

STATE

HIGH SCHOOL

BASKET-BALL

TOURNAMENT

1922

TURNEY

ALL-OHIO

CENTER

[photograph of Highwarden]

HIGHWARDEN

ALL-SOUTHERN

GUARD

[photograph of basketball players in a huddle]

JUST BEFORE THE FINALS

27</text>
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                    <text>[page 30]

[corresponds to page 28 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[photograph of basketball team]

Basketball '21-'22

Delaware High started its 1921-1922 basketball

season under the direction of Coach Mahon with

three "D" men, Captain Spaulding, Turney, and High-

warden. With this firm foundation upon which to

build a team, the prospects for the coming season

looked very bright.

The first game was played with Hyatts on the

Delaware court. Spaulding was the only man on

the Delaware team that could locate the basket, and

due to the exceptional playing of Hill from Hyatts,

the home team was sent down to defeat. The next

game was played in Crestline where Delaware, with

Perry as star, was victor by a 21-14 score. The fol-

lowing week we suffered defeat at Galion in a close-

ly fought contest, which was won only after a neces-

sary overtime period.

Following our defeat at Galion we made a great

comeback and defeated both Ashland and South High

of Columbus on our own floor. Perry was high point

man in the Ashland contest and Turney proved best

in the South High game.

Following this last game our team became se-

verely crippled. Perry and Highwarden were tem-

porarily unable to play, and Spaulding was forced 

out of the game for the rest of the season on ac-

count of illness. We suffered several straight de-

feats, and only rallied in the last schedule game of

the season, defeating Harding 33-13, thus revenging

ourselves for our defeat at their hands earlier in

the season.

After the close of the schedule season the team

worked hard for two solid weeks in preparation for

the tournament. This extra training was not in vain,

for Delaware won six straight games in the prelim-

inaries of the southern division and came back the

next week-end to play in the finals. Piqua and

Xenia, two of the best teams in the southern divi-

sion, fell prey to our superior team work. Turney

was the main factor in pulling us through, and his

ability at shooting baskets, as well as his exception-

ally fine floor work, won him a place on the All-

State team. Commendable mention must also be

made of the unusual guarding of Highwarden which

placed him securely on the second All-State.

In the game for the championship of Southern Ohio

the following week we were matched against the

strong Greenfield aggregation. here again Turney

played one of the best games of his basketball ca-

reer, and we emerged with the long end of a 34-14

score, leaving us to play Mount Vernon in the finals

for the championship of Ohio.

The championship game was played before the

largest audience ever assembled in Edwards Gym-

nasium. We have no alibi to offer for our defeat.

Mount Vernon had the better team, and won the

game and honor by a 33-17 score. We are proud to

have met such a team as Mount Vernon, for they

deserved their victory; at the same time we cannot

forego an expression of our own pride in the team

that won the championship of Southern Ohio.

-SCOTT RADCLIFFE.

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                    <text>[page 31]

[corresponds to page 29 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[photograph of football team]

Football, 1921

A promising outlook greeted the opening of D.H.S.

football season: Seven "D" men with a host of new

material, many of whom had played before, reported

for the first work-out. In past years we had great

difficulty in securing a coach, and generally took

whomever we could get. This trouble was obviated

by the election of Mr. George Mahon to the faculty

corps. This former Wesleyan star joined our school

as teacher of Mathematics, athletic director and

coach. Under this new system, both coach and stu-

dents have taken greater interest in sports.

After two weeks' hard practice, we were met by

the strong aggregation from South High of Colum-

bus, and defeated 7-0.

The following week, we went to Columbus, where

we played Aquinas, another Capital City team, and,

through a few costly fumbles, we came home with

the small end of a 13-0 score.

Smarting under our two defeats, we prepared for

the Ashland game, with the determination to bring

about a vicotry--and so we did--for they were put

away with a disheartening 28-0 tally. The stellar 

playing of Turney and Highwarden brought about

this victory.

Next came Mansfield. They were determined to

avenge the defeat of their neighbor, Ashland, but in

this they were disappointed, for we tucked them

away with the stinging defeat of 24-19. This was

one of the best games played on teh local field in

years, and the team received great praise from the 

papers and from the town fans. The exceptionally

good playing of Turney and Spaulding was the fea-

ture of this contest.

The following week we played Galion in another

home game. We were unable to repeat the work of

the preceding Saturday and they were our victors

by the unhappy margin of 28-7. Through the good

work of Spaulding and Highwarden, we succeeded

in getting one touchdown.

Because of a heavy snowfall, it seemed as if our

season were temporarily at a standfill. This condi-

tion hindered our practice but little, however, and

the fellows, determined to put Bucyrus under cover,

practiced early and late, regardless of the weather.

The contest was staged at Bucyrus on a snow-cov-

ered field. Unfortunately, the team was greatly

crippled by the absence of Highwarden and Sands,

who were laid up on account of injuries received in

previous games. The loss of these men drove the

team to fight harder than ever to overcome this de-

ficiency, and although Delaware outplayed their op-

ponents, they lost their only chance to score when

Turney collided with the goal post. The game ended

with a 0-0 score.

We journeyed to Zanesville the following week,

where we played in a sea of mud; but the boys didn't

seem to mind this, and, due to the ability of Turney

and Spaulding to cross their opponents' goal-line, we

brought home the bacon.

The ensuing Saturday we met Marion on their 

home field and suffered our first defeat from them

in years.

We finished the season by defeating the Alumni

7-0 in our annual Turkey-day game.

-SCOTT RADCLIFFE.

29</text>
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                    <text>[page 32]

[corresponds to page 30 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[photograph of girls' basketball team]

Girls' athletics in D.H.S. started off in fine shape

under the direction of Miss Marjorie Crimm, our

coach of 1921. After many hard practice games,

teams were picked from the excellent material of

each class squad, all working hard to perfect their

passwork and basket-shooting in anticipation of 

the third annual basketball tournament. This event

was started by a series of preliminary games, played

every week. The first two were played between the

Seniors and Juniors, followed by a Sophomore-

Freshman game. The outcome of these games was

in favor of the Seniors and Sophomores. The sec-

ond two games of the series were between the Se-

niors and Freshmen, and the Juniors and Sopho-

mores; in these contests the Seniors again were

victors and the Juniors on good footing. Next came

the semi-finals, which were played with much pep

and enthusiasm by all classes. The upper classes,

kept always on the jump, won by hard playing, thus

bringing them together for the final and decisive

game. Everyone on the teams adhered to strict

training; more careful practice and coaching was

gone through, and much interest displayed. 

In the last and long looked-forward-to game, the

Junior team won by a score of 14 to 8, thus winning

the championship. A consolation game followed be-

tween the Sophomores and Freshmen in which the

"Sophs" got the long end of a 12 to 2 score.

The usual stunts between halves showed much

originality and humor in their portrayal of old-

fashioned customs, a mock girls' basketball game,

and a pipe-organ performance.

Line-up for championship game:

Juniors			Seniors

	Right Forward

Lova Volk.............Janet Dennis

	Left Forward

Elsie Monesmith.......Mary Austin

	Center

Frances Radcliffe.....Charlotte Rice

	Right Guard

Mary McKenzie.........Hilda Kiessig

	Left Guard

Florence Crawford.....Dorothy Powell

Lillian Murphy substituted for Mary Austin in

the second half. Miss Alice Patterson of O.W.U.,

refereed the game, and Miss Crimm umpired.

-FRANCES RADCLIFFE.

30</text>
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                    <text>Delaware High School Bulletin '22 (p. 32)</text>
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                    <text>[page 33]

[corresponds to page 31 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

[cast photo]

THE CAST

"MIKADO"

[photo of director]

MISS

SHEEN

DIRECTOR

[photo of accompanist]

DALE

BARTHOLOMEW

ACCOMPANIST

[photo of scenic artist]

D. BECK

SCENIC

ARTIST

31</text>
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                    <text>[page 34]

[corresponds to page 32 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Affirmative Debate Team

[photographs]

Dorothy Whipple Beverly Kelley Elizabeth Hoffman Harold Stephens

The past debate year in Delaware High School has

been successful from two standpoints: first, in the

number of points scored, and second, in the devel-

oping of six excellent debaters.

The goal of the debaters and coaches has been not

to win decisions alone, but the important aim

was turning out from D.H.S. clear thinkers, and

young men and women who would understand the

value of hard work as well as constructive mental

discipline. This we believe has been accomplished.

In following this as a purpose we were most for-

tunate in having Mr. Harold W. Roupp from Ohio

Wesleyan University, who is an experienced debater,

as our coach and instructor.

Although we did not win the silver cup we scored

four out of a possible six points. There is a gen-

eral feeling among the High School students that

the decision of the Marion-Delaware debate was un-

warranted. However, the team offers no apology,

believing with the audience, that they had won the

debate even though the decision was against them.

[DHS logo]

32</text>
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                    <text>[page 35]

[corresponds to page 33 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Negative Debate Team

[photographs]

Lillian Murphy Gladden Hull Catherine Houk John Beal

As for the turning out of six excellent debaters,

any one who attended either the Marion or Bucyrus

debate will see why we feel that the time spent was

well worth while. And feeling as we do about it,

we wish to urge more students to go out for this

forensic activity next year. It is important that the

school show well in mental as well as physical com-

bat.  

There are three chief reasons why Delaware High

was successful during the past year: first, we receiv-

ed excellent coaching from Miss Phillips and Mr. 

Roupp; second, the teams were not afraid of hard

work; and third, we knew that the school was be-

hind us, wishing us to do our best and win.

The year of 1923 will see three seasoned debaters

back in school. Our best wishes to next year's team.

We hope they will be even more successful than we

have been, and win the silver loving cup for Dela-

ware High. -JOHN BEAL.

[DHS logo]

33</text>
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                    <text>[page 36]

[corresponds to page 34 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

BULLETIN STAFF

[photographs]

34</text>
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                    <text>[page 37]

[corresponds to page 35 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Editorials

Staff

Abigail Semans............Editor-in-Chief

Willis Stevenson.........Business Manager	Elsie Monesmith................Art Editor

Miriam Stafford...........Literary Editor	Alice Rush..................Alumni Editor

Lova Volk.......Assistant Literary Editor	Scott Radcliffe...........Athletic Editor

Catherine Houk.......Subscription Manager	Frances Radcliffe.........Athletic Editor

Mary Liebenderfer.....Advertising Manager	Mrs. Dell McAfee Naylor...Faculty Advisor

A New Investment

Every respectable high school has a library com-

plete enough to furnish references for debate teams

and the collateral reading demanded by various sub-

jects. In order to be truthfully rated as a first class

high school we should have such a library. We

consider the action of the recently graduated class-

es in devoting their money to the equipment of a 

high school reference room as very commendable.

Our aesthetic sense has been cultivated by the pic-

tures and statues which former classes have donat-

ed, and now we are glad for the practical develop-

ment afforded by the funds raised in more recent

years. Many school activities have contributed to

this cause, and the collection is growing quite large.

The class of 1918 gave four beautiful oak library

tables. One hundred and ninety-four dollars was

donated by the class of 1919 for books. Among 

these volumes is a set of New International En-

cyclopedias, a Dictionary, and forty dollars worth 

of other books. The Bulletins of the years of 1919,

1920, and 1921 have altogether given $333.33. The

interest from the high school Liberty bond is being

used for the collection. We must not overlook the

manual training boys who have made the fine 

book shelves. The total sum amounts to $626.45.

Thus we see that the library is well under way, and

we expect that it will be in good working order by

next year.

The Hayes Centennial

When the news came that Warren G. Harding 

had been elected by an overwhelming majority to

the Chief Executive Office, enthusiasm and excite-

ment prevailed here not only because another Pres-

ident had been added to Ohio's long list of famous

sons, but because his residence is only twenty miles

away from our city. That was all very well; but we

cannot help wondering whether or not one hundred

years from now Marion will have forgotten that she

was, in 1921, the center of the nation's interest, and

will have allowed her now most honored residence

to be neglected and run down. This will be the 

case if Marion follows the example of her neighbor,

Delaware. It seems to us that since this is the cen-

tennial anniversary of the birth of Rutherford Birch-

ard Hayes, the citizens of Delaware should begin

to recognize that his birthplace is here, and in a 

very deplorable condition. Surely all right think-

ing people will realize that this fact does not re-

flect credit on our town. Patriotism to our nation

as well as to our city demands that we remedy this

condition. Are the pupils of Delaware High School

going to allow our old time rivals to get ahead of

us even in showing respect to a native President?

We think that our point will be appreciated if we 

conclude this article by the familiar phrase, "Yea

Delaware! Beat Marion"!

Tennis Courst for the High School

Tennis, one of the most interesting games in the

great field of athletics, is becoming more and more

popular in this country. Courts are being construct-

ed in every vacant lot and old garden patch. There

are many things to recommend this game; one is

that anyone can play it. It does not take a robust 

person; neither does it take a tall one, as do other

sports. Tennis is a game every student should play

for mental reasons as well as physical. A keen

35</text>
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                    <text>[page 38]

[corresponds to page 36 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

mind is needed to understand and play the game

well. To be a good player one must be accurate

and must use very good judgment at all times.

Physically, it gives every muscle its proper exercise.

It occasions no overdoing, strained muscles or brok-

en bones as do almost all other athletics. An acci-

dent can be blamed on no one but the player him-

self.

What would be better for the high school than

good tennis courts? The school has access to a

very good football field and a fine basketball court;

and now that tennis is becoming so popular, why

not have courts? The question, that might enter

one's mind, where can ground be found on which

to construct them? can be thrown aside. The high 

school owns a lot back of the building which is

large enough for two good courts, and is in a fine

location. What good is that idle ground doing for

us? Why not have it changed into something use-

ful and helpful to the student?

A Young Genius

An event took place on the evening of May 2 which

once more justifies Delaware High's reputation for

contributing to the world and which gives the class

of '23 ample cause to be very proud of a fellow mem-

ber. This event was the piano recital given by Dale

Bartholomew at Sanborn Hall. From the first ex-

quisite note until the last, the large audience was

literally held spellbound. Dale conducted himself

like a true virtuoso, with not a trace of self-con-

sciousness in his manner, holding the instrument al-

ways under perfect control. Beginning with Rach-

maninoff's "Prelude in G Minor," he played selec-

tions from Chopin, Schumann, Rubenstein, Liszt, and

Grieg. His fingers touched the keys lightly or

firmly as his interpretation of the selections varied,

but there was always that fullness and delicacy of

tone which mark the true artist. His technique

throughout was practically faultless.

There were present at the concert several in-

structors in music of the college and they were

equally well pleased with the success and well-de-

served praise of the young musician.

We of Delaware High School appreciate more than

ever before Dale's talent and ability and his ser-

vices in the Choral Class and Glee Club. He is un-

doubtedly destined for the highest success in the

musical world, and he has the very best wishes of

both the faculty and the pupils of Delaware High

School for the coming years.

Honor Member of Class of '22

It is not very often in a life time that one finds

within his own circle of acquaintances a young ge-

nius so brilliant that he is recognized by those ex-

perienced in his art, and is given an opportunity for

a swift and remarkable career. This was the reali-

zation to which the students of Delaware High

School awoke when Bernard Schweitzer appeared

suddenly as one of the brightest and most promis-

ing among the young explorers in the realm of mu-

sic. The student body has twice had the opportun-

ity of hearing Bernard sing since he took up his

study in Chicago, and has been delighted to mark

his progress. We are very proud of him because

he is one of our number, and because he received

part of his training, and, we hope, a great deal of

his inspiration while under the influence of our own

school. Had Bernard remained longer with us, he

would have graduated with this year's class.

After hearing him render most inspiringly the

famous "Hosanna" anthem, the Holy Name Cathe-

dral of Chicago succeeded in securing his services.

To appreciate the honor implied in this, we must

consider that the very greatest of singers have ac-

cepted invitations to sing in this cathedral.

So, fellow classmate, we wish you a realization of

your greatest hopes. We also look forward to that

day when we shall hear you in a greater hall than

the chapel of D.H.S.

[DHS logo]

36</text>
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                    <text>[page 39]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 37 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Book III

Literature

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                    <text>[page 40]

[corresponds to page 38 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

A Fantasy

Prone on the sun-

warmed sand,

just out of reach

of the breakers,

A Boy with a Suf-

fering Heart lay

thoughtfully gaz-

ing upward.

Sprinkling the stones with dew and filling the air

Back of the first great dune in a cottage low in the

valley,

Sick, and dying with care, his mother lay stricken

with fever;

Hers was the grief of the world, the down-trodden

world of the helpless.

All night long he had watched, till his eyes grew

heavy with vigil,

And now, as at length she slept, he lay thinking and

pond'ring and planning.

Was there not some way he, though his years one

might count on ten fingers,

Might bring, in his own small way, glad joy to the

heart of the sufferer?

Coax long-vanished smiles to her lips, as his own

smiles might seem in reflection?

Wearied with sorrow and care, and lulled by the

swish of the sea-surf,

His thoughts turned to happier paths, and his eyes

closed gently in slumber.

Suddenly faint in his ear a weird cry roused him to

action.

"Look!" it cried, "Look, ye, lad, for magic abides in

yon castle!"

The Boy with the Suffering Heart first glanced, then

gazed in amazement.

Afar, where the dune had been a castle rose sheer

to the heavens.

Silver and gold were its walls, and its windows

gleamed brighter than jewels.

Its towers were wreathed in mist that sparkled like

dew on the hawthorne.

Nearer and nearer he drew. Urged on by a great

fascination

He mounted its Parian steps, and paused not, but en-

tered its portals.

Suddenly, born on the breeze, came the same weird

voice from the ether.

"Mortal, guard well thy tongue, for ne'er since the

last king of Egypt

Died by the hand of the dream folk, those guardians

who watch o'er the castle

For sland'ring the name of the wardens, has mortal

e'er glimpsed this great vision.

Thou of the Suffering Heart must cherish and honor

the privilege.

What thou wilt see beyond is not for the scorn of the

rabble.

Its sight must be earned by faith and kindness and

thoughts of endearment."

Urged by the same fascination, and quickened by

glad expectation

That some how in some strange way the dream folk

would answer his problem,

He raced down the long light hall till two doorways

rose, thwarting his passage.

One opened on sunlit halls where fountains played

gayly and lightly,

Sprinkling the stones with dew and fillin gthe air

with sweet perfume.

Round it the flowers sprang, holding their cups to

its showers,

Like a rare rug for the trees, which teemed with the

sweetest of songsters.

Rose and lily and fern played hide and seek with 

the thrushes.

Gayly in and out, in the shade, 'mongst the birds and

the flowers

Dancing in gay attire were the mystical, care-free

dream folk.

Blue were their eyes as the sky, and their hair shone

like gold in the sunlight,

Clothed in shimmering white, richly embroidered

with purple,

Azure and saffron and rose, with the green of wee

leaves in the springtime.

Spellbound he stood in the door, nor quivered, till

roused by the weird voice,

He let his gaze slowly be turned, till it fell on the

opposite doorway.

Startled with horror and pain he choked back a sob

e'er it 'scaped him.

For as he gazed within, till his eyes grew used to 

the dead light

He saw not a thing but space, as black as a cellar

at midnight.

Gradually came into view the skull of a man, with

its jaw bone

Cruelly broken across, and beside it a chest filled

with treasure;

Here hung a hang-man's rope still looped in the

death-knot of slaughter;

Here was a gibbet; beneath, the mouldering bones of

its victims.

Turning away in disgust, he stepped toward the

doorway of dreamland.

When suddenly both doors were gone, and he was

38</text>
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                    <text>[page 41]

[corresponds to page 39 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

alone in his sadness.

He sank to the floor in his grief, and his sobs broke

the silence of ages.

"Why can't it all be like that, all beauty, and glory,

and radiance?"

An agonized sigh shook his frame, his heart was

breaking with sorrow.

Suddenly faint but clear, the weird voice, softened

to music

Fell on his heart like balm, then ceased he his weep-

ing to listen.

"Oh, Boy of the Suffering Heart, hearken to all that

I tell you.

You in your innocent grief, have stumbled on life's

greatest lesson.

The castle you now are within holds the secret of

human endeavor;

Yon rooms were the souls of men, some good, some

teeming with evil.

"Long ago in this hall, ere began the great cycle of

ages,

The wrong of the world was confined, till arose a 

great monster named Rumor

Who broke through the heavy barred walls and freed

from their bonds of confinement

The spirits of evil and sin, who now roam the wide

world at random.

But alas, as he broke through the wall, a stone shak-

en loose from its moorings

Stopped up the door of gold, and blocked that pas-

sage forever.

Wearily watching and waiting, year after year with-

out number,

The guardian sprites of the hall have searched for a 

mortal, a human

Who could roll the stone from the door and free all 

good from its burden.

Thrice have they tried and failed, thrice turned anew

to their mourning.

"Now we have welcomed you with the hope which

seems beyond hoping,

That a Boy with a Suffering Heart, urged on by un-

selfish emotions,

Might say the potent word that would loose the stone

from the portal.

Speak the wish nearest your heart. I go, for I dare

not stay longer."

A cry of joy on his lips, the Boy, no longer

dejected,

Sprang like a dart to his feet--"Aid, help for my

suffering mother!"

A flash of light, a whirl, a sound of echoing

music,

A blurr of mingled hues as the dream folk rushed on

toward the doorway.

Blinded and dazed and stunned, the Boy fell tremb-

ling, startled.

The harsh stones turned to sand he was back again

by the sea side.

The breakers were loud and fierce, steadily rain-

drops were falling.

Stumbling and weak in his haste, the lad rushed on

toward the cottage.

The dream folk were free at last, but where, oh,

where had they vanished?

"Look," came the low weird voice, "Look to the west-

ward and southward."

He turned then stopped in amazement, a glad cry

burst forth from his bosom,

"Mother, oh, mother, look, the dream folk, high in

the heavens!"

High in the arch of ether, where the clouds were

broken asunder,

The sun shone through on the mist, and the air was

tinted to purple,

Azure and saffron and rose, with the green of wee

leaves in the springtime.

His mother turned on her couch, with the weary 

look of the dying,

But as she looked at the tinted arch, her pain be

came gladness,

The gray lines left her face, she sank back pale and

exhausted

But now to grow stronger each hour, for a promise

of good everlasting,

A token of dream folk faith was this rainbow arch

in the heavens.

Prone on the sun warmed sand, just out of reach of

the breakers,

A Boy with a Happy Heart, lay thoughtfully gazing

upward.

Back of the first great dune, in a cottage low in the

valley,

Weak, but happy, and stronger each hour, his moth-

er lay sleeping.

The Boy with the Happy Heart as he lay there lulled

by the sea surf,

Freed from his heavy care, closed his eyes softly in

slumber. 

Faint through his dreams, there came, the low weird

tones of the dream folk,

"Saved by his generous wish, we promise him peace

everlasting."

Ages have come and gone, but oft in the sky of a 

summer,

After a heavy shower, comes the rainbow, the pledge

of the dream folk.

-CHARLOTTE RICE, '22.

39</text>
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                    <text>[page 42]

[corresponds to page 40 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

The Amateur Househusband

Henry Obstinate, a father and husband, who be-

came exasperated because Mrs. Minerva Obstinate

put in a plea for a clothes-wringer and, having re-

ceived it, untactfully sent in a similar plea for a 

washing-machine, quite boldly declared he could 

take care of the house as a recreation. Wise Mrs.

Obstinate refrained from pressing her desire and

Henry went to his club; but when he returned to

his peaceful realm, he was informed by note that his

practical wife thinking he needed a period of re-

creation, had gone to her old home in order to per-

mit him to enjoy the needed rest. She left the chil-

dren, Mary and John, to keep him from getting lone-

some during the many hours in which he would be

unoccupied with household duties.

Monday morning dawned radiant and calm, but

Henry slept serenely on. At the late hour of eight,

John and Mary anxiously arose and surveyed their 

audacious parent. Why hadnt he called them? They

dressed for school with unusual hilarity. Presently,

vociferous sounds issued from above.

"Why hasn't Minerva called me?" shrieked Henry

as he came panting down the stairs. Then he re-

membered his spouse had departed for a time. Well,

he would show "Min"! He commenced his "recrea-

t'on" by laboriously trying to comb and braid Mary's

hair. What a mess! How did "Min" do it? He final-

ly disposed of that incident by leaving her hair un-

braided and tying an awkward-looking bow around

it. Much to his chagrin, he discovered that it was

too late for the children to go to school.

After one-half hour of swearing and wrestling

he had three eggs fried, but Mary and John refused

to eat theirs because he had stirred the fire with the

egg-turner, then turned the eggs! In the midst of

the confusion of the children's crying, the eggs pop-

ping, and Henry hopping around with his hair in his

eyes, at the same time nursing a burnt hand, the tele-

phone rang. "Hello! Hello!! Hello!!!" shouted

Henry. Slam! Went the receiver followed by a tor-

rent of profane language.

"It is ten o'clock and you haven't started the 

washing yet. 'Min' always had it done by nine

o'clock," reminded Henry's conscience. He dutifully

gathered up as many dirty clothes as he could find,

promising himself he would wash the breakfast

dishes with the dinner dishes. He had a vivid recol-

lection of a boiler of water which he had been in the

habit of putting on for "Min," so he put a boiler

full of water on the stove and piled the clothes in.

By the time this was accomplished it was time to

get dinner in order to give the younger Obstinates

something to eat before they started to school.

With one hand burnt and his disposition badly

injured, Henry rumaged through the cellar and pan-

try in a frantic effort to find a cook-book and some-

thing to cook. He found some canned goods from

which he selected a can of peaches, a can of sweet-

potatoes, a can of peas, and a can of salmon. As

the "amateur househusband" began slashing reck-

lessly into the top of a can, the can-opener undiplo-

matically slipped, causing the wielder to gash his

hand on the ragged edge of the lid. Howling in 

anguish, he bound up the cut and proceeded more

slowly. Having completed his task, he called the

children in to partake of the "tin" dinner. The peas

were partially prepared but since the cook couldn't 

find the cook-book he was not to be censured if

things weren't altogether edible. The remainder of

the victuals was cold.

The younger inmates disposed of, the washing

was resumed. As Mr. Obstinate turned to the boil-

ing clothes, he looked with awe upon the strangely

colored water. He gingerly picked up a garment

and after careful inspection recognized his ex-best

white shirt, ex-best--for, alas--one sleeve was a 

dingy black and the front was an elegant mottled

red. He limply stood gazing at his neighbor's beau-

tiful white shirt, tauntingly waving on the line.

Mystified, he hunted for the wash-board and tub;

then he went to work. After hours of real labor

at the wash-board, in which the only thing that was

accomplished was the further disfigurement of his

hands and what appeared like the last stages of

lumbago in his back, he gave up in despair. He sat

down, gazed from the best suit of clothes all wet

and dabbed with flour, to his hands all red and

blistered, then to the kitchen which looked as though

a small tornado had just passed through it.

As the victim was brooding over some of the evils

in life, the lesser Obstinates trooped in. As usual,

they were on the brink of starvation and since it

was nearly five o'clock, supper loomed up before

Henry's eyes. Supper is generally a soothing thought

to most people, but to Henry it was a dancing figure

dressed in red and possessing two extremely long,

pointed horns which protruded from above either

eye. Mary produced a cook-book and Henry donned

the chef's cap once more, armed himself with spoons

and flour, then proceeded to make biscuits.

Now, the neighborhood owned in joint-partnership,

three common black cats which had just discovered

the Obstinate family's bowl of milk that Henry had

so innocently placed on the porch to keep cool.

40</text>
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                    <text>[page 43]

[corresponds to page 41 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

These domesticated quadripeds had unanimously vot-

ed to consume that opaque fluid at the same mo-

ment that Henry, unsuspectingly, glanced out. In 

rage, he jumped at such an exhibition but the ex-

hibitors jumped quicker. While Henry was wrath-

fully viewing the enhancing picture that the three

anthracitic felines, each licking his jaws and each

reposing on the fence, made against the horizon, he 

became conscious of a peculiar odor. Henry ran

back into the kitchen--but, alas!--his culinary art,

the biscuits, were perfect pictures of mud turtles

huddled under their shells, and in fact they felt much

the same too! Poor Henry felt as though his cran-

ial cavity was almost devoid of that desired sub-

stance, grey-matter.

The next morning Mrs. Obstinate was amused 

when a telegram arrived which was written thus:

"Come home. Sick. Choose washer."

-MILDRED CAVIN, '23.

Sheer Luck Combs

An Original Story of Deductive Reasoning

By the Author

THE MISSING SPARK PLUG

Sheer Luck sat in his den deeply engaged in study

and profound reflection. He had, just two days be-

fore finished deducting the facts in the case of Elu-

sive Killem, which on the previous day had led to 

the arrest of that gentlemen; and now he was try-

ing to solve the problem of the capture of Slim Jim

by the Bingville police force.

The butler entered and handed him a card an-

nouncing Miss Billionaires.

"Show her in," said Sheer Luck.

She entered, tall, stately, and handsome, wearing

a dress of the latest production of the designer's art.

"What's the trouble?" asked Sheer Luck Combs,

unconcernedly. 

"May I speak confidentially?" asked the beautiful

blond.

"Sure."

"Well, then, I have come to have you solve the 

intricate problem concerning the missing spark plug

in my limousine. You know I had a car made to 

order with a peculiar spark plug, which cannot be

duplicated. If you can keep a secret, I shall tell

you one. The Count De von Marrymoney, of Bo-

logne, and I were to elope in this very car, so it

would be quite provoking to spoil all the romantic

sensations by using any other now. My father does

not favor my marriage with the count, but of course

it would not be romantic if father and mother both

agreed to the union."

"I see, I see."

"But about the spark plug," continued Miss Bil-

lionaires, "I always carry that on the end of a gold

chain about my neck so no one can drive the car

but myself. The plug resembles an antique locket.

At night I place it in a small vault which no one

knows about except myself. It is in my own room

and impossible to be seen, since it is so well con-

cealed."

"Well, then, you mean to say that it was stolen 

from your vault last night at twelve o'clock by a 

person who entered--you know not how--and van-

ished even more mysteriously when you sat up in

bed."

"Wonderful! How did you know?" asked the

amazed beauty.

"Very simple. I just deducted it from your talk."

"Then can you assist me in finding the valuable

article?"

"Certainly. It is this moment in your father's 

posession. He has it in his right-hand vest pocket."

"But how do you know?"

"Since you ask, I shall explain. Your father did

not want you to marry the count?"

"No."

"He knew you were going to elope in your car,

because you told your mother and she is a woman. 

Your father knew that the car had but one spark

plug, and he also knew of the vault, because he saw

you open it one night when you were unaware of his 

presence. Mr. Dexterous Sharp, the magician and 

pickpocket, as well as the contortionist and hypno-

tist, wanted to earn two hundred and fifty dollars, 

so he burglarized your father's house--by his con-

sent--and secured the article. It is now in your

father's vest pocket, because most men carry valu-

ables there, for a while at least."

"A wonderful and amazing intellect!" said the

swan-like creature. "But how can I secure the

plug?"

"Give Mr. Sharp five hundred to rob your dad."

"Good! I'll do so immediately. But where can I

find Mr. Sharp?"

"Next room to the right. He's my partner."

Thus Uncle Sam lost another billion heiress, but

Sheer Luck Combs continues to deduce evidence from

nothing, and has a world-wide fame.

-EDNA WOOD, '24.

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                    <text>[page 44]

[corresponds to page 42 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Joe Strikes for Liberty

Not long ago, Mr. Ireland, of the Dispatch, took a

trip into Kentucky. The Sunday after his return,

the "Passing Show" was filled with cartoons of what

he had seen there, and his comments upon them.

Among them was a touching little illustration de-

picting an old mountaineer climbing up the trail on

horseback, while his better half labored along be-

hind him on a mule, most dejectedly. It was evi-

dently Mr. Ireland's purpose to illustrate the habit-

ual position of a mountaineer's lady, and so far as I

know, he is right in assuming that the greater por-

tion of Kentucky women do shirk along behind their

husbands; slaves, living only for their master's 

pleasure.

But there is an exception. Indeed in the case of

which I am about to speak, the accepted positions of

husband and wife were just reversed. 

It seems that Joe and Lizzie, his wife, lived in

hardworking comfort in a more or less spacious

shack on the farm of a well-to-do mountaineer. Liz-

zie worked hard, and Joe, spurred on by a stimulus

the nature of which only husbands know, did like-

wise. Joe's loftiest ambition was to sit around all

day in the sun, bare as to feet and vacant as to mind,

and with the assurance of three good meals a day

and a soft bed at night, watch Lizzie hang out the

clothes. Of these, the most longed for privilege and

the one most improbable of fulfillment, was that of

watching Lizzie hang out the clothes. For whatever

part Joe may have had in the weekly rite of washing

was emphatically not that of onlooker. In fact he

was never idle; if Lizzie didn't want him to help her

wash, she ordered him to mind the baby or stir the 

beans. And Joe, of course, had a man's aversion to

all of these housewifely duties.

Those who knew the state of affairs at the Tolliver

home were fond of telling a story about poor Joe.

They said that Mr. Warren, on whose farm Joe's

shack stood, had once asked him to help with the

hay. Joe, torn between a wholesome awe of his wife

and a desire to do a real man's work with real men

for the first time in his married life, stumbled and

quavered, but finally managed to convey the idea that

to pitch hay would be his dearest delight, but he

"kinda thought Lizzie wuz washin' today; he didn't 

know ef she wuz er not, but he reckoned he'd better

go ask her fore he decided."

So ask her he did, only to find that Lizzie wanted 

to go to an all-day revival meeting and had decreed

that Joe's place was in the home. Lizzie was not

particularly diplomatic about it, and she did not

realize that every road has a winding. Neither did

she realize that Joe was aware of the fact that he

was the laughing stock of the community; that he

was tired of her ceaseless dominion; and that to his

sluggish mind at last had come the realization that

he could escape. Ignorant of all these things, how-

ever, she went her pious way, never doubting Joe's

fidelity.

On her return, she found the shack emp-

ty; even the baby was gone. Eventually the baby

was found asleep by the creek her feet trailing in

the water, and Lizzie's anxieties were stilled. Joe

could look out for himself. She never thought of

him until her beans got burnt from lack of the usual

stirring, or on wash day.

As for Joe, he was not far away. He had simply

gone down the road and across the river to Blue

Bonnet, where he got a position in the mines. The

hours were short, the pay sufficient, and no one ques-

tioned his right to chew his tobacco unceasingly or

to sleep whenever he wanted to. He never thought

of Lizzie except at meal time, for in spite of her

shrewish tendencies, Lizzie was a good cook, and he

had always been well fed. But the food now avail-

able was not of the best, and no matter if he was 

plebian in most respects, Joe's stomach was aristo-

cratic. Then, too, the work at the mines we begin-

ning to pall upon him.

Finally, like other great men of history, Joe was

conquered by his appetite and he went home to his

loving spouse. She greeted him stolidly, betraying

no surprise or any other emotion, but Joe was used

to that. If he had any qualms, one glance at the

clothes-line was enough to dispel them. He said,

"Liz, give yuh a dollar a week fer room 'n board."

Liz's lips said nothing but her eyes did. In response,

Joe drew out one of his dollars. He continued, "One

dollar, three meals a day an' room. You 'n me be 

strangers to one 'nother." He meant by this that 

he did not intend to do the washing, but he was too

delicate to say so.

Lizzie agreed, and got her sister to come and pay

her a visit. Joe got his three meals, but his room

was the kitchen and his bed the floor, for the only

other room besides the kitchen was occupied by Liz-

zie, her sister, and the baby.

In spite of this and a few like draw-backs, Joe

was very well pleased, for in his role of stranger

and roomer, he was never nagged at or made to

stir the beans. But he reached the zenith of his

glory when he was the joy of sitting on the grass

42</text>
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                    <text>[page 45]

[corresponds to page 43 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

less plot which was the yard, watching Lizzie hang

out the clothes.

All went well for a few weeks, but the time came

when the stock of dollars was exhausted. He knew

that Lizzie's good food and shelter would be no long-

er forthcoming without the weekly dollar. The cold

weather, too, was coming on, and the need of shoes

was beginning to be felt. Lizzie was adament in her

refusal to get out his winter clothing. In her own

words, "I ain't a-goin' to let no stranger war my

husban's close."

In despair, Joe departed once more for the mines,

only to find that they were closed. There was no

work in the town; Blue Bonnet had settled into its

customary winter stupor.

Luck was against him wherever he turned. He

felt in his ragged pocket for his old standby, his

"plug o' tobaccy," and brought his hand out, empty

save for one lonely nickel. With it he could have

invested in more tobacco but he knew that if he did,

the luxury of riding across the river in "the boat"

would never be his, for Ma McCoy, the slatternly 

woman who lived on the opposite bank and whose

leaky, home-made skiff was the only ferry, was

exacting in her demands for payment. He renounc-

ed his longed-for "chaw," signalled to her, and she

rowed across and pulled up on the shore. He paid

no attention to her shrill command to "stan' up in

th' middle, 'n mebbe she'll swarp off'n th' bank

better." He was engrossed in his thoughts.

All too quickly the skiff reached the opposite 

shore, his last nickel was in Ma's grimy fist, and

he was plodding up the mountain road wondering

where his next meal was to come from and where

he would sleep that night. To worry was foreign

to his nature; he believed, without reasoning, that

when the time came a course would open.

He became colder and more miserable every min-

ute, but at last he approached the shack and turned

into the yard. As he went into the kitchen he stum-

bled over the baby playing in the dirt in the door-

way. Picking her up, he awkwardly soothed her

cries and went into the kitchen. A familiar odor

greeted his nostrils, a familiar scene, his eyes. Lizzie

was washing. He was cold; he was hungry. The

room was warm and a kettle of beans boiled on the

stove.

He looked out the door; the wind was rising and the

sky was gray with cold. Joe turned again to the

kitchen and, without a word, lifted a tub of dirty

clothes to the floor and stepped into it, his feet

slopping the warm water and stamping the dirt from

the clothes in the fashion approved by the moun-

taineer housewives. His zeal was pathetic.

Lizzie said nothing; she understood. She disap-

peared and presently returned with a pair of clumsy

boots and thick sox.

"Gittin' cold," she remarked. "Better put on them

boots whin yuh git through. Stir th' beans."

-ANNE BOOTON, '22

One Saturday in the Ten Cent Store

There was a time when the word "clerk" brought

to my mind the picture of an untidy, uneducated, and

unrefined young woman. However, I have since

changed my views and now I realize that, although

she may not be a college graduate, the same young

lady is clean and intelligent, and often more sens-

ible than many of the girls who are graduated from

the best university.

To be sure much more is demanded of the shop

girl today: if she be lacking in intelligence and

quick-witted mastery of a situation, she will soon

lose her place; she must be able to meet all kinds of

people pleasantly; she must be able to understand 

those who cannot or do not speak clearly; she must

be able to make out the numerous reports and lists

required by the management; she must be accurate

in everything, particularly in accounting for stock,

in ringing money in the register, and in making 

change, for, if she is not accurate, she will probably

get such a tongue-lashing from some irate customer

that she will flinch for a week.

The clerk must always be prompt in the morning

and at noon, prompt to wait upon the people and

to answer their questions, which are often very fool-

ish. She must always have a smile, no matter what

may be hidden back of it; she must be polite under

all circumstances--a duty which is, I think, the most

difficult, because it is human nature to want to speak

for one's self, especially if wrongly accused. But

the girl behind the counter must smother her feel-

ings and calmly listen to anything the customer

wishes to say. She must never show impatience

even though a lady should take all day to decide 

whether she wishes a five or a ten-cent pair of shoe

43</text>
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                    <text>[page 46]

[corresponds to page 44 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

laces, a mock diamond or ruby ring.

On the other hand the clerk has many pleasures,

and enjoys many good times with the other girls.

Then, too, there is the enjoyment of work well done

and a day well spent. To the school girl, working

in the store one day a week is all pleasure, for she

does not have any of the hardwork to do; and, be-

sides the rest from the monotony of school routine,

she has an easy way of getting spending money

without having to ask father each time.

Furthermore, such work gives one an excellent

chance to study kinds of people and characters.

There is the flashily dressed young girl who buys a 

ten-cent box of rouge and takes from her purse a 

ten-dollar bill with which to pay; and the aristo-

cratic lady who looks at all the perfumes and asks,

"Is this all the kind of perfume you've got?" In

contrast to these types is the poor mother, who looks

as if she had not as much as seen a new dress since

her wedding day, with a half dozen ragged little chil-

dren about her. She has, perhaps, fifty cents in her

worn pocket-book, which she spends upon cheap

toys and candy for her young brood.

There are two types of college girls, the snob and

the non-snob. The non-snob wears a pleasing smile

and treats the clerk as an equal, while the snob

sails along with a high-and-mighty air seeming to

think the clerk was made to serve her; and the un-

usual part of it is that most often the snob is unbe-

comingly dressed, and looks as if she might have a 

mother at home who, wrinkled and careworn, wash-

es in order to earn money enough to give her daugh-

ter a good education. Following this "malforma-

tion," in a class by herself, is the young business

girl who is much more considerate of others and

who is a delight to wait upon; she has had some

experience with people and knows how the clerk

feels.

Then comes the young married man whose wife 

has sent him for a hair net. He doesn't know what

color, whether it should be single or double meshed,

with or without elastic,--or just a hair net. If she

wants some crochet-cotton, the young husband, pick-

ing up a spool of black darning cotton, will inquire,

"Is this the only color crochet thread you have?"

And so on through the whole list of patrons.

From the richest to the poorest, from the largest

to the smallest, one can tell who and what they are

by the way they walk, talk, and act. Although there

are many trying incidents, the funny ones are by far

the more numerous, and the experience is worth

while to any girl, for it helps to broaden her views

and make her more thoughtful of others.

-ALICE RUSH, '23.

The Poet's Belief

The realm in which the poet-soul dwells is un-

doubtedly a far-away world to the ordinary man.

The spirit of poetry bursts forth from a heart,--not

from a mind,--a heart that is overflowing with the

deepest conceivable passions. An understanding of

and a sympathy for the feelings of his fellowmen

is a great essential to the true poet, for the readers

of his works look not only for pleasure and enjoy-

ment from his pen, but rather for a helpful, an up-

lifting thought that will duly pay them for the time

they spend with him.

Many have written jingles, love songs, and dra-

matic narrative poems, which have gained much ap-

plause; but would these alone suffice if we could

not learn to know the poet by the expression of his

beliefs? If there be poetry in him, his whole soul

summons this expression, whereby we come to

know him, and if he can supply us with that uplift-

ing, that moving quality for which we have searched,

does it not seem that he is near and in fond company

with the living God of Wisdom?

But what are we to say of two who are recognized

as being among the world's best producers of verse,

--Homer and Virgil? Their seemingly immortal works

bespeak the fact that they must have a god--that is,

a source of inspiration, hope, and higher ideals; but

was this the Heavenly Father? We have proof, too,

that Virgil's belief lay not in one god, but in many

gods, not all of whom were faultless.

However, the lack of consciousness of divine sym-

pathy upon the part of these early composers who

had not yet the witness of Christ, forbids the inter-

pretation of their real personalities. In the realm

of superstition they are lost, and the valuable and

interesting material left us by them leaves us with

an inexpressible coldness.

What a different effect is produced by the cherish-

ed memorials of those others who felt the divine

touch! How many have been comforted by the

soothing melody of the imperishable faith of Tenny-

son! His lines

"For so the whole round earth is every way

Bound by gold chains about the feet of God"

are the key to his immense chamber of understand-

ing and sympathy. In the possession of these tal-

ents, our "Idyll" poet stands not alone, for by his

side marches an army of trustful servants, the man-

ifestation of whose beliefs in the All-Powerful One

is inestimable. In these lines from Lanier's 

"Marshes of Glynn"

"As the marsh hen secretly builds on the watery

sod,

44</text>
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                    <text>[page 47]

[corresponds to page 45 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Behold I will build me a nest on the greatness of

God"

is portrayed his absolute confidence in this One

which makes his work both beautiful and imperish-

able.

A review of the lives of others skilled in the poet-

ical art would serve as just examples of the fact

that, although undoubtedly they put their faith in

some unknown power, this was not always the God

of Love.

These poems which possess a tendency to draw 

the soul toward the ethereal realms are the most

moving and eternal of these gifts. Those artists

whose pens produce these works are, perhaps, God's

best instruments for leading the world to Him.

Think of the tear-drops and smiles of rejoicing that

are prompted by the Psalms and Hymns of those

who know Him. And, after all, are not these mere-

ly an expression of man's greatest passion, Love?

-DOROTHY BARRETT, '22.

Lest We Forget

Last December Delaware High suffered the loss

of one of its best known students when George

Noble answered his final summons. He was a mem-

ber of '24, loyal and active in every phase of school

life. We shall always remember him for his win-

ning ways, his manly behavior, and his splendid

sense of good fellowship which endeared him to us

all. Until the very last, he never gave up the hope

that he would be with us again, that he would once

more share our good times in D.H.S. We cannot 

help but feel that his spirit is even now with us in-

spiring us to higher endeavor.

When we think of the untold agony George went 

through during the long months of his illness, it

seems that, to him, death must have been a God-

send. Even when he had reached the valley and

only awaited the time when he would solve the mys-

teries of the great beyond, he had a kind word and

a smile for his friends. It seems that nothing more

significant could express his wonderful courage

than these few lines:

"It's easy enough to be cheerful

When life flows along like a song,

But the man worth while

Is the man with a smile,

When everything goes dead wrong."

Certainly we who found such a true pal in George

can look forward to the time when, after life's for-

tunes and misfortunes are set aside, we shall find

him awaiting his friends.

-BEVERLY KELLEY, '24.

Autumn

Autumn's train comes dancing, whirling,

O'er the summer's sun-baked land,

Like a gala-day procession,

Like a pageant's motley band.

Here a dash of red and yellow;

There of purple; yonder, green;

Peasant woman's broidered kerchief;

Spanish dancer; golden sheen

Mingled with rich, royal purple,

Truly worthy of a queen.

Lasts it all but for a moment;

Fleet the vision fades away,

Yields its place in turn to Winter,

Winter, cold, and drear, and gray.

-CHARLOTTE RICE, '22.

LaJoie

One fleeting glimpse!

Far in the billowy clouds

The azure tips of my Blue Bird

I see. Alas! He, too has gone.

But no! Just overhead he turns

And darts straight down to me.

I close my eyes. I dare not look

Upon that joyous symbol.

A fluttering faint!

And then a rush of azure tips

Have brushed my cheek in passing

And left me Youth, and Love,

And best of all, a Happiness Eternal.

-ADELINE WELCH, '22.

45</text>
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                    <text>[page 48]

[corresponds to page 46 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Written for and dedicated to the

Delaware (O.) High School.

Alma Mater Song.

Charles E. Bodurtha, '20. Bernard Schweitzer, '21.

Andantino maestoso.

[musical score for SATB voices with piano accompaniment, in 3/4 time, key of D Major; text printed below]

Wher-e'er you go, There you may know Mem-'ries of High School will

stand;...........Thoughts of her fame, Love of her name, Will thrill you in

46</text>
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                    <text>[page 49]

[corresponds to page 47 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

ev-'ry land;........Hon-or un-stained, Fair play pro-claimed,

Sym-bol-i-zes our band. Del-a-ware High, Del-a-ware

High, This is our cry, High, High, Del-a-ware High.

Alma Mater Song--2.

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                    <text>[page 50]

[corresponds to page 48 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Lullaby Lily

LULLABY LILY, sweet little

lily,

She lived in the ripples of Lullaby Lake;

And one of the breezes, the soft, summer breezes,

To Lullaby Lily a song would he make.

He loved little Lily, white Lullaby Lily,

But long upon Lullaby Lake did he sigh

Before to his singing, his soft, summer singing,

Dear Lullaby Lily would make a reply.

Then, out on the ripples, the round-running ripples,

The breeze heard the lily's soft voice, as she said,

"Oh go to the babies, the bad, bouncing babies,

Whose mammas can't soothe them and put them to

bed

To fat, funny babies, and round, rolly babies,

Their little hands clapping, their eyes all aglow;

To sad, sighing babies, and wee, wailing babies,

Their little lips trembling in wavering woe.

One dear little baby, a week, woeful baby,

Has found a cool bed under starlight and trees.

Oh, go to the mother, the wan, weeping mother,

And give her our blessing, sweet, soft, summer

breeze;

Go carry my perfume, my light, lily perfume,

(And mingle the cool of your breath as you blow)

To all of the babies, the world-weary babies,

Whose little lives long for the summer to go.

For I am the lily called Lullaby Lily,

And I want my sweetness to make the world glad."

So that's why, my darling, my dear, dainty, darling,

You're sleeping--the breeze did as lily sweet bade!

-MIRIAM STAFFORD, '23.

Cuban Dawn

I came on watch at midnight, and although the

day had been intently hot, the off-sea breeze blow-

ing over the deck of the ship had cooled things won-

derfully, and now at four o'clock it was delightfully

refreshing and without the customary sultriness that

gives one that languid sort of feeling that is always

felt near Cuba. The breeze which had been blowing

practically all night had worn itself out, and in that

calm grayness just before the dawn, the ocean as-

sumed a mirrored smoothness in its very stillness.

There was not a sound save that of my own foot-

steps as I walked up and down the deck. It was yet

but a short hour till dawn, and a creeping sense of

oncoming light added to the breathless intensity, an

intensity like that felt by the soldier at the zero hour

of a charge.

In the magical shifting of the shadows, there was

seen, but a few feet above the horizon, a bank of 

clouds, the under line of which seemed to rest paral-

lel with the ocean, the upper a jagged line, like the

blade of a giant saw, the whole forming a sort of

sensitive screen about the lower edge of the eastern

sky. Gradually the dull grayness became transfused

with a gorgeous royal purple, lined with a delicate

pink; then as the sun rose slowly through its heaven-

ly path, it changed in an instant the azure of the

ocean to a perfect sea of gold, flooding the world, it 

seemed, with a Midas-like splendor. An artist would

never dare attempt to paint a picture like that, for

its rich and mellow beauty in unbelievable unless

one can see it in its natural grandeur.

But the scene changed: the sun was lifted behind

the screen and the sea of gold melted and resumed

its former serene azure with but a trace of gold. 

Again a new scene was created before me. The sun,

now risen beyond the screen, smothered the ocean in

a dazzling brilliant pink, with still a touch of gold

intermingling with that rich blue seen only in a 

southern sky; a very riot of colors one would say,

yet softened and subdued like the mellow beauty of

a rose.

I turned from the ocean view, and looked but a

short distance to the entrance of Santiago Bay, with

Morro Castle in ruins standing as a reminder of its

old guardianship over the harbor. The soft gray of 

the Castle stood out from the background of the low

white buildings on the slope of the hills beyond. The

trees, the bushes, the grass, the very hills them-

selves seemed green--a deep, rich, emerald green

that brought out the beauty and brilliance of the

buildings like the setting of a diamond.

The ship's bell struck five. What! An hour wast-

ed in merely looking at the scenery Wasted? Ah,

no; for these scenes have left a picture, nay, a vision,

too beautiful to be real,--a scene I shall never forget.

WILLIAM E. JONES, '22.

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                    <text>[page 51]

[corresponds to page 49 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

A Diplomatic Romance

Dear Dad:

Arrived O.K. this A.M. and Aunt Ella was at the

train to meet me. She is just fine and sends love.

We are set for a "tea" this afternoon. I suppose

it will be a bore, women sit in one corner and talk

about their best friends while the men try to look

interested. Oh yes! there is a special feature for

this afternoon. I am to meet Count de Preles. He

is representing the French Government here unoffi-

cially. Thrills! Thrills! Thrills!

Well, dear, I will write you all about it tomorrow

as we are going to the opera tonight.

With lots of love,

MADGE.

Dearest Pater:

(That's Latin, Daddy). Well, I met the Count de

Preles. He is the most insipid looking mortal, but

to give him credit he is very good looking, although

his clothes fit so precisely, his hair always looks

just so, and his mustache is also scrupulous. I'll

bet that he couldn't do a good day's work and I don't 

suppose he ever saw a gymnasium unless it was to

take a perfumed shower bath. He is quite attentive

and Aunt Ella is charmed with him. I suppose when

your husband is in the president's cabinet, you have

to be nice to foreigners, though, don't you?

Well, I am going to play golf with the Count-No-

Account today. Love,

MADGE.

Dearest Daddy:

How are you? I am just fine! I'm so excited!

I have scented a mystery. No, it isn't from a dime

novel either. You know that there have been some

royal Russian jewels sold to the French government.

They were stolen and people believe some one

brought them to this country. Dad, I think the

Count knows something about it. You see the man

who stole them, also stole the credentials of a 

French diplomat. They were not marked except

only one of many so they couldn't be traced. No

one knows why the Count is here. He doesn't do

anything much but play golf, but I've caught him

looking around at receptions as if he was afraid of

being watched. I'm going to cultivate his friend-

ship and see if I can't help in locating the jewels, as

Uncle Ralph says that it is very urgent that they 

find them.

Yours,

MADGE.

Dearest:

The plot thickens. Last night we had a dance. I 

went with the Count, and, Dad I caught him--not

with the jewels--but he was talking to the butler

givign him orders. I listened and heard him say,

"We'll go slowly; we can't risk discovery!" When I

coughed and stepped out, he acted as if he had just

asked the butler for his hat. He is clever.

Then on our way home, we went for a long ride.

He has a marvelous voice and is remarkably fond

of telling stories and also of his many travels. Tru-

ly, he is an exceptional man, but he can't fool me;

he is a crook and I am going to catch him.

I'm so sleepy. Good-night,

MADGE.

Dear Daddy:

I'm so thrilled. When we were playing golf yes-

terday, an aeroplane fell down right in front of us.

The motor had gone dead and of course the plane

crashed to the ground but fortunately the man was

not hurt. He is very handsome and it turned out

to be Jack Langley. He is just an ace from the war

who is working on an aeroplane invention. He's 

very gentlemanly and Aunt Ella invited him up to-

morrow. The Count stiffened and looked like a 

thunder cloud when he saw who the pilot was. I 

don't know what was the matter, whether it was be-

cause he didn't like the aviator or not. Will tell 

you tomorrow.

MADGE.

Dear Dad:

I've so much to tell you. I was out for a yacht

party yesterday with Jack. The Count was invited,

but he did not come. I wonder why? He seems to

like me, but yet he is so indifferent--not that I care,

except to catch him with the jewels.

Anyway Jack told me yesterday that he was a 

French secret service man. He used to know the

Count in Paris. He said Don wasn't a Count then

at all, and also said that he (Jack) was over here to

trace the jewels and catch the thief. I told him my

suspicions of the Count, and he is going to watch 

him. He said he would let me help him if anything

new came up. He is very nice and so attractive. I 

will write again soon.

Love,

MADGE.

Dearest Pere:

That is not a new kind of fruit--that is the French

word for "Dad."

It has been over a week since I've written any-

thing but telegrams. I was so glad when I got your

night letter but you shouldn't say so much when

you pay by the word. I will be a miser before very

long if I keep on getting economical.

Things are going slowly. There is something do-

ing every minute but I haven't found the jewels yet.

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                    <text>[page 52]

[corresponds to page 50 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

The Count has been out of town for a week and if

it wasn't so absurd, I'd think that I missed him. He

is so insipid, and as I have found him out, he is a 

crook. Jack says he hopes to have him cornered in

a week. I am so excited.

Yours in suspense,

MADGE.

Dear Daddy:

I just happened to think of what Grandma used

to call you. Do you remember? Well! it was Jum-

bo. She said she called you that because you liked

peanuts so well.

Don got back last week. He is the Count, as you

already know. I'm letting him see me lots because

I want to find out all I can for Jack. It doesn't

seem to be working very well. He's charming until

I talk about the jewels and then he immediately be-

gins conversing on another subject, although I'm

going to see if he will tell me. Will write later.

Love,

MADGE.

Daddy Dear:

I'm so unhappy. Today Jack told me to keep Don

out until he had a chance to search his bags. I took

him out into the garden and it was certainly a won-

derful night. Don seemed terribly worried about

something, so I asked him what the matter was.

For just a minute he forgot himself and started to

tell me but immediately put on his mask and went

back into the house. Daddy, I know he was going

to tell me that he liked me just a little. I read it

in his eyes and the better point is that I want him

to love me. I have only known him a month, yet

I'm desperately near loving him--an effeminate

crook.

Love,

YOUR HEART-BROKEN MADGE.

P.S. There is something that seems strangely 

familiar about Don's eyes.

Dear Dad:

I'm so excited. It is all over--the mystery I mean.

I will try to tell you just how it happened. Wed-

nesday night, Jack didn't get all through searching

Don's room so he told me to keep him out again last 

night. We went out in the park. I guess I do be-

lieve in Romancing and Fate, after all, Dad, because

a man attacked Don in the wooded part of the park.

Did I tell you he was effeminate? You should have

seen him put that man down. Jack Dempsey better

look out for his title. Don tied the man's hand with

a handkerchief and made him walk into the keeper's 

lodge, that happened to be near, and locked him in.

When he came back to me I was ready to faint. I 

knew then more than anything else that he was safe

so I just started to cry. (No! I'm not ashamed of 

myself because I couldn't help it). Then Don told

me that he loved me but couldn't tell me anything

about himself. He asked me if I could trust him.

Somehow I knew then, that he was all right. I told

him about Jack. He turned as white as a sheet and

he asked me if I was still his brave little woman.

As if I wouldn't pick sponges off the ocean's bottom

after he had said that.

To make a long story short. He gave me a note 

to take to police headquarters as fast as I could

drive his car--and that was rather hurriedly. When

I gave it to the chief he called his squad together

and went out to the house.

You should have been here then, Dad, it was great.

They were all stationed at different places but the

chief and he went in the house with me on his trail

as close as Eliza's bloodhounds. The very first thing

we saw was Don with Jack tied to a chair looking

into a revolver.

Then they blew a whistle and the men outside 

brought in three more. Dad, what do you think?

Jack is the thief himself and Don caught him.

They made me go to bed immediately because it

was late and I was so excited. Anyway, I saw them

take Jack and his confederates to jail.

Don is going to tell me all about it tomorrow. I'm 

glad I trusted him.

Your sleepy but happy MADGE.

P.S. The mustache is false.

Dear Dad:

It's a lovely morning. I'm ready to go to lunch

but it isn't quite time so I will tell you all about the

mystery. 

Jack is an ex-convict from France. A Russian

hired him to steal the jewels and he was to meet

him here with them. His plane crashed and gave

him an entrance into society with a little mystery to

hide his real mission.

Don is an American Secret Service officer who was

put on the case by the French and American Gov-

ernments. He knew who Jack was but was waiting

to get him with his superior and his jewels. He had

proof that Jack had the jewels and that is what Jack

wanted in Don's room. They have Jack, the man 

who hired him, the proof, and also the jewels. Don

has had a great raise and much honor. I'm so proud

of him.

Remember I said his eyes were familiar? Dad,

do you remember the Montagnes that lived on the

next ranch to us in Texas? The boy that I played

with until I went East to school? That boy is Don.

His real name is Donald Montagne. And, Dad, can't

you leave Wall Street long enough to come out next

week-end? Don will want to ask you something,

although I don't know what it is.

Yours blissfully,

MADGE.

--HELEN HITESHEW, '22.

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                    <text>[page 53]

[corresponds to page 51 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Paula

Last summer I had my first glimpse of community

life, and I found it quite enlightening. I was at a

camp in Vermont at the time, where were gathered

girls of all types and descriptions, from every part

of the United States. There was the petted mother's

darling who was so trying just about bed-time when

she was in the habit of being rocked to sleep. There

were tomboy terrors and the peevish, ill-tempered

ones, with a liberal sprinkling of winsome, happy-

hearted little lassies who were like lumps of sugar

in sour apple-sauce--quite a relief. And last, there

was Paula.

Paula was a wee mite of a seven-year-old with a 

large imagination, which was partly a gift of nature

and partly the result of many hours spent listening

to stories or pouring over volumes of fairy tales and

mythes. This imagination, however, was of an airy

nature which held no room for material things, and

which, if she had been older, would have gained for

her the epithet of dreamer. Her very expression

was unpre-possessing at the outset. She was in

the habit of contorting her small, deep-set eyes and

full wide mouth into the most monkey-like expres-

sions that I have ever beheld on a human counten-

ance. Moreover, in her dress, she was the constern-

ation of those who had her in charge. Her stock-

ings were continually coming down; her middy was

invariably unpinned at the throat; while her tie was 

often missing altogether; there seemed to be no

means in the whole camp by which her bloomers

could be kept above her knees; in short, Paula was

not one to be bothered by her appearance.

Alien as it may appear to this utter disregard of

neatness, the child had a passion for dressing up, 

and "make believe" was a favorite pastime which

whiled away not only much of her play time, but

even much of the time when she was apparently en-

gaged in other occupations. From remembered tales,

still fresh in mind, or by her art of mental pictur-

ing, she could at any moment evoke characters or

situations to suit her taste. At dinner one noon

she seemed absorbed in her own thoughts for fully

fifteen minutes. Suddenly she broke her silence

with,

"O, Mrs. Blackburn, won't you please put on my

shoes, I've been wading long enough, I think."

Mrs. Blackburn, by this time somewhat accus-

tomed to Paula's eccentricities, did as she was re-

quested, meanwhile questioning the child about her

queer statement. It seems she had tired of the table

conversation, and to while away the time had imag-

ined herself in wading in a "silvery brook that

sparkled on the pebbles," to use her own words.

She continued, "Mother lets me wade if I take off 

my shoes."

It was one of these flights of imagination that

insured and strengthened a warm friendship be-

tween the child and me. One evening shortly be-

fore taps I ascended the hill just behind our shack,

intending to lie in the hammock and read until dark.

On reaching the summit my attention was called by

Paula's tentmates who came scrambling up the hill

in their pajamas crying at the top of their voices:

"O, Miss R--, do come down and tell Paula there

isn't a ghost in the tent."

Upon going down to investigate, I found that

Paula's tent councillor had been detained and the

child was possessed with the idea that there was a

ghost in the tent, nearer which she refused to come

than a tree perhaps twenty-five feet away. From

that outpost of safety, she would make sudden dash-

es back into the woods. On one of her frightened

flights, I caught her and managed to keep her still.

I hoped to divert her mind by asking what she liked

to do.

"Well," she said. "I like to read best."

"What kind of books do you like " I suggested.

"O, those about fairy people and goblins and

ghosts and animals and--things." The last men-

tioned was added rather absently. For some mo-

ments she lay back in my arms silently thinking.

Then she broke out,

"Happy (that was what the children called their

councillor) tells us lovely ghost stories. Will you

tell us one?"

Seizing my chance, I answered:

"Paula, I'll tell you a story if you will promise to

go back in your tent and go to bed."

Much to my surprise she acquiesed. The other

children followed a little behind, unwilling as yet

to trust themselves nearer the tent. I thought the

incident was closed, but no. Again Paula's voice

held me.

"There he is, I see him; he's caught behind the

shelves. He can't get out."

On being told that there was nothing there, she

explained, "O yes he is. You can't see him though.

He looks just like the tent flap. All I can see is his

teeth. He can bite like anything, too. I knew a

girl once who was bitten by a ghost. It hurt just

awfully."

Thinking she had gone far enough in her imagin-

ings, and not daring to think what wild thing she

would say next, I put her on her bed and told her

to be quiet while I told her a story. When I finally

left, she was just about asleep and I stole out with-

out disturbing her.

As I was thinking about the incident the next day,

I could not help marveling at the wonderful talent

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                    <text>[page 54]

[corresponds to page 52 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

the child possessed and picturing to myself the use

she might put it to in later life. At the same time,

a horror of what might become of the child if this

talent were misued filled me with a sense of fore-

boding. Many times have I pondered over this since

I returned home, but the picture which oftenest

comes to my mind is that of Paula, unconscious of

self, listening to a story told at a camp-fire gather-

ing, or herself acting out her own fanciful imag-

inings. --CHARLOTTE RICE, '22.

Home Seekers' Vision

A burning summer sun had beaten down upon the

prairie for days. Furnace-like, the south winds

come racing out of the pulsing haze at the far hori-

zon. The sky seemed of copper and the floor-like

plain's once emerald disk was tinged by the heat

with grayish brown.

One object broke the monotony of the scene,--a

white-covered wagon, its flapping canvas-top giving

scant shelter to the emigrant and his wife crouch-

ed within Their journey had been long,--seemingly

endless to the fever-stricken woman.

Suddenly the man looked up, startled. Their

search for a home was over.

"See!" he cried out in joy.

They had come out on the edge of a wide-reaching

valley. Lines of dense-leaved, billowy forest, bent

and swayed in the gentle breeze. A lake with her

and there a touch of foam to relieve the sparkling

blue of the waves restlessly tossed and wrinkled 

its waters. Broad meadows suggesting clover and

golden-rod were near by, and the waving of the

grass was like that of the lake. Yonder, along the

beach, the travelers caught a glimpse of dwellings

--beautiful homes whose splendor seemed to dazzle

their eyes.

"See!" called out again the glad husband, his

strong arm lifting the fainting wife that she might

get a better view.

The burdens of the past had been very great. In

the fierce race of life they had been left far behind;

but now the journey over, the thinly grassed prairie

was nearly ended--the haven was in sight. They

could almost taste the fruits of the trees and catch

a scent of the clover.

Hungrily, earnestly they feasted their eyes as they

gazed through the opening in the flapping canvas.

A passing cloud drifted suddenly before the sun. A

cry of pain and disappointment surged to the wo-

man's lips as she saw again a dreary length of plain

whose level lines had so long fatigued her eyes. 

The torrid wind found not a leaf to stir. She fell

back on her heated pillow.

The mirage had lifted. The emigrant was alone

on the prairie with his dead.

--MILDRED McNETT, '23.

Sentimental Value

Everyone who is capable of deep feeling has in

his possession some object which has no intrinsic

value whatever but which he would not sell for any

money. Or, perhaps the article which he prizes most

is of no use to him although it would command a 

price if offered for sale. The things which bind

this worthless object so closely to his life are the

heart-strings themselves, which are caused to vi-

brate with new life whenever the beloved article is

presented to his sight. Perhaps it is a pressed flow-

er, a handkerchief, an old school book, or a worn-

out garment which never fails to revive the old sen-

sations and dear memories that make life newer and

happier.

Perhaps we have never stopped to consider what

a great factor sentiment, or even sentimentality, is

in our lives. Some people are proud of the fact that

they are called sentimental; others are ashamed of

its. There is really no more excuse for either feeling

than there is for being proud or ashamed of eating

or breathing. Sentiment is a part of life itself. The

past, present, and future are bound together by it;

life is given unity by the sentimental regard we have

for persons, circumstances, and things.

Who among you has never, in the innocent idol-

atry of youth, idealized some person who has after-

wards proven entirely unworthy of your worship?

But even after he has been shown to have feet of

clay, will the sight of the athlete who was your idol

to Apollo, the teacher whom you regarded as Wis-

dom incarnate, the girl who seemed an unparalleled

example of tenderness and unselfishness, or the min-

ister who appeared as a paragon of all virtue, ever

fail to revive old emotions and sobering memories

which make your life better for having once cher-

ished those ideals? Even though much bitterness

was caused by the disillusionment you suffered, has

not a new tenderness been added to your under-

standing by the deep experience?

To anyone, then, who has ever felt the thrill of a 

happy experience, the inspiration of a wonderful

discovery, or the pain of a broken idol, sentimental

value is an inseparable element of life; and all the 

harshness of struggle, the discouragement of disap-

pointment and the unsympathetic attitudes of men

cannot mar the memories his treasures of sentiment

recall. --MIRIAM STAFFORD, '23.

52</text>
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                    <text>[page 55]

[corresponds to page 53 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

Forceful Magic

Jack Wellington was an ordinary young man in 

many ways, but had turned special attention toward

the age-old art which sometimes instructs, often

amuses, and always entertains.

His big night was at hand--the night which would

either make him or break him. True, the young

magician had given numberless performances for his

friends, and even entertained in one of the small

theaters of his city; but tonight he was to present

hs [sic] performance before an immense crowd of Chi-

cago theater-goers. It was to be a charity benefit;

so the audience would be composed of two classes:

one made up of those who were ever ready to make

allowances for an inexperienced actor, while the

other class was composed of those who sit stiffly 

in their places and seem to say, "Well, we're used to

seeing all kinds of players and we know a good show

from a bad one. We make no allowances and ex-

pect the best for our money."

Now this latter class was enough to discourage

any young fellow; but had not Jack spent weeks in

preparation? Had he not put special stress upon

his "patter" in order to overcome all difficulties

along that line and to render a performance with-

out room for criticism? This tended to add encour-

agement, but Jack could not help being a little ner-

vous before the curtain went up.

The orchestra was playing the opening number!

In a moment he would face a sea of faces! The

great curtain slowly ascended and with it rose his

courage. He was, at once, the same cool-headed

Jack Wellington who had practiced his entertain-

ment without error.

The orchestra broke into the closing strains of

"The Stars and Stripes Forever" following the pro-

duction of a large American flag on a rigid staff.

The audience began to sit up and take notice. Per-

haps, after all, this show might prove of interest.

Jack launched into the performance with perfect

ease. He pulled rabbits from unsuspecting gentle-

men's coats, effected the production of bowls of gold-

fish, caught live pigeons from the air, and caused

cards to assume animated life. The vanishing of a 

young lady from a suspended cabinet, and her in-

stantaneous appearance at the rear of one of the

theater aisles brought thunders of applause. In fact,

everything went along splendidly until, nearing the 

close of the first act, a spectator publicly challenged

the wizard to hypnotize him.

Now Jack Wellington might easily have eluded this

challenge by saying that he had had no experience

along mesmeristic lines and would be unable to do

as the spectator requested, but Jack never thought

of such an easy way out. The show had been run-

ning so smoothly that he was literally taken off his

feet by such a public challenge. He vaguely remem-

bered promising to do as the man asked but suggest-

ed postponing the demonstration until the next act,

in which he was going to demonstrate mind-reading. 

This was agreeable to the spectator, who gloried in

Jack's uneasiness.

The remainder of Act One went off more or less

mechanically, and when the curtain had descended,

he was met by an excited brother and assistant.

"You sure are in a deuce of a mess now, Jack!

Why you've never had a lesson! You can't hypnotize

anyone--"

"Now just can that stuff, Tom," interrupted his

brother, "I know it as well as you, but this is no

time to lose our heads. Something's bound to turn

up and, anyway, I may be able to bluff my way

through. I think I know the principles."

Saying this, Jack hurried away to his dressing

room, leaving Tom to look after all preparations for

the next act and supervise the change of scenes.

In three minutes the apparatus of the preceding 

act was cleared away. A plain, yet attractive, set-

ting stood in its place. This was to serve as scenery

for the mind-reading demonstration--an act care-

fully practiced and one which had promised success

in the largest sense of the word, but which was now

extremely doubtful in the hands of the nervous 

Jack.

The young performer had decided to attempt the

hypnotizing stunt first, leaving the remainder of the

act until later, so that he might possibly overcome

his inevitable failure with the more certain "Mir-

acle Mind Reading," as it was advertised.

The low, steady beat of a tom tom announced

the beginning of the second act and was followed

by the weird strains of "The Shiek." Jack, arrayed

in an Arabic costume, stepped to the footlights as

the curtain rose. His voice was clearly audible al-

though he felt as if his heart were in his mouth.

He requested the subject's presence on the stage

and, when this request was complied with, began to 

walk the man backwards, going through meaning-

less motions with his hands in front of the man's

face. Every moment Jack felt worse. These impos-

sible motions could not go on. Already the audience

was sensing the bluff. Was so brilliant a perform-

ance to be sacrificed now? It seemed inevitable.

Suddenly the man's eyes closed! he sank in silence

to the floor! Was this a dream? Jack Wellington

was completely bewildered but knew that he must

retain his composure, so he managed to turn and

bow to the suprised audience. The curtain de-

scended for a second, while the subject was removed.

A very jubilant and self-satisfied Jack Wellington

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                    <text>[page 56]

[corresponds to page 54 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

resumed the act and carried it off with almost un-

believable skill. All through the performance the

thought was uppermost in his mind that he had actu-

ally put the man to sleep! Surely he must be gifted

with unknown powers!

At length, the final encore was over and Jack was

met by enthusiastic friends. Nothing gave him more

surprise than to learn that the man whom he had

hypnotized had challenged him on a bet which the

man had made with one of Jack's friends. This

friend, as Tom remarked, must have had a tremen-

dous amount of faith in Jack's ability.

On the following morning, the young entertainer

was awakened to see an account of his success in

the "Tribune" staring him in the face. Tom held the

paper before the approving eyes of his brother.

"Jack," he said, "did you ever see a better write-

up? Why, people all over the city know of this,

and from what I can gather, the mesmeristic stunt

got off best of anything!"

"I'll agree with you," chimed in Jack, "Hot dog!

I guess I'm some hypnotist! It's a mystery to me,

though, why I never discovered my abilities before."

A look of disapproval spread over Tom's face.

"Look here, Jack, you hate yourself too doggoned

much for any use, so I'm going to put you wise to

something I'd intended to keep to myself. Wait a 

minute."

With this, Tom left the room returning a moment

later with a hammer.

"Say, Jack, did you ever see this hammer before?"

"Sure did," said his brother; "It's the one we used

in setting up some of the stuff last evening."

"Well," continued Tom, "do you recall the mo-

ment last night when you accidentally backed your

subject against the back-drop? This hammer," add-

ed Tom, "has more magic in it than you think. Last

evening, when I observed the outline of the honor-

able gent's ivory dome against the back-drop, I just

couldn't resist the temptation of giving him a light

tap on the head. I really hadn't intended to tell you,

but since you've assumed such a self-satisfied atti-

tude over your apparent success--"

"Tom," broke in a pride-shaken brother. "You're 

the kind of brother and assistant to have!"

Now, although Jack Wellington's pride was wound-

ed momentarily, he was not the sort of fellow to miss

a good joke even at his own expense, so he smiled

as he shook his younger brother's hand and said,

"I may be able to pass as a fair magician, but as a 

hypnotist--well, as a hypnotist, I'm afraid I'd be

obliged to resort to your more effective method of

forceful magic."

--BEVERLY KELLEY, '24.

Short One

"Don't you feel any better, Jane?" Cora Jennings

said to her sister, who was still in bed at the late

hour of eight on the day they had planned to leave

for New York.

"Oh, dear, don't worry, I'm sure I'll be all right;

I'm just fighting off a miserable cold."

"Don't you want something to eat? Maybe that

would make you feel better."

"Oh, I don't know what I want; I want to go. We

have planned this little trip for so long, and now we

even have our reservations, and I am going to spoil

all our fun. Oh dear, it's such a splendid day, and

besides we are almost packed."

"Now look here, Jane, you just forget about spoil-

ing our fun and get that ache out of your system.

You lie right still there in bed and don't you move

an inch out of it until I tell you you can. I'll finish

doing what few things are to be done." She started

to leave and Jane called to her,

"Well, Cora, you might bring me a little bite to 

eat, if you're not going to let me get it for myself."

Cora left the room, soon returning with a tray of

steaming coffee and hot rolls. Scarcely had Jane

finished her slight meal when some one called from

the bottom of the stairs, "Jane! Cora!"

Who could it be? Aunt Luella from Uniontown

was the only one they knew of who always walked

right in, but she always told them she was coming.

Presently the call came up the stairway again, a lit-

tle louder this time, "Jane! Cora!"

"Oh, it's Mrs. B-- coming over to find out all she

can to spread over the town," said Cora.

She hurried to the top of the stairs and looked

down. Sure enough it was she, standing in her neat

morning dress, her inquisitive face turned upwards.

"I just ran over to see if you really were going,

and if there wasn't something I could do," she said.

The truth of the matter, as the girls both knew,

was that she just couldn't keep away; she wanted

to know all their plans and didn't know how to find

them out without having some excuse to come over;

that done, perhaps she might finally question the 

information out of them if she managed well. Of 

course she came directly up the stairs, not waiting

to be asked, and found Jane in bed.

"Oh, you can't go, can you?" she said as she turn-

ed to Cora--"Oh, what a shame! I suppose you had

all your plans made?" She looked rather question-

ingly at the girls, but Jane hearing this comforting

query rolled over, heaving a faint sigh, and gave

Cora a look not to tell. Cora understood.

"I'll tell you what you ought to have," Mrs. B--

continued; "some whiskey mixed with a little hot

54</text>
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                    <text>[page 57]

[corresponds to page 55 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

water. That would fix you up in a jiffy. If you 

haven't any I'll go right home and get you some.

I'll bring enough so that you'll have some to put in

your suitcase, and I know if you take some now

you'll be able to go." She said this and hurried home

for the potion not waiting to see if they had any, for

she was certain the Jenningses would hesitate a lit-

tle at having such a thing around.

She returned shortly with her bottle, and after

seeing that Jane had taken a dose, went back home.

After Mrs. B-- had left, Jane fell asleep and Cora

finished packing, locked the windows, drew some of

the shutters, and left only a few things undone that

had to be finished at the last minute. When Jane

awoke, she felt so much better that they decided

to go.

Finding no chance acquaintance on the train they sat

and discussed every one back home from the grocery

man to the president of the club, and when for the

second time they had got back to Mrs. B-- Jane be-

gan to feel bad again. Her berth was made up at 

once, and after much uneasiness she went to sleep

only to be awakened by the man in the next berth,

who was snoring most atrociously. She felt no bet-

ter; in fact, she felt worse. After doing everything

she could think of, Cora finally resorted to the whis-

key. She went to the dressing room to prepare the

draught, and on returning thought she knew her

berth, but missed it by one.

The occupant, who was none other than the afore-

said snorer, was now deeply buried in peaceful slum-

bers. Cora was standing over him, her hand on his

pillow before she discovered he was not her sister;

then in her fright and confusion she spilled the hot

whiskey on him. He immediately awoke, and grab-

bed her by the wrists, thinking she was trying to get

his watch and money from under his pillow. Her

eyes were burning with shame and horror, for you

must remember she was very aristocratic and pre-

cise, and was very much abashed by such a mishap;

her face was flushed and her mind all in confusion,

herself very nervous and quaky. To think that she,

Cora Jennings, had mistaken the berth of a man un-

known to her even by name for that of her sister.

And too, how terrible! She had accidentally spilled

the whiskey on him! What if it should be printed

in the papers? What would her friends back home

in Cincinnati think when they read it? Oh, horrors!

While all this was nunning through her bemuddled

brain, the man was sitting up in bed muttering in-

coherent threats, and holding on to her wrists with

such a grip that when she finally pulled herself 

away, they felt as if they had just been released from

the stocks. She ran into her own berth breathless, 

pale, and excited. The patient, hearing the commo-

tion and forgetting all about her pains, drew Cora

up close to her, and in frantic whispers, amid chok-

ing tears of shame and nervous laughs, tried to

soothe her panicky sister. Meanwhile, the irate

neighbor got out as fast as he could to the colored

porter, who was sitting dozing in a chair at the rear

of the sleeper.

"There is some one in this car that is trying to 

rob me!" he exclaimed.

"Oh, Boss, yo dunno wat yo' is talkin' about. They

ain't no sech thing; for ef thar was Ah'd of seen

'em, Ah guess."

"Well I guess if you swa some one standing next

to your bed with her hand on your pillow ready to

grab your watch from under it, you would know it."

"Aw, shoot, Boss, yo' is drunk; that's what yo' is.

Aw can smell it on yo' right now. Get yo' on back

there to bed and stop makin' this here disturbance

in this car, or I'll have yo' put off at the nex' stop.

Yo' dunno wat yo' is sayin'. Youse drunk; that's wat

yo' is. G'wan back to yo' berth."

But the man was certain of what he said, and was

certain, too, that he was not drunk; so stayed right

where he was.

The porter called the conductor, and explained the

difficulty. The conductor was also convinced of the

man's drunkenness, being able, like the porter, to 

smell the liquor on him.

Then ensued the angry protestations of the out-

raged traveling man. He was put off at the next 

stop, and to this day no one knows that he was not

drunk, nor does any one know how Jane Jennings's 

threatening cold was cured with whiskey toddy.

--FRANCES NAYLOR, '22.

Danny Peters' Inheritance

It was a sultry midsummer afternoon that settled

itself upon the small group of tumble down shacks,

graced by the presence of a combined general store

and saloon, and endowed by its founders with the

simple yet very appropriate cognomen of "Peace."

This interesting little bozanza town, like so many

others on the Western prairie, had gradually sprung 

up since the days of the forty-niners, until now it

boasted of a population a little in excess of one hun-

dred souls.

On this particular afternoon the center of inter-

est, as usual, revolved about the pouch of the gen-

eral store, where several of the town characters and

idlers sat about, some smoking, others dozing, and,

when the spirit moved them, swapping experiences.

At the time when our story opens, old Jerry Pratt,

historian of the place, and an inveterate story tell-

er, had just disposed of his companionable quid and

was about to relate an anecdote bearing on his fa-

55</text>
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                    <text>[page 58]

[corresponds to page 56 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

vorite topic--the days when he was young.

"Did any of this bunch ever hear the straight of

how Crazy Horse got his first taste o' fire water?"

inquired the oldest inhabitant in a reminiscent mood.

No one replied, and taking it for granted that he

would not be interrupted, Jerry cleared his throat

and began.

Just at this point the conversation was interrupt-

ed by a shot issuing from the saloon, and a moment

later, out burst a roughly dressed individual with a 

white scar on his left cheek, who vaulted to his

pony's back and was off. After him came Tim, the 

bartender, flourishing a cork-screw and shouting:

"Sthop him, I say, he ain't paid for his drink.

The blitherin' idot tried to puncture me, but thank

Hiven, the lookin' glass is all that's busted."

To catch the fellow then, however, was impossible.

for the only witness to his hasty flight was a ris-

ing pyramid of alkali dust far down the road.

"I know that man," vouchsafed "Slim" Henderson,

Deputy Sheriff. "Joe, don't you remember 'Stick-

up' Jim Ramsey, who tried to lay a claim to Sam

Peter's land by fake papers, about two years ago?

The varmint skipped out 'a town quite sudden, af-

ter a little tussle with Sam, but he swore revenge

afore he pulled up stakes. I'd know that gent any-

where by that pretty looking scar he carries around.

Let me tell you there'll be trouble brewing afore

long with such a reptile loose around here."

Rising, "Slim" yawned, stretched himself, and

drawled, "I'll just go over and have a little chat

with the Sheriff about this. It won't do any harm

to keep a watch out for this fellow's whereabouts."

Jerry was first to speak after Henderson's depar-

ture. "This here country sure is going to the dogs.

Why a decent feller can't live secure any more."

Suddenly a cloud of dust appeared on the road

opposite that just taken by the man known familiar-

ly as "Stickup." From the rapidity of approach,

the onlookers conjectured that whoever it might be,

had something of real importance on hand. The ob-

scuring dust lifted, little by little, disclosing a horse,

whose rider hung low over the saddle, urging the 

steed to greater effort.

"I'm willin' to wager that's Danny, Sam Peters' 

boy. But what can he be in such a rush about?"

queried "Spooks" Slade, district mail carrier. Their

anxiety was soon set at rest, for Danny, a red-head-

ed, capable looking boy of sixteen, who was an es-

pecial favorite with all the residents of Peace,

swung off his horse, and scarcely waiting to catch

breath, exclaimed, "Dad's struck it rich at last, boys,

after all these hard years of plugging. It's over

along the foot of the Sawtooth somewhere; I didn't

stop long enough to find out. And,--oh, yes, I near-

ly forgot,--Dad wants a whole new prospecting out-

fit, too." After such a long speech--for Danny--he

lapsed into silence.

Joe Cameron voiced the feelings of all when he

said, "You bet we're all for you, son. I just felt in

my bones that Sam was about due for a little change

in luck."

It did not take Danny long to secure the needed

equipment, and with the well-wishes of all ringing

in his ears, he set out for home. Just at dusk he

rode in, and found Pedro Mendez, the Mexican hired

man, standing ready to help him unload. The man's

teeth shone white against a brown skin, as their

eyes met, but there was little of humor in the smile.

It was a smirk that lingered artificially. The fel-

low was rather uncommunicative, but conveyed the

information that Mr. Peters had been very restless

during his absence, and had asked to see him as soon

as he got back.

As they were talking, the Sheriff, Mr. Long, af-

fectionately known as "Shorty," rode up. He had

just heard of Mr. Peter's good fortune, and know-

ing that Danny's father must be anxious to stake

his claim as soon as possible, had ridden up with

the ownership papers. The conversation between

the Sheriff and Sam Peters chiefly concerned the

latter's new find, but when Long mentioned that

Ramsey was in the neighborhood, Pedro's eyes

lighted up with an unaccustomed glow.

After supper, Mr. Peters drew a rough chart of

the strike, explaining it all to Danny as he went

along. If the two had only known they were being

watched by Pedro, who had crept beneath the un-

curtained kitchen window where he could distinctly

hear all that was said, and occasionally risk a 

glance within, things might have been different. As

it was they were so engrossed in study of the map, 

that Pedro found it easy to slip away, after he was

sure that Mr. Peters had secured the chart in his 

boot for safekeeping.

When once out of danger of discovery, Mendez

slipped out behind the wagon shed, and whistled

low three times. An answering whistle came back

to him, and soon a figure appeared out of the

darkness.

"Is that you, 'Hoot'?" Pedro whispered.

"Yep, and I reckon I'm on time too, Mex," said

the man. "Anything new on tap?"

"Si, Senor, and something important. Tell Gorgas

that to-morrow, Mr. Peters rides past Black Hills. 

He goes to stake a new claim. He will be alone;

wait your chance and then strike. Saavy? There

will be a map of the strike hidden in his boot."

"Looks like easy pickin', gringo. When will you

join us?" asked "Hoot."

"Pronto, hombre," replied Mendez. "How many

are in the gang, senor?"

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                    <text>[page 59]

[corresponds to page 57 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

"Just five. Gorgas says that he won't have a whole

raft of men around, like he did two years ago. 'Mem-

ber how we all skidooed when Long caught us red

handed a rustlin' them cattle. I ain't forgot that

day yet. Well, I spose you're wantin' to know who's

back. There's 'Dusty' Phillips and 'Smilin' Jack'

Wilson, besides myself. Who d'ye think blew in

last night? Why, Ramsey. He's been layin' low for

a while, but he said it warn't in him to keep away

with the old gang workin' again. I guess I' orter

light out. Boss told me to hoof it right back.

S'long."

"Adios," was Pedro's rejoinder. He listened un-

til he heard the dull thud of a horse's hoofs speed-

ing off across the mesa. Then turning, he sought

his lodgings above the stable to plan for the mor-

row. Next morning at dawn, Mr. Peters set out

on his way with a happy heart.

Danny, for some unaccountable reason was ap-

prehensive of his father's going, but he was almost

afraid to voice his fear. The feeling remained up-

permost in his mind all forenoon, although he tried

in vain, by working, to drive it away.

Soon after lunch he caught a glimpse of his fath-

er's horse "Star," coming riderless over the plain

at a terrific gallop, and his worst alarms were real-

ized. Moreover, from the blood stains on the saddle,

he knew there had been a fight, and that his father

needed him badly. He attempted to find Mendez,

but the Mexican had discreetly fled. Quickly mount-

ing, the boy started out, scanning the sage brush

dotted plan far ahead, for the sight which he so

dreaded to see, yet momentarily expected.

About mid afternoon near Coyote Pass, he found

his father by the side of the road, nearly dead. A

smile came over his face as Danny bent down over

him and he said,

"I knew you'd be here, but there's no use trying

to help me, son, I'm done for. A pack of bunco men

rode up at me out of that coulee, 'afore I could put

up a scrap, and plugged me full of lead. It's the

same bunch that hung out in these parts 'afore the

Sheriff got busy. Jim Ramsey was one of 'em, son.

He's always had it in for me since I gave him a 

lickin', a couple of years ago. Thank God, I didn't

bring that chart along. It's home under the floor

in the southwest corner of the kitchen. Don't let

'em get it, son."

Mr. Peters could scarcely speak above a whisper,

but it was clear that there was something else he

wanted to say.

"Danny, you've been a good boy, and I hope you'll

be a better man than your dad has been. I always

tried to do my duty by you, just like Mary made me

promise, afore she died. My one possession is this

claim, the only inheritance I can leave you. Take

it, and may God protect you, my boy."

He tried to speak again but the effort proved too

much. Sam Peters had passed to the Great Beyond.

Broken hearted, Danny dug a shallow grave, and 

placed a rude cross at the head; standing for a mo-

mont, bareheaded, the forlorn figure of a boy who

has just lost his best friend. Then mounting his

horse, the grief-stricken lad turned homeward as

the last rays of the setting sun gilded the far off

jagged peaks of the Sawtooth; and one by one, the

stars came out, casting their steely blue glitter over

the earth.

A day or so later Danny was seated on the top-

most rail of the corral, wondering as to just what

the future would bring, when suddenly his reverie

was rudely cut short by the swish of a lariat whose

horsehair noose settled about his shoulders, jerking

him violently backwards. So stunned was he at

this unexpected happening that he had no chance

to resist, and when he could think clearly again he

found himself bound, and being carried on the shoul-

ders of two men. Where could they be taking him?

Any doubts he had were quickly dispelled, for

they soon arrived at an old, unused well, some dis-

tance from the road. Setting down their burden,

the men commenced to taunt Danny. At last wehn

they tired of this, the two lowered him into the

deep, dark pit, and then went on to rejoin their

companions.

Danny lay still for a long time, trying to make

himself believe it was all a dream; but suddenly he

realized the grim reality of it, and strove with all

his might to tear the restraining cords loose. Then

he attempted to shout, but soon saw the utter futil-

ity of this, for he heard only the empty echoes. Hav-

ing given up all hope of rescue, he lay quietly trying 

to rack his brains for a way of escape, when sud-

denly in the little circle of light above, appeared one

of the most welcome sights Danny had ever seen.

It was the smiling, freckled face of "Spooks" Slade.

"Hello there, Dan, I didn't dare come near till

just now. Saw the two of 'em sneaking in behind

ya, just as I got to the top of the hill, so I ducked

into the brush, and watched proceedings. I'll say

they took ya off the fence pretty neat. They've just

flew the coop. Took your Dad's prospecting outfit, 

too. Just you lay still; I'll lower a rope down right

off."

As soon as Danny stood above ground again, they 

decided that no time must be lost in getting to Peace,

where the Sheriff could be consulted.

They arrived there in quick time, and Long pro-

posed that the pursuit start as soon as possible.

They agreed, and six trusty men having been chosen,

57</text>
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                    <text>[page 60]

[corresponds to page 58 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

the chase started in earnest. Although "Shorty" 

thought it unwise for Danny to go along, he finally

gave in, when he realized that they boy was the only

one who knew the trail the claim jumpers had tak-

en, since Mendez had secured the map before start-

ing.

It was early evening when far ahead on a stretch

of level mesa, the pursuers saw the glow of a camp

fire. Assured that Gorgas's band had no intimation

of their nearness,--for this country was one little

traveled,--the men decided to camp right where 

they were, in a little valley. "Tiny" Maxwell, Long's 

right hand man, was sent out to reconnoitre. He

returned with the news that there were only six 

men in Gorgas's gang, and as far as he could see,

no guard had been posted, so secure did they feel.

He also discerned that whiskey was being used

freely by all.

Immediately a council was called, and the plans

for the capture of the unsuspecting bandits worked

out. It was decided that early next morning, they

should quietly surround the camp, while all were

deep in a drunken sleep, and have them under ar-

rest before they were fully awake. One man was 

then posted as guard, and the rest left. Danny,

however, was very restless. Finally, unable to stand

it any longer, he went to the Sheriff and told him

he could not feel secure until he had set up the

claim with his own hand. He was determined on

starting out as soon as possible, and "Shorty" prom-

ised him that as soon as the morning's work had

been attended to, he would let him have two men to

go along.

Just as the first glimmer of dawn appeared, the

posse swooped down upon the bandits, and with very

little commotion, the entire gang was taken into

custody. They proved to be some of the worst char-

acters in the West, and the Sheriff was glad to have

these very men, since they escaped him once be-

fore.

True to his promise, Long gave Danny two men

to act as escort, and after several hours of hard rid-

ing among the rocky foothills of the majestic, snow-

covered Sawtooth range, guided by the boy who

picked the trail by various landmarks, they ap-

proached the narrow gulch in which the precious 

deposit was located. All of a sudden, they became

aware of the marks of a horse's hoofs in the soft 

earth, and proceeding with infinite caution they

came to the canyon's entrance, and found that some-

one must be within, for the hot ashes of a fire lay

scattered about.

Resolved to take no changes, Danny then instruct-

ed the two men to creep into the valley a little way,

and spy, while he took a circuitous route, worming

his way through the dry creek-bed, to a point where

he could look out upon the floor of the gulch in all

directions.

What the lad saw, not fifteen feet away from him,

was a horse tethered, and on the side of the gently

sloping hill, a rude sign announced that this land

was held by Miguel Gorgas.

Just as he stood there watching, several shots rang

out in quick succession, seeming to come from just

around the bend. Realizing that his two compan-

ions must have been discovered, he slipped down 

again, and watching his chance, came up noiseless-

ly behind a natural parapet of boulders, where he

intended to take a look around. Something seemed

to warn him of impending danger, and there, sure

enough, flattened against the stone breastwork lay

a man, intent on drawing a bead on someone. So

busy was he defending his position, that he failed

to notice even Danny's sudden appearance. Quick-

ly the fellow fired, and turned part way 'round to

reload his gun. Danny shrank back, but not before

he had seen the face of "Stickup" Ramsey. Crawl-

iong up a little nearer, though still sufficiently hid-

den, the boy was almost able to touch his man. It 

was now or never. Drawing his pistol from its hol-

ster, he placed the cold steel muzzle resolutely

against "Stickup's" neck, at the same time ordering

him to surrender, in no uncertain terms. The ef-

fect was instantaneous. Perhaps more from sur-

prise than fear, the claim-jumper threw up his

hands, and it was but a matter of minutes before

the boy and his companions had him safely fastened

up with a heavy pair of manacles.

The task of setting up a fresh claim was soon ac-

complished, and closely guarded, and the man whose

name had been a cause of terror to all the plains

was marched back in sullen submission.

As for Danny, whose quick thinking had marked

him as a hero, he was the center of all attention,

and his entrance into Peace was rivalled only by

that of a conquering warrior.

For the satisfaction of those who must have every-

thing explained to them, it might be added that Dan-

ly's [sic] inheritance turned out to be one of the richest

finds ever uncovered in that section of the West-

ern country. --WILLIAM BROWN, '22.

58</text>
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                    <text>[page 61]

[corresponds to page 59 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Bulletin

An Indian Sport

In the summer of 1918 I happened to visit my

uncle, who was a civil surgeon, then stationed at

his camp at Atrauli, in the United Provinces of In-

dia. English officials were very infrequent in that 

part of the country, and for this reason we became

acquainted with the Rajah, the nominal ruler of 

that particular district. During the latter part of

our stay, my uncle and I were invited to be guests

of the dignitary at a celebration to be held for the

purpose of raising money for the Red Cross,--a cel-

ebration in which the main sport was to be wrest-

ling. We accepted the invitation eagerly, for we had

never before seen an Indian wrestling match.

The Rajah called for us that afternoon at three.

On arriving we found that there was a considerable

crowd on the grounds; but everyone made way for

us, and we were soon in our seats. The ground had

been spaded for a space about twenty feet square,

in which the wrestling matches were to take place.

One side was reserved for His Highness and his

retinue; the other three for the public, who throng-

ed and crowded them.

At about three-thirty the matches began. The

first one was between two young men who were

making their first appearance in the ring. As each

stepped out, he was greeted with a cheer from the 

men of his village, who had come to see him wrestle.

In an instant they were at it. Since neither of the 

wrestlers was very muscular, it was plain that

both depended upon their speed. During the match,

one old man in the front line sat wrapped in the

contest. He was a man of about sixty, who was

lame, and who might have been taken for the grand-

father of one of the wrestlers. His lameness sug-

gested the fact that he himself had probably wrestled

at some time, and was now the young man's coach.

When at last his pupil won the victory, he went wild

with excitement, and the victor rushed to the side-

lines and hugged and wept over his old grandfath-

er, acting much as the Mt. Vernon players did after

the Delaware game. He then shook hands with his

grinning friends, and peeled off a rupee from each

hand he shook, for such was the custom.

The next match was between a well-built and in-

telligent-looking farmer, and a harry, muscular man

who might have claimed relationship to a chimpan-

zee. After each was duly greeted, another match 

was on.

From the beginning of this second match, it was

apparent that it was a battle between Brains and

Brawn; but when Brains got a good hold on Brawn, 

he was not strong enough to throw him, and Brawn

eventually won by wearing out Brains. Then Brawn,

in his turn, received due congratulations and rupees

from his townspeople, and the next contestants step-

ped into the ring.

One was a man of much the same type as the vic-

tor of the previous match; the other a very self-sat-

isfied looking Hindu Babu. The latter was almost 

too fat to look like a wrestler, yet the crowd had

"doped" it out that he would win. By his actions he

conveyed the impression in a very decided way that 

he believed in the judgment of the crowd. It took

him about twenty minutes to throw his opponent;

but he had an excuse ready: he had sprained his

wrist, he said, and that was why he did not win

sooner.

This last match ended the regular schedule, but a 

bunnia from the North, Dirjon by name, champion

of the United Provinces, was willing to take on any-

body who cared to wrestle with him. For a time no

one seemed very anxious to do so. After a wait, the 

Rajah made an announcement to the effect that since

this man had come all the way from Lucknow, it was

a pity he had to go home without having accom-

plished anything. At these words, a tall Mohamme-

dan stepped out of the crowd, and took up the chal-

lenge. The two then went into adjoining tents to 

get ready.

Dirjon came out first, and took his corner amid

wild cheers from the spectators. He was a man of

average height, very powerfully built, with rippling

muscles under his smooth brown skin. He started,

after the Indian custom, to warm up, not with some

selections from Walter Camp's Daily Dozen as an

American might, but with an exercise peculiar to

wrestlers of his country,--an exercise which I have

never seen in any other part of the world, and one

which combines all the contortions of the Daily

Dozen in one. As one watched Dirjon's powerful

body going through these motions, one could not

help wondering at the audacity of the lanky Mo-

hammedan who now stepped into his corner.

Not a sound did the crowd utter as the two wrest-

lers took their places. No time was wasted in pre-

liminary feints. Like a flash Dirjon rushed across

the soft ground, and in an instant literally picked

up his opponent and laid him on his back in the dust.

At this the crowd acted exactly as the crowd in the

bleachers acts when Babe Ruth knocks his fifty-

seventh homer; a noise more like a roar than any-

thing else went up and continued for ten minutes

without a stop. The celebration was over, but not a

soul stirred in the arena for at least ten minutes;

after which the crowd moved off slowly, first by

ones, and then faster.

The Rajah then invited us to tea, which had been

prepared on the grounds; and, as we went, we felt

that we had had a pleasant afternoon's entertain-

ment.  --JOHN R. BEAL, '22.

59</text>
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                    <text>[page 62]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 60 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Pianos		Phonographs and Records

Blair &amp; Company

Delaware's Leading

Furniture House

Our Motto

"QUALITY and LOW PRICES"

Interior Decorations	Floor Coverings</text>
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                    <text>[page 63]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 61 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

When Hungry

Come to

The Candy Kitchen

Cafeteria

Wholesome Food

Prompt Service

There's the 

Pleasure

of giving good candy

and the added pleas-

ure of giving it in

Whitman's 

SAMPLER

BUN'S

Prof. Leas: William, what is a dry dock?

Bill T.: A physician who won't give prescrip-

tions.

Cline Jones (with a headache): Will you give

me something for my head?

Druggist: I wouldn't take it as a gift.

Waiter: Milk or water?

Mr. Boyers: Don't tell me, please; let me guess.

Before Exams

O Lord of Hosts, be with us yet,

Lest we forget, lest we forget.

After Exams

The Lord of Hosts was with us not,

For we forgot, for we forgot.

Polly: I think a street car has just passed.

Dot: How do you know

Polly: I can see its tracks.

The D.H.S.

Boys and Girls

Bring their dates to

Vatsure's Confectionery</text>
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                    <text>[page 64]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 62 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Call 2482

Get Prices on Furniture, Rugs, Linoleums, Lace Curtains,

Draperies, Stoves and Ranges

Swickheimer &amp; Noble

Mrs. Naylor (commencing the recitation): Paul, 

will you start the ball rolling

Paul B.: I haven't got the ball yet.

(James Warner, reading a thrilling composition

in English III): "The man was awakened by the

sound of heavy foot prints coming towards him."

"Now please don't go out tonight," said Mr. Wor-

line to his wayward furnace.

Mr. Mahon in Economics: Ccan you give an il-

lustration of the difference between rarity and

scarcity?

Fred Wickham: The beauty of some girls is rare,

and of others it is scarce.

Mrs. Naylor in Eng. III): How many of you have

read "To a Field Mouse?"

Scott Radcliffe: I didn't know you could get one

to listen.

JOHN K. FOSTER

WALL PAPER, MOULDING,

PAINTS and VARNISHES

Phone 7423 36 E. Winter St.

Delaware, Ohio

THE 

GREAT ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC TEA CO.

5300 Stores

Groceries, Candy, Cakes, Fruit

The Best Service Give us a Trial

60 N. Sandusky Street

WILSON'S 

THE HOME OF HART, SCHAFFNER and MARX CLOTHES

Everything for the Young Fellow

THE HOTEL ALLEN BLOCK</text>
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                    <text>[page 65]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 63 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Auto Laundry Co.

Washing and Painting Automobiles

Our Specialty

91 East Winter Street

Phone NO. 7107

PREST-O-LITE

BATTERY SERVICE STATION

Lancaster Tires

VULCANIZING

23 East Winter Street

Phone 7184

We Carry Foods of Value known for

QUALITY PURITY UNIFORMITY

KURRLEY &amp; EVANS

Ruth Drake: I see you don't speak to R-- any-

more.

Mary Louise Kendrick: No, I give him the ge-

ological survey.

Ruth: The geological survey?

Mary Louise: Yes: What is commonly known

as the stony stare.

Autos kill more people than street cars--probably

because the street cars are harder to kill.

Clayton Herriot: What shall we do this evening?

Jack Pleasant: Let's flip a coin. If it comes

heads, we'll go to a show; if it's tails, we'll go to 

the game; and if it stands on end, we'll study.

Dorothy: Can't you keep a secret?

Ersel: Yes I can; it's the people I tell it to who 

can't.

Those who stop to think get run over.

Delaware Electric

Supply Co.

12 W. William St.

Electrical Appliances

and Contract Work

If it's 

Electrical and Good

The Electric Shop

62 N. Sandusky St.

FEEDS AND SEEDS

Quality Goods at right price

Lawn Seed, Lawn Lime and Fertilizers	Poultry Supplies of all kinds

Richard O. Guthke

Formerly City Feed Mill

35 S. Sandusky St. 	Phone 2626</text>
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                    <text>[page 66]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 64 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

SEIBERING &amp; SILVERTOWN

CORDS

Canfield-Price Vulcanizing Co.

Phone 4120 77 N. Sandusky St.

A. Emerson Company

Home of the

Home-Made Weiners, Minced Ham

Pressed Ham, Jellied Tongue

WHOLESALE and RETAIL

McGUIRE'S NEWS SHOP

All the Latest Magazines and Daily Newspapers

CIGARS TO BURN

FINEST BOX CANDY

Big Assortment of Post Cards

AGENT FOR LANG'S DRY CLEANING AND DYEING

Miss Wise: What is the best word you can give

descriptive of violent action?

Wilbur Willis: Home brew.

Mary S.: Why did you get thrown out of music?

Bill Brown: For singing.

Harold G.: Ever hear the story about the golden

fleece?

Bob S.: No, do they bite?

Miss Wise (to Cline Jones sleeping in the study

hall): Wake up! You can't sleep in here.

Cline: I know I can't with you making all this

fuss.

Leroy Decker: Did you tell Miss Wise I had big

feet?

Jay Jackson: I did not. I merely stated that if

you took off your shoes you would be half un-

dressed.

"Prompt Printers for Particular People"

The Independent

PRINT SHOP

48 1/2 N. Sandusky St.

Telephone 2582

THE 

GAZETTE

DELAWARE, OHIO

Publishers and Job Printers</text>
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                    <text>[page 67]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 65 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

PROFESSIONAL PAGE

DR. W. S. McCLEERY

Osteopathic Physician

27 W. Winter St.

Phone 2303

COMPLIMENTARY

W. A. WHITACRE

Dentist

2nd Floor People's Building

Elevator Service

X-RAY

Special Attention Given to

Radiographing Teeth

WILLIAM O. SEMANS

Dental Surgeon

X-Ray Examinations

4th Floor People's Building

Phone 2414

Telephones:

Office, 2488; Residence, 2559

DR. CATHERINE MAY

CHUBB

Osteopathic Physician

Office: People's Bldg.

COMPLIMENTARY

'Phones:

Residence, 2317; Office, 5138

JOHN PFANNSTIEL

Dentist

Delaware, Ohio

'Phone 5443

B. GORSUCH

Dentist

62 1-2 N. Main St.

Hyatts Block

Delaware, Ohio

DR. MARK A. BAUER

DR. ALICE POTTER BAUER

Osteopathic Physicians

Fourth Floor People's Bldg.

F. L. DAVISON

Dentist

69 1-2 N. Sandusky St.

Delaware, Ohio

H. D. JONES

Dentist

57 1-2 N. Sandusky St.

Over Blair's Store

'Phone 4159

'Phone 7119

DAVID MORGAN

Dentist

Delaware, Ohio</text>
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                    <text>[page 68]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 66 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Make Thrift a Habit!

Habit is a physical thing. Doing something over and over

again forms a habit. You just can't wish yourself into a habit.

You must act. Do something physically. The foundation of

the thrift habit is to save first and spend afterwards. The Bank

can assist you materially in developing this habit.

Delaware Savings Bank

Billy Radcliffe: Say, Ab, you'd better keep your

eyes open around here today.

Ab Semans (innocently): Why--?

Billy: Because you'll look like an idiot if you go

around with them shut.

Shay, Joe, whersh my hat?

'S on your head.

'S funny, I didn't feel it.

Well, 's not a felt hat.

(Scott Radcliffe, after a long struggle with his

vocabulary, finally manages to make himself un-

derstood.)

Mr. Utley: Well, Scott, if you can't express your-

self, you can get there by freight anyway, can't 

you?

"Bev" K.: Have you an opening for a bright, en-

ergetic high school student?

Employer: Yes, and don't slam it on the way out.

THE MORRISON DRY GOODS CO.

Exclusive Delaware Agency for

"Miss Saratoga Middies"

Middies and Middy Suits

The Delaware Water Co.

Come and see the new

Filtration Plant</text>
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                    <text>[page 69]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 67 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Hard wood, Cypress, Pine, Poplar and Redwood Lumber

Poplar, Fir and Yellow Pine Siding and Flooring

Shingles, Lath, Ceiling, Mouldings Sash and Doors

Flint Kote Individual and Strip Shingles and Roll Roofing

Our Window and Door Frames will please you

THE McKENZIE LUMBER CO.

Phone 2269

The Delaware Clay Co.

Mrs. Naylor: "Don't forget a penny for ink to-

morrow.

Nevin K.: I refuse to contribute if you're going

to buy red ink with it.

Mrs. Naylor: Oh, you'd receive more than your

money's worth, Nevin.

They say that Paul Benedict has been wandering

in his mind lately.

Don't worry, he can't go far.

Mrs. Naylor: What battle inspired the poem,

"The Charge of the Light Brigade"?

Nevin K.: Valley Forge.

Mr. Utley: What was Lincoln's Gettysburg Ad-

dress?

Ed. Schweitzer: I never knew he lived there.

Ed. Schweitzer: What will this test cover?

Deltus McCarty: About two sheets of paper.

CANDIES		FRUITS		CONFECTIONS

PAUL BIANCHI

Fancy Brick Ice Cream, Ices and Sherbets for all Occasions

We Deliver	Phone 6191

Don't throw your old shoes away;

bring them to the

Modern Shoe Repair Shop

Electric Shoe Shop

Shoes Dyed

Mrs. W. J. Longworth

7 W. William St.

CHANDLER, CLEVELAND

and

MAXWELL

MOTOR CARS

Sales	Service

STEGNER AUTO

SERVICE CO.

Delaware, Ohio

Phone 5113 	21 Spring St.</text>
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                    <text>[page 70]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 68 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Jack		Watson Bros., Bulletin Boosters		Bob

at

THE ALLEN CIGAR STAND

You can "Watch Our Smoke" All Night

THE 

ALLEN COFFEE SHOP

A good meal at a good price.

14 E. Winter St.

Foolish Question No. 9, 876,493

Frank Bartholomew: I see your umbrella's

blown inside out. What's that for?

Dot Clark: So it'll wear the same on both sides,

your poor boob.

Miss Sheen: Frances, can you sing at the church

Easter night?

Frances N.: I don't know. What day does Eas-

ter come on?

Floyd S.: They say that whiskey shortens a man's 

life.

Walter S.: Yes, but he sees twice as much in the

same length of time.

Coach Mahon: Bus, I'll never be able to put you

at quarterback.

Bus: Why not?

Coach: Because when you call signals the only

numbers you can think of are seven and elenen.

W. H. FORD

INSURER

13 1/2 E. Winter St. .. Delaware, O.

Sheet Rock	Brick

Figure with me--it pays you

RUSSELL D. KISSNER

"Zip" Service

Clean Coal	Rooffing	Stucco

The most dependable line of 

CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS

at the right prices

THE STANDARD

"The Store of Quality and Service"
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                    <text>[page 71]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 69 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Your Savings or Checking Account

are always welcome at

First National Bank

Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent

Rates Reasonable

Any service cheerfully rendered which is consistent with sound and careful

Established 1857

Fat McLaughlin (in Mansfield restaurant): Nev-

er mind the beefsteak, boys, you'll be old sometime

yourselves.

Miss Quinn: What is the most common word in

the high school vocabulary?

Merrill Baldwin (awaking suddenly): Unpre-

pared.

Miss Fisher was making up the eyes for the mem-

bers of the chorus at Mikado when Birdie Paschall

asked: "Oh Miss Fisher, do you make eyes?

Miss Phillips: How did the Israelites cross the

river Jordan under the leadership of Joshua?

Eldred Henders: They forged it.

FRESH PASTURIZED DAIRY PRODUCTS

Oscar Case Creamery

Phone 2416	23-27 N. Union St.	Phone 2238

Special Bricks and Individual Moulds

For All Occasions

ALL 

Women and Men

Girls and Boys

Go to the Delaware

SHOE SHINING PARLOR

18 S. Sandusky St.

Pure Food Market

Wholesale and Retail Dealers in

FISH, OYSTERS, FRUIT

AND VEGETABLES

Terms Cash	19 E. Winter St.

Phone 2216

R. W. Pierson, Prop.

QUALITY FIRST</text>
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                    <text>[page 72]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 70 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Look into the matter of 

INSURANCE

Fire, Lightning, Tornado &amp; Windstorm

Automobile	Live Stock	Surety Bonds

Phone 7173 	2nd Floor People's Building

W. S. POLLOCK

Lee B. in French (making a last desperate at-

tempt to translate): Gryphus etait suivi du molosse--

Gryphus was swimming in molasses.

Bob S.: Let's take a canoe ride.

Elsie M.: Let's do. Are you sure you can run

one?

Miss Wise: Who is the author of this book?

Betty Riddle: Anonymous. I don't know his

name.

Helen Oviatt (upon leaving Bun's): That waiter

seems terribly tired.

Bob Dunlap: I'm pretty well spent myself.

Spend Your Leisure Time at the

Y.M.C.A.

Games of all kinds, Gym Classes,

Shower Baths, Bowling

Swimming Beach and Camp

in the

Good Old Summer Time

J. R. THOMAS

STAPLE LINE OF GROCERIES

Your patronage 

appreciated

Wrist Watches from $5.00 Up

FINE COMMENCEMENT PRESENTS

Eyes Carefully Examined and Glasses Fitted

Harmount Jewelry Store</text>
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                    <text>[page 73]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 71 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

THE MARICAD ART SHOP THE SHOP UNIQUE

The Place to Buy Gifts

Just a Little Different

M. CADWALLADER

Mrs. Emma Shaw

FOR HATS

East Winter St.

Next Door to Strand

T. R. Griffith	 C. L. Oewn

Griffith &amp; Owen

HOME FURNISHERS

Furniture, Rugs, Linoleum, Shades,

Stoves

Phone 2235	6 S. Sandusky St.

Take Your Girlie to the Movies

They went into a picture show--

Jim and Jane--you see,

And sat down in a corner

As dark as it could be.

And when the heroine on the screen

The villain bravely faced,

T'was then that we first noticed

Jim's arm 'round Jane's--umbrella.

And when the picture ended

As usual--all in bliss,

T'was then we were certain

That Jim did take a--chocolate.

And as they homeward journeyed,

The stars shone out above,

T'was then--but it's a secret,

Jim told her of his--work.

--LILLIAN MURPHY, '22.

Hair Nets Gainsboro and Duro Belle, single mesh, 10c

Double mesh, 15c, 2 for 25c

Morse's Candy In many sizes and prices

EASTMAN AND ANSCO FILMS	 Bring us Your Photo Work

STARR'S DRUG STORE

COMMENCEMENT GIFTS

Books, Fine Stationery, High School Stunt Books, Fountain Pens

Vases, Fancy Goods of all Kinds

LEMLEY'S BOOK STORE

W. Winter St.</text>
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                    <text>[page 74]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 72 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Every Man is the Ruler

of His Own Destiny

Pin Your Future

To Habits to Thrift

The independeence of

the individual begins

when he starts to save

regularly. Today

Start with a dime;

End with a barrel of money.

We'll furnish you the bank--FREE

THE FIDELITY BLD'G ASS'N

&amp; LOAN COMPANY

46 N. Sandusky st. Delaware, Ohio.

ELECTRIC "SAVINGS" SIGN

SERVICE SAFETY

Sam Lyons: Hope we have chapel in the morning.

Ed. Schweitzer: How come?

Sam Lyons: I need the sleep.

Sam Lyons: I deliberately tried to make a mis-

take on this intelligence test. You see I didn't want

to be conspicuous by being the only one to get 100.

Hosea: I could die dancing, couldn't you?

Adeline: No, there are pleasanter ways of dying

than being trampled to death.

Notice

Milton's Pair-o'-dice Lost!

Finder please return to the office--REWARD!

THE DELAWARE TIME SERVICE

for

Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing

All Work Guaranteed

J. G. WEBB, Prop. 70 S. Sandusky St.

M. Nappi---Shoes and Hosiery

BOSTONIANS

FAMOUS SHOES FOR MEN

JULIAN and KOGENGE

Shoes for Women

Agency for the Foot-Saver Shoes

Controls the Arch

Dankel &amp; Anderson

CLOTHIERS AND FURNISHERS

"The Store With a Conscience"</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="11280">
                    <text>THE

SUNRAY

STOVE

CO. 

MANUFACTURERS

Sunray Gas Stoves

We believe in Our Schools and Home Products.

Why not Patronize A Local Industry?

The Store Advertised by Its Friends

SMART OXFORDS FOR SPRING

Our Spring assortment of Low Shoes is complete in the exclusive styles

that are found only in high grade shoes.

J. WINDSOR CONE

THE STORE KNOWN FOR "THOSE BETTER SHOES"

Prof. Leas: What is electricity sent over?

James Smith: Why--er--

Prof. Leas: Correct. Sit down.

Glenella J.: Bill, I'm in love. What would you 

do if you were in my shoes?

Bill S.: Shine 'em, kid, shine 'em.

(Darwin Forsyth's right knee to his left knee):

If you let me get around this time, I'll let you get

around next time.

Mrs. Naylor: Paul, what great classic was trans-

lated into the English by William Cullen Bryant?

Paul B.: The Last of the Mohicans.

Delaware Farmer's Exchange Company

Dealers in

Flour, Feed, Grain, Seeds, Fertilizer, and Farm Supplies

Pfiffner's Drug Store

Drugs

Toilet Articles

Hotel Allen Block

Greetings from 

The People's

Building &amp; Loan

Company</text>
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                    <text>[page 76]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 74 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

NOTICE

After games, between classes run across the campus to the

PUBLIC CANDY SHOPPE

For Candies, Fresh Daily, and Ice Cream. The best and Finest of Brands.

Where music is going on at all hours.

The Place of Quality.

The W. M. Heseltine Company

Dry Goods and Ready-to-Wear

Reliable Qualities	Popular Prices

Dictes and Sayings of Our Philosophers

1. The rally will begin on time and close on time.

2. Now you all know I like to talk.

3. Now won't you please try just a little harder?

4. Work, for the night is coming.

5. Cut out that talking!

6. Next-next!

7. Now we're going right on.

8. Altogether now, and watch the attack.

9. Exactly!

10. I stand corrected.

EVERYTHING IN DRUGS	EVERYTHING IN MUSIC

Edison, Sonora, Brunswick and Columbia

Phonographs and Records

NORWOOD DRUG CO.

Call for Eucall Remedies and Toilet Articles any place in Ohio. Use

Eucall Tooth Paste.

FOR LUMBER

Go to the

McCullough Lumber Yard

Delaware, Ohio	Corner Winter and Henry Sts.	Phone 2374

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                    <text>[page 77]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 75 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

We are now able to give you KODAK FINISHING

of the same high quality in portraits

BODURTHA

Miss Williams (drawing circles on the board):

This isn't proving very satisfactory. It would have

paid me to stop and tie the chalk to the string.

Mr. Mahon: What is a triangle?

Helen Hardin: A three sided rectangle--oh, no,

it's an angle with three sides.

(Edgar Cartmell in English, arguing with Miss

Phillips about the window shade.)

Miss Phillips: Edgar, I wish you would please

sit still.

Edgar: Well if I fix it one way, the sun comes

around and burns my back.

Bob White: Say, why don't you get yourself an

asbestos shirt?

SCHWEITZER'S 

CLEANING AND DYE WORKS

Delaware, Ohio

DODGE BROS.

MOTOR CARS

L. A. POWERS

38 E. Winter St. Phone 2376

A Traveling Bag, Suit Case or Trunk Makes a Fine Graduation Present.

We have a large stock of each to pick from.

F. J. Klee &amp; Son

19 S. Sandusky St.</text>
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                    <text>[page 78]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 76 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Sell Brothers

QUALITY

SELBRO

SERVICE

Delaware, Ohio.

Victrolas Records Kodaks

Athletic Goods Film Einishing [sic]

Do It Electrically!!

You save time and labor

Ohio Utilities Company

Deltus McCarty pulled this one in public speak-

ing:

A man was shaving on the back porch one morn-

ing when a friend saw him and said, "See you're

shaving outside this morning."

THe man replied, "What d' ye think I am--fur-

lined?

Mrs. Herrick (after spring vacation): It seems

good to see so many familiar faces walking in here.

A Junior's Doubtful Don'ts

I used to think I knew I knew,

But now I must confess

The more I know I know I know

I know I know the less.

Paul Waggoner: Why do they say "God save the

king"?

Sam L.: Because the queen can take care of her-

self.

C. A. WHITE

&amp;

SON

Studebaker CHEVROLET

Manring &amp; Kendrick

HARDWARE

55 S. Sandusky St. Delaware, Ohio

Goods the Best, Prices the Lowest	Talking Machines, Stoves, Ranges

Phone 2588</text>
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                    <text>[page 79]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 77 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Hardin &amp; Gallant

44 S. Sandusky St.

Stationery

Books

Wall Paper

Printing

BANNER MEAT MARKET

FRESH MEAT

Phone 2501	16 S. Main St.

O. K. Hardware

When It's Hardware

See the O. K.

THE GOODS THE PRICE

Freshmen (trying to be smart): Where were the

FEATHERS when they called that FOUL?

Junior (still smarter): Say, don't you know this

is a PICKED team?

Bechtel: Why do you think you'd make a good 

actor?

Klotz: Well, I've had five years' experience in

picking up cues.

Bechtel: Yes, in a pool room.

(In Civics) Mr. Utley: Election day is always on

the first Tuesday after the first Monday in Novem-

ber.

Catherine Houk (seriously): But Mr. Utley, what 

if that day should fall on Sunday.

Waiter in Marion restaurant: We're very up-to-

date here. We cook everything with electricity.

Coach M.: Oh, you do. Just give this steak an-

other shock then.

GRADUATION GIFTS

Diamonds	Jewelry

Wrist Watches	Pearl Beadds

Fountain Pens and Pencils

B. YEHLEY &amp; SON, Jewelers and Optician

Harry W. Clark

Plumbing, Steam and Hot Water Heating

Tin, Galvanized and Slate Roofing

23 W. Winter St.

Shop Phone 2526	House Phone 5467

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                    <text>[page 80]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 78 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

STROHM

Will MEAT you

on the way from

school

Just a word as a reminder: Don't fail 

to see Fuller before buying that monu-

ment or marker. It will pay. Works

2nd door west of Postoffice on Spring

St.

S. L. FULLER, Prop.

REMEMBER

We have the original and only D.H.S. official seal made up in pins and rings.

YOUNG &amp; OWEN, Jewelers and Opticians

A complete line of

SHEAFFER PENS AND PENCILS

All makes of Fountain Pens and Pencils Repaired.

Mrs. Mansfield asked Clayton Herriot to put up a

"No Smoking" sign at the Y.M.C.A.

This was the horrible result: "NO SMOKING

ALOUD."

John Beal: When Walter Swearingen sings he

reminds me of a drunken man trying to get in ear-

ly in the morning. He can't seem to locate the

right key.

Miss Phillips: What are the three commonest

words?

Curtis Zeigler: I don't know.

Miss Phillips: First 100 this month, Curtis.

Walter (filling cup for seventh time): You must

be very fond of coffee.

Stevie: Yes, or I wouldn't drink so much water

to get a little.

Just An Account? No!

The depositing of money in a bank is more than opening an account. It is

the means of establishing a relationship without which one's business career

cannot be a success.

The Delaware National Bank

Delaware, Ohio</text>
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                    <text>[page 81]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 79 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

To the Students and Teachers of

D.H.S.

We dedicate this to you in appreciation of the generous patronage that you

have favored us with during the past year, and we trust we may continue to

serve. 

FATE'S HOME-MADE CANDIES

Neville Brothers

BUICK AUTOMOBILES

GOODYEAR TIRES	DIAMOND GRID BATTERIES

72 N. Sandusky St. Delaware, Ohio

Edgar E.: Do you think I'll ever be able to ac-

complish anything with my voice?

Lester S.: Well, it might come in handy in case

of a fire.

Mr. Leas (in Physiology): Would you recommend

walking on an empty stomach as an aid to diges-

tion?

Mildred Ralph: It depends on whose you walk on.

Miss Phillips: You have two parables to tell to-

day.

Louise Icenhour: Shall I tell 'em both at once?

Miss Phillips: No, tell them one right after the

other.

Mr. Main after concert by Bernard Schweitzer in

chapel: It is evident that Bernard has been doing

some very hard work.

GRAFF'S 

GOOD

SHOES

Remember

RUSS JONES

When it Comes to

BARBERS

Just Around the Corner

On East Winter

The Horseback Craze is Sweeping the Country

GET IN THE GAME

Learn this most red-blooded and popular sport. Shea has excellent

horses and a competent instructor, Sergent Mailey, at your command.

SHEA'S</text>
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                    <text>[page 82]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 80 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

Complimentary

Headline in the Gazette: Coach Falls Off Trestle

--Kills Seven Men. We were immensely relieved

to see Mr. Mahon at school next day seemingly none

the worse for wear.

John Beal: What are you reading about?

Irl Chambers: Electricity.

John: Current events, huh?

Irl: No, light reading.

Emory Jones (out hunting): Hey, don't shoot.

Your gun isn't loaded.

Bill Paschall: I can't help that. The bird won't

wait.

Mr. Utley (in Civics): Ralph, have you studied 

your lesson?

Ralph Hagar: I looked it over.

Mr. Utley: I believe you over looked it.

The Tire Shop

Quality Vulcanizing

Goodyear Tires and Tubes

J. BRADWELL, Prop.

Phone 6421	27 S. Sandusky St.

GOOD GOODS at RIGHT PRICES

GRIMES

The Grocer

W. Winter Street

Elmont Fruit Store

Fruits Candies Ice Cream

Hotel Elmont Building

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                    <text>[page 83]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 81 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

S

T

R

A

N

D

Theatre

A Picture Play House

of Character

DAILY

MATINEE

THE

R. P. Harris Co.

"The

House 

of 

Quality"

for 

All Kinds of

Dry Goods

and

Ready-to-Wear

"The 

Best 

Place

to 

Shop"</text>
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                    <text>[page 84]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 82 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

DAVIS

SIX

OLDSMOBILE

FOUR &amp; EIGHT

Parish &amp; Scott Service Garage

REPAIR WORK

STORAGE

WASHING

67 N. Sandusky St.	Phone 2634

Mrs. Naylor: Let your words flow through your

pen.

James Warner: I can't even make the ink flow

through mine.

Mrs. Naylor: I see you have a cough, Emory.

Would you like a drink?

Emory J.: I don't know. Have you anything

special?

From an exam paper in History: The French

soldiers were very jealous of Joan of Arc. She was

betrayed, sold into England, and burned to steak

there.

Burrel Smith: I don't believe I have a friend in

the world.

Paul B.: Here's your chance to make one. Lend

me four bits.

For Delicious Refreshments

call at

EVANS' SODA GRILL

"Courtesy and Service" our Motto

N. A. WILKINS

CLOTHIER AND TAILOR

56 N. Sandusky St.

We have Ready-made and a fine display

to select from

Shoe Repairing

Our work pleases Particular People

and we respectfully solicit your patron-

age.

Frank Case

Opp. Strand Theare [sic]</text>
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                    <text>[page 85]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 83 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

SPECIAL SUITS FOR THE HIGH SCHOOL FELLOW IN

Double Breasted and Sport Models

$25, $30, $35

SIGN OF THE BEAR

The Smith Clothing Co.

ESTABLISHED 1870

Remember You Do Best at Smith's.

The Jenkins Shop

Millilnery, Art Goods

Novelties

26 W. Winter St.

Delaware, Ohio

Phil Saves

Your Sole

Let Him

Heel You

GEM SHOE REPAIR SHOP

North Side of William Street

Sam Lyons: Today's a good day for the race,

isn't it?

Mr. Leas: What race?

Sam: The human race.

Mr. Leas: "Five."

Mr. Mahon to David Camp in Economics: Will it

be necessary for you to indorse [sic] this check?

David: No. All I have to do is sign my name

to it.

This line appears in "Long's Outlines": "Oliver

Goldsmith arrived on the continent with a flute, a 

spare shirt, and a guinea as his sole possessions."

The line as Abigail Semans wrote is on the board:

"Oliver Goldsmith arrived on the continent with a 

flute, a spare shirt, and a fowl as his sole posses-

sions."

Miss Phillips: Who is the Prince of Whales?

Paul Bechtel: The one that swallowed Jonah.

THERE IS NOTHING SO SURE IN

THIS WORLD OF OURS AS THE JOY

In a Box of

BARRETT'S

Home Grown Flowers

M. BARRETT, FLORIST

Phones 2688-2666</text>
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                    <text>[page 86]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 84 of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

CAMPBELL GROCERY CO.

QUALITY AND SERVICE

Phone 2470	49 N. Sandusky St.

W. H. ZEISSLER, Druggist

THE REXALL STORE

47 N. Sandusky St.

Phone 2483

Drugs, Medicines, Toilet Articles,

Liggett's Chocolate

Clausing's 

BOOT SHOP

Hotel Allen Block

For Style

and Quality Shoes

Mrs. Herrick: You seem to cough easier this

morning.

Willis S.: I ought to; I've been practicing all

night.

Mr. Utley (in history): Did the news of the bat-

tle of Lexington and Concord reach the Southern

Colonies the day after the battle?

Fred Wickham: No, sir, there weren't as many

women in those days as there are now.

Miss Shults: What would follow if all the girls

in high school should leave?

Dick Reid: I would.

Billy R. (trying to wake Abigail up): Eight

o'clock! eight o'clock!

"Ab" (sleepily): Did you? Better call a doctor.

Polly L.: See the dancing snow flakes.

Dot C.: Practicing for the snow ball, I suppose.

Gas for HEATING

COOKING

LIGHTING

THE DELAWARE GAS CO.</text>
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[corresponds to inside of back cover of Delaware HS Bulletin '22]

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                  <text>This collection contains high school yearbooks from Bellpoint, Delaware, Galena, Harlem and Sunbury, OH.  At this time, yearbook dates range from 1915-1973, although not every year in that range is represented. The elementary, middle and high school year books  from the Big Walnut Schools that we have in our collection are also included here.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to front cover of Oak Grove Cemetery 1850-51]&#13;
&#13;
OAK GROVE CEMETERY.&#13;
&#13;
At Delaware, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
1850-51.&#13;
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[blank page]</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 3 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
[map of Oak Grove Cemetery]&#13;
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OAK GROVE CEMETERY, DELAWARE, OHIO.</text>
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RULES AND REGULATIONS,&#13;
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AND&#13;
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ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION,&#13;
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OF&#13;
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OAK GROVE CEMETERY,&#13;
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AT&#13;
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DELAWARE, OHIO:&#13;
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WITH THE &#13;
&#13;
DEDICATION CEREMONIES, ETC.&#13;
&#13;
COLUMBUS:&#13;
&#13;
PRINTED BY SCOTT &amp; BASCOM.&#13;
&#13;
1852.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 5 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
COMPILED BY DR. R. HILLS,&#13;
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PRESIDENT:&#13;
&#13;
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES,&#13;
&#13;
DECEMBER, 1850.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 6 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
R. HILLS, PRESIDENT.&#13;
&#13;
C. PLATT, CLERK.&#13;
&#13;
B. POWERS, TREASURER.&#13;
&#13;
R. HILLS,&#13;
&#13;
C. C CHAMBERLAIN,      &#13;
&#13;
B. POWERS,		&#13;
&#13;
JAS. EATON,&#13;
&#13;
C. HILLS,&#13;
&#13;
JAS. EATON, SURVEYOR.&#13;
&#13;
D. F. McCULLLOUGH, AGENT.&#13;
&#13;
SAMUEL PARKS, RESIDENT SUPERINTENDENT.	</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to unlabeled page 7 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
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[blank page]</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 8 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
HISTORY OF THE ASSOCIATION.&#13;
&#13;
ON June 20th, 1850, there appeared in the "Olentangy Gazette" of&#13;
&#13;
that date, the following notice, the result of suggestions made at a re-&#13;
&#13;
cent meeting of the Common Council of the town of Delaware:&#13;
&#13;
BURIAL GROUND NOTICE.&#13;
&#13;
The citizens of Delaware and vicinity are requested to meet at the Court&#13;
&#13;
House, this evening, at 7 1-2 o'clock, to take into consideration the subject of &#13;
&#13;
extending the limits of the present Burying Ground, and making a suitable fence&#13;
&#13;
around the same; or of changing the location, if necesssary, and selecting a suit-&#13;
&#13;
able place for a new one, as the present ground is nearly all occupied. It is hoped&#13;
&#13;
that a subject, in which all must be interested, will ensure a general attendance of &#13;
&#13;
the citizens.&#13;
&#13;
This meeting was numerously attended; Mr. E. Moore acting as&#13;
&#13;
Chairman, and Mr. C. C. Chamberlain as Secretary. After a general&#13;
&#13;
interchange of opinion on the necessity of immediate action, Dr. R.&#13;
&#13;
Hills moved that a committee of five be appointed, to inquire into the &#13;
&#13;
propreity of enlarging the present Burying Ground, or of selecting a &#13;
&#13;
new one, and report to an adjourned meeting. This motion was adopted, &#13;
&#13;
and Dr. R. Hills, Benj. Powers, James Eaton, D. F. McCullough&#13;
&#13;
and C. C. Chamberlain, were appointed to the committee.&#13;
&#13;
At the adjourned meeting, held at the same place, on the evening of &#13;
&#13;
June 29th, 1850, the committee, through their chairman, made a re-&#13;
&#13;
port, of which the following is an abstract:&#13;
&#13;
Your committee report, that, in regard to the present Burial Ground,</text>
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                    <text>Rules and Regulations and Articles of Association of Oak Grove Cemetery (p. 8)</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 6 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
				6&#13;
&#13;
the amount of land orginally appropriated--about two acres--has&#13;
&#13;
long since been taken up; and that the extensions of Mr. C. C. Cham-&#13;
&#13;
berlain, on the north, and Dr. Reuben Lamb, on the south--about two&#13;
&#13;
acres more--are nearly all sold. They also find that one acre of &#13;
&#13;
ground, belonging to the township, and lying separately from the other&#13;
&#13;
by a few rods on the south, is now being used as a pasture in connec-&#13;
&#13;
tion with other lands, the monuments being every one broken down,&#13;
&#13;
and the inscriptions on nearly all completely effaced.&#13;
&#13;
The other grounds are in miserable condition; the fences, partly&#13;
&#13;
board, and party worn, are dilapidated; the monuments are some of&#13;
&#13;
them broken and defaced, and nearly all leaning in different directions&#13;
&#13;
and different degrees; many lots are found to be lapping on each other,&#13;
&#13;
and the single carriage avenue or lane through the centre could hardly&#13;
&#13;
be found without an expert surveyor, and hogs and cattle are permitted&#13;
&#13;
to trample upon and uproot these "houses of the dead" to an extent&#13;
&#13;
shameful to the living.&#13;
&#13;
Two things are evidently essential to be done under this state of&#13;
&#13;
things: the preservation and protection of the old ground, and the pur-&#13;
&#13;
chase and appropriation of a new one. The duties of your committee&#13;
&#13;
refer only to the latter.&#13;
&#13;
An extension of the present ground was first considered; but what&#13;
&#13;
was deemed an adequate amount of suitable ground could not be pro-&#13;
&#13;
cured--only some eight or ten acres, with three or four of it useless,&#13;
&#13;
and at an expense of $200 per acre.&#13;
&#13;
The next consideration of the committee was, to ascertain if elsewhere&#13;
&#13;
a tract of land could be procured, suitable, in all respects, for a Bury-&#13;
&#13;
ing Ground of the character of modern rural cemeteries. After a tho-&#13;
&#13;
rough examination in all directions, your committee are unanimous in &#13;
&#13;
recommending for this purpose the purchase of the "Kilbourne Farm,"&#13;
&#13;
a tract of fity acres lying south of the town, one mile distant. A por-&#13;
&#13;
tion of this is cultivated, the remainder in a state of nature; the whole&#13;
&#13;
undulating and varied in surface, with small rivulets meandering through&#13;
&#13;
it. There is also a small frame house, a barn, well, and other improve-&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 7 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
ments upon the property, and it is understood that it can be procured&#13;
&#13;
for thirty dollars per acre. It is certain that no site as eligible as this,&#13;
&#13;
in location, accessibility, distance, picturesque views, variety of surface,&#13;
&#13;
and as appropriately timbered, can be procured at all.&#13;
&#13;
Your committee most decidedly recommend the establishment of a &#13;
&#13;
Rural Cemetery, for these, among other reasons. It is in accordance&#13;
&#13;
with man's nature, as well as the instinct of the age, to ornament and &#13;
&#13;
beautify the sleeping places of the dead. We have all seen the evi-&#13;
&#13;
dences of this propensity of the heart, in the turfing of the little hillock,&#13;
&#13;
the planting of the rose, the ivy, the evergreen, and beautiful flowers,&#13;
&#13;
over the spot where lies the well-remembered dead. With this feeling&#13;
&#13;
so strongly implanted in our nature, it is difficult to understand why we&#13;
&#13;
appropriate so sparingly of the surface of the earth for the purpose of &#13;
&#13;
burial, and especially such public, naked and bleak spots as is custom-&#13;
&#13;
ary. It was not always thus; for it was "the field of Ephron,...the &#13;
&#13;
field and the cave which was therein, and all the trees which were in &#13;
&#13;
the field, and those that were in all the borders round about," that the&#13;
&#13;
affectionate heart of the old patriarch, Abraham, prompted him to seek&#13;
&#13;
as a "burial place" for "Sarah, his wife." How strangely does this&#13;
&#13;
Scriptural picture contrast with the burial places found all over the &#13;
&#13;
country, without even an exception until recently !&#13;
&#13;
It is the taste of most persons to visit the graves of the departed--&#13;
&#13;
the places consecrated to memory--and the influence of such practice&#13;
&#13;
is unquestionably felt in developing the better feelings of our nature,&#13;
&#13;
in chastening the heart and softening down its rough asperities. Let&#13;
&#13;
something, then, be done to make attractive these dwelling places of our&#13;
&#13;
friends. Let the beauties of nature be fully opened and developed, and &#13;
&#13;
combined with the skill of the sculpter, the genius of the architect, and&#13;
&#13;
the taste of the florist, to beautify and adorn them. Let the invalid and&#13;
&#13;
all others anticipating death, have no other thought than a burial in &#13;
&#13;
some sweet, secluded spot, where the green lawn, the spreading oak and &#13;
&#13;
bending elm, the cooling shade and rippling water, the rustling leaves&#13;
&#13;
and the wild bird's song, and indeed, all the sweet voices of Nature,</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 8 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
			8&#13;
&#13;
proclaim that this is her own beautiful home; and where there is a &#13;
&#13;
stronger realization that God is near to us.&#13;
&#13;
Your committee, therefore, recommend the adoption of some plan for&#13;
&#13;
the purchase of the "Kilbourne Farm," and its improvement for the&#13;
&#13;
purposes of a Rural Cemetery.&#13;
&#13;
The Report and its recommendations were approved by the meeting,&#13;
&#13;
and the same committee were further instructed to report a plan for the&#13;
&#13;
organization of a Cemetery Association, to carry into effect the recom-&#13;
&#13;
mendations just adopted.&#13;
&#13;
On July 13th, 1850, articles of association were adopted and signed&#13;
&#13;
by R. Hills, C. C. Chamberlain, D. F. McCullough, James Eaton, B. &#13;
&#13;
Powers, T. W. Powell, R. N. Jones, Geo. F. Stayman, C. Hills, C.&#13;
&#13;
Platt, E. Moore, S. Rheem, A. A. Welch, Hosea Williams and S. M.&#13;
&#13;
Littell; and  on August 10th, 1850, by Geo W. Campbell, Geo. Woods&#13;
&#13;
Little, W. S. Little, M. L. Griffin, G. W. Stark, II. Van Horn, Asahel&#13;
&#13;
Welch and S. Finch.&#13;
&#13;
At this meeting, August 10, 1850, Dr. R. Hills, C. C. Chamberlain,&#13;
&#13;
James Eaton, B. Powers and D. F. McCullough, were elected Trustees&#13;
&#13;
of the Association, and C. Platt, Clerk.&#13;
&#13;
This Board was subsequently further organized by the election of Dr.&#13;
&#13;
R. Hills as President, and Benj. Powers as Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
A resolution was adopted to organize the Association under the gen-&#13;
&#13;
eral act of the Legislature, chartering Cemetery Associations, dated&#13;
&#13;
Feb. 24, 1848.&#13;
&#13;
A Constitution and By-Laws were adopted. The land was pur-&#13;
&#13;
chased of Mr. Kilbourne for the sum of $1,550. The Board decided&#13;
&#13;
upon borrowing the sum necessary to meet the first payment of purchase&#13;
&#13;
money, and with which to commence improvements. They also decided&#13;
&#13;
to improve and dedicate only about thirty acres at present, it being the &#13;
&#13;
northern portion of the tract.&#13;
&#13;
R. Hills, T. W. Powell and Jas. Eaton, were appointed a committee&#13;
&#13;
to lay out the grounds into sections, lots, carriage avenues, walks, &amp;c.&#13;
&#13;
With the assistance of other members of the Board, and other gen-&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 9 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
tlemen and ladies of taste and judgment, this was done, and such other&#13;
&#13;
important improvements made by the summer of 1851, that they were&#13;
&#13;
considered in readiness for a formal dedication to the purpose designed.&#13;
&#13;
The impressive ceremony of Dedication was held in the grove, in the &#13;
&#13;
north-western portion of the grounds, at 10 o'clock on Thursday, July&#13;
&#13;
20, 1851. The day was a beautiful one, and the concourse of citizens&#13;
&#13;
large and attentive.&#13;
&#13;
The first burial in the Cemetery was on the day of dedication, imme-&#13;
&#13;
diately after the ceremonies of the occasion. An amiable old lady,&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. McCracken, who had lived just her allotted time of threescore&#13;
&#13;
years and ten, was thus fitly appointed by Providence to lead in this&#13;
&#13;
place "the way of all flesh."&#13;
&#13;
The exercises in the ceremony of Dedication were as follows:&#13;
&#13;
			INVOCATION.&#13;
&#13;
By the Rev. H. VAN DEMAN, of the First Presbyterian Church.&#13;
&#13;
			SELECTED ODE.&#13;
&#13;
Written by the late B. T. CUSHING, Esq., for the dedication of Green Lawn&#13;
&#13;
Cemetery. Read by the Rev. Mr. HUGHS. Sung by a chori,&#13;
&#13;
led by Mr. H. E. HOWARD.&#13;
&#13;
Music--"The Grave of Bonaparte."&#13;
&#13;
Sleep softly, ye greenwoods, with shadowy boughs;&#13;
&#13;
Sleep softy! disturb not your solemn repose!&#13;
&#13;
For ye bend in your beauty where shortly will wave&#13;
&#13;
The flower of affection, reared over the grave!&#13;
&#13;
Ye birds, whose clear anthems swell over the lea;&#13;
&#13;
Ye insects, whose pipings come gladsome and free;&#13;
&#13;
Ye winds of young summer, your music must blend&#13;
&#13;
With the sighs of the mourner who weeps for his friend.&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>Rules and Regulations and Articles of Association of Oak Grove Cemetery (p. 12)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 10 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Ye groves and ye hillocks, how lovely ye lie,&#13;
&#13;
Like a vision of beauty--a dream of the sky;&#13;
&#13;
Yet here must we follow the loved ones away,&#13;
&#13;
And here must our bodies commingle with clay!&#13;
&#13;
Sleep softly, ye greenwoods, with shadowy boughs;&#13;
&#13;
Sleep softly! disturb not your solemn repose!&#13;
&#13;
For ye bend in your beauty where shortly will wave&#13;
&#13;
The flower of affection, reared over the grave!&#13;
&#13;
READING THE SCRIPTURES.&#13;
&#13;
By the Rev. W. C. FRENCH, of the Episcopal Church, who selected the XXIIId&#13;
&#13;
Chapter of Genesis.&#13;
&#13;
PRAYER.&#13;
&#13;
By the Rev. EDWARD THOMPSON, D.D., President of the Ohio Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
ORIGINAL ODE.&#13;
&#13;
Written by Mr. J. D. LARIMORE, and read by the Rev. AHAB JENKS.&#13;
&#13;
"Put off thy shoes!" Unbare they head!&#13;
&#13;
For where thou standest now&#13;
&#13;
"Is Holy Ground"--a sepulcher.&#13;
&#13;
With rev'rence lowly bow:&#13;
&#13;
Speak low; nor let one sinful thought&#13;
&#13;
Have access to thy breast.&#13;
&#13;
Let peace breathe comfort to thy soul,&#13;
&#13;
While in this place of rest.&#13;
&#13;
Beneath these shades how sweet to sleep, &#13;
&#13;
And know affection's care&#13;
&#13;
Hath made this home, this resting place,&#13;
&#13;
And laid our bodies there.&#13;
&#13;
These evergreens shall emblems be&#13;
&#13;
Of that bright state above,&#13;
&#13;
Where truth and mercy concentrate&#13;
&#13;
In one Eternal Love.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 11 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
				11&#13;
&#13;
Great God of love! we dedicate&#13;
&#13;
These hills and vales to Thee;&#13;
&#13;
To hold thy dead, of every name--&#13;
&#13;
"God's Acre" let this be.&#13;
&#13;
And may the souls, whose bodies lie&#13;
&#13;
Within this beauteous calm,&#13;
&#13;
By nestling in the bosom of &#13;
&#13;
The Heavenly Pascal Lamb!&#13;
&#13;
PRELIMINARY ADDRESS.&#13;
&#13;
By Dr. R. HILLS, President of the Association.&#13;
&#13;
[This address was mostly a history of the Association, with a general&#13;
&#13;
statement of the action of the Board of Trustees, past and prospective.&#13;
&#13;
Of the past action a brief statement has already been given, and need&#13;
&#13;
not be repeated. Of the latter, it alluded to certain improvements de-&#13;
&#13;
cided upon, and in contemplation by the Board, among which was the &#13;
&#13;
hedging of the grounds with the Osage Orange so far as practicable, a&#13;
&#13;
nursery having been already started for that purpose. A section of &#13;
&#13;
ground, something less than one acre, immediately adjoining the en-&#13;
&#13;
trance, and upon the right of it, had been reserved, upon which to &#13;
&#13;
erect a Gate Lodge, or residence for the superintendent of the grounds.&#13;
&#13;
A circular spot of about 900 feet in circumference, on the highest sum-&#13;
&#13;
mit of the Ground, and near the front--a most beautiful situation for&#13;
&#13;
the purpose--had also been reserved upon which to erect a chapel--&#13;
&#13;
probably at some distant period of time.&#13;
&#13;
Allusion was also made to the general principles upon which the&#13;
&#13;
Association was based, the provisions of the Charter, the Constitution&#13;
&#13;
and By-Laws, and the impression corrected, that a few persons professed&#13;
&#13;
to have receieved, to the effect that the Association was established in &#13;
&#13;
part as a monetary speculation by a few individuals--the profits from &#13;
&#13;
the sales of lots to accrue to them. This was clearly shown to be erro-&#13;
&#13;
neous; that all purchasers of lots became part owners of the property,&#13;
&#13;
endowed with all the rights and privileges of others, in proportion to &#13;
&#13;
the extent of their purchase; that all profits must be applied to the pay-</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 12 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
ment of the original purchase and the improvement and keeping of the &#13;
&#13;
grounds, and not one cent, under any circumstances whatever, could&#13;
&#13;
be appropriated to private purposes.&#13;
&#13;
The address closed with an announcement, that preparations were&#13;
&#13;
now completed for the sale of lots, and an appropriate allusion was&#13;
&#13;
made to the first burial upon the grounds, which was to take place&#13;
&#13;
on that same day.]&#13;
&#13;
DEDICATORY ADDRESS,&#13;
&#13;
By the Rev. F. MERRICK, Professor in the Ohio Wesleyan University.&#13;
&#13;
"DUST THOU ART, AND UNTO DUST SHALT THOU RE-&#13;
&#13;
TURN," was the fiat of Him with whom alone are the &#13;
&#13;
issues from death, when the first human pair had by&#13;
&#13;
transgression provoked his just displeasure. And from&#13;
&#13;
the day the decree went forth even until now, death &#13;
&#13;
has swayed his sceptre over the nations, and laid low&#13;
&#13;
in the grave each succeeding generation. No age, no&#13;
&#13;
circumstances have shielded from his remorseless blow.&#13;
&#13;
The infant, sleeping upon its mother's breast, has &#13;
&#13;
opened its eyes to close them in the sleep of the grave.&#13;
&#13;
The bloom of health upon the cheek of youth has&#13;
&#13;
faded, the strength of manhood bowed at the approach&#13;
&#13;
of the destroyer, while old age has tottered on its way&#13;
&#13;
to the tomb. The relations of parent and child, brother&#13;
&#13;
and sister, husband and wife, friend and lover, have</text>
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                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11177">
                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 13 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
each been severed at a blow. Kings have laid aside&#13;
&#13;
their robes of royalty, for the habiliments of the tomb;&#13;
&#13;
and the beggar in his rags has been borne to his final&#13;
&#13;
resting place. The warrior, death's most faithful ally,&#13;
&#13;
has at last himself fallen before the mighty archer.&#13;
&#13;
The student in his retirement, the man of business in&#13;
&#13;
the public mart, the Christian in his closet, and the&#13;
&#13;
sensualist in his place of debauch, has each met the&#13;
&#13;
dread summons, and passed away. Amid the soft&#13;
&#13;
zephyrs of spring, the sultry heats of summer, the decay&#13;
&#13;
of autumn, and the frosts of winter, death alike has&#13;
&#13;
reveled.&#13;
&#13;
"Leaves have their times to fall,&#13;
&#13;
And flowers to wither at the north wind's breath,&#13;
&#13;
And stars to set : but all--&#13;
&#13;
Thou hast all seasons for thine own, O Death!"&#13;
&#13;
Since, therefore, death must pass upon all, it is meet&#13;
&#13;
we should provide a suitable spot as the last resting&#13;
&#13;
place for the mortal remains of ourselves and friends.&#13;
&#13;
I say suitable spot, for since death is an event of so&#13;
&#13;
much interest, it cannot be a matter of indifference&#13;
&#13;
where rest the sleeping dead. But to select and pre-&#13;
&#13;
pare such a spot is no easy task. He who attempts it,&#13;
&#13;
should have correct views of life, death, and immortal-&#13;
&#13;
ity. He should know what it is to shed the tear of </text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 14 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
affection upon the grave of the departed, and rejoice&#13;
&#13;
in the hopes which spring immortal from its dust.&#13;
&#13;
With such views and feelings, he will blend the joy-&#13;
&#13;
ous and the sad; for death must ever be regarded as a &#13;
&#13;
sad event.&#13;
&#13;
"Yea, though promises and hopes strive to cheat its sadness:&#13;
&#13;
Full of grief, though faith herself is strong to speed the soul;&#13;
&#13;
For the partner of its toil is left behind, to endure the ordeal of change."&#13;
&#13;
Men have, indeed, in all ages labored hard to disarm &#13;
&#13;
death of his terrors. They have greeted his approach&#13;
&#13;
with songs, have decked his victims with flowers, and &#13;
&#13;
filled their resting place with cheerful light. Poesy&#13;
&#13;
has sung of the quiet of the grave, and satirized the fear&#13;
&#13;
of death; while philsophy has recommended a cheer-&#13;
&#13;
ful submission to the unavoidable decision of fate.&#13;
&#13;
"Still death is terrible--the tear,&#13;
&#13;
The groan, the knell, the pall, the bier,&#13;
&#13;
And all we know, or dream, or fear&#13;
&#13;
Of agony, are his."&#13;
&#13;
And the grave--where the eye, the cheek, and the &#13;
&#13;
lip of beauty fade, and where the lovely form moulders&#13;
&#13;
back to dust--tell me not it has no gloom, nor forbid&#13;
&#13;
the falling tear. Hence, thou cold philosopher and&#13;
&#13;
dreamy poet, until ye have learned the language of &#13;
&#13;
nature, and then ye will bid me stand with the Saviour&#13;
&#13;
beside a brother's grave and weep. And, but for the</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 15 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
light of revelation, well might I there stand and refuse&#13;
&#13;
to be comforted. But thanks be to God, through &#13;
&#13;
whose word "life and immortality are brought to &#13;
&#13;
light." "Thy daed men shall live; together with my&#13;
&#13;
dead body shall they arise," is its glorious announce-&#13;
&#13;
ment. Yes, the grave shall unloose its prisoner, and &#13;
&#13;
the ocean's depth uncover the sleeper upon its coral&#13;
&#13;
bed. To those who sleep in Christ, there comes a morn&#13;
&#13;
of gladness,--&#13;
&#13;
"When love's soft dew o'er every eye&#13;
&#13;
Shall shed its mildest rays,&#13;
&#13;
And the long silent dust shall burst&#13;
&#13;
With shouts of endless praise."&#13;
&#13;
Then should the place of sepulture have its lonely&#13;
&#13;
glen and sunny hill-side. There should fall the shade&#13;
&#13;
of the cypress, the laurel, and the willow; and there,&#13;
&#13;
too, should bloom the amaranth, the lily, and the rose.&#13;
&#13;
How well adapted is this spot to the use to which&#13;
&#13;
we this day dedicate it--&#13;
&#13;
"Midst holy prayers, and generous grief, and consecrating blessings,"&#13;
&#13;
I need not say. All must feel that, when completed,&#13;
&#13;
it will harmonize sweetly with the feelings of the &#13;
&#13;
hopeful mourner. Henceforth be it sacred as a place&#13;
&#13;
of burial for the dead; not consecrated to bless their&#13;
&#13;
sleeping dust, or open to their spirits the portals of the &#13;
&#13;
skies; but as a place where their bodies may, in undis-</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 16 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
turbed repose, rest until the last trump shall bid them&#13;
&#13;
rise. &#13;
&#13;
Here bring your dead, and bury them from your&#13;
&#13;
sight. Here let the father and the mother sleep, and&#13;
&#13;
by their side their children. In some sequestered spot, &#13;
&#13;
where bloom the sweetest, loveliest flowers, find a rest-&#13;
&#13;
ing place for her, to whom, next to God, thou gavest&#13;
&#13;
thy heart's best love--thy wife; and on her grave &#13;
&#13;
sprinkle the green locust leaves; and when thy race is &#13;
&#13;
run, lay thee down by her side to rest. Where the&#13;
&#13;
myrtle and the thyme shed their perfume, bury thy&#13;
&#13;
sister; and beneath the oak, around which the wood-&#13;
&#13;
bine twines, let the manly form of thy brother find&#13;
&#13;
repose. In some soft shade make the grave for thy&#13;
&#13;
infant, and on it plant the violet.&#13;
&#13;
If monumental marble tell who and where the&#13;
&#13;
sleeper is, let chaste simplicity give it form and make&#13;
&#13;
the record. Oh, it is a sad thing to see the pride and&#13;
&#13;
vanity of the living finding expression upon the same&#13;
&#13;
stone which records the humiliating victory of the grave.&#13;
&#13;
But not alone to the dead be this place given. Let &#13;
&#13;
the living come hither also--the aged, to see that &#13;
&#13;
between them and the grave there is but a step--the&#13;
&#13;
young, to be reminded that they too must die--the &#13;
&#13;
sad and desponding, to learn that a living man should </text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 17 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
not complain--the thoughtless and the gay, to check&#13;
&#13;
the exuberance of their mirth--the man of business,&#13;
&#13;
to see an end of all his cares--the idle, to learn the&#13;
&#13;
value of time. Here let the infidel come, and see how&#13;
&#13;
dark and gloomy is the grave into which the light of &#13;
&#13;
revelation shines not; and here let the Christian come,&#13;
&#13;
and with an apostle sing, "Oh death, where is thy&#13;
&#13;
sting? Oh grave, where is thy victory? Thanks be&#13;
&#13;
to God, who giveth us the victory, through our Lord&#13;
&#13;
Jesus Christ." Here let all come and gain pricelss&#13;
&#13;
lessons of wisdom. But let none rush rudely within&#13;
&#13;
these sacred enclosures--these precincts of the dead.&#13;
&#13;
Along these avenues let the wheel roll slowly, and the &#13;
&#13;
foot fall lightly. Let not the loud voice disturb the&#13;
&#13;
meditations of the thoughtful, nor the merry peal break&#13;
&#13;
harshly upon the ear of the grief stricken mourner.&#13;
&#13;
Be still, commune with thine own heart, and receive&#13;
&#13;
instruction.&#13;
&#13;
How much of interest will centre in these grounds!&#13;
&#13;
Human dust will here mingle with its native elements.&#13;
&#13;
Sighs from bleeding hearts will rise upon the evening&#13;
&#13;
breeze, and prayers salute the opening day. Every sod&#13;
&#13;
will be watered with the tears of affection, and every&#13;
&#13;
spot be made sacred with hallowed memories. And,&#13;
&#13;
3</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 18 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
methinks the wings of ministering angels will rustle&#13;
&#13;
among these overhanging boughs, as they watch with&#13;
&#13;
sleepless eye the graves of the heirs of salvation, and&#13;
&#13;
strengthen the hearts of the disconsolate mourners.&#13;
&#13;
But not thus always. An end shall come. A last&#13;
&#13;
funeral procession shall slowly wind along these ave-&#13;
&#13;
nues, a last tear be dropped, a last sigh heard; and &#13;
&#13;
then a change shall pass over the sleepers here. At "the&#13;
&#13;
voice of the archangel and the trump of God," they&#13;
&#13;
shall awake, and come forth, some to everlasting life,&#13;
&#13;
and some, it is to be feared, to shame and everlasting&#13;
&#13;
contempt.&#13;
&#13;
Be it ours, having served our generation according&#13;
&#13;
to the will of God, to fall asleep in Jesus, and here rest&#13;
&#13;
until time shall be no more; and then to be found&#13;
&#13;
numbered among those who share a part in the first&#13;
&#13;
resurrection.&#13;
&#13;
ORIGINAL ODE.&#13;
&#13;
Written by Dr. R. HILLS, and read by Rev. Dr. WARNER.&#13;
&#13;
Music--"Pilgrim Fathers."&#13;
&#13;
Where towering oaks arise,&#13;
&#13;
And graceful elm trees bend,&#13;
&#13;
Where cooling shades and sunny skies&#13;
&#13;
Their loveliest beauties blend,&#13;
&#13;
Where deep and winding aisles&#13;
&#13;
Invite us oft to tread,&#13;
&#13;
Where nature wears its sweetest smiles--&#13;
&#13;
There we would rest when dead.</text>
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                    <text>[page 22]

[corresponds to page 19 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]

				19

Not in the hum of earth,

Where the busy pave is trod,

Can highest, holiest thoughts have birth,

Or man commune with God.

'Tis in a spot like this,

Where God's impress is felt,

That visions of eternal bliss

Will wayward natures melt.

Bring hither then the dead!

These groves to them are given:

A home to those who souls are led

To sweeter homes in Heaven.

Fond memories soon will bring

Affection's tributes here;

For human hearts will ever cling

To those they once held dear.

Oh, cherish then the spot

Where loved ones sweetly rest,

And where the stricken mourner's thought

Upheaves the aching breast!

Aye, call it "Holy Ground,"

Where man should lightly tread--

Jehovah's presence here is found:

'Tis sacred to the dead!

BENEDICTION.

By the Rev. H. E. PILCHER.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to unlabeled page 20 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
THE CHARTER,&#13;
&#13;
OR&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL LAW INCORPORATING CEMETERY ASSOCIATIONS, PASSED&#13;
&#13;
FEB. 24, 1848, AND ADOPTED BY THIS ASSOCIATION.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 1--Details how organizations may be formed,&#13;
&#13;
and what officers they shall have.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 2--Prescribes the duties of the Clerk of the &#13;
&#13;
Association and the County Recorder, in perfecting the&#13;
&#13;
organization of the Association.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 3--Gives perpetual succession to the Trustees, &#13;
&#13;
and empowers them to make contracts; to sue and be &#13;
&#13;
sued.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 4--Authorizes the Association to prescribe&#13;
&#13;
terms on which members may be admitted, the number&#13;
&#13;
of Trustees and other officers, time and manner of elec-&#13;
&#13;
tions and meetings, and passage of By-Laws.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 5 "Such Association shall be authorized to </text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 21 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
purchase, or to take by gift, or devise, and hold land,&#13;
&#13;
exempt from execution and from any appropriation to&#13;
&#13;
public purposes, for the sole purposes of a Cemetery,&#13;
&#13;
not exceeding one hundred acres, which shall be&#13;
&#13;
exempt from taxation, if used exclusively for burial&#13;
&#13;
purposes, and in no wise with a view to profit. After&#13;
&#13;
paying for such land, all the future receipts and in-&#13;
&#13;
come of such Association, whether from the sale of lots,&#13;
&#13;
from donations, or otherwise, shall be applied exclu-&#13;
&#13;
sively to laying out, preserving, protecting and embel-&#13;
&#13;
lishing the Cemetery and the avenues leading thereto,&#13;
&#13;
and the erection of such building or buildings as may&#13;
&#13;
be necessary for the cemetery purposes, and to paying&#13;
&#13;
the necessary expenses of the Association. No debts&#13;
&#13;
shall be contracted in anticipation of future receipts,&#13;
&#13;
except for originally purchasing, laying out, enclosing&#13;
&#13;
and embellishing the grounds and avenues, for which a &#13;
&#13;
debt may be contracted not exceeding ten thousand&#13;
&#13;
dollars in the whole, to be paid out of future receipts;&#13;
&#13;
and such Association shall have power to adopt such&#13;
&#13;
rules and regulations as they shall deem expedient for&#13;
&#13;
disposing of and conveying burial lots."&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 6--Exempts burial lots from taxation, execu-&#13;
&#13;
tion, or any process whatever.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 7--Provides that a plat of the ground and</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 22 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
lots shall be made and recorded; gives power to in-&#13;
&#13;
close, improve and adorn the grounds and avenues, and&#13;
&#13;
to erect buildings; power to prescribe rules to lot-&#13;
&#13;
holders for inclosing and adorning lots, and erecting&#13;
&#13;
monuments thereon, and prohibiting whatever they&#13;
&#13;
deem improper; and provides for an Annual Exhibit &#13;
&#13;
of the affairs of the Association.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 8. "Any person who shall wilfully destroy, mu-&#13;
&#13;
tilate, deface, injure or remove any tomb, monument&#13;
&#13;
or gravestone, or other structure placed in any cemetery;&#13;
&#13;
or any fence, railing, or other work for the protection &#13;
&#13;
or ornament of a cemetery or tomb, monument or grave-&#13;
&#13;
stone, or other structure aforesaid, or of any cemetery&#13;
&#13;
lot within a cemetery, or shall wilfully destroy, cut,&#13;
&#13;
break or injure, any tree, shrub or plant, within the &#13;
&#13;
limits of a cemetery, shall be deemed guilty of a mis-&#13;
&#13;
demeanor, and shall, upon conviction thereof before any&#13;
&#13;
court of competent jurisdiction, be punished by a fine&#13;
&#13;
of not less than five dollars, nor more than five hun-&#13;
&#13;
dred dollars, and by imprisonment in the county jail&#13;
&#13;
for a term of not less than one, nor more than thirty&#13;
&#13;
days, according to the nature and aggravation of the &#13;
&#13;
offence; and such offender shall also be liable in an&#13;
&#13;
action of trespass in the name of the said Association,&#13;
&#13;
to pay all such damages as have been occasioned by&#13;
&#13;
his unlawful act or acts; which money, when recovered,</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 23 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
shall be applied to the reparation and restoration of the &#13;
&#13;
property destroyed or injured as above; and in all pro-&#13;
&#13;
secutions and suits under this act, members of the As-&#13;
&#13;
sociation shall be competent witnesses."&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 9--Asserts that the General Assembly reserves&#13;
&#13;
the right to tax such property at any time hereafter.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to unlabeled page 24 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
CONSTITUTION.&#13;
&#13;
ART. I--NAME.&#13;
&#13;
This Association shall be styled "The Oak Grove&#13;
&#13;
Cemetery."&#13;
&#13;
ART. II--MEMBERSHIP.&#13;
&#13;
Any person, or association of persons, may become a &#13;
&#13;
member by the payment of ten dollars into the Treasu-&#13;
&#13;
ry, which may be applied on the payment of lot or lots&#13;
&#13;
purchased.&#13;
&#13;
ART. III--PRIVILEGES.&#13;
&#13;
Members shall be entitled to one vote for each and&#13;
&#13;
every ten dollars paid into the Treasury, which vote&#13;
&#13;
may also be given either in person or by proxy, if au-&#13;
&#13;
thorized in writing.&#13;
&#13;
ART. IV--TRUSTEES.&#13;
&#13;
The business of the Association shall be transacted&#13;
&#13;
by a Board of five Trustees, who shall be Stockholders</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 25 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
of the Association. A regular meeting of the Associa-&#13;
&#13;
tion shall be held on the first Monday of January an-&#13;
&#13;
nually.&#13;
&#13;
ART. V--VACANCY.&#13;
&#13;
Any vacancy occurring in the Board of Trustees, or &#13;
&#13;
the Clerkship, may be filled by the remaining Trustees.&#13;
&#13;
ART. VI--ALTERING AND AMENDING&#13;
&#13;
This Constitution may be altered or amended by a &#13;
&#13;
vote of two-thirds of the members present, in person or&#13;
&#13;
by proxy, at any regular annual meeting. Thirty days' &#13;
&#13;
notice shall be given of such intention to alter or amend,&#13;
&#13;
by publishing it in one or more newspapers of the &#13;
&#13;
town.&#13;
&#13;
4</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 26 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
BY-LAWS.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 1. The members of the Association shall, on &#13;
&#13;
the first Monday in January next, elect five Trustees&#13;
&#13;
and one Clerk. Three of the Trustees so chosen shall&#13;
&#13;
serve one year and until their successors are elected,&#13;
&#13;
and the other two, two years and until their successors&#13;
&#13;
are elected; and they shall draw lots, unless they &#13;
&#13;
otherwise agree, which shall go out first; and the &#13;
&#13;
places of those whose terms expire shall be filled by an&#13;
&#13;
election to be held annually, on the first Monday in&#13;
&#13;
January of every year thereafter--the term of office to &#13;
&#13;
be two years. The Clerk elected next January shall &#13;
&#13;
serve one year and until his successor shall be chosen,&#13;
&#13;
and a Clerk shall be elected every year thereafter at&#13;
&#13;
the annual election.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 2. The Trustees shall select by ballot from&#13;
&#13;
their own body a President and a Treasurer, who shall&#13;
&#13;
serve for one year and until their successors are elected.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 3. The President shall preside at all meetings</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 27 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
of the Board of Trustees and of the Association, and&#13;
&#13;
shall call meetings of the Board whenever he may deem&#13;
&#13;
it necessary, or when requested to do so by any two&#13;
&#13;
members thereof. He shall also sign officially all deeds,&#13;
&#13;
conveyances, agreements, and all other important docu-&#13;
&#13;
ments. In his absence at meetings the office may be&#13;
&#13;
filled pro tem.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 4. The Clerk shall keep the Minutes of the&#13;
&#13;
Board and of the Association, shall have custody of&#13;
&#13;
all the books, papers, accounts, with the seal, and all&#13;
&#13;
other personal property of the Association, except when&#13;
&#13;
otherwise provided for. He shall also collect all moneys&#13;
&#13;
due to the Association, and pay over the same imme-&#13;
&#13;
diately to the Treasurer, and shall give bond in the &#13;
&#13;
sum of one thousand dollars, with security approved&#13;
&#13;
by the Board, for the faithful discharge of his duties,&#13;
&#13;
which bond shall be kept by the Treasurer. He shall&#13;
&#13;
also countersign officially all deeds, conveyances, and&#13;
&#13;
other important documents, and also sign all orders on&#13;
&#13;
the treasury. He shall give notice of all special meet0&#13;
&#13;
ings of the Trustees, and all meetings of the Associa-&#13;
&#13;
tion, and shall perform such other duties as the Board&#13;
&#13;
may from time to time direct.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 5. The Treasurer shall receive all the funds&#13;
&#13;
of the Association, and deposit them in Bank, or other-</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 28 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
wise keep them, as may be directed by the Board, and&#13;
&#13;
shall pay the same out only on the check of the Clerk.&#13;
&#13;
He shall give bond with approved security, in the sum&#13;
&#13;
of two thousand dollars, for the faithful performance of&#13;
&#13;
his duty. The Clerk and Treasurer shall each render&#13;
&#13;
an account of the financial condition of the Association&#13;
&#13;
at the annual meeting, and at such other times as may &#13;
&#13;
be required by the Board of Trustees.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 6. All accounts or claims against the Associ-&#13;
&#13;
ation shall be first approved by the Board of Trustees,&#13;
&#13;
or a committee thereof, in writing, before they can be&#13;
&#13;
allowed, and shall then be paid in an order drawn by&#13;
&#13;
the Clerk upon the Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 7. There shall be a meeting of the Board of &#13;
&#13;
Trustees on the first Thursday evening of each month,&#13;
&#13;
and at such other times as may be determined by ad-&#13;
&#13;
journment, or by the call of the President.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 8. All agents and servants of the Corporation&#13;
&#13;
shall be appointed for such periods as may suit the &#13;
&#13;
pleasure and convenience of the Board of Trustees.&#13;
&#13;
SEC. 9. These By-Laws may be altered, amended or &#13;
&#13;
repealed at any regular meeting of the Board of Trus-&#13;
&#13;
tees, by the vote of a majority thereof, after such repeal,&#13;
&#13;
amendment or alteration shall have been proposed at,&#13;
&#13;
and entered on the minutes of the previous meeting.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 29 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
RULES FOR PROPRIETORS OF LOTS.&#13;
&#13;
1. No person shall have any use of, or title to a lot,&#13;
&#13;
until the same is paid for; and if not paid for within&#13;
&#13;
ten days from the date of selection or purchase, the&#13;
&#13;
selection shall be forfeited.&#13;
&#13;
2. No transfer of any lot will be permitted, without&#13;
&#13;
the consent of the Board of Trustees.&#13;
&#13;
3. No tree or shrub shall be removed from any lot,&#13;
&#13;
or any material alteration made in its surface, without&#13;
&#13;
the consent of the Board.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--The propriety of this rule is evident; for though&#13;
&#13;
the lot itself might be improved, yet great injury might accrue&#13;
&#13;
to the adjoining lots, or to the beauty and interest of the entire&#13;
&#13;
grounds.]&#13;
&#13;
4. All enclosures of lots must be placed on the lot &#13;
&#13;
itself, and must never exceed three and a half feet in&#13;
&#13;
height. No description of wooden fence or enclosure&#13;
&#13;
will be permitted; nor close walls of brick or stone;</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 30 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
except as foundations for enclosures, of twelve inches&#13;
&#13;
or less in height.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--Everything erected of wood is quickly perishable, and&#13;
&#13;
soon assumes that dilapidated condition of which every common&#13;
&#13;
grave yard has many examples, as perfect eye-sores. Better, a&#13;
&#13;
great deal, that there be no enclosed lots; especially as the entire&#13;
&#13;
grounds are to be well protected. The Board desire in the very&#13;
&#13;
start to suppress and prevent these destructives of beauty. Much&#13;
&#13;
more beautiful, more permanent, and far cheaper enclosures can&#13;
&#13;
be made of little hedges of some favorite shrub, either deciduous&#13;
&#13;
or evergreen. Or expensive ones may be made of stone and iron,&#13;
&#13;
of chains, of wire, &amp;c. The Board, through their officers, will&#13;
&#13;
be able and willing to furnish suggestions upon these subjects to&#13;
&#13;
those desiring them.]&#13;
&#13;
5. Two or more lots may be included in one en-&#13;
&#13;
closure, by arrangement between owners.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--The cost of enclosing will thus be cheapened, and the&#13;
&#13;
general good effect in appearance will oftentimes be increased.&#13;
&#13;
Relatives and neighbors might often be induced to make their&#13;
&#13;
selections of lots with this view.]&#13;
&#13;
6.Proprietors of lots may improve and adorn their&#13;
&#13;
lots, and the adjoining borders, with trees, shrubs,&#13;
&#13;
plants, hedges, &amp;c.; but all such improvements must&#13;
&#13;
have the sanction of the Board of Trustees or their&#13;
&#13;
agents.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--The Board wishes to encourage, to the fullest extent,&#13;
&#13;
displays of individual taste and judgment, but must see that the </text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 31 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
general interest of the entire Association is not marred and in-&#13;
&#13;
jured by that which is improper.]&#13;
&#13;
7. Proprietors of lots may build any suitable monu-&#13;
&#13;
ment or monuments thereon, provided that no slab-&#13;
&#13;
stone placed upright shall be more than two and a half&#13;
&#13;
feet in height, and it is recommended that they be &#13;
&#13;
placed so as to face the avenues.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--The Board are sensible that they will come in con-&#13;
&#13;
flict with past custom and practice in this rule more than in any&#13;
&#13;
other. One intention is, to do away entirely with the ordinary&#13;
&#13;
thin slab head-stone, as a monument which, though well enough&#13;
&#13;
in a crowded, old fashioned grave-yard, with its military style of &#13;
&#13;
order and precision, is entire unsuited to the character of a &#13;
&#13;
rural, picturesque Cemetery. This can only be appreciated fully&#13;
&#13;
by those who have seen the latter; and time will be requisite to &#13;
&#13;
reconcile the minds of many to the requirements of the rule. But&#13;
&#13;
eventually all will acknowledge the propriety of the restriction.&#13;
&#13;
The position of the stone, and impliedly that of the grave, is also&#13;
&#13;
of importance. That graves should be dug at a uniform point of &#13;
&#13;
the compass, and the head-stones and monuments be placed cor-&#13;
&#13;
respondingly, without reference to the locality and direction of &#13;
&#13;
avenues, is incompatible with the general design and object; and&#13;
&#13;
the idea of a rural Cemetery might as well be abandoned, if this&#13;
&#13;
were permitted. The Board will be provided with plans and de-&#13;
&#13;
signs of monuments with which to aid persons in deciding with&#13;
&#13;
true taste and judgment before any outlay. A plan has recently&#13;
&#13;
been introduced of erecting what is termed a "family monument,"&#13;
&#13;
to be placed in the centre or front of the lot, to contain the re-&#13;
&#13;
cords for those buried around, and blank spaces for additional</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 32 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
ones. This would be in many instances a cheaper plan to&#13;
&#13;
have a stone or monument for each, and would contribute much&#13;
&#13;
more to the beauty and embellishment of the grounds.]&#13;
&#13;
8. All plans of enclosures, monuments, vaults,&#13;
&#13;
tombs, or other structures, shall be submitted to and&#13;
&#13;
approved by the Board of Trustees, or their appointed&#13;
&#13;
officers, before they can be erected; and if any monu-&#13;
&#13;
ment, railing, or other structure, any inscription, any&#13;
&#13;
tree, shrub, or plant, or any portion thereof, shall be&#13;
&#13;
decided, by four-fifths of the Board of Trustees, to be&#13;
&#13;
offensive, improper, or in any way injurious to the&#13;
&#13;
general interests of the Association, they shall have&#13;
&#13;
power, and it shall be their duty to change or remove&#13;
&#13;
the same.&#13;
&#13;
9. All materials for improvements shall be depos-&#13;
&#13;
ited under the direction of the Superintendent, and&#13;
&#13;
shall not remain longer than necessary; and all rub-&#13;
&#13;
bish shall be removed by the proprietor without delay.&#13;
&#13;
10. Vaults or tombs will be permitted, provided&#13;
&#13;
they are under ground, except the entrance; are built&#13;
&#13;
of durable materials, in a substantial manner, and are&#13;
&#13;
provided with two tight stone or metal doors, one within&#13;
&#13;
the other, and kept securely fastened.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 33 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
11. All lots must be kept in the neatest order, by&#13;
&#13;
the owners thereof.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--It is the intention of the Board to have every thing&#13;
&#13;
kept neatly and in order, having a resident Superintendent for&#13;
&#13;
that purpose; but it is expected that every lot owner, while living&#13;
&#13;
and a resident with us, will have an interest in personally attend-&#13;
&#13;
ing to its condition.]&#13;
&#13;
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[corresponds to unlabeled page 34 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
RULES RESPECTING BURIALS.&#13;
&#13;
1. All burials in private lots will be restricted to&#13;
&#13;
the proprietor's family and relatives, unless by special&#13;
&#13;
permission of the Board of Trustees.&#13;
&#13;
2. All graves will be opened and filled by the&#13;
&#13;
Superintendent or his assistants.&#13;
&#13;
3. Application must in all cases be made to the&#13;
&#13;
clerk, or, in his absence, to some member of the Board,&#13;
&#13;
for an order to the Superintendent to open the grave.&#13;
&#13;
The size of the coffin, the lot, and the precise place&#13;
&#13;
thereon for the grave, must be designated in the appli-&#13;
&#13;
cation, and in the order. No order will be issued&#13;
&#13;
without the required fee, and the Superintendent will&#13;
&#13;
in no case act, without the required order.&#13;
&#13;
4. A statement shall also be made, in all cases, to&#13;
&#13;
the clerk, for the purpose of record, of the name of the&#13;
&#13;
deceased, the age, place of nativity, residence, occupa-&#13;
&#13;
tion, parentage, disease, date of death, and any other&#13;
&#13;
important matter.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 35 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
5. All graves shall be at least five feet deep, when&#13;
&#13;
the coffin is four feet and upwards in length, and all&#13;
&#13;
others shall be at least four feet deep, except those for&#13;
&#13;
infants under one year of age, which need not exceed &#13;
&#13;
three and a half feet.&#13;
&#13;
6. The surface of the ground over graves should&#13;
&#13;
always be kept nearly level, or nearly in its natural&#13;
&#13;
shape, and not raised into unsightly mounds.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--The practice of raising mounds on the surface of the&#13;
&#13;
earth, of the form of the grave, was intended to meet the subse-&#13;
&#13;
quent sinking of the earth; but this equally unsightly appearance&#13;
&#13;
will always be promptly remedied by the Superintendent. These&#13;
&#13;
coffin-shaped hillocks do not harmonize with the spirit that should&#13;
&#13;
prevail in such a place--the Spirit of Nature, in all her simpli-&#13;
&#13;
city, beauty and purity. One means of preventing the sinking of&#13;
&#13;
the earth, is to have the lower part of the grave built up with&#13;
&#13;
durable brick, and covered with thin slabs of stone, instead of &#13;
&#13;
using boards, as is customary, which must in a little time give&#13;
&#13;
way and thus occassion the sinking.]</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 36 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
THE WANDERER'S HOME.&#13;
&#13;
A portion of the ground is set apart to be separately&#13;
&#13;
enclosed, having a Senior and a Junior Department,&#13;
&#13;
termed the WANDERER'S HOME, where paupers and &#13;
&#13;
friendless strangers may have burial, under the follow-&#13;
&#13;
ing prescribed&#13;
&#13;
REGULATIONS.&#13;
&#13;
1. The graves shall be opened in regular rows, &#13;
&#13;
succeeding one another in order of date, and at uniform&#13;
&#13;
distances.&#13;
&#13;
2. A head-stone shall be erected at each of the&#13;
&#13;
several graves, of uniform size and character, two feet&#13;
&#13;
high, fourteen inches wide, and two inches thick, with&#13;
&#13;
a plain inscription of the name, age, and time of death&#13;
&#13;
of the deceased.&#13;
&#13;
3. The same fees for opening and closing the grave&#13;
&#13;
shall be paid as in other cases, with one dollar addi-&#13;
&#13;
tional for the use and care of the ground; which fees, </text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 37 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
together with the cost of the head-stone, shall be paid&#13;
&#13;
as other funeral expenses, and before the burial.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--This arrangement secures to all, however poor, not&#13;
&#13;
only a decent burial, but a substantial, though plain, monumental&#13;
&#13;
record. And as this department must necessarily remain under&#13;
&#13;
the exclusive control of the Board, there is a reasonable certainty&#13;
&#13;
of its receiving perpetual care and attention. The cost of the &#13;
&#13;
stone cannot be definitely given, as it must necessarily vary; but&#13;
&#13;
it can unquestionably be obtained under a general arrangement&#13;
&#13;
of the Board at a much less price than by individuals. Where&#13;
&#13;
other resources are insufficient, it is expected that the legal pro-&#13;
&#13;
visions for the poor will be made applicable to this, as for other&#13;
&#13;
purposes.]</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 38 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
REQUISITE FEES.&#13;
&#13;
For opening and closing graves 5 feet deep, - - $2 00&#13;
&#13;
"   "       "   "       "      4 "    "    - - - 1 50&#13;
&#13;
"   "       "   "       "    3 1/2 "  "    - - - 1 00&#13;
&#13;
For each deed of lot and its record,   - - - - -   50&#13;
&#13;
"   " transfer of lot "  "   "    - - - - - -    2 00&#13;
&#13;
RULES FOR VISITORS.&#13;
&#13;
1. No horses or carriages will be admitted on the&#13;
&#13;
Sabbath, except on occasion of burials.&#13;
&#13;
2. No riding or driving will be allowed faster than&#13;
&#13;
four miles an hour.&#13;
&#13;
3. No persons will be admitted with fire-arms.&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 39 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
4. Horses must never be fastened to trees, shrub-&#13;
&#13;
bery, or enclosures of lots, and must never be left&#13;
&#13;
unfastened.&#13;
&#13;
5. All persons are prohibited from picking either&#13;
&#13;
wild or cultivated flowers, injurying any tree, shrub, or&#13;
&#13;
plant, entering any enclosure without leave, writing or &#13;
&#13;
marking upon, defacing, or in any way injurying any&#13;
&#13;
monument, vault, railing, or other structure.&#13;
&#13;
6. No person will be permitted to disturb the quiet,&#13;
&#13;
or good order of the place in any way, and all propri-&#13;
&#13;
eties due to its sacred character should be observed,&#13;
&#13;
and will be required on all occasions.&#13;
&#13;
[NOTE.--As a matter of general interest, we state, that the&#13;
&#13;
entire grounds intended for that purpose, have been surveyed into&#13;
&#13;
burial lots, varying in size from a few feet, to six or seven hun-&#13;
&#13;
dred in superficial surface--the average being about four hundred &#13;
&#13;
square feet. The total number of lots is about one thousand.&#13;
&#13;
They have also been appraised at rates varying from one to six&#13;
&#13;
cents per square foot--the average being about four cents. So&#13;
&#13;
that lots vary in appraised value from $3 up to $30 or $40.&#13;
&#13;
There are many very pleasant small lots to be found, for sums&#13;
&#13;
varying from $5 to $10. So that any and every person may&#13;
&#13;
command a situation here, that could obtain one any where else.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 40 of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
It is not inteneded, however, that this appraisement shall be per-&#13;
&#13;
petual, nor will it probably remain longer than circumstances&#13;
&#13;
demand an expeditious sale of lots.]&#13;
&#13;
CORRECTION.--In the Preliminary Address, page 11, middle &#13;
&#13;
of the page, instead of 900, read 450.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to back cover of Oak Grove Cemetery booklet]&#13;
&#13;
[back cover blank]</text>
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                  <text>Delaware</text>
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                  <text>This collection contains a variety of items pertaining to different events and organizations in the City of Delaware, Delaware County, Ohio including commerce, history, and schools.</text>
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                <text>Oak Grove Cemetery at Delaware, Ohio 1850-51</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>This book contains the rules and regulations of Oak Grove Cemetery in Delaware, Ohio, along with the dedication ceremony of Oak Grove Cemetery, 1850-51.</text>
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                <text> Scott &amp; Bascom; Columbus; 1852</text>
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                <text>1850-1852</text>
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                <text>22221003</text>
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                    <text>[page 1]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of Delaware Blue Book 1913]&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE&#13;
&#13;
-OHIO-&#13;
&#13;
BLUE BOOK&#13;
&#13;
PRICE [image of two men smoking cigars] 15 CTS.&#13;
&#13;
SOME ~ FACTS AND&#13;
&#13;
	FIGGERS ~&#13;
&#13;
1913&#13;
&#13;
COMPILED BY&#13;
&#13;
C.A. JONES. G.G. WHITEHEAD.</text>
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                    <text>The Delaware Ohio Blue Book (p. 1)</text>
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                    <text>[page 2]

[corresponds to inside of front cover of Delaware Blue Book]

Natural Gas

Gladdens the Home

Natural Gas

Is the Best, Cheapest and Most Satis-

factory Fuel on Earth. The People

Who Use It Know This.

The Delaware

Gas Co.</text>
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                    <text>[page 3]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 3 of Delaware Blue Book]

[left hand side]

The Store 

Where

Styles

Originate

[image of woman with hat]

The Store

that Others

Try to 

Imitate

[right hand side]

New York Cash Store

Cloak and Suit Dept.

Leaders in outer garment

apparels, always showing

the newest and most up to 

date Coats, Suits and Dress-

es from New York's fore-

most designers. Also 

Waists, Petticoats, Furs,

Raincoats and Skirts. A

visit to this department is

convincing and quality guar-

anteed. We show new 

ideas every week.

SATISFACTION GUARAN-

TEED OR MONEY

REFUNDED</text>
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                    <text>[page 4]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 4 of Delaware Blue Book]

THE SPECIALTIES

-OF THE-

Cregmile Carpet Company

-ARE-

Rugs				Expert 

Draperies			Advice

Linoleum			in

Matting				Choosing

and

Window Shades

The Best

'Selections

the Market 

Affords

Your Inspection of Our Showings is Solicited

20 North Sandusky Street

(With THE STANDARD Clothing Co.)

-Headquarters For-

Pennants, Leather Pillows and Banners

GET OUR PRICES</text>
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                    <text>The Delaware Ohio Blue Book (p. 4)</text>
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                    <text>[page 5]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 5 of Delaware Blue Book]

Now, as Always, it is the

Leading Insurance Company

in the Country

The Ohio Farmers' 

Insurance Company

Began business in Delaware

County in 1850

Rates as low as the lowest--

always consistent with relia-

ble indemnity. Losses ad-

justed satisfactorily as our

past record of 62 years will

show. Your business solic-

ited.

W.S.

POLLOCK

LOANS, LIVE STOCK

INSURANCE,

REAL ESTATE</text>
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                    <text>The Delaware Ohio Blue Book (p. 5)</text>
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                    <text>[page 6]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 6 of Delaware Blue Book]

DELAWARE

CITY MAP

FOUR WARDS

12 PRECINCTS

HEAVY LINES-WARDS.

DOTTED LINES-POTS.

[?] VOTING PLACES

DIVIDING LINE IS

ALWAYS MID-ST.

J. AND W. 

1913

[map]</text>
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                    <text>[page 7]

[corresponds to page 7 of Delaware Blue Book]

City of Delaware.

VOTING PLACES AND TERRITORIES.

First Ward.

Precinct A--Territory bounded by Sandusky street on the east,

Winter street on the south, Liberty on the west and Lincoln avenue

on the north. Voting place, Courthouse basement.

Precinct B--Bounded by Liberty street on the east, Winter

street as far as Elizabeth and William street to the corporation line

on the south, corporation line on the west and Lincoln avenue on the

north. Voting place, Evans residence, 181 North Liberty street.

Precinct C--Bounded on the north and west by the corporation 

line, on the east by Sandusky street and on the south by Lincoln

avenue. Voting place, F. M. Marriott garage.

Second Ward.

Precinct A--Northern boundary is Winter street, with Sandusky

on the east, Park avenue on the south and Liberty street on the west.

Voting place, building at Delaware run on Franklin street.

Precinct B--Bounded on north by Winter street from Winter to 

Elizabeth, then west on William street; on east by Liberty street,

south by Park avenue and west by corporation line. Voting place,

Shaffer residence on South Liberty street.

Precinct C--Bounded on north by Park avenue, east by Liberty

street, south and west by corporation line. Voting place, High-

warden building on South Liberty street.

Prceinct [sic] D--Bounded on north by Park avenue, east by San-

dusky street, south by corporation line and west by Liberty street.

Voting place, English's barn, near corner Railroad and Sandusky

streets.

Third Ward. 

Precinct A--Bounded on north by East Winter street, east by

the Olentangy river, south by corporation line and west by Sandusky

street. Voting place, City Hall.

Precinct B--Bounded on north by Winter street, east and south

by corporation line and west by the river. Voting place, Ferguson

house, corner Lewis and William streets.

Fourth Ward.

Precinct A--Bounded on north by corporation line, on east by

the river, south by Winter street and west by Sandusky street.

Voting place, Company K armory.

Precinct B--Bounded on north by corporation line, east by Big

Four railway, south by Winter street, and west by the Olentangy

river. Voting place, near corner Annette and East Winter streets.

Precinct C--Includes territory north of Winter street and east

of the Big Four tracks. Voting place, Maloney house on East Cen-

tral avenue, just east of Potter street.

7</text>
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                    <text>[page 8]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 8 of Delaware Blue Book]

Neville = Made

CLOTHES

ARE

The Stylish Cut

The Cheapest Price

The Best Made

The Goods that Wear Best

Then why try others when you are

sure to get the best value and

satisfaction from

NEVILLE

22 1-2 N SANDUSKY ST. THE TAILOR</text>
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                    <text>[page 9]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 9 of Delaware Blue Book]

A FOREWORD

There is at all times a demand for information of various kinds

relative to the city and county of Delaware. Hundreds of queries are

answered weekly from the newspaper offices. This book is an en-

deavor to place in a convenient form, such as the city has not pre-

viously had, the information that is often useful to both citizens and

non-residents. C. A. JONES, G. G. WHITEHEAD,

Compilers.

INDEX

Agricultural Statistics........... 57		Expenses ............... 91

Ashley, Officials, etc............ 29		Council ................ 15

Athletic Records................17-18		Facts of Interest....... 89

Banks ............................ 37		Clerks-Townships ....... 53

Benevolent Institutions........... 43		Commercial Club......... 79

Building and Loan Associations.... 37	 Constitutional Amendment Vote.. 41

Carnegie Library ................. 83	     County-Officials ....... 45-47

Church Directory .............. 83 1/2	        Duties of Officials..... 47

City--History .................... 61		Map .................. 16 1/2

      Officials .................. 15	 Creation--County .............. 59

      Salaries ................ 16 1/2   Court--Times of Holding........ 21

      Duties of Officials ........ 93		Districts .............. 21

SELL BROTHERS

STATIONERS

EVERYTHING FOR THE OFFICE

Kodaks and Photo Supplies

Victor-Victrolas

Leather Goods

And Everything to be found in a First-Class Stationery Store.

PHONE 288</text>
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                    <text>[page 10]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 10 of Delaware Blue Book]

NOTICE

Good Clothes Are an

Index to Character

Our Shirts and Neckwear have

that individuality of quality and

appearance that cannot fail to

please. 

Our Men's Furnishings are a

feast of fine fixings from the

foremost makers.

J. M. Mead

Haberdasher	Dry Cleaning and Pressing

69 North Sandusky Street</text>
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                    <text>[page 11]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 11 of Delaware Blue Book]

INDEX--Continued

Distances in County........... 95	Public Service Corporations....... 39

Election--Results ............ 41	City Contracts.................... 89

	  Cost of............. 49	Red Cross Seals .................. 53

Expenses--City ............... 91	Rivers ........................... 93

	  County ............. 49	Railroad Time Tables........... 13-15

Express Companies ............ 35	Railroad History ................. 59

Fair Dates.................... 57	Rural Postal Routes............... 89

Fraternal Directory ....... 69-78	Safety Department ............ 16 1/2

Girls' Industrial Home ....... 63	Salaries--City ............... 16 1/2

Hayes, Rutherford B........... 63		  County ................. 47

Historical Facts.............. 59	Schools--Cost, Salaries........... 55

Industries ................ 31-33		 City .................... 55

Interurban Lines ............. 63	Settlement Dates ................. 59

Maps--City ...................  6	Senatorial District............... 21

      County ............. 16 1/2	Street Directory .............. 23-29

      Parcel Post............. 87	Street Names...................... 59

Marriages .................... 49	Street Railway ................... 85

Mayors of Delaware............ 63	Sunbury Officials ................ 29

Mortgages .................... 49	Taxation Figures.................. 49

Newspapers ................... 39	Telegraph Hours .................. 83

Oak Grove Cemetery ........... 89	Time Tables.................... 13-15

Ohio Wesleyan University...... 37	Township--Clerks ................. 53

Oldest Buildings.............. 59		  Map ................ 16 1/2

Organizations ............. 81-82		  Acreage ................ 65

Ostrander--Officials, etc..... 29		  Population ............. 65

Parcel Post and Rates......... 86		  Values ................. 65

Parcel Post Zone Map ......... 87	Voting Places ....................  7

Party Organizations........... 83	Villages ......................... 29

Population Facts.............. 65	Wool in Eighth District........... 20

Postoffice, Officials, etc.... 85	Wet and Dry Vote.................. 43

					Y. M. C. A........................ 79

LOOKING FOR THE BEST

-IN-

Men's Clothing and Furnishings

-SEE-

Warren &amp; Dengler

SANDUSKY STREET</text>
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                    <text>[page 12]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 12 of Delaware Blue Book]

Any Time, All the Time

Let Your Train of Thought Take You to

Bob Watson's Jack

Smoke House

Hotel Donavin Block

-ALWAYS ON TIME WITH-

Magazines News

Cigars Huyler's

Cigarettes Reymer's

Pipes Whitman's

Post Cards Candy

WATCH OUR SMOKE</text>
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                    <text>[page 13]

[corresponds to page 13 of Delaware Blue Book]

Railway Time Tables.

RAILWAY TIME TABLES.

Big Four--Westbound, 12:17 a.m., 5:52 a.m., 10:35 a.m., 3:08

p.m., 9:02 p.m. Eastbound, 2:50 a.m., 7:58 a.m., 12:26 

p.m., 5:20 p.m., 10:13 p.m. Westbound train due at 10:35

and eastbound at 5:20 do not run on Sunday.

Springfield Branch--Leave Delaware 6:10 a.m., 3:20 p.m. Arrive

Delaware 12:20 p.m., 7:15 p.m. No trains on Sunday.

Pennsylvania--Southbound, 11:05 a.m., 8:51 p.m. Northbound,

7:42 a.m., 6:14 p.m.

Hocking Valley--Northbound, 7:01 a.m., 9:45 a.m., 3:31 p.m.,

5:30 p.m., 10:57 p.m. Southbound, 6:21 a.m., 8:00 a.m., 

11:00 a.m., 1:56 p.m., 8:00 p.m. The 7:01 northbound and

1:56 southbound trains do not run on Sunday. The 5:30 north-

bound runs thirty minutes late Saturday and Sunday; run to

Marion only.

COLUMBUS, DELAWARE &amp; MARION ELECTRIC RAILWAY.

-Southbound- 				-Northbound-

Lv. Dela.	Ar. Colum.		Lv. Dela.	Ar. Marion.

5:10 a.m.	6:18 a.m.		4:55 a.m.	5:55 a.m.

6:03		7:18			5:55		6:55

*7:03		8:18			6:55		7:55

*8:03		9:18			7:55		8:55

9:03		10:18			9:55		10:55

*10:03		11:18			11:55		12:55 p.m.

11:03		12:18 p.m.		1:55 p.m.	2:55

*12:03 p.m. 	1:18			3:55		4:55

1:03		2:18			5:55		6:55

*2:03		3:18			7:55		8:55

3:03		4:18			9:55		10:55

*4:03		5:18			Limited Cars.

5:03		6:18			9:03 a.m.	9:50 a.m.

*6:03		7:18			1:03 p.m.	1:50 p.m.

7:03		8:18			5:03		5:50

*8:03		9:18

9:03		10:18

*10:03		11:18

Limited Cars.

6:48 a.m.	7:45 a.m.

8:48		9:45

12:48 p.m.	1:45 p.m.

4:48		5:45

*These cars from Marion to Columbus make street stops in 

North and South Delaware.

All regular cars leave Columbus on the half hour, from 6:30

a.m. to 10:30 p.m. The theater car leaves Columbus C., D. &amp; M.

station at 11:20 p.m., reaching Delaware at 12:45 a.m.

13</text>
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                    <text>[page 14]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 14 of Delaware Blue Book]

Those Who Know Delaware, Also

Know the Quality of

Jewelry, Watches and

Silverware

-SOLD BY-

Young's Jewelry 

Store

Special attention to repair work,

and the quality is guaranteed, be-

cause we do it ourselves.</text>
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                    <text>[page 15]

[corresponds to page 15 of Delaware Blue Book]

Limited cars leave Columbus at 8 a.m., 12 noon and 4 p.m.,

stopping at North Columbus, Worthington, Delaware, Prospect and

Marion. Radnor is a signal stop. Limiteds do not run on Sundays

nor holidays, but there is hourly service to Marion on such days.

Regular cars stop at almost all streets crossed in Columbus, Dela-

ware and Marion.

DELAWARE, MAGNETIC SPRINGS &amp; RICHWOOD RAILWAY.

Northbound--Leave Delaware 7:56 a.m., 8:26 a.m., 12:56 p.m.,

3:26 p.m., 5:56 p.m. and 8:26 p.m.

Southbound--Arrive Delaware 7:45 a.m., 10:25 a.m., 12:55 p.m.,

3:25 p.m., 5:55 p.m. and 8:25 p.m.

The distance to Magnetic Springs is 13 miles and to Richwood

18 miles.

Delaware City Officials.

Bert V. Leas (D.), Mayor.	Arthur J. White (R.), Solicitor.

H.L. Eliot (R.), Vice Mayor	F.D. King (R.), Auditor.

J. Windsor Cone (D.), Treasurer.

CITY COUNCIL.

Herbert L. Eliot (R.), Pres.	Robt. Parker, Jr. (D.), Pres. pro tem.

F.D. King (R.), Clerk.

Members-at-large, George G. Whitehead (D.), Henry Freese (D.),

William A. Howald (D.). First ward, C.W. Chidester (R.);

Second ward, C. C. Dunlap (R.); Third ward, William Hanra-

han (D.); Fourth ward, Robert Parker, Jr. (D.).

Standing Committees of Council--Finance, Dunlap, Parker, White-

head; service, Parker, Dunlap, Freese; safety, Freese, Chidester,

Whitehead; law and ordinance, Whitehead, Howald, Hanrahan;

claims, Chidester, Parker, Howald; sanitation, Hanrahan,

Freese, Dunlap; library, Howald, Chidester, Hanrahan. Regular

meeting, first Monday evening of each month.

PUBLIC SERVICE DEPARTMENT.

Stephen Potter, director of public service; I. E. Martin, clerk; George

S. Irwin, engineer; Clarence Hazelton, street commissioner; 

William Wohlheater, custodian city building.

PUBLIC SAFETY DEPARTMENT.

A. J. Willey, director of public safety; F. D. King, clerk; James

Spaulding, chief of police; Charles Keiser, chief of city fire de-

partment.

BOARD OF CONTROL.

Bert V. Leas, chairman ex-officio; F. D. King, clerk; Stephen Potter,

A. J. Willey.

BOARD OF HEALTH.

Bert V. Leas, chairman ex-officio; F. V. Miller, health officer and

clerk; A. K. Harmount, J. J. McGough, George Firtch, Joseph

Schweitzer, Charles C. Smith.

15</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="11068">
                    <text>[page 16]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 16 of Delaware Blue Book]

You don't need a hand book

to secure the best values in

House Furnishings

If you buy of

Swickheimer

&amp; Noble

40-42 S. Sandusky Street

All kinds of FURNITURE, "from the

cheapest that's good to the best that's made."

The largest line of LACE CURTAINS

and DRAPERIES in the city.

A complete line of all makes of STOVES

and RANGES, including the famous Majestic

Malleable Ranges, charcoal iron body.

Exclusive agents for the Whittall line of

WILTON and BRUSSELS RUGS.

All kinds of FLOOR COVERINGS.

No matter what it is you want

for the furnishing of your home,

see us before you buy.</text>
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                    <text>[page 17]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 17 of Delaware Blue Book]

DELAWARE COUNTY

MAP

[map of Delaware County townships and towns, with bordering counties labeled]

J. and W

1913</text>
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                    <text>[page 18]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 18 of Delaware Blue Book]

Sinking Fund Trustees--C. E. Kuhlthau, Paul Bliss, E. R. Wil-

liams, W. F. Thompson.

Civil Service Commission--James Neville, H. T. Main, B. P. Benton.

Trustees Carnegie Library--V. D. Stayman, C. W. Wiles, George H.

Carter, W. M. Heseltine, H. T. Main, T. J. Griffin, D. H. Batten-

field, clerk.

Board of Education--G. J. Hoffman, president; D. E. Hughs, secre-

tary; E. M. Semans.

City School Examiners--William McK. Vance, John A. Shoemaker,

Henry T. Main.

United States Distributing Agent for Delaware--E. I. Pollock.

Deputy City Auditor--Miss Rena Swickheimer.

Night Captain Police--William Pickett.

Sanitary Policeman--Joseph Hartsough.

Sanitary Contractor--James Gatton.

Keeper of the Royal Pound--James Jamison.

SAFETY DEPARTMENT.

Police--James Spaulding, chief; Frank vining, night captain.

Officers, William Pickett, Charles Ruder, Frank Pliickebaum,

Jr., and William Wilson.

Number of arrests in past five years: 1908, 357; 1909, 238; 

1910, 214; 1911, 243; 1912, 317. February and April seem to be

the most peaceable months, while police are busiest in July. The

1912 record by months is as follows: January, 21; February, 17;

March 25; April, 21; May, 28; June, 27; July, 45; August, 26; Sep-

tember, 24; October, 31; November, 21; December, 31.

Fire Department--Chief, Charles Keiser. Captain Frank Amrine,

Firemen Sam Jones and Rollie Morey, Central department;

Captain Clive Dall, Fireman Earl Amrine, East Side depart-

ment. Combination automobile fire truck and motor equipment 

for hook and ladder wagon added to Central station in spring

of 1913. There were forty alarms in 1912, with total damage

of but $8,560. In 1911 there were but 33 alarms, while in 1910

there were 51. December is the worst month for fires.

SALARIES OF CITY OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYES.

Mayor, $1,000 per annum; vice mayor, $75 per annum; city so-

licitor, $500 per annum; city auditor, $900 per annum; city treas-

urer, $480 per annum; city councilman, $60 per annum; service

director, $500 per annum; safety director, $200 per annum; clerk of

board of control, $100 per annum; clerk to service director, $140 

per annum; clerk to safety director, $100 per annum; city engineer,

$4.50 per day; clerk of council, $300 per annum; street commis-

sioner, $800 per annum; health officer, $600 per annum; sanitary

policeman, $57 per month; city fireman, $57 per month; chief of fire

department, $70 per month; city police, $57 per month; captain of

police, $62 per month; chief of police, $70 per month; custodian of

city building, $50 per month; street laborers, graded from $1.75 to

$2.50 per day; white wings, $26 per month; dog catcher, 50 cents

each for dogs, 25 cents each for cats. Clerkships bring the salary of

the city auditor to a more reasonable figure than the nominal $900,

as seen by the above payroll.</text>
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                    <text>The Delaware Ohio Blue Book (p. 18)</text>
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                    <text>[page 19]

[corresponds to page 17 of Delaware Blue Book]

Athletic Records.

OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY--1912.

Basketball.

Wesleyan ...............61	Buchtel ...............14

Wesleyan ...............13	Colgate ...............39

Wesleyan ...............19	St. Lawrence ..........33

Wesleyan ...............12	Rochester .............37

Wesleyan ...............11	Allegheny .............41

Wesleyan ...............20	Ohio State ............23

Wesleyan ...............32	Cincinnati ............24

Wesleyan ...............38	Wittenberg ............17

Wesleyan ...............39	Ohio University .......27

Wesleyan ...............35	Rochester .............25

Wesleyan ...............36	Denison ...............25

Wesleyan ...............36 	Western Reserve .......26

Wesleyan ...............29	Wooster ...............25

Wesleyan ...............30	Wooster ...............25

Wesleyan ...............63 	Cincinnati ............22

Wesleyan ...............28	Allegheny .............18

Wesleyan ...............47	Denison ...............25

Wesleyan ...............33	Ohio State ............15

			__				__

Wesleyan ..............582	Opponents .............470

Baseball.

Wesleyan ...............5	Ohio Medics ...............4

Wesleyan ...............2	Western Reserve ...........8
.
Wesleyan ...............2	Kentucky ..................5

Wesleyan ...............2	Michigan Ags. .............1

Wesleyan ...............3	Michigan ..................8

Wesleyan ...............1	Wooster ...................2

Wesleyan ...............3	Case ......................2

Wesleyan ...............8	Washington and Jefferson ..7

Wesleyan ...............3	West Virginia .............2

Wesleyan ...............2	Michigan Ags ..............5

Wesleyan ...............5	Ohio State ................8

Wesleyan ...............3	Ohio State ................0

Wesleyan ...............5	Otterbein .................2

Wesleyan ...............6	Ohio University ...........3

Wesleyan ...............4 	Ohio University ...........5

Wesleyan ...............5	Wooster ...................2

*Wesleyan .............10	Alumni ...................11

Wesleyan ...............6	Denison ...................2

Wesleyan ...............1	Muskingum ................12

Wesleyan ...............8	Oberlin ...................5

			__				  __

Wesleyan ...............84	Opponents ................94

*Post season series of four games.

17</text>
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                    <text>[page 20]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 18 of Delaware Blue Book]

The Music Center of Delaware

Piano buyers are pleased with

every phase of their purchase here

[image of three people and pianos in a store]

FOR EVERYTHING MUSICAL

The Chute &amp; Butler

Music Store

K. C. FERGUSON, Manager

30 South Sandusky Street  Delaware, Ohio

Phone No. 91 for Expert Tuning and Repairing.

McKinley and Carl Fischer Edition of Sheet Music.</text>
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                    <text>[page 21]

[corresponds to page 19 of Delaware Blue Book]

Football.

Wesleyan ..................16		Otterbein ..................0

Wesleyan ...................6		Denison ...................19

Wesleyan ...................8		Ohio University ............6

Wesleyan ...................7		Oberlin ...................48

Wesleyan ...................6		Case ......................19

Wesleyan ...................0		Michigan Ags. .............46

Wesleyan ..................20		Wooster ....................7

Wesleyan ...................0		Reserve ....................7

Wesleyan ...................6		Ohio State ................39

			   ___					   ___

Wesleyan ..................69		Opponents .................191

DELAWARE HIGH SCHOOL--1912.

Basketball.

Delaware H.S. .............33		Alumni ...................27

Delaware H.S. ............111		Ashley ...................11

Delaware H.S. .............64		Mutes ....................18

Delaware H.S. .............70		Worthington ..............19

Delaware H.S. .............46		Company K ................26

Delaware H.S. .............43		Galion ....................7

Delaware H.S. .............33		Stivers ..................19

Delaware H.S. .............46		Marion ...................20

Delaware H.S. .............35		Newark ...................25

Delaware H.S. .............38		Lancaster ................22

Delaware H.S. .............33		Plain City ...............22

Delaware H.S. .............38		Kingston .................12

Delaware H.S. .............34		Crestline .................5

Delaware H.S. .............25		Springfield ..............23

Delaware H.S. .............10 		Findlay ..................22

Delaware H.S. .............15		Springfield ..............16

			  ___					  ___

Delaware H.S. ............674		Opponents ...............294

Baseball.

Delaware H.S. .............7		Alumni ..................6

Delaware H.S. .............7		Galion ..................3

Delaware H.S. .............6		Marion ..................9

Delaware H.S. .............10		Galion ..................3

Delaware H.S. .............6		Marion ..................1

Delaware H.S. .............5		Mt. Gilead ..............8

Delaware H.S. .............8		Mt. Gilead .............11

			  ___					___

Delaware H.S. .............49		Opponents ..............41

Football.

Delaware H.S. .............14		Alumni ..................0

Delaware H.S. .............53		Mt. Gilead ..............0

Delaware H.S. .............13		Columbus East ...........7

Delaware H.S. ............101		Crestline ...............7

Delaware H.S. .............62		Doane Academy ...........0

Delaware H.S. ..............6		Ohio Wesleyan Freshmen ..0

Delaware H.S. .............25		Mt. Gilead ..............6

19

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                    <text>[page 22]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 20 of Delaware Blue Book]

THE

DAVIS

STUDIO

Makers of High Grade Photos

and Portraits

The Largest and Best Equipped 

Studio in the City.

Opposite College Campus.</text>
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                    <text>[page 23]

[corresponds to page 21 of Delaware Blue Book]

Delaware H.S. .............14		Columbus North .............0

Delaware H.S. .............45		Cleveland Central ..........0

			  ___					   ___

Delaware H.S. ............333		Opponents ..................13

COMPANY K BASKET BALL RECORD, 1912.

Company K .................21		Marysville Crescents .......15

Company K .................60		Dublin .....................13

Company K ..................5		New Straitsville ...........48

Company K .................29		Columbus Independents .......1

Company K .................18		Ashville ...................40

Company K .................41		Kenton Independents ........14

Company K .................19		Marysville .................55

Company K .................10		Plain City .................26

Company K .................12		Plain City .................50

Company K .................12		Delaware Reps. .............32

Company K .................47		Big Four ....................6

Company K .................42		Northern Blues .............20

Company K .................24		Marysville .................15

Company K .................11 		Delaware Reps. .............32

Company K .................35		O.S.U. Sophomores ..........24

Company K .................15		Northern Blues .............44

Company K .................37		Columbus Reps. .............10

Company K .................17		Marysville .................54

Company K .................15		Dublin .....................17

			  ____					   ____

Company K ................470		Opponents .................516

DELAWARE--IN WHAT DISTRICTS.

Common Pleas Judicial--First subdivision, sixth district, Dela-

ware, Licking and Knox counties. Judges, H. W. Jewell, Delaware,

and T. B. Fulton, Newark.

Circuit Judicial--Fifth circuit, Delaware, Ashland, Morrow,

Richland, Knox, Licking, Fairfield, Perry, Morgan, Muskingum, Co-

shocton, Holmes, Wayne, Stark and Tuscarawas counties. Judges,

Voorhees of Coshocton, Shields of Canton and Powell of Morrow.

F. M. Marriott, Delaware, ended the short term February 9, being

succeeded by L. K. Powell of Mt. Gilead.

Senatorial--Fifteenth-sixteenth, Delaware, Licking, Muskingum

and Perry counties. Hon. W. E. Haas, Delaware, second term.

Congressional--Eighth district, Delaware, Hancock, Hardin,

Logan, Champaign and Union counties. Hon. Frank B. Willis, na-

tive of Delaware, but later of Ada, second term.

Hon. F. M. Marriott, ex-judge of the circuit court, was Dela-

ware county's representative at the Fourth Ohio Constitutional Con-

vention held in Columbus the first half of 1912.

TIMES OF HOLDING COURT.

Court of Appeals--Voorhees, Shields, Powell; May 27, Nov. 25.

Common Pleas--Jewell, Fulton; Jan. 6, April 7, Sept. 15.

21</text>
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                    <text>[page 24]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 22 of Delaware Blue Book]

Gilbert's Bakery

THE HOUSE OF QUALITY.

TRY OUR MILK BREAD

Made from pure full cream milk. We have a fine line of appe-

tizing Cakes, Cream Puffs, Cookies, Cinnamon Rolls, Dough-

nuts, etc.

BOSTON BROWN BREAD.

RYE AND GRAHAM BREADS.

Our customers are satisfied with the quality of our home-

baked goods. Join in and help boost Delaware products.

Gilbert's Bakery

12 SOUTH SANDUSKY ST. PHONE 402.

Established 1862

INSEPARABLE COMPANIONS--SHOES AND MANKIND.

Shoes that please mankind have to fit right, feel right, look

right and be PRICED right.

We, as shoe dealers, make it our highest aim to fill the

bill.

We buy our shoes of strong, well-known manufacturers,

who stand behind the goods. We stand behind the shoes we

sell.

In every department--Men's Women's and Children's--

we are strong. We want your trade. We extend a special in-

vitation for you to call and look over our shoes, whether you

are in the market or not. We issue premium tickets with

every sale.

REMEMBER THE OLD SHOE STAND.

B. W. Brown &amp; Co.</text>
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                    <text>[page 25]

[corresponds to page 23 of Delaware Blue Book]

Delaware Street Directory.

The dividing line between streets east and west in Delaware is

Sandusky street, and between streets north and south is William

street. William street was designed as the main thoroughfare of the

city by its founders, and in the central section is sixty feet wide.

Natural conditions, primarily the natural route of traffic along the

old Sandusky trail, from Columbus to the lakes, made Sandusky the

business street of the city despite the original plans. Delaware has

115 streets and avenues, named as follows:

(Unless otherwise noted, the suffix "street" is correct.)

Ann--From East William south, second east of Big Four railroad.

Annette--From AEast Winter north to East Central avenue, second 

east of river.

Bank--From Wade street east along Big Four railroad.

Belle Avenue--From Sandusky street west to the Liberty road, south

boundary of the corporation.

Berlin--From Vine street south to city limits.

Bern--From Pennsylvania avenue to Heffner street, sixth west of 

Sandusky.

Blymyer--From Lincoln avenue to city limits, second east of San-

dusky.

Branch--North from Hayes street to Calm street.

Calm--From Frank street east to Branch street.

Campbell--North and south between West Central avenue and West

Lincoln avenue, sixth west of Sandusky--city car line.

Carlisle Avenue--North from Flax street, second west of Lake.

Catherine--From William to Winter, fourth west of Sandusky.

Central Avenue--East and west, second north of William.

Chamberlain--From Lake street east, second nroth of Big Four

shops.

Channing--From William street north, third east of Big Four.

Cheshire--From East William south, first east of Big Four railroad.

Chestnut--From Pennsylvania north to Heffner street, seventh west

of Sandusky.

Columbus Avenue--North and south between West William street

and Springfield branch of Big Four, second east of Hocking Val-

ley railroad.

Cottage--From Liberty west, first north of Central avenue.

Court--East and west, Sandusky to Franklin, between Courthouse

and Carnegie Library.

Curtis--From West William south, third west of Hocking Valley

railroad.
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                  <elementText elementTextId="11078">
                    <text>[page 26]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 24 of Delaware Blue Book]

The Delaware

National Bank

Delaware, Ohio

The Oldest and Strongest Bank

In The County

Capital, Surplus and Profits

$205,000

THE BANK FOR EVERYBODY

Safe Deposit Boxes

Interest Paid on Time Deposits</text>
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                    <text>[page 27]

[corresponds to page 25 of Delaware Blue Book]

Eaton--From South Liberty west, third south of William.

Elizabeth--From West William street north to Central avenue, fifth

west of Sandusky.

Elm--From Kurrley street east, second south of William.

Euclid--From West Central avenue north, seventh west of Sandusky.

Fair Avenue--From Big Four railroad east, second north of East

Central avenue.

Flax--From Lybrand street east to Lake street, first north of East

Central avenue.

Forest Avenue--From Lincoln north to Heffner, first west of Liberty.

Fountain avenue--East and west, fourth north of William.

Frank--From East William south, between Big Four viaducts.

Franklin--North and south, first west of Sandusky.

Griswold--From North Franklin west to Euclid, first north of West

Central avenue.

Gruber--From West William south to Spring street, first west of 

Hocking Valley railroad.

Hammond--From East Central avenue north, third east of Big Four

railroad.

Harrison--East and west, between South Henry and South Liberty

streest, fifth south of William.

Hayes--Henry street to river and river to east corporation line, first

south of William.

Heffner--From Union to Euclid streets, fifth of William.

Henry--From East Central avenue, south to Olentangy avenue, sec-

ond east of Sandusky.

High--From South Liberty west to Noble, south of William.

Highland--South from Foutain [sic] avenue, second west of Liberty.

Hillyer Avenue--South from Wootring street, first east of Sandusky.

Hoyt Avenue--South from Wootring street, first east of Sandusky.

John--from Elizabeth street to Kign avenue, first north of William.

Joy Avenue--East from Lake street, fourth north of Central avenue.

King Avenue--From West William north to Central, first west of 

Monnett Hall.

Kirkland--Pennsylvania to Heffner street, fifth west of Sandusky.

Kurrley--From East William south to Big Four railroad, third east

of railroad.

Lake--From East William north, first west of Big Four railroad.

Lewis--North and south between East William and East Winter, sec-

ond east of river.

Liberty--North and south, third west of Sandusky.

Lincoln--East and west, third north of William.

Little--North from William to Winter, first east of river.

Maple--East and west between Noble and David streets.

Mason Avenue--From Liberty to Euclid, first north of Fountain.

Montrose Avenue--South from West William street, third east of 

Hocking Valley railroad.

Morning--Central avenue north, first west of Hocking Valley.

Neil--South from South street, first west of Liberty.

Noble--From Park avenue south to South street, fourth west of

Sandusky.

25
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                    <text>[page 28]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 26 of Delaware Blue Book]

The						"Echo"

Famous	

Chase			ALWAYS			VEGETABLES

&amp;			THE			

Sanborn's		BEST			"The Garden

Coffees			In Things to		Ripe

and Teas		Eat!			Flavor"

J.E. CAMPBELL

PHONE 47

-LET IT BE A-

COMMERCIAL

CIGAR

5 CENTS

J. HESSNAUER &amp; CO., Makers

Delaware, Ohio.</text>
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                    <text>[page 29]

[corresponds to page 27 of Delaware Blue Book]

Oak--East from Potter, third north of William.

Oak Hill Avenue--From South Liberty west, first south of William.

Ohio--West from South Liberty, fifth south of William.

Olentangy Avenue--Sandusky east to river, sixth south of William.

Olentangy Street--South from west end of Prospect street.

Orchard Avenue--Sandusky east, fifth south of William.

Park Avenue--From Sandusky west, third south of William.

Parker--From East Central avenue north to Fair avenue, third east

of Big Four.

Pennsylvania Avenue--Sandusky weset, sixth north of William.

Perkins Avenue--William to Spring streets, second west of Hocking

Valley railroad.

Plum--South from Fountain avenue, first west of Liberty.

Potter--North and south, first east of Big Four railroad.

Prospect--From Lake street to river, second north of Central.

Railroad--From South Sandusky west along Springfield branch of

Big Four, fourth south of William.

Ralph--From Pennsylvania railroad to Wolfley street, first north of

Fountain avenue.

Reid--From Lake east to Channing, first north of Central avenue.

Renner--From Cheshire east along Big Four railroad.

Rheem--From Cheshire east, first south of William.

Richardson--From Central to William, second east of Big Four.

Ross--From South Liberty west, first south of Railroad.

Sandusky--North and south, the main street of the city, Columbus to

Marion and Sandusky road.

Sheldon--South from South street, third west of Liberty.

Smith--North and south, fourth east of Lake.

South--West from Sandusky, south of William.

Spencer--From Pennsylvania street to Heffner street, fourth west of

Sandusky.

Spring--From South Sandusky west, first south of William.

State--From Hayes to Vining streets, first east of Berlin street.

Stillson--South from South street to Oak Grove Cemetery, second

west of Liberty.

Sweetzer Avenue--From Wootring street north, first east of San-

dusky.

Tod Avenue--From Montrose avenue to Toledo street, first west of

Park avenue.

Toledo--From William street Springfield branch of Big Four, first

east of Hocking Valley railroad.

Union--North and South, first east from Sandusky street.

University Avenue--From Sandusky west, second south of William.

VanDeman Avenue--From West Central to Griswold, fifth west of 

Sandusky.

Vernon Avenue No. 1--North from Flax street, first west of Lake.

Vernon Avenue No. 2--East from Channing street, along Big Four.

Vining--From the river to east corporation line, second south of

William.

Wade--From central avenue south to Big Four, fourth east of Big 

Four railroad station.

Walnut No. 1--South from Hayes street, first east of Henry.

27</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="11082">
                    <text>[page 30]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 28 of Delaware Blue Book]

IF IT'S 

GAME

Home-dressed Meats

Seal Shipt Oysters

Poultry

Lobsters

Blue Points

Deliciously Cured Meats

-See The-

THOS. DONOVAN

MEAT MARKETS

PHONE 113</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="146956">
                    <text>The Delaware Ohio Blue Book (p. 30)</text>
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                    <text>[page 31]

[corresponds to page 29 of Delaware Blue Book]

Walnut No. 2--From Wilder to Joy, fifth east of Lake street.

Washington--North and south, second west of Sandusky.

Webb--From Reid street north to Wilder street, first east of Lake.

Weiser Avenue--East from Sandusky to Henry streets, fourth south

of William.

Welch--South from Fountain avenue, third east of Sandusky.

Wells--From Wilder to Joy, third east of Lake street.

Wilder--East from Lake, third north of Central avenue.

William--Main street east and west through city.

Willow--From Wilder to Joy, first east of Lake.

Wilmer--From Sandusky to Henry, first south of William.

Winter--East and west, first north of William.

Wolfley--North from Fountain avenue, third east of Sandusky.

Wootring--From Sandusky to Henry streets, third south of William.

County Towns.

OSTRANDER VILLAGE.

Population, 1910, 431; 1900, 401; 1890, 357.

Postmaster, Martin L. Kalb; superintendent of schools, C. E. 

Weatherby.

Village officials--William C. Bovey (D.), mayor; John W.

Gabriel, clerk; Stanley McKittrick, treasurer; Edward McWade,

Harry W. Robinson, E. F. Stone, A. N. Jacobs, Cal Price, Jasper

Larcomb, councilmen; George P. Liggett, marshal; Earl N. Smart,

assistant marshal and health officer.

SUNBURY VILLAGE.

Population, 1910, 485; 1900, 464; 1890, 475.

Postmaster, Oatfield Whitney; superintendent of schools, Milton

Utley.

Village officials--H. W. Stone (R.), mayor; Milton Utley, clerk;

Charles Armstrong, treasurer; C. D. VanHouten, A. C. Williams,

C. M. Wheaton, A. J. Cook, John Loar, Charles Beaver (resigned),

councilmen; Pearl Stanforth, marshal.

ASHLEY VILLAGE.

Population, 1910, 706; 1900, 700.

Postmaster, George H. Riley; superintendent of schools, W. C. 

Merritt.

Village officials--L. E. Thomas (D.), mayor; George Richards

(R.), clerk; Frank Riley, treasurer; Luther Kirk, Daniel Drake,

Frank Pierce, Ray Watters, Thomas Wilcox and J. B. Lea, council-

men; Walter Shoemaker. marshal.

Figures compiled by Congressman F. B. Willis show that the 

Eighth district of Ohio, of which Delaware county is a part, is the

largest wool producing region in the world.

29</text>
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                    <text>[page 32]

[corresponds to unlabled page 30 of Delaware Blue Book]

MILLER BROTHERS

Funeral Directors

Some (not our friends) advertise us as high-

priced. But are we?

Our record is based on the high quality of

our work, and on the very reasonable charges

which we have always made.

Ambulance Service Day or Night.

PHONE 268.

20 East William Street Delaware, Ohio</text>
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                    <text>[page 33]

[corresponds to page 31 of Delaware Blue Book]

Delaware Industries.

C. &amp; E. Shoe Company--East William street. Started operation

September, 1912. There are now 225 employes, with capacity

for 350 and a daily output of 200 dozen pairs of ladies' and chil-

dren's shoes. C. B. Wolfe is president, and there are factories

in Columbus and Marion, headquarters being in the former city.

The company employs 1,000 men and women, and, beginning

with the spring of 1913, operates an automobile truck between

the three points.

Cook Motor Company--Located west of Hocking Valley. Incor-

porated in 1901. Capital stock, $100,000. Makers of gas, gaso-

line, distillate, naphtha, alcohol and coal oil engines, stantionary

and portable. Fifty employes. Officers: L. L. Denison, presi-

dent and treasurer; H. W. Jewell, vice president; C. C. Stedman,

secretary and general manager. Directors: L. L. Denison,

H. W. Jewell, C. C. Stedman, C. Riddle, C. C. Dunlap, James

Ousey and G. Wirt.

Sunray Stove Company--North Union street. Incorporated Decem-

ber, 1908. Capital stock, $25,000. Makers of gas stoves,

ranges and heaters. Fifteen employes. Officers: S. S. Blair,

president; B. W. Hough, vice president; H. L. Eliot, secretary;

M. C. Russell, treasurer and general manager. Directors:

H. L. Eliot, M. C. Russell, B. W. Hough, S. S. Blair and W. H.

Bodurtha.

Scioto Lime and Stone Company--Plant at Klondyke. H. E. Kend-

rick, manager. Office, 9 New York Cash Store building.

Delaware Garment Company (formerly Delaware Underwear Com-

pany)--South Sandusky street. Incorporated 1903. Capital

stock, $100,000. Makers of wash dresses, skirts and flannellette

gowns. Local employes, 100. Another plant in Galion. Officers:

President, W. A. Morrison; vice president, F. M. Bauereis; sec-

retary-treasurer, J. L. Anderson; directors, officers and R. W.

Cellars and John A. Shoemaker.

Delaware Clay Manufacuring Company--Incorporated 1892. Cap-

ital stock, $250,000. Makers of hollow brick, hollow building

tile, drain tile, silo blocks, fireproofing. Officers: L. L. Deni-

son, president; C. W. Denison, vice president; Ann B. Denison,

secretary-treasurer; directors: L. L. Denison, C. W. Denison,

L. B. Denison, F. P. Hills and Anna B. Denison.

Delaware Ice Company--Incorporated 1904. Capital stock, $20,000.

Officers: Willard Galleher, president; F. P. Hills, vice presi-

dent; L. K. Galleher, secretary; W. B. Galleher, treasurer.

Directors: Officers and J. C. Swickheimer. Average annual

consumption of ice, 2,500 tons.

Automatic Incubator Company--James Ferguson, president; D. H. 

Leas, secretary. Office, 15 East Central avenue.

Potter Cigar Box Factory--Located 17 West William street. W. H.

Potter, manager. Eight employes. Founded 1895.

31</text>
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                    <text>[page 34]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 32 of Delaware Blue Book]

If You Want

Information

-ABOUT-

Lumber, Lime, Plaster, Sand, Cement, Sash Doors,

Builders' Hardware, Paints and Oils or in fact

Anything That it Takes to

Construct a Building

Call Phone 575

-Or Better Still-

Come to Our Office

And Talk it Over.

C. C. DUNLAP

Yard and Office West William Street, Near Hocking Valley Depot</text>
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                    <text>[page 35]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 33 of Delaware Blue Book]

Ohio Wesleyan University

Stands for the Best in Modern Education

[photo of Gray Chapel]

GRAY CHAPEL.

A building that is notable among the college buildings of the

United States.

Location, central and ideal.

Faculty, able and progressive.

Scholarship high.

Enrollment increasing.

Unexcelled physical equipment.

Atmosphere delightful.

Write to Pres. Herbert Welch, D.D., LL.D.

Delaware, Ohio, for Information.</text>
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                    <text>[page 36]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 34 of Delaware Blue Book]

Ohio Wesleyan University

Stands For the Best in Modern Education

[photo of Sanborn Hall]

SANBORN HALL OF MUSIC.

One of the Best Equipped in the Central States.

Courses in Liberal Arts, Music, Fine

Arts, Engineering.

Academy for Those With Deficient Preparation.</text>
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                    <text>[page 37]

[corresponds to page 35 of Delaware Blue Book]

INDUSTRIES.

J. Hessnauer &amp; Co.--Cigar manufacturers; started in 1880;

"Commercial," 5-cent, and "Lynette," 10-cent, chief brands; No. 25

South Sandusky street.

C. C. Dunlap--Lumber; started ten years ago; twenty-five em-

ployes; office on West William street, just west of Hocking Valley

station.

National Fireproofing Company--Main offices at Pittsburg, Pa.,

this being one of thirty factories in the United States; opened on

East William street ten years ago; H. L. Eliot, manager; forty-five

employes.

H. J. McCulloguh &amp; Co.--Started business here in 1853; retail

lumber yards; offices at 88 East Winter street, phone 52.

Delaware Creamery Company--W. Z. Evans, manager; manu-

facturers of ice cream, butter, ice, condensed milk, etc.; established

twelve years ago; heavy business throughout country, the payroll for

dairy products amounting to $60,000 annually.

A. C. Miller Sawmill--West off Lincoln avenue; twenty em-

ployes; in business ten years.

Electric Roller Milling Company--Organized March 23, 1904;

John F. Gaynor, president; Thomas J. Griffin, treasurer; J. G. Rosen-

thal, secretary; manufactureres "Electric" brand flour.

McKenzie Lumber Company--William McKenzie, manager.;

P. H. Said, secretary-treasurer; operate at Delaware, Ashley, Waldo,

Sunbury, Springfield and West Mansfield; wholesale and retail lum-

ber; 150 employes.

Riddle, Graff &amp; Co.--Cigar manufacturers; founded in 1866;

Christian Riddle &amp; Sons; leading brands, "El Delo," "Moss Agate,"

"No Deviation" and others; 130 employes.

White Sulphur Stone Company--George B. Christian, Sr., presi-

dent; B. F. Freshwater, vice president; George B. Christian, Jr., gen-

eral manager; J. F. Dombaugh, secretary-treasurer; O. P. Bird, su-

perintendent.

FOUR EXPRESS COMPANIES.

The four express companies doing business in Delaware county

are assessed a total of $15,000 on the personal property tax dupli-

cate. The American Express Company has the largest holdings, 

while the United States company, with a small office at Peerless on

the Toledo &amp; Ohio Central, is set down for but $20. Aside from this

the valuations are as follows:

American--Delaware, $3,610; Ashley, $2,030; Hyatts, $170;

Leonardsburg, $290; Lewis Center; $200; Meredith, $290; Ostran-

der, $270; Powell, $240; White Sulphur, $60. Total, $7,180.

Adams--Delaware, $1,400; Condit, $150; Galena, $310; Lewis

Center, $40; Norton, $40; Sunbury, $770. Total, $2,710.

Wells Fargo--Delaware, $2,300; Radnor, $40; Troy, $3,550.

Total, $5,890.

35</text>
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                    <text>[page 38]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 36 of Delaware Blue Book]

THE

DELAWARE

SAVINGS BANK

COMPANY

Delaware, Ohio

Does a general Banking Business. Pays in-

terest on Savings Deposits and Time Certificates.

Banking rooms newly remodeled.

President--C. B. Austin

Vice President--B. F. Freshwater

Cashier--F. P. Hills

Assistant Cashier--J. H. Buck.</text>
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                    <text>[page 39]

[corresponds to page 37 of Delaware Blue Book]

OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY.

Under control Methodist Episcopal Church. Established 1844,

on grounds of famous Sulphur Spring and Mansion House. Mansion

House (Elliott Hall) original building. Ohio Wesleyan Female Col-

lege established at Monnett Hall 1853. Union effected and institu-

tion became co-educational 1877. Number of students first semester

1912-13, 1,103. Value of grounds and buildings, $1,000,000. In-

come producing endowment $900,000. Scholarship funds, etc.,

$200,000. Members of faculty, 65. Gray Chapel ranks as the finest

college building of the middle west; cost $180,000 when completed

1893. President board of trustees, Hon. D. S. Gray, Columbus; sec-

retary board of trustees, W. G. Hormell, Delaware, O.; president, 

Dr. Herbert Welch, D.D., LL.D.; vice president, R. T. Stevenson,

B.D., Ph.D.; treasurer, B. E. Cartmell, B.A.; registrar, W. E. 

Smyser, M.A.; dean of women, C. B. Austin; dean of school of ora-

tory, R. I. Fulton; principal academy, D. L. Edwards. Volumes in

library, June, 1912, 62,884.

BANKS.

Delaware National Bank--Assets (February 4, 1913), $737,659.09.

Officers: President and manager, E. I. Pollock; vice president,

T. M. Thomson; cashier, W. Brooks Galleher; directors, E. I. 

Pollock, T. M. Thomson, T. J. Griffin, J. L. Anderson, J. O. 

Gooding, C. G. Lewis, S. S. Blair.

Delaware Savings Bank Company--Assets (February 4, 1913),

$572,393.96. Officers: President, C. B. Austin; vice president,

B. F. Freshwater; cashier, F. P. Hills, W. H. Bodurtha, T. C. 

Jones, L. L. Denison, B. F. Freshwater and Charles Brundige.

Deposit Banking Company--Assets (February 4, 1913), $612,663.66.

Officers: C. Riddle, president; R. G. Lybrand, vice president;

A. S. Conklin, cashier; H. W. Jones, assistant cashier; directors,

C. Riddle, George Cleveland, G. J. Hoffman, E. J. Healey, R. G.

Lybrand, A. S. Conklin, W. M. Heseltine.

First National Bank--Assets (February 4, 1913), $540,013.25.

Officers: M. Miller, president; H. W. Jewell, vice president;

George Powers, cashier; Robert Powers, assistant cashier;

directors, M. Miller, H. W. Jewell; J. D. VanDeman, R. K. Willis,

William M. Miller, G. W. Powers, George W. Thomas.

BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS.

People's Building and Loan Company--Assets (January 31, 1913),

$920,224.27. Officers: President, C. Riddle; vice president,

R. G. Lybrand; secretary, H. C. Clippinger; directors, C. Rid-

dle, R. G. Lybrand, J. E. Campbell, J. H. Cunningham, T. J. 

Griffin, B. F. Freshwater, James Ousey, William McKenzie and

R. J. Pumphrey.

Fidelity Building and Loan Company--Officers: D. H. Battenfield,

president; V. D. Stayman, vice president; Frank S. Watkins, 

secretary; Robert B. Powers, treasurer; directors, D. H. Batten-

field, Dr. W. P. Caldwell, G. J. Hoffman, R. J. Cox, J. D. Van

Deman, M. Miller, E. P. Nash, F. J. R. Pfiffner, V. D. Stayman.

37</text>
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                    <text>[page 40]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 38 of Delaware Blue Book]

1881 Your Money's Worth 1913

or

Your Money Back.

A Great Store for All the People.

New York Cash Store

Department Store. Largest Store in Delaware.

Turney's Department Store

The Place to Buy

German, English and Amer-	A large line of China,

ican open stock Dinnerware.	Jardinieres and Glassware,

A full line of Swiss spun	Lamps, Toilet Sets, Water

Aluminum Cooking Utensils,	Sets and Vases.

not cast, the only goods of	Underwear, Hosiery, Crash, 

this kind shown in the city.	Laces and Embroidery.

Everything Kept in a First-Class Notion Store.

Ours is the Big Christmas Store

Don't Fail to See Us Christmas.

We Carry a Full Line of Groceries, and Deliver.

Come and see us.		R. C. TURNEY,

Always welcome.   Telephone 510.   Proprietor.
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                    <text>[page 41]

[corresponds to page 39 of Delaware Blue Book]

PUBLIC SERVICE CORPORATIONS.

Delaware Gas Company--Organized 1860. Natural gas turned in

October 20, 1902. Has 1,800 consumers. Average annual con-

sumption of gas, 312,000,000 feet. Rate (1912 contract), 33

cents per 1,000 feet, first five years; 35 cents per 1,000 feet,

second five years; less 3 cents discount for payment in ten days.

Officers: T. C. Jones, president; J. W. Hills, vice president;

J. F. Shoub, secretary-treasurer. Directors: T. C. Jones, F. P.

Hills, R. E. Hills, H. W. Jones, J. W. Hills. Gas shut off only

twice in eleven years, and then only for short period. Company

prides itself on having best pressure of any town in Ohio.

Delaware Electric Light, Heat and Power Company--Incorporated

March 4, 1890. Has 700 Consumers. Regular lighting rates, 

12 cents per K. W., less 2 cents per K. W. if paid before the

tenth of each month. Minimum charge, 90 cents per month.

Special contracts at various rates on schedule furnished.

Officers: J. E. Campbell, president; B. F. Freshwater, vice

president; J. G. Rosenthal, secretary; M. Miller, treasurer.

Directors: J. E. Campbell, B. F. Freshwater, J. G. Rosenthal,

M. Miller, Adolph Frank, T. J. Griffin, Ed Banner, William

Miller and W. F. Mitchell.

Citizens' Telephone Company--Established January, 1898. Has

2,462 phones. Average calls in ten hours, 12,000 to 14,000.

Delaware exchange, 26 operators; two operators in sub-

exchanges at Ostrander, Lewis Center, Kilbourne and Radnor.

Bell and Citizens' long distance. Rates: Business, $2 and 

$2.50 per month; resident, $1.50, $1.25 and $1.10, less 10 per

cent before tenth of month. County rate, $1.25 net. Officers:

C. D. Young, president; W. G. Hormell, vice president; George

H. Carter, secretary and general manager; A. S. Conklin, treas-

urer. Directors: C. D. Young, W. Guy Jones, J. L. Anderson,

W. M. Heseltine, W. G. Hormell, F. A. Owen, Dr. A. J. Pounds,

J. O. Gooding and George H. Carter.

Delaware Water Company--F. M. Marriott, president; Martin

Miller, vice president; C. W. Wiles, secretary-treasurer; valuation by

state tax commission, $200,000 of which approximately $45,000 is

outside the city, in Delaware and Troy townships; rate to consumers,

25 cents per 1,000 gallons; rate to city, $40 for each of 262 hydrants,

and 7 cents per 1,000 gallons in city building; city contract for ten

years expires December 31, 1920. Entire city's average daily con-

sumption, 1,000,000 gallons.

City Newspapers--The Daily Journal-Herald. Officers: J. D.

Knowles, president and general manager; F. M. Marriott, vice

president; W. A. Hall, secretary; H. E. Buck, treasurer. George

G. Whitehead, city editor.

Delaware Daily Gazette. H. C. Thomson, editor and pro-

prietor; W. D. Thomson, managing editor; C. A. Jones, city

editor.

39</text>
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                    <text>[page 42]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 40 of Delaware Blue Book]

The Delaware Clay

Mfg. Co.

Manufacturers of

HOLLOW BRICK, HOLLOW BUILDING

TILES, PATTERN TILE, SILO BLOCKS.

Also

DRAIN TILE

3 to 27 inches, inclusive

START TODAY to smoke

MOSS AGATE

THE BEST 5c CIGAR IN THE WORLD

"Look for the Little Yellow Band."

Riddle, Graff

&amp; Co.</text>
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                    <text>[page 43]

[corresponds to page 41 of Delaware Blue Book]

At the Polls.

VOTE IN COUNTY AT ELECTION NOVEMBER 5, 1912.

President--Wilson (D.), 2,934; Taft (R.), 2,584; Roosevelt (Prog.),

1,510; Debs (S.), 123; Chafin (Proh.), 157. Wilson's plurality

over Taft, 350.

Governor--Cox (D.), 2,980; Brown (R.), 2,379; Garford (Prog.),

1,465; Poling (Proh.), 202; Ruthenberg (S.), 118; Kircher

(S.L.), 8. Cox's plurality over Brown, 601.

Congressional (Eighth District)--Willis (R.), 3,297; Durbin (D.),

2,799; Herbert (Prog.), 796; Parthemer (S.), 89. Willis' plu-

rality, 498.

Circuit Court--Long term: Powell (D.), 2,465; Stasel (R.), 1,948.

Powell's majority, 517. Short term: Marriott (D.), 3,359;

Kuntz (R.), 1,782. Marriott's majority, 1,577.

Common Pleas Court--Jewell (R.), 3,809; Carr (D.), 2,289; Mont-

gomery (R.), 2,099; Fulton (D.), 1,770. Jewell's plurality over

Carr, 1,510.

State Senate (Fifteenth-Sixteenth District)--Watkins (R.), 3,331;

Haas (D.), 2,791; Shaw (Prog.), 662; Blaney (S.), 88; Haskall

(Proh.), 70. Watkins' plurality, 540.

THE COUNTY TICKET.

Representative--Plumb (R.), 3,412; Miller (D.), 3,100. Plumb's

majority, 312.

Probate Judge--Humes (R.), 3,259; Martin (D.), 2,424. Humes'

majority, 835. 

Clerk of Courts--Gregory (R.), unopposed, 3,842; W. P. Caldwell

(Prog.), written names, 11.

Sheriff--Williams (R.), 3,723; Leonard (D.), 2,926. Williams' ma-

jority, 797.

Auditor--Aldrich (R.), 3,591; Main (D.), 2,817. Aldrich's major-

ity, 774.

Commissioners--Dickerson (R.), 3,373; Gorsuch (D.), 3,344; Shoe-

maker (R.), 3,317; Eckelberry (D.), 3,030; Swickheimer (R.),

3,017; Baxter (D.), 3,008. Dickerson, Gorsuch and Shoemaker

elected.

Treasurer--Hessnauer (D.), 3,309; Gallant (R.), 3,275. Hess-

nauer's majority, 34.

Recorder--Rose (R.), 3,746; Warren (D.), 2,749. Rose's major-

ity, 997. 

Surveyor--Higley (R.), 3,399; Reichelderfer (D.), 3,045. Higley's

majority, 354.

Prosecuting Attorney--Williams (D.), 3,423; Bliss (R.), 2,874.

Williams' majority, 549.

Coroner--Davies (R.), unopposed, 3,576.

CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS.

Delaware county was one of the few in the state to vote against

the adoption of every amendment submitted at the special election

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                    <text>[page 44]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 42 of Delaware Blue Book]

-IF IT'S-

Plumbing or Gas

Fitting

-CALL-

Manring &amp; Bing

Phone 32  22 South Sandusky Street

-The Famous-

"Round Oak"

Stoves and Ranges

Cannot be Excelled Either in Quality or Price.

General Hardware Supplies</text>
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                    <text>[page 45]

[corresponds to page 43 of Delaware Blue Book]

September 3, 1912. The adverse majorities on the forty-two amend-

ments ranged from 109 to 1,850, in some townships reaching as

high as 6 to 1. The liquor license clause lacked 124 votes of carry-

ing (1,579 to 1,455), the woman suffrage amendment lost by 191

(2,098 to 1,907), the initiative and referendum by 1,071, abolition

of capital punishment by 1,258. Home rule for cities lost heavily in

the townships and in the city by 618 to 598.

THE "WET" AND "DRY" VOTE.

Delaware county went into the "dry" column October 1, 1908,

and thirty days later fifteen Delaware saloons were closed. The

county went "dry" by 2,147, and to this total the city contributed a

"dry" majority of 528. No precincts except those in the Fourth ward

went "wet," although Harlem township came within one vote of a

tie. Precinct A of the First ward scored the most decisive "dry"

victory, the proportion being 7 to 1. On the day of the local option

election there were two arrests on charges of keeping saloons open

and two for alleged illegal voting. The total vote cast was 6,539,

4,343 being "dry" and 2,196 "wet." Delaware county was the seven-

teenth to vote under the Rose law.

May 25, 1903, the city voted on the liquor question and went

"wet" by a majority of 574, as against the "dry" majority which the

city gave at the 1908 election. Before 1890 the city was "dry" for a

period of a year, but in August, 1899, the "wets" won again and helf

sawy until the 1908 election. At one time there were twenty-seven

saloons in the county.

BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS.

Aged People's Home--Located 47 East William street. Established

July 4, 1892. Present home occupied 1901. Home for sixteen 

ladies, February, 1913. Controlled by board of managers, com-

posed of thirty-four members. Officers: Mrs. J. R. Simpson,

president; Mrs. John Cowgill and Mrs. W. A. Morrison, vice 

presidents; Mrs. Lewis Slack, secretary; Mrs. J. L. Wolfley,

treasurer; trustees, Mrs. Sidney Moore, Mrs. George H. Carter,

Mrs. H. C. Thomson and officers named above.

Jane M. Case Hospital--Corner West Winter and Franklin streets.

Incorporated August 10, 1904. Opened July 21, 1906. Capac-

ity, 24 patients. Patients in 1912, 388. Officers: R. K. Willis,

president; S. Potter, vice president; S. S. Blair, secretary; 

C. Riddle, treasurer; trustees, officers and F. M. Marriott, C. C.

Stedman and Dr. A. J. Willey. Miss Anna O'Harra, head nurse;

president Ladies Auxiliary, Mrs. M. Miller. Nine nurses.

Children's Home--Incorporated January 2, 1882. Present home oc-

cupied March 1890. Managed by board of twenty-four ladies. 

Officers: Mrs. J. F. Shaffer, president; Mrs. Jane Nelson, vice

president; Mrs. Henry Welch, secretary; Mrs. F. M. Baureris, 

treasurer. Matron, Miss Simon. Advisory board, H. W. Crist,

R. K. Willis. Fifty-six children in home from Delaware, Hardin

and Morrow counties. Acres in property, fifty-nine.

43</text>
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                    <text>[page 46]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 44 of Delaware Blue Book]

THE LAST WORD IN "HOSIERY"

Armor Plate

The Kind All Others Try to "Imitate". All Sixes, All Prices

For Men, Women and Children.

-SOLD BY-

C.O. Haas

VARIETY MERCHANT

147 East Winter Street	Delaware, Ohio

TAILORING Especially For

		You

[image of tailor and man, scissors, measuring tape, thread]

Wilson

Can Please You

HOTEL DONAVIN BLOCK

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                    <text>[page 47]

[corresponds to page 45 of Delaware Blue Book]

Delaware County Officials.

Elective.

Judges Court of Common Pleas--Harry W. Jewell (R.) and T. B.

Fulton (D.). Terms began February 9, 1913, for six years.

Delaware, Licking and Knox counties.

Representative--Grant M. Plumb (R.). Term began Jan. 6, 1913.

Auditor--W. H. Bodurtha (R.); deputy, W. V. Aldrich (R.), who

succeeds as auditor the third Monday in October, 1913. Term

two years.

Treasurer--W. P. Smart (R.). Will be succeeded by J. Hessnauer

(D.) the first Monday in September, 1913. Term two years. 

Deputy, Miss Nina Humiston.

Prosecuting Attorney--E. R. Williams (D.). Second term of two

years began January 6, 1913.

Probate Judge--E. T. Humes (R.). Deputy, C. P. Thompson. Sec-

ond term of four years began February 9, 1913.

Clerk of Courts--Orton G. Lea (R.). Will be succeeded by Ira Greg-

ory (R.) August 4, 1913. Deputy, Miss Margaret Mead. Term

two years.

Sheriff--T. B. Williams (R.). Second term began January 6, 1913.

Deputy, Al Linn; jail matron, Mrs. T. B. Williams. Term two

years.

County Commissioners--P. H. Perry (R.), R. G. Dickerson (R.) and

W. D. Sherwood (D.). Messrs. Perry and Sherwood will be suc-

ceeded by Guy Shoemaker (R.) and Seth Gorsuch (D.) the

third Monday in September. Clerk, W. H. Bodurtha. Terms

two years.

Recorder--C. G. Rose (R.). Second term will begin the first Mon-

day in September. Deputy, Miss Irena Rose. Term two years.

Coroner--Dr. M. Wray Davies (R.). Term began January 6, 1913.

Term two years.

Surveyor--W. F. Whittier (D.). Will be succeeded by F. C. Higley

(R.) the first Monday in September. Term two years.

Appointive County Boards.

Blind Commissioners--E. A. Furniss, B. F. Davids, Henry S. Brey-

fogle. Appointed by probate court. Disburse $3,200 to $3400 

annually. Salary $2 per meeting, not to exceed ten meetings a 

year.

Soldiers' Relief Commission--Aaron Frantz, Gilbert Fravel, R. W.

Whitney. Appointed by common pleas court. Meet last Satur-

day in each month. Salary $2.50 per day and expenses. Dis-

burse $1,600 to $1,800 a year to soldiers, their widows and

orphans.

Board of County Visitors--Mesdames N. F. Overturf, C. B. Austin,

S. A. Markel, Hettie McDowell; Messrs. V. D. Stayman and R. K. 

Willis. Appointments made by the probate judge.

45</text>
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                    <text>[page 48]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 46 of Delaware Blue Book]

Marvel Flour 	From Spring

Graham Flour 	   Wheat

Whole Wheat Flour

Corn Meal

Our Own Make. Ground Fresh Daily.

Feed of All Kinds

Custom Grinding

Poultry Supplies

M. A. Campion

CITY FEED MILL

PHONE 984 DELAWARE, OHIO

Delray Pure Salt in Barrels, Sack or Lump.

Also Salt Ash.</text>
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                    <text>[page 49]

[corresponds to page 47 of Delaware Blue Book]

Infirmary Superintendent--E.M. Reed. Matron, Mrs. E. M. Reed.

Appointed by county commissioners. Salary of superintendent,

$696; matron, $200.

Law Librarian--Colonel B. W. Hough. Appointed by common pleas

court.

Secret Service Officer--W. B. Matthews. Appointed by common pleas

court. Salary $1,200 and expenses.

Juvenile Officer--Mrs. H. C. Clippinger. Appointed by probate court.

Salary $40 per month.

Deputy Sealer of Weights and Measures--Howard Core. Appointed

by county auditor. Salary $720 per annum.

Delaware City Board of Review--R. J. Cox, J. A. Thomas, T. J.

Griffin. Appointed by state board of assessors. Meet first Mon-

day in June and thereafter until work is completed. Time fixed

by state board and generally forty days. Salary $4 per day.

Delaware County Board of Equalization (outside Delaware city)--

The county commissioners. Meet the first Monday in June.

County Board of Elections--John Shoemaker, chief deputy; Ed

Slocum, F. H. Richey and Art Wing; Forest Curtin, clerk. Meet

before and after each primary and election.

Budget Commission--County auditor, prosecuting attorney and

mayor of Delaware.

Court Bailiff--Al Linn. Salary $2 per day.

County School Examiners--Prof. C. E. Weatherby, Prof. H. T. Main,

Mrs. Ella Knowles; Prof. H. T. Main, clerk. Appointed by pro-

bate court. Hold examinations first Saturday in each month.

Pension Examiners--Dr. C. W. Chidester, Dr. G. W. Morehouse, Dr.

O. W. Bonner. Appointed by congressman. Meetings fourth 

Wednesday in each month.

SALARIES ELECTIVE COUNTY OFFICIALS.

Common Pleas Judge--$4,000 per year ($3,000 paid by state, $1,000

from the three counties apportioned according to population of

each county. Delaware county's share is $260.78 per year).

County Auditor, Probate Judge and County Treasurer--$2,280 each

per year, based on population; $100 per 1,000 for first 15,000,

$65 per 1,000 for second 15,000.

Clerk of Courts--$1,995. Based on population; $85 per 1,000 for

first 15,000, $60 per 1,000 for second 15,000.

Sheriff--$1,690. Based on population; $65 per 1,000 for first

15,000, $55 per 1,000 for second 15,000. Also certain fees.

Representative--$1,000 per year.

County Commissioners--$1,200 per year, and allowance for ditches,

$3 per day not to exceed 100 days in year.

Recorder--$1,500 per year.

Surveyor--$5 per day, generally charged to work on which he is 

engaged.

Coroner--Certain fees. Minimum $10 per inquest.

DUTIES OF COUNTY OFFICIALS.

Auditor--All matters of taxation, all road and ditch records, all

bond records, blind relief, all moneys paid in and out of the county

treasury go through his office, records county commissioners and

47</text>
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                    <text>[page 50]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 48 of Delaware Blue Book]

WM. McKENZIE	 F. E. McKENZIE     P. H. SAID

Pres. and Mgr.	   Vice Pres.	    Sec.-Treas.

The

McKenzie Lumber

Co.

Wholesale and Retail Lumber Dealers

Our Specialties, Everything

A complete stock of Building Material.

Poplar, White and Yellow Pine Siding,

Shingles of all kinds, Flooring, Ceiling, Lath,

Moulding, etc., etc.

We are always in the market for Logs and

Timber.

Phone 175.

Yard and Office, East Winter Street, Delaware.</text>
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                    <text>[page 51]

[corresponds to page 49 of Delaware Blue Book]

infirmary directors, transfer of deeds, payment of all bills and con-

tracts, payment of all court costs paid out of county treasury, in-

numerable reports to state officials. Member county board of eqal-

ization. Secretary of board of review. Clerk county commissioners.

Member budget commission.

Treasurer--Pays out all money on auditor's warrant and re-

ceives all taxes, etc.

Recorder--In charge of all records of recordable instruments

of writing, deeds, mortgages, etc.

Probate Court--Has charge of all matters pertaining to es-

tates, guardianships, trusteeships, marriage licenses, lunacy cases,

certain criminal and civil cases; juvenile judge.

Clerk of Courts--Has charge of all files, records, etc., of the 

courts, and obeys the orders of all courts save the probate court.

Sheriff--Handles all orders in partition, serves warrants and

court papers. Custodian of prisoners in charge of county courts.

COUNTY INFORMATION.

Cost of an Election--The expenses of a primary or election in

Delaware county averages about $1,800. The annual election ex-

penses of the county total from $3,600 to $4,000 per year.

Powell Fair Appropriation--Delaware county makes an ap-

propriation of $543.84 to the Powell Fair annually, under the county

fair law.

The State Board of Agriculture receives $175 per year from Del-

aware county, which also pays the actual expenses of each Farmers'

Institute held in the county up to $31.25.

Mortgages Recorded (county recorder's report)--Year ending 

June 30, 1912, 604, totaling in value $1,048,276.30. Paid off. 574

amounting to $754,257.75. In 12 months 922 deeds recorded.

Vital Statistics Record--Delaware city, 1912, 162 deaths, 177

births. Dr. A. J. Pounds, registrar.

Marriages in 1912--219 marriage licenses were issued in Dela-

ware county in 1912, an increase of 11 over 1911.

COUNTY TAXATION AND EXPENSE FIGURES.

Total real and personal property in Delaware county (shown by

1912 abstract in county auditor's office)--Real estate, $40,693,010,

and personal property, $13,573,560. Valuation Delaware city--Real

estate, $6,095,180, and personal property, $2,851,950. County total

duplicate, 1911, $39,538,495.

County tax levy, exclusive of special assessments, $434,184.75.

Levy in 1911, $404,578.01.

Levy in Delaware city, limit of 15 mills, as provided under the

Smith law. Divided as follows: State, 0.451 mills; county, 2.349; 

county sinking fund, 0.2; township, 0.1; corporation, 3.7; schools

3.4; school sinking fund, 1.2; corporation, 3.6.

The total of the county tax levy of $434,184.75 is divided as fol-

lows: State purposes, $18,352.72 (of which about $13,000 comes

back for common schools and as interest on irreducible debt from

United States and Virginia military lands); county purposes, $103,-

726.51; township, $41,999.96; schools, $132,345.24; corporation,

$71,483.68; turnpike debt, $66,276.64.

49</text>
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                    <text>[page 52]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 50 of Delaware Blue Book]

[photo of house]

Residence 110 Montrose Avenue, bought by Mrs. A. D. Foster

CHAS. S. MASON

Builder

Has constructed more than a hundred

splendid residences, garages and

other buildings in Delaware during

the past seven years--enough to make a respec-

table little city all by itself.</text>
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                    <text>[page 53]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 51 of Delaware Blue Book]

[photo of a house]

Residence on Montrose Avenue erected for Rev. W. McK. Brackney, D.D.

Are You Thinking of

Building or Buying?

If you are, we would ask you to call at our

office, No. 1 Lamb's Block, over Bee

Hive Store, and talk over the matter.

Pictures are on exhibit of 50 or 60 houses built

in Delaware, and there are all kinds of plans.

We will be glad to consult with you. No trou-

ble to show properties.</text>
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                    <text>[page 54]

[corresponds to unlabled page 52 of Delaware Blue Book]

YEHLEY'S

Jewelers and Opticians

Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Sterling Sil-

ver, Clocks, Libby Cut Glass, etc.

Our Aim is High-Class Goods at Reasonable Prices. A Large

and Well-Selected Stock to Choose From.

ESTABLISHED 1891

THE

McCULLOUGH

LUMBER YARD

-IS A-

DELAWARE LANDMARK

For 60 years the discriminating buyers of

Building Materials have found there the most

DEPENDABLE STOCK

You Know the Place

Corner

Winter and Henry Sts.

Delaware, O.</text>
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                    <text>[page 55]

[corresponds to page 53 of Delaware Blue Book]

The county levy of $103,726.51 (as above) is divided as follows:

County fund (all court costs, all salaries, all appraisement costs, sup-

plies, costs Farmers' Institutes, expense juvenile and secret service

officers, damages, election expenses, etc.), $48,831.62; poor fund,

$8,952.47; bridge fund, $22,381.16; soldiers' relief, $1,587.03; debt

or sinking fund, $8,138.61; improved road repair, $6,714.36; ditch

fund, $4,069.30; blind relief, $3,051.97.

Taxing districts in county, 52. Rate varies in each, and may be

obtained from county auditor.

The appraisement for 1912 returned for the county: 204 auto-

mobiles valued at $75,165; 906 watches valued at $12,941; 1,077

pianos valued at $88,056. Merchandise stocks are valued at $578,-

465, manufacturers' stocks at $192,205; money subject to check,

amounts to $767,730, and credits to $1,435,985. The banks report

$661,000. The total valuation of steam railways in the county is

placed at $6,049,940, and electric railways at $719,470. The total

returns by assessors is $5,610,325, and by incorporations $7,963,235.

Bonded Indebtedness Delaware County--January 1, 1913.

Roads, $583,901.50; ditches, $73,653.50; county, $46,700.00. Total,

$604,255.00. Of this the road and ditch bonds are covered by special

assessments.

Most valuable city corners, according to last appraisement--

Southwest corner Winter and Sandusky streets, $90 per front foot;

Northwest corner Winter and Sandusky streets, $82 per front foot.

TOWNSHIP CLERKS.

Berkshire township, W. E. Lohr, Sunbury; Galena district, F. C.

Cornell, Galena; Sunbury district, H. O. Kempton, Sunbury; Berlin

township, Harry Jaynes, Galena No. 1; Brown township, Wesley Ott,

Kilbourne; Eden district, Charles H. Wilson, Kilbourne; Concord

township, Alvin Dunlap, Delaware No. 5; Delaware township, E. E.

Moeller, Delaware; Genoa township, George F. Hogans, Westerville;

Harlem township, Cleveland Grove, Galena; Kingston township, D. P. 

Carney, Sunbury; Liberty township, W. F. Boyles, Powell; Liberty

district, V. P. Rutherford, Powell; Marlboro township, Albert Main,

Norton; Orange township, C. E. Boyd, Westerville; Lewis Center, 

P. B. Goodrich, Lewis Center; Oxford township, J. W. Strine, Ashley;

Ashley district, Emma McCurdy, Ashley; Porter township, Howard

A. Trimmer, Sunbury No. 2; Radnor township, R. W. Holmes, Rad-

nor; Radnor district, R. W. Jones, Radnor; Scioto township, Forest

Gabriel, Ostrander No. 2; Ostrander district, Odell Liggett, Ostran-

der; Warrensburg, V. T. Mitchell, Delaware No. 6; Thompson town-

ship, Emmett Fryman, Radnor No. 1; Trenton township, Milo J. Con-

dit Condit No. 1; Trenton district, H. H. Cring, Condit; Troy town-

ship, A. D. Main, Delaware No. 7; Eagleville district, G. F. Robinson,

Radnor No. 1; Special No. 5, George E. Ayers, Radnor No. 1.

Red Cross Seals--The report of sale of Red Cross seals during the

holiday season of 1912 shows: South school, 867; North school,

3,000; West school, 4,283; East school, 1,034; high school, 660;

business firms, 3,300; retail stores, 2,246; Ashley, 178. Total,

15,568, at the sale price of 1 cent each. The record for 1912

was 46 seals ahead of 1911, and 2,498 behind the sale of 1910.

53</text>
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                    <text>[page 56]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 54 of Delaware Blue Book]

Best Work

Most Painless Methods

-AT THE-

Lowest Possible Cost

Davison Dental 

Parlors

69 1-2 North Sandusky Street</text>
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                    <text>[page 57]

[corresponds to page 55 of Delaware Blue Book]

OUR SCHOOL SYSTEM.

Cost of Schools.

During the year ending September 1, 1912, the public school

system of the county cost $154,132.02, divided as follows: Salaries

elemntary teachers, $83,563.41; salaries high school teachers, 

$44,612.15; superintendents, exclusive of teachers, $342.69; cost of

buildings and grounds, $3,071.09; other purposes (janiors, coal,

furnishings Delaware's new high school building, etc.), $53,684.29.

In Delaware the total cost of the city's school system was 

$34,082.00, divided as follows: Elementary tuition, $20,287.09;

high school tuition, $11,070.00; supervision, $2,725.00.

School Census, Salaries, Etc.

The school enumeration of May, 1912, showed 6,572 persons

under 21 years of age in the county; 3,397 male and 3,185 female.

In Delaware city there were 2,102 persons; 1,016 male and 1,086 

female. By ages the total of 6,572 in the county is divided as fol-

lows: 6 to 8 years, 1,168; 8 to 14 years, 2,746; 14 to 16 years, 

1,020; 16 to 21 years, 1,638. 

There are 139 school buildings, containing 211 rooms, in the

county, with a total valuation of $343,300; 197 teachers are em-

ployed. The total enrollment for the year 1911-12 was 4,979, and

the average daily attendance 3,902. 

The average salary of teachers in the county was as follows:

Elementary--Townships, men $42.66, women $40.13; districts, men

$55.40, women $44; Delaware city, women $52. High school--Men

$96.16, women $64.50; Delaware city, men $120, women $68.

The average cost of instruction per pupil on daily attendance in

the elementary grade was $25.55 in the townships and $22.78 in 

the districts. Based on the total enrollment, the average cost per

pupil was $20.71 in the townships and $27.11 in the districts. In

the high schools the cost (based on daily attendance) averaged

$41.99 and on total enrollment $30.89. In Delaware city the aver-

age cost was as follows (based on daily attendance): Elementary,

$23.57; high, $44.13. Based on total enrollment: Elementary,

$20.07; high, $38.87.

High schools are maintained in Delaware, Powell, Ashley, Sun-

bury, Galena, Ostrander, Radnor and Warresnburg.

Delaware City Schools

Superintendent, William McK. Vance.

High School--Ranked first class and accredited by the Nort-

western Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Principal,

H. T. Main. Thirteen regular and two special teachers. Enroll-

ment, 383.

North School--North Washington street. Amy M. Swisher, act-

ing principal. Six teachers. Enrollment, 233. All pupils residing

north of Central avenue between the Olentangy river and Hocking

Valley railroad.

West School--West Winter street. Mary L. Pratt, principal.

Twelve teachers. Enrollment, 466. All pupils residing west of the

Olentangy between the center of Park avenue and Central avenue;

55</text>
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                    <text>[page 58]

[corresponds to unlabled page 56 of Delaware Blue Book]

FOR FORTY YEARS

The Name of

Bodurtha

Has been synonymous with the latest and most

up-to-date Photography.

It is more true today than ever in the past.

Studio: 57 1/2 N. Sandusky St.</text>
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                    <text>[page 59]

[corresponds to page 57 of Delaware Blue Book]

all west of the Hocking Valley north to the corporation line. Cost

of building, $42,800.

South School--South Liberty street. Laura A. Woodward, prin-

cipal. Eight teachers. Enrollment, 309. Only kindergarten de-

partment in the city. All pupils south of Park avenue and west of

Olentangy.

East Building--East Winter street. Mrs. Ella N. Stokes, prin-

cipal. Six teachers. Enrollment, 221. All pupils east of Olentangy.

New $35,000 building, with auditorium, will be erected in 1913.

Volumes in school libraries, 2,670.

AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS, DELAWARE COUNTY.

(Compiled with Assessor's Returns, May, 1912.)

Total number of acres in county, 237,846.

			Acres sown	Bu. produced	Acres sown

			   1911.           1911.	   1912.

Wheat.....................19,010	 284,103          16,047

Rye........................1,282	  14,012	     901

Oats......................10,020	 228,186	  14,818

Barley........................63	  ......	      11

Corn......................37,722       1,417,493	  41,815

Ensilage corn..............1,535	  ......	   1,298

Peas..........................70	   3,500 lbs.

Irish potatoes...............482          32,080	     444

Meadow....................41,899	  44,188	

Clover.....................8,995	   9,926 tons.

Alfalfa......................459	   1,276 tons.

Gallons of milk produced, 1911, 632,581. Butter made in home

dairies, 484,628 pounds; in creameries, 1,509,836. Eggs produced,

1,160,637 dozen.

Acres in fruit--Apples, 2,162 acres, producing 161,581 bushels

in 1911; grapes, 2 acres; peaches, 38 acres, 1,873 bushels; pears,

26 1/2 acres, 2.067 bushels; cherries, 15 1/4 acres, 475 bushels.

Acres cultivated, 1911, 73,363; acres in pasture, 144,888; acres

woodland, 17,493; acres lying waste, 2,102.

Animals owned--10,120 horses, valued at $1,187,381; 17,089

cattle, valued at $440,227; 201 mules, valued at $23,190; 48,821

sheep, valued at $154,075; 21,183 hogs, valued at $156,900.

FAIR DATES, 1913.

The Pumpkin Show--October 8, 9, 10 and 11.

Rome Fair--September 18 and 19.

Powell Fair--September 16, 17, 18 and 19.

Ashley Fair--September 10, 11 and 12.

Ohio State Fair--September 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5.

Richwood Tri-County Fair--September 16, 17, 18 and 19.

Marion County Fair--September 23, 24, 25 and 26.

Hardin County Fair (Kenton)--August 26, 27, 28 and 29.

Morrow County Fair (Mt. Gilead)--September 30 to October 3.

Champaign County Fair (Urbana)--August 12, 13, 14 and 15.

Wyandot County Fair (Upper Sandusky)--September 16 to 19.

57</text>
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                    <text>[page 60]

[corresponds to unlabled page 58 of Delaware Blue Book]

The Modern Way

THROUGH

THE

(MARION)

HEART

(DELAWARE)

OF

(COLUMBUS)

OHIO

THE 

COLUMBUS

DELAWARE AND

MARION

RAILWAY COMPANY.

[graphic of heart with arrow through it]

This is the route of the

Columbus, Delaware &amp; 

Marion Railway

Cheapest, quickest and most convenient Route

to Columbus. Limited cars, leaving Delaware

at 6:48 and 8:48 a.m., 12:48 and 4:48 p.m.,

maket he trip to North Columbus in 36 minu-

tes, and to Gay and High Streets in 57 minutes

We have been enjoying a large passenger

and freight business in Franklin, Delaware

and Marion counties, and solicit a continua-

tion of your patronage.

CHARTERED CAR RATES

FOR SPECIAL PARTIES.

The C. D. &amp; M. Railway.</text>
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                    <text>[page 61]

[corresponds to page 59 of Delaware Blue Book]

Delaware Historically.

First Settlement--In the county made by Nathan Carpenter and

Avery Powers, six miles south of Delaware, in Liberty township,

May 1, 1801. In the city, first settlement made by Moses Byxbe,

who removed from Berkshire in 1808 and was big factor in early

history; died September 9, 1826.

County Created--Act creating Delaware county passed February 10,

1808. Delaware county organized May 1, 1808. First officers:

John Welch, Ezekiel Brown and Avery Powers, commissioners;

Rev. Joseph Drake, treasurer; Dr. Reuben Lamb, recorder;

Solomon Smith, sheriff; Azariah Root, surveyor.

Delaware Platted--On west side of Olentangy, May 9, 1808. Incor-

porated 1816.

First Tavern--On elevation facing on Henry street and now located

in Ohio Wesleyan campus, opened by Joseph Barber. Head-

quarters of General William Henry Harrison during advnce to

the lakes in war of 1812. Site has just been marked by a 

memorial tablet erected by the Daughters of the American Rev-

olution.

Oldest Buildings Now Standing--Oldest business room, now occupied

by Emerson's Meat Market, erected by Alexander Kilbourne,

1831. Oldest residence, brick building at southwest corner of

East William and Union streets, erected by Dr. Reuben Lamb

in 1810.

First Bank--Bank of Delaware, organized 1817, with Moses Byxbe

president. Located northwest corner William and Sandusky

street. History of short duration.

In War Times--Delaware was prominent in the march of troops to

the lakes during war of 1812. During the civil war many

troops went from Camp Delaware, which was located just east

of the Olentangy and south of the Springfield division of the

Big Four.

Public Buildings--Present courthouse erected 1870; cost, $80,000.

Present jail erected 1878; cost $25,845.35. City hall erected

1879-82; cost, $135,000. Carnegie library erected 1906; cost,

$21,500.

Local Street Names--Winter, a corruption of Witter, maiden name of

wife of Moses Byxbe. Henry, name of Henry Baldwin's partner 

in platting Delaware. William, for brother of Henry Baldwin.

Griswold, for Ezra Griswold, prominent early resident. Other

names largely patriotic in origin.

Railway History--Big Four (Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati &amp; St.

Louis), now part of New York Central system; completed east

of city in 1851; county paid $100,000 to secure it; curve built

into Delaware later. Hocking Valley, incorporated May 23,

1872; first trains ran January 10, 1877. Pennsylvania (origin-

ally Columbus &amp; Sandusky Short Line), opened for traffic April

15, 1893; purchased by Pennsylvania November, 1902.

59</text>
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                    <text>[page 62]

[corresponds to unlabled page 60 of Delaware Blue Book]

[image of watch] 

Always

On

Time

Wins respect. It has gained a reputation for

OUR WATCHES

That we feel proud of. Our selection of time-

pieces are marvels of artistic skill in design and

finish. We sell Guaranteed watches at Reasona-

ble figures. 

We carry the best there is in

DIAMONDS, CUT GLASS and JEWELEY [sic]

We solicit your inspection of our goods.

BARON &amp; C0.

Hotel Donavin Block. Sign of the Big Street Clock.</text>
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                    <text>[page 63]

[corresponds to page 61 of Delaware Blue Book]

Electric Lines--Columbus, Delaware &amp; Marion opened for traffic to

Columbus September, 1902. Delaware, Magnetic Springs &amp;

Northern, incorporated 1903; first cars to Magnetic Springs

June 23, 1904; cars to Richwood October 15, 1906.

DELAWARE FROM 1808 TO 1913.

By act of the Ohio Legislature, February 10, 1808, Delaware

county was created.

Through the influence of Moses Byxby, special commissioners

located the county seat here in March, 1808.

Delaware was first incorporated as a village in 1816. That year

thirty-two votes were polled, and in the winter of the first election a

wood-chopper, standing on the barren Monnett Hall hill, looked over

the surrounding valley and counted thirty-two houses. In four years

these increased to fifty, and in 1823 there were sixty houses.

At that time a Board of Trustees, elected by the people, man-

aged the affairs of the village. This form of government continued

until 1849, when the Legislature passed an act providing for a town

council of eight members. This council chose from its ranks a 

Mayor, Recorder, Treasurer and Assessor. They also elected a mar-

shall and a street committee of three.

Up to 1857 the Mayor served without pay, except such legal fees

as he received as a magistrate. In that year, however, the salary

was fixed at $200. In 1863 this salary was cut in half. In 1854

councilmen were allowed $1 for each regular session and 50 cents

for each special meeting. The marshal received $200 annually. In

fact, at that time the marshal was a most important functionary.

Besides representing the majesty of municipal law, he collected the

taxes, cleaned the streets, had charge of the village market. Later

it became the duty of council to appoint the marshal, and he served

night and day for $2, exclusive of legal fees.

In the early days city officials were much troubled with stray

animals. Hogs, dogs and cows ran at large, greatly to the worry of

the citizenry. Finally a dog and hog tax was levied in 1842, but the

friends of the latter were too powerful, and the partially collected

tax was refunded. But with the growth of the village the opposition

grew stronger, and the hog, shorn of his liberty, cannot at this pro-

gressive date be nurtured within the closely guarded precincts of the 

city.

In 1821 James B. Weaver was the only school teacher in Dela-

ware. He taught in a building on the site of present city hall. In

a fit of passion he fatally injured a pupil, and although no prosecu-

tion followed, the act broke up the school and drove the teacher from

his profession and from the town.

In 1873 Delaware advanced from village rank to the dignity of

a city. The population was slightly more than 6,000. The city was

divided into three wards, and later into five. There was a re-division

in 1891, when six wards were created. There was another change in 

1899, and finally the divisions were made in 1912 to include four

wards, with a total of twelve precincts. It is interesting to note the

61</text>
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                    <text>[page 64]

[corresponds to unlabled page 62 of Delaware Blue Book]

SUPERBA

-LEADS IN-

Motion Picture Plays

and Vaudeville

THE W. M.

HESELTINE

COMPANY

Dry Goods and Ready-to-Wear

We Want Your Business</text>
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                    <text>[page 65]

[corresponds to page 63 of Delaware Blue Book]

Mayors and their politics, from the city's organization down to the

present time:

1872--John D. VanDeman (Republican).

1874--W. O. Semans (Temperance).

1876--J. A. Barnes (Republican).

1878--C. H. McElroy (Republican).

1880--F. M. Joy (Republican).

1882--H. L. Baker (Democrat), two terms.

1886--H. E. Buck (Democrat).

1888--J. K. Newcomer (Democrat).

1890--Henry S. Culver (Republican), two terms.

1894--H. L. Baker (Democrat), third term.

1896--W. R. Carpenter (Republican).

1902--H. H. Beecher (Republican).

1908--W. E. Haas (Democrat), two terms.

1912--Bert V. Leas (Democrat).

RUTHERFORD B. HAYES.

Governor of Ohio three terms, and President of the United

States.

Born October 4, 1822, at 17 East William street, in a log struc-

ture now clapboarded and at the rear; the nineteenth President of

the United States, being inaugurated in 1877, at the age of 54. He

died at Fremont, January 17, 1893. He was major general in the

civil war and was a member of congress immediately thereafter. He

was Ohio's governor (Republican) for two terms, 1868-1872, and an-

other term beginning in 1876. He received 250,935 less popular

votes than his opponent, Samuel J. Tilden, but he won the United

States Presidency with the electoral commission, the vote being 185.

INTERURBAN LINES, ETC.

Columbus, Delaware &amp; Marion railway; 1912 valuation, 

$1,273,130.

Delaware, Magnetic Springs &amp; Northern railway; 1912 valua-

tion, $227,130.

Delaware Electric Light, Heat and Power Company; 1912 valua-

tion, $141,190.

Delaware Water Company; 1912 valuation; $200,000.

Delaware Gas Company; 1912 valuation; $116,300.

GIRLS' INDUSTRIAL HOME.

Matron, Miss Charlotte Dye.

Present population, 414.

Girls on parole, 680.

Size of farm, 189 acres.

Value of all property, $476,324.72.

Value of lands, $13,230.

Value of buildings, $388,800.

Value of furniture and fixtures, $13,625.21.

Value of machinery and tools, $27,883.75.

63</text>
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                    <text>[page 66]

[corresponds to unlabled page 64 of Delaware Blue Book]

Established 1857. [image of shoe, man, and woman]

FOR FIFTY=FOUR YEARS

BAUEREIS' have been

selling GOOD SHOES for

the whole family--a rec-

ord which could not have

been attained without de-

pendable merchandise,

honest service and meth-

ods. Why don't you wear

BAUEREIS'S shoes, too?

"WHERE THE 

STYLES COME

FROM."

BAUEREIS'

"TO SAVE SOME MONEY"

Is one good habit to have.

We pay 4 per cent interest on savings deposits.

We pay 5 per cent on six month time deposits.

It is no trouble for us to answer questions

about our business methods.

Get in Communication with Us.

-THE-

People's Building &amp; Loan Co.</text>
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                    <text>[page 67]

[corresponds to page 65 of Delaware Blue Book]

Facts on Population.

Delaware city--In 1910, 9,076; 1900, 7,940; 1890, 8,224; 1880,

6,894; 1870, 6,000; 1860, 3,889; 1850, 2,074; 1840, 898; 1830, 532;

1820, 250; 1910, 27.

Delaware county--In 1910, 27,182; 1900, 26,401; 1890, 27,189;

1880, 27,381; 1870, 25,175; 1860, 23,902; 1850, 21,817; 1840, 22,-

060; 1830, 11,504; 1820, 7,639; 1810, 2,000. Gain in a century,

25,182.

Ohio population--In 1910, 4,767,121; 1800, 45,365.

Delaware county incorporated villages--Ashley, 706; Ostrander,

431; Sunbury, 485.

Delaware county has 445 square miles area. The population is

61.1 people to every square mile, while the rural population alone is

40.7 persons to each square mile. The county's rural population in

1910 was 18,106, and in 1900 it was 18,461, showing a decrease

of 355.

Elevation of county points, above sea level--Delaware, 927 feet;

Peerless, 1,179; Sunbury, 970; Summit, 972.					Val. 1910 du-

Real Estate--Value, Acreage--Population Minor Subdivisions.			plicate before

Delaware County		Population	Acreage.	Value fixed by		Tax Com.

Townships.		in 1910.			Tax Com.		was created.

Berkshire ............... 1,126		15,323		$  997,100		$  395,590

Berlin ..................   976		16,440		 1,107,045		   410,120

Brown ...................   930		16,006		 1,241,200		   399,210

Concord ................. 1,579		15,227		 1,065,195		   331,360

Delaware ................   996		13,225		 1,209,145		   447,050

Genoa ...................   856		15,225		 1,067,833		   353,070

Harlem ..................   925		16,687		 1,169,820		   400,410

Kingston ................   555		15,083		   817,780		   304,450

Liberty ................. 1,377		21,048		 1,387,778		   515,830

Marlborough .............   405		 7,564		   585,720		   184,140

Orange ..................   954		16,249		 1,202,724		   390,910

Oxford ..................   613		12,337		   922,374		   319,160

Porter ..................   659		16,053		   843,714		   325,460

Radnor .................. 1,082		19,566		 1,766,715		   578,810

Scioto .................. 1,219		21,821		 1,533,072		   539,900

Thompson ................   666		12,472		 1,072,700		   341,670

Trenton .................   882		16,397		 1,062,873		   377,240

Troy ....................   684		15,609		 1,112,616		   422,210

			 _______	_______		 _________		   ________

Totals ................. 16,484		282,332		 $20,165,424	     	  $7,036,590

65</text>
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                    <text>[page 68]

[corresponds to unlabled page 66 of Delaware Blue Book]

WALK-OVER

SHOES

The Walk-Over Way

"Never mind what size the customer wears,

sell him what he ought to wear."

That's the WALK-OVER method and we

always try to carry it out.

However, if you insist on something that

doesn't fit you we'll sell it to you--politely but

regretfully.

But to get your full money's worth you

ought to buy WALK-OVER shoes fitted the

WALK-OVER way.

"Walk-Over" Prices $3.50 to $6.00.

The Walk-Over Shop

Hotel Donavin Corner. Delaware, Ohio.</text>
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                    <text>[page 69]

[corresponds to unlabled page 67 of Delaware Blue Book]

GALLOWAY

&amp; MARTIN

Watch Us Grow Watch Us Grow

To Our New Store

To the Public:--

In order to keep pace with our constantly growing busi-

ness, we will, about November 1st, remove to greatly improved

and more commodious quarters in the "New Building and Loan

and McKenzie" fireproof building on the corner of Sandusky

and Winter streets, where we will occupy about 8,000 square

feet in all, with an entrance on both streets.

The location is three doors north of our present location

and directly opposite the Hotel Donavin.

The store will be one of the finest dry goods stores of its

size in Ohio.

Galloway 

&amp; Martin</text>
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                    <text>[page 70]

[corresponds to unlabled page 68 of Delaware Blue Book]

GALLOWAY &amp; MARTIN

WATCH US GROW

TO OUR NEW STORE

We endeavor at all times to present for your approval an

unsurpassed selection of Dry Goods and Women's Wearing Ap-

parrel, comprising the very newest ideas--styles that are cor-

rect in every detail, and merchandise which for quality and

general attractiveness cannot be equalled at our prices--is our

effort. Every desirable mode, embracing quality, exclusiveness

and distinctiveness, rightly priced, is found in our showing.

Galloway 

&amp; Martin

DELAWARE'S MODERN DRY GOODS STORE</text>
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                    <text>[page 71]

[corresponds to page 69 of Delaware Blue Book]

Fraternal Directory.

Hiram Lodge No. 18, Free and Accepted Masons--Founded January

21, 1811. Officers: W. A. Whitacre, W.M.; A. C. Jones, S.W.;

D. H. Leas, J.W.; H. W. Jones, treasurer; W. M. Semans, secre-

tary; John Holl, S.D.; J. F. Wittlinger, J.D.; Louis Thorman,

tyler; T. H. Housel, chaplain; C. G. Lewis, R. T. Graff and E. R.

Williams, finance committee; J. L. Sperling, F. A. Owen and 

J. W. Heimberger, trustees; W. A. Sellars and C. S. Hyde,

stewards; E. Y. Mason, organist. Stated communication second

and fourth Tuesday evening of each month. Election first De-

cember communication.

Delaware Chapter No. 54, Royal Arch Masons--Chartered October

15, 1855. Officers: D. H. Leas, M.E.H.P.; W. A. Greiner, E. 

King; O. S. Smith, E. Scribe; H. L. Clark, C. of H.; J. W. Heim-

berger, Princ. Soj.; H. W. Jones, R.A.C.; E. H. Shipman, G.M.

3d V.; C. W. McKeehan, G.M. 2d V.; E. P. Nash, G.M. 1st V.;

R. T. Graff, treasurer; W. M. Semans, secretary; Louis Thor-

man, guard; E. Y. Mason, organist; C. W. Denison, C. W. Wiles

and J. G. Rosenthal, finance committee. Stated conventions

first Thursday of each month. Election first Thursday in De-

cember.

Sidney Moore Council No. 84, Royal and Select Masters--Chartered

October 9, 1900. Officers: C. W. Denison, T.I.M.; John Holl,

D.I.M.; O. P. Sell, Prin. C. of W.; W. B. Galleher, treasurer;

W. M. Semans, recorder; C. W. McKeehan, Captain of G.; F. N.

Sell, Cor. of C.; J. F. Utz, steward; Louis Thorman, sentinel;

R. J. Cox, C. W. Wiles and J. W. Heimberger, finance commit-

tee. Stated assembly third Monday in each month. Election

third Monday in December.

Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias--Officers: A. J. White, captain;

E. S. Owen, first lieutenant; George Irwin, second lieutenant;

H. V. Spicer, recorder; John Pfiffner, treasurer-sergeant; Henry

Freese, first sergeant; Frank Mason, second sergeant. Staff:

A. J. Pounds, surgeon third battalion, first regiment; H. H.

Miller, chaplain first regiment; B. H. Masters, major brigadier-

general's staff. Meetings first and third Thursdays each month.

Catholic Knights of Ohio--Officers: John Schweitzer, president;

John Maloney, vice president; John Shoub, recording secretary;

F. W. Pliickebaum, financial secretary; J. P. Grasser, treasurer;

John Haas, sentinel; A. Pliickebaum, George Haas and P. 

Griffin, trustees.

Josephine Camp No. 14051, Modern Woodmen of America--Officers:

J. A. Baumgardner, V.C.; W. A. Fisher, P.C.; P. N. Teeple, 

W.A.; Paul S. Nichols, clerk; Michael Nappi, banker; G. V.

Matthews, escort; C. B. Brewster, physician; J. Cunningham,

watchman; H. W. Simpson, sentry; W. L. Smith, trustee.

69

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                    <text>[page 72]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 70 of Delaware Blue Book]

QUALITY COUNTS

Let Me Have Your Next Order for

Roses, Carnations, and All

Flowers in Season.

JOSEPH H. CUNNINGHAM

325 West William Street Telephone 309

John G. Koch

-Wholesale and Retail Dealer in-

Fresh and Salt Meats, Lard and

Dressed Poultry.

Sausage a Specialty.

Phone 433 73 South Sandusky Street

3rd Door South of Post Office</text>
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                    <text>[page 73]

[corresponds to page 71 of Delaware Blue Book]

Buckeye Lodge No. 2873, Modern Brotherhood of America--Officers:

A. A. Stephen, president; L. F. Hall, vice president; H. E. Mar-

tin, secretary; J. H. Smith, chaplain; C. M. Hurd, sentry;

Chauncey Shaw, watchman; J. W. Long, conductor; J. K. James,

physician; George W. Kughn, Michael Stack and C. S. Baron,

trustees.

Delaware Lodge No. 76, B.P.0. Elks--Officers: M. L. Wolff, exalted

ruler; L. C. Riddle, esteemed leading knight; Ellis Cregmile,

esteemed loyal knight; Ellis Gallant, esteemed lecturing knight;

A. K. Harmount, secretary; H. B. Powers, treasurer; Ray Yates,

tyler; E. W. Carpenter, T. B. Williams and James McDonald, 

trustees; J. D. Knowles, esquire; A. J. White, chaplain; Edward

Moeller, inner guard; Ernest Main, musician.

Catholic Ladies of Columbia--Officers: Mrs. Ellen Potter, presi-

dent; Mrs. Frank King, vice president; Miss Anna Kraus, sec-

retary; Mrs. Lena Nappi, financial secretary; Mrs. Margaret

Reinhart, treasurer; Miss Minnie Enright, monitor; Miss Kate

Connell, sentinel.

Haymakers' Association No. 42 1/2--Officers: F. C. Grojane, P.C.H.;

John Aigner, C. of H.; J. L. Cooperrider, A.C.H.; Emery John-

son, overseer; J. H. Pinyerd, C. of S.; J. H. Temple, A.S.; R. L.

Sherwood, K. of B.; Jacob Shearer, H. B.; Albert Ufferman,

B.D.; N. E. Harris, G. of H.; R. L. Hudson, G. of B.

Delawanta Lodge No. 42, Improved Order of Red Men--Officers:

Frank Grove, sachem; Nelson Jones, Sr. sagamore; Harry Clark,

Jr. Sagamore; John Cooperrider, prophet; William Temple, sec-

retary; Clark Long, collector of wampum; G. K. Zimmerman,

keeper of wampum.

Delaware Council No. 1056, Knights of Columbus--Officers: George

Parker, grand knight; William Thompson, deputy grand knight;

Maurice Hanning, chancellor; Forest J. Curtin, treasurer; John

Hines, recorder; Daniel Griffin, financial secretary; William

Quirk, advocate; Joseph Shea, inside guard; Daniel Sullivan,

outside guard; Henry Burke, lecturer; Jerome Montaine, O. J.

Ryan and J. J. McGough, trustees. Meetings first and third

Tuesdays of each month.

Silver Maple Camp No. 6, Woodmen of the World--Officers: A. S. 

Conklin, council commander; C. M. Hettenbaugh, advisor lieu-

tenant; Al Linn, banker; Charles G. Rose, clerk; H. T. Main,

escort; Wilbert Main, watchman; S. F. Truxall, sentry; E. M.

Semans, physician; H. F. Owen, J. C. Swickheimer and F. R.

Conklin, managers.

Ladies of the Modern Maccabees No. 971--Organized November 22,

1912. Officers: Mrs. Elizabeth Jacobs, commander; Mrs.

Emma Dennis, Lieut. Com.; Mrs. Belle Cavin, past commander;

Mrs. Elizabeth Amrine, chaplain; Miss Lena Wheeler, record

keeper; Mrs. Gertrude Watrous, finance keeper; Miss Nellie

Shaw, captain of guard. Meetings in P.H.C. hall first and third

Tuesday evenings of each month.

Delaware Lodge No. 284, Protected Home Circle--Officers: Ira

Trout, president; Clara Miller, vice president; Cecil McKnight,

secretary; Bessie Long, treasurer; G. K. Zimmerman, account-

71</text>
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                    <text>[page 74]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 72 of Delaware Blue Book]

YOU CAN LOOK

PROSPEROUS AND

FEEL PROSPEROUS

Good clothes cut to fit right and feel right

are as gratifying to the wearer's feelings as they

are satisfying to the eyes of his friends. We

have a suit here for you that will please you from

the ground up. Nothing would please us better

than to have you come in and try it on.

Prices from $10 to $30

Satisfaction awaits you here certainly.

SMITH 

CLOTHING CO.
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                    <text>[page 75]

[corresponds to page 73 of Delaware Blue Book]

ant; Inez Brown, guide; Sadie Foster, companion; Nannie Zim-

merman, guardian; Emma Dennis, chaplain; Grant Havens,

watchman; William Matthews, sentinel; Hallie Havens, pianist;

G. K. Zimmerman, captain degree staff. Meeting night, every

Thursday evening, 7:30, East Winter street.

Delaware Home No. 147, Home Guards of America--Officers: James

E. Terry, counselor; Esta Slack, past counselor; May L. Tuite,

vice counselor; Orton G. Lea, chaplain and treasurer; W. E.

Slack, recording and financial secretary; James E. Terry, W. E.

Slack and Orton G. Lea, trustees. Meeting third Monday even-

ing of each month in K.O.T.M. hall.

Delaware Rebekah Lodge No. 198--Organized 1884. Mary Clark,

noble grand; Lois Nash, vice noble grand; Estella Davis, finan-

cial secretary; Lucy Pickett, recording secretary; Clara Welch,

treasurer; Frances Klee, pianist; Ella Hurd, deputy president.

Meeting second and fourth Thursday, in I.O.O.F. hall.

Ladies' Catholic Benevolent Association--Mary R. Griffin, past presi-

dent; Catherine Jennings, president; Josephine Sauers, first

vice; Elizabeth O'Connor, second vice; Catherine Egan, treas-

urer; Kittie Donohue, financial secretary; Elizabeth Diggins,

recorder; Joanna Parker, marshal; Anna Haas, guard; Eliza-

beth Quirk, Margaret Keefe and Elizabeth Delaney, trustees.

Meetings second Thursday evening of each month in K.C. hall.

Royal Arcanum--John Pfannstiel, regent; William E. Knight, vice

regent; Ernest C. Dulin, secretary; Arlton Waggoner, collector.

Meetings Bodurtha's gallery, when called.

Home Guards of America, Detlor Home No. 253--Organized 1910.

C. P. Wallace, worthy counselor; Clifton Main, past counnselor;

Walter P. Loop, vice counselor; S. A. Ekelberry, secretary;

W. S. McCandlish, treasurer; Mrs. W. F. Crickard, chaplain;

Mrs. Clara Miller, guide; Mrs. Harriet Everal, conductor; Mrs.

B. F. Sams, inner shield; Landon Aldrich, outer shield; W. S.

McCandlish, trustee; C. P. Wallace, captain of degree staff.

Meeting every Friday evening in P.H.C. hall.

Daughters of Pocahontas, Muskoko Council No. 91--Mae Cruik-

shank, Pocahontas; Margaret Sherwood, Winona; Emma Den-

nis, prophetess; J. L. Cooperider, Powhatan; Clara Miller,

keeper of records; Emma Long, collector of wampum; Grace

Temple, keeper of wampum; George Zimmerman, captain; 

Eulala Thomas, pianist; Emma Long, representative to great

council.

Olentangy Lodge No. 53, I.O.O.F.--Chartered November 15, 1845.

Grover Wakeman, N.G.; Charles Sutley, V.G.; George J. Long,

recording secretary; H. L. Clark, financial secretary; G. K.

Zimmerman, treasurer; B. Yehley and Wellington Long, trus-

tees; C. P. Wallace, captain degree staff; F. A. Bartholomew,

musician. Meeting every Tuesday night, in Cochran block.

Delaware Encampment No. 52, I.O.O.F.--Chartered December 31,

1885. Kenneth Inskeep, high priest; Charles Owen, chief

patriarch; W. T. Davison, senior warden; Clint Shoemaker,

junior warden; A. J. Ryan, scribe; J. C. Swickheimer, treasurer;

73</text>
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                    <text>[page 76]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 74 of Delaware Blue Book]

It's the Weak Spot

That gives way in cold weather. It pays to watch the plumb-

ing so that weak spots may be repaired in due time.

Before the Break

We'll be glad to prevent disaster by giving good plumbing at

the start, and good repairs afterward, when rarely necessary.

Roof, Spouting and Hot Air Furnaces Are Our Specialties.

Wolfley, Marnell, Williams

&amp; Co.

CIT. PHONE 609. 58 N. SANDUSKY ST.

Winter Wraps

Dry Cleaned

By this time of the season your coat has very likely be-

come a little soiled and mussed.

Why not send it to us and let us dry clean and press it?

When returned the garment will look just as fresh and attract-

ive as it did when new.

Bring Your Garments to Us for Good Cleaning.

You'll really be surprised to see what an improvement it

makes in their looks. Let us know your needs.

Schweitzer's Dry Cleaning

Establishment

PHONE 1234.</text>
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                    <text>[page 77]

[corresponds to page 75 of Delaware Blue Book]

H. L. Clark, captain. Meeting first and third Friday evenings

of each month.

Woman's Relief Corps--Luck Pickett, president; Mary Coleman,

senior vice president; Amelia Freshwater, junior vice presi-

dent; Mrs. S. E. Paddock, chaplain; Catherine Allen, treasurer;

Mary Smith, guard; Lillian Spicer, conductor; Lula Stone, dele-

gate; Lillian Spicer, alternate. Meeting first and third Tuesday

afternoons, in G.A.R. hall.

Fraternal Order of Eagles, Delaware Aerie No. 376--Organized

1903. Patrick Foley, past worthy president; T. B. Samson, 

worthy president; Dan Smith, vice president; Eugene Bur-

roughs, secretary; Jacob Fegley, chaplain; J. P. Grasser, treas-

urer; F. R. Mayer, trustee, three years; William Davis, outer

guard; John Karl, inner guard; Ernest Snedeker, E. D. Watson 

and Wesley Howells, auditing committee. Meeting every Thurs-

day evening.

Rebekah Lodge, Olentangy Chapter--Organized 1912. Sadie Kruck,

noble guard; Nellie Osboune, vice grand; Daisy Vining, financial

secretary; Gertrude Slack, recording secretary; Sadie Mathias,

treasurer; Clara Vining, musician; Mattie Battenfield, captain

degree staff; Ollie Kingman, deputy president; M. W. Batten-

field, trustee. Meeting first and third Thursday evenings of

each month, in I.O.O.F. hall.

Knights of Pythias, Lenape Lodge No. 29--Chartered February 11,

1871. Roy Hutchisson, C.C.; Russell Baker, V.C.; L. J. 

Crumb, prelate; W. V. Aldrich, M. of A.; Frank Conklin, K. of

R. and S.; E. S. Owen, M. of F.; E. S. Mettler, M. of E.; H. V.

Spicer, M. of W.; T. S. Troxell, I. G.; Bert Jaynes, O. G.; S. F.

Truxall, janitor; E. J. Paddock, pianist; O. J. Lenhart, Frank

Klee and J. W. Pfiffner, trustees. Meetings every Monday even-

ing, Frank Brothers hall.

George B. Torrence Post No. 60, G.A.R.-- R. J. Cox, post comman-

der; William G. Gannon S.V.C.; C. W. Wiles, J.V.C.; Charles

K. Bailer, chaplain; S. B. Brown, officer of the day; J. F. Cur-

ren, quartermaster and adjutant; R. H. Kellogg, patriotic in-

structor; Robert Butts, officer of the guard; Dr. S. W. Fowler,

W. A. Greiner and J. F. Curren, trustees; J. F. Curren, delegate

to state encampment; R. K. Willis, alternate. Meeting first

Tuesday evening in each month.

Ancient Order of Hibernians--F. J. Curtin, president; Jerry Gearon,

vice president; Dan Sullivan, secretary; Ed Moynihan, record-

ing secretary; John Flavin, treasurer. Meeting second and 

fourth Mondays of each month, in K.C. hall.

Catholic Total Abstinence Union--President, James O'Brien; vice

president, Mrs. C. Potter; secretary, Robert Warren; treasurer,

Miss Lizzie Keefe. Meetings quarterly.

Federation Catholic Societies--President, Edward Fleck; vice presi-

dent, John Schweitzer; secretary, Herman Hiss, Sr.; treasurer,

John Grasser; sergeant-at-arms, Mrs. William Hanrahan.

Meetings second Sunday each month.

75</text>
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                    <text>[page 78]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 76 of Delaware Blue Book]

Not to be ranked among the least things of Delaware and

Delaware County is the

Real Estate and Loan Agency, and 

General Insurance Business of

J. D. Russell

Successor to Wm. McRoberts.

Fourteen of the best Fire Insurance Companies in Amer-

ica are represented in his office, as well as four Fidelty, Cas-

ualty, Accident and Guaranty Companies. Along with all these

is the Indiana and Ohio Livestock Insurance Company, the best

of its kind in the United States. Hence "J. D." is prepared to

sell you a farm, loan you the money to pay for it, cover all the

buildings, livestock and chattels with insurance, and then

guarantee you prompt and honorable settlement in case of loss.

Therefore, You'd Better

See "J. D." About It

OVER DELAWARE SAVINGS BANK, EAST WINTER ST.</text>
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                    <text>[page 79]

[corresponds to page 77 of Delaware Blue Book]

St. Joseph's Benevolent Society--President, Edward Fleck; record-

ing secretary, John Teufel; treasurer, John Reinhart; financial

secretary, Edward Reinhart. Meetings first Sunday afternoon

in each month at K.C. hall.

Ancient Order of Hibernians, Ladies' Auxiliary--Anna Finnell,

county president; Mrs. William Hanrahan, president; Mrs.

Thomas Ross, vice president; Margaret Fitzgerald, recording

secretary; Kathryn Sullivan, financial secretary; Nellie Foley,

treasurer; Mrs. E. Smith, mistress-at-arms; Nellie Purkey, ser-

geant. Meeting fourth Thursday evening of each month in

K.C. hall.

National Union, Delaware Council No. 176--F. A. Owen, president;

John Riddle, vice president; E. S. Mettler, secretary; John

Karl, speaker; John Shoemaker, treasurer; H. C. Clippinger,

financial secretary; J. L. Smith, chaplain; John White, sergeant;

R. G. Lybrand, usher; A. A. Larason, doorkeeper; B. F. Fresh-

water, W. Z. Evans and N. F. Overturf, trustees.

Knights of the Maccabees of the World, Delaware Tent No. 246--

W. S. Tozzer, past commander; C. C. Long, commander; Edward

Wheeler, lieutenant commander; E. F. Sutley, R.K.; J. W.

Johnson, M. of A.; J. Gearon, chaplain; C. E. Tibbals, sergeant;

G. Lumbard, 1st M.G.; J. O. Morrow, 2nd M.G.; C. W. Chides-

ter, sentinel; C. W. Hughs, picket; C. E. Tibbals, trustee; F. B.

Volk, auditor. Meetings every Thursday evening, hall over

Vatsures'.

Ladies of the Maccabees of the World, Oak Leaf Hive No. 128--

Floretta Ufferman, commander; Belle Cavin, past commander;

Sarah Eger, lieutenant commander; Emma Hessey, chaplain;

Nellie Shaw, record keeper; Clara Sutley, finance auditor;

Elizabeth Jacobs, lady-at-arms; Emily Curran, sergeant; Stella

Bruke, sentinel; Anna Hudson, picket; Mary Schrock, official

prompter; Catherine Egan, musician; Emma Long, captain of

guard; Mary Kraus, color bearer No. 1; Ella Hurd, color bearer

No. 2; Maud Inskeep, ensign No. 1; Lena Wheeler, ensign No. 2.

Pythian Sisters, Lenape Temple No. 285--Mrs. William Pickett, most

excellent chief; Mrs. Cowgill, most excellent senior; Mrs. Davis,

excellent junior; Mrs. Williams, manager; Mrs. H. V. Spicer,

protector; Mrs. Hurd, guard; Mrs. Crumm, mistress of records

and correspondence; Mrs. Havens, mistress of finance; Mrs.

Gregory, past chief; Mrs. Fred Engroff, pianist. Meetings

first and third Tuesday evenings, in K. of P. hall.

Owls--Organized November, 1912. Jesse Pinyerd, past president;

Edward Orians, president; Fred Ufferman, vice president; Evan

Evans, invocator; Web Dunham, secretary; R. L. Hudson, treas-

urer; Clarence Swope, warden; Dan Williams, sentinel; J. F.

Reichelderfer, picket. Meets Tuesday evenings at 7:30 in Red

Men's hall.

COLORED FRATERNAL ORDERS.

Odevene Spring Lodge No. 7764, G.U.O.O.F.--Meets second and

fourth Monday evenings of each month. Officers: A. W. Day,

W.T.; R. L. Johnson, W.A.; Robert Johnson, W.C.; J. F.

Gardner, P.S.; J. C. Lyon, P.N.F.; W. H. Alston, N.F.; T. A.

77</text>
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                    <text>[page 80]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 78 of Delaware Blue Book]

Nuts, Candies, Fruits

THE NAME

PAUL BIANCHI

STANDS FOR

QUALITY

Ice Cream, Sodas, Soft Drinks

South Sandusky Street Almost to the Post Office

M. Cadwallader

MILLINER

8. W. Winter St. Delaware, Ohio.</text>
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                    <text>[page 81]

[corresponds to page 79 of Delaware Blue Book]

Whyte, P.N.G.; E. W. Smith, N.G.; James O. Smith, V.G.;

C. H. Campbell, E.S.; James N. Craig, I.G.; Charles Rose,

warden; G. W. Wilson, R.S. to V.G.; Richard Cook, L.S. to 

N.G.; A. W. Day, J. F. Gardner and J. C. Lyon, trustees.

Eureka Lodge No. 3, Knights of Pythias--Officers: Richard Cook,

C.C.; G. Franklin, V.C.; T. M. Viney, M.F.; J. H. Day, prelate

and M. of E.; S. H. Austin, K. of R. and S.; C. Kemper, M. of

W.; J. Williams, M. of A.; E. Cook, inner guard; J. M. Lloyd,

outer guard; H. T. Ragan, H. Fleming and A. P. Warrick, 

trustees.

White Sulphur Lodge No. 10, F. and A.M.--Meetings first Thursday 

of each month. Chartered 1868. Officers: Horace Wheeler,

W.M.; S. A. Tyson, S.W.; J. A. Reese, J.W.; H. W. B. Alford,

treasurer; B. F. Thomas, secretary; J. A. Wilson, S. D.; Jeptha

North, J.D.; J. T. Hurley, S.S.; Henry Fleming, J.S.; H. C. 

Clay, chaplain; Harry Clay, tyler.

Miscellaneous Organizations.

DELAWARE COMMERCIAL CLUB.

The Delaware Commercial Club was organized February 17,

1906. On February 5, 1912, the Boosters' Club (composed ex-

clusively of retail merchants) was merged into the larger club, and

the membership fee placed at $10 per year. The club has 140 mem-

bers, and during the year 1912 accomplished an especially notable

piece of work in bringing to the city the C. &amp; E. shoe factory, which

has 300 employes. The Commercial Club raised a total of $11,000

for this enterprise, presenting to the company the factory building

and a fine lot. The officers during the past year were William Mc-

Kenzie, president; J. L. Anderson and L. C. Riddle, vice presidents;

W. D. Thomson, secretary; W. Brooks Galleher, treasurer. New

officers were elected at the annual banquet February 13: Bert Arm-

strong ,president; M. L. Wolff and F. M. Bauereis, vice presidents;

W. D. Thomson, secretary; F. N. Sell, treasurer. The club's chief

objects are to promote the industrial welfare of the city, bring new

factories, etc. It has available some fine sites for new industries.

Rooms, Y.M.C.A. building.

DELAWARE Y. M. C. A.

Southwest corner East Winter and Union streets. Dedicated

March 24, 1907. Carries on a multitude of activities for boys and

men. Excellent dormitory facilities, gymnasium, bowling alleys,

Commerical Club rooms, etc. Value of property, $25,000. The asso-

ciation is managed by a board of fifteen directors, five of whom are

elected each March for three years. The present officers are: Presi-

dent, C. A. Jones; vice presidents, J. L. Anderson and H. E. Kend-

rick; secretary, E. F. Young; treasurer, T. M. Thomson; general sec-

retary, H. M. Fiske.

79</text>
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                    <text>[page 82]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 80 of Delaware Blue Book]

Service

Is a question in which at least two parties are

always concerned.

Our operators and management do their best

to give you the best service. Watch the num-

bers and help us make it better.

THE CITIZENS

TELEPHONE CO.

Both Bell and Central Union Long Distance.

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                    <text>[page 83]

[corresponds to page 81 of Delaware Blue Book]

Factory Site Club--George E. Caylor, president; Charles Wells, Jr.,

vice president; R. T. Turney, secretary; Eugene Nash, treas-

urer;. Organized for the promotion of Delaware's industrial

welfare, and started auspiciously by helping bring the C. &amp; E.

shoe factory to Delaware.

Fourth Regiment--Delaware officers: B. W. Hough, lieutenant-

colonel; Captain H. H. Miller, chaplain; First Lieutenant Floyd

Miller, assistant surgeon. Company K: James Samson, cap-

tain; Robert Walton, first lieutenant, and V. V. Enyart, second

lieutenant. First organized in 1878. At present there are three

commissioned officers and fifty-seven enlisted men.

Delaware County, W.C.T.U.--Officers: Mrs. Martha McCarty, pres-

ident; Mrs. Frank May, vice president; Mrs. Al Linn, recording

secretary; Mrs. C. A. White, corresponding secretary; Mrs. W.

A. Rees, treasurer.

Woman's Federation--Officers: Mrs. D. Y. Murdoch, president;

Mrs. Frank Campbell, Mrs. R. E. Hills and Mrs. J. C. Gekeler,

vice presidents; Mrs. R. H. Pengally, secretary; Mrs. L. G. West-

gate, treasurer. 

Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals--V.D. Stayman,

president; Dr. Lee Wentz, humane officer.

Ladies' Christian Union--Officers: Mrs. E. M. Semans, president;

Mrs. N. Wagner, first vice president; Mrs. Hettie McDowell, sec-

ond vice president; Mrs. W. B. Patten, secretary-treasurer.

Teachers' Institute--Officers: William McMannis, president; Cecil

McKnight, secretary; Mrs. Ella Knowles, H. T. Main and C. E.

Weatherby, executive committee.

Delaware Club--Officers: E. Louis McCarty, president; Ernest

Main, vice president; Homer Benton, secretary-treasurer.

Delaware Glee Club--Murray Avery, president, E. I. Jones, Radnor,

vice president; F. C. Higley, secretary-treasurer; E. I. Pollock, 

manager; George Young, librarian; Prof. Collins Brock, di-

rector.

Delaware County Medical Society--W. F. Crickard, president; A. H.

Buck, vice president; Gaillord Hyatt, secretary; Floyd Miller,

member board of censors. Meetings on first Friday evening of

each month, at the courthouse.

Young Men's Glee Club--Organized December, 1912. Paul Crimm, 

president; Kenyon Vance, vice president; Eugene Critzer, sec-

retary-treasurer; Emil Turner, manager; Hugh Fuller, libra-

rian. Meetings Monday evenings.

Delaware County Agricultural Society (Powell Fair)--W. H. Fisher,

president; Arch Richards, treasurer; Bond S. Neff, secretary;

Walter Zinn, assistant secretary; directors, T. A. Canfield,

George F. Miller, W. H. Fisher, Allen Rutherford, Jacob Hess-

nauer; George Perry, C. F. Talley, Horton Smith, W. T. Hall, 

Mrs. J. E. Sharp, Mrs. Charles Waldorf, J. C. Campbell, Walter

Zinn, W. B. McCloud, J. E. Sharp, Wayland Ryant, C. M. Leon-

ard, C. C. Dunlap, Charles Waldorf, Nelson Case.

Rome Fair--C.M. Shicks, president; Ed Hall, vice president; Arthur

Mann, secretary; James Cockerell, treasurer; Al Wilson, Ed 

Furniss and C. D. Wigton, executive committee.

81</text>
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                    <text>[page 84]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 82 of Delaware Blue Book]

The Standard

The Always Reliable

CLOTHING HOUSE

Where you can always find a complete and up-to-

date stock of

Men's and Young Men's Clothing

and Furnishings

We carry a number of lines and goods that are

exclusively s old by us. Among them we call

your attention to the following:

ADLER-ROCHESTER CLOTHING

MONARCH AND CLUETT SHIRTS

STANDARD SPECIAL HATS

Everything sold out of our store must be

worth the price, or your money goes back to you.

If you have never been a customer here,

TRY US ONCE</text>
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                    <text>[page 85]

[corresponds to page 83 of Delaware Blue Book]

Delaware County Agricultural Extension School--Otho Pollock, pres-

ident; Wesley Gross, vice president; Bert Morris, secretary-

treasurer; executive committee, J. L. Sonner, Harry Bieber, 

L. B. Jackson, Charles Shively, H. M. Cowgill, Charles Humes,

L. F. McKinnie and F. E. Coover.

Delaware Farmers' Institute--James Taggart, president; C. W.

Humes, vice president; Tracy Oswald, secretary-treasurer; insti-

tute committee, Mrs. T. R. Smith, Mrs. S. M. Cleaver, W. E.

Holcomb, Charles Shively and Bernard Hatton.

Ministerial Association--Rev. S. K. Mahon, president; Rev. T. H.

Housel, vice president; Rev. E. C. Dolbeer, secretary-treasurer. 

Meets first and third Monday mornings of each month.

Delaware County Law and Order League--Rev. E. M. Wylie, presi-

dent; W. C. Diven, secretary and fiscal agent; Prof. W. G. Hor-

mell, treasurer; Rev. Alfred Farrar, county superintendent;

excecutive committee, W. A. Morrison, L. L. Denison and the

officers named.

Delaware County Sunday School Association--President, B. E. Cart-

mell; vice president, Rev. E. M. Wylie; secretary, B. P. Benton;

assistant secretary, Ray D. Mohr; treasurer, C. E. Gardner.

Seventy-two Sunday schools in Delaware county affiliated.

Local Officers of State and National Organizations--Secretary of

Woman's Home Missionary Society, M.E. church, Mrs. Delia L. 

Williams; president and secretary Ohio Wholesale Grocers' As-

sociation, R. E. Hills; secretary Ohio Osteopathic Association,

Dr. L. A. Bumstead; secretary Ohio Academy of Science, Prof.

E. L. Rice; member state executive committee Ohio Y.M.C.A.,

W. A. Morrison; great medical examinder Great Camp Macca-

bees for Ohio, Dr. C. W. Chidester; president Percheron Horse

Breeders' Association, Lewis Slack; secretary Delaine-Merino

Record Association, S. M. Cleaver.

Delaware Archaeological and Historical Society--President, D. L.

Zeigler; secretary, Frank Grove; curator, Howard Core. The

members of this society possess many thousands of Indian and

other relics secured mainly within the borders of the county.

THE CARNEGIE LIBRARY.

Located 101 North Sandusky street. Opened September 1, 1906.

Cost of building, $21,500. Cost of operation 1912, $2,000. Libra-

rian, Mrs. B. C. Lahr. Number of volumes, 7,900. Number patrons,

4,000. Books borrowed 1912, 42,150. Users reading room 1912,

23,342. Hours, 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., daily, except Sundays and

holidays. Fifty magazines and five daily newspaperes received reg-

ularly.

COUNTY PARTY ORGANIZATIONS 1912.

Democratic--J. M. Schaffner, chairman; Wesley Weiser, secretary.

Republican--H. L. Eliot, chairman; E. D. Watson, secretary.

Progressive--Lewis Slack, chairman; R. M. Avery, secretary.

Western Union Telegraph Hours--From 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., daily, and

8 to 9 a.m., and 4 to 5 p.m. Sundays. Ira Horn, local manager.

83</text>
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                    <text>[page 86]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 84 of Delaware Blue Book]

WE ARE THE LEADERS IN

Confectionery And Ice Cream Lines

Vatsures

Our Candies are Fresh and Home-made

When you Buy VATSURES'

you get the Purerst and Best

Ice Cream Orders

Phone 694 	5 North Sandusky Street

There Is Always

ONE BEST IN Groceries

Most everyone says it's

Kurrley &amp; Evans

Phone 77	81 N. Sandusky St.

Crisp and clean, sound and fresh.

Our goods always reliable.</text>
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                    <text>[page 87]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 85 of Delaware Blue Book]

Church Directory.

Asbury M.E.--Corner Franklin street and Lincoln avenue. Stephen

K. Mahon, pastor, 213 North Franklin street; G. O. Higley, 

treasurer; B. E. Cartmell, Sunday school superintendent; C. W.

Chidester, president Brotherhood.

Zion Reformed--Corner Henry and East William streets; John C. 

Gekeler, pastor, 257 South Sandusky street; Julius Hoffman,

treasurer; Fred Decker, Sunday school superintendent and pres-

ident Brotherhood.

First Baptist--Franklin and Court streets. B. F. Griffeth, temporary

pastor, Y.M.C.A.; Bird Frost, treasurer; Harry Gallant, Sun-

day school superintendent.

St. Mark's Lutheran--East William street, near Union. F. B. Hax,

pastor, 358 North Sandusky street; Walter Yake, treasurer;

E. V. Swickheimer, Sunday school superintendent.

First Presbyterian--Corner Winter and Washington streets. E. M.

Wylie, pastor, 148 West Winter street; David Battenfield,

treasurer; B. P. Benton, Sunday school superintendent; F. A.

Bartholomew, president Brotherhood.

St. Mary's Catholic--East William street, near Henry. Rev. Father

Ph. Steyle, corner William and Henry streets; Daniel J. Griffin,

Joseph Shea and Frank Pliickebaum, Jr., trustees; Jerome

Montaine, Robert Parker, Jr., and John Shoub, church com-

mittee.

William Street M.E.--Corner West William and Franklin streets. 

Rev. T. H. Housel, pastor, 12 North Franklin street; D. H. Leas,

Sunday school superintendent; Prof. C. B. Austin, president of

Brotherhood.

St. Paul's M.E.--University avenue. Rev. C. P. Hargraves, pastor,

45 University avenue; W. A. Morrison, Sunday school superin-

tendent; R. G. Hooper, president of Brotherhood.

St. John's Lutheran--North Sandusky street, near courthouse. Rev.

E. C. Dolbeer, pastor, 278 North Sandusky street; Charles Mor-

ton, Sunday school superintendent; Harry Courter, president of

Brotherhood.

Faith M.E.--South Liberty street. Rev. H. G. Hageman, pastor,

70 1/2 South Sandusky street; Ira Davis, Sunday school superin-

tendent.

St. Peter's Episcopal--West Winter street. Rev. A. C. Jones, rector,

167 West Winter street. Rev. A. C. Jones, Sunday school super-

intendent.

City Mission--University avenue. J. H. White, superintendent; J. A.

Baumgardner, Sunday school superintendent.

United Brethren--Eaton street. Mrs. Martha Allebaugh, pastor;

Edward Morris, Sunday school superintendent.

Christian Science--Hall and Reading room over Delaware Savings

Bank; Major L. P. Davison, first reader.

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                    <text>[page 88]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 86 of Delaware Blue Book]

If You Want in Shoes: Comfort,

Wear and Style

We Want 	T	Florsheim For Men

to Show		H	Dorothy Dodd For Women

You		E 	Educator For Children

Nothing So Good in Delaware!

GRAFF BROS.

51 North Sandusky Street

A. J. WHITE Phone 443 PAUL L. BLISS

White &amp; Bliss

ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW

Reid Block Delaware, Ohio</text>
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                    <text>[page 89]

[corresponds to page 85 of Delaware Blue Book]

Grace M.E.--East extremity of Central avenue and William street.

Rev. L. E. Rush, pastor, 332 East William street; Charles Sut-

ley, Sunday school superintendent.

Second Baptist--Ross street. D. G. Grady, pastor, Cedarville, Ohio.

Mrs. Catharine Keys, treasurer; Dr. A. P. Warrick, committee

on publication.

Trinity M.E.--South Liberty street. B. W. Kirtley, pastor, living

northeast of the city.

Zion A.M.E.--South Washington street. J. H. Mason, pastor, 136

South Washington street; Horace Wheeler, Sunday school su-

perintendent.

DELAWARE STREET RAILWAY.

Franchise granted November 16, 1891. Company incorporated

May 31, 1892, for $60,000. First cars operated November, 1892.

System completed 1894, with five miles of track. Sold July 30,

1898, for $13,525. Sold to C., D. &amp; M. March 20, 1905, for $50,000.

Under receivership management of the C., D. &amp; M. a regular

15-minute schedule has been maintained, the lines have been greatly

improved and the cars put in first-class condition, giving Delaware a

service of much excellence. As a consequence a total of 405,110

passengers were carried on the city cars during the twelve months

of 1912, an average of 1,110 a day, and the property has become a

profitable part of the C., D. &amp; M. system.

The Delaware Post Office.

SOME FIGURES.

Postmaster, E. Lee Porterfield; qualified April 1, 1912; salary,

$2,700 per annum. Assistant postmaster, Hosea Spauling; salary,

$1,300 per annum.

Employes--Six regular clerks; salaries, four at $1,100, one at 

$800 and one at $600. Seven carriers; salaries, six at $1,100 and

one at $1,000. 

Total business 1912, $28,277.01. Expense 1912, inside, $9,800,

outside $7,600. Extras, approximately $500.

New building, corner of South Sandusky and Spring streets, oc-

cupied November 1, 1911. Cost of building, $65,000; cost of site,

$10,000; cost of furnishings, $5,000.

MAIL HOURS.

The first mail is sent out of the Delaware office at 5:22 a.m.,

daily and Sunday, and the last at 7 p.m. on week days and 6 p.m. on

Sundays. Seventeen mails are sent out to trains and received from

the same every day, and in addition mail is sent to Magnetic Springs

by interurban every week day at 7:55 a.m.

The office is open every day, except Sundays and holidays, from

7:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. On Sundays it is not open at all. Holiday hours

are from 7:30 to 10 a.m. Money order and postal savings windows

are open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., except on Sundays and holidays.

The registry window is open at the same hours as the postoffice.

85</text>
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                    <text>[page 90]

[corresponds to page 86 of Delaware Blue Book]

Delaware and the Parcel Post.

The new parcel post, operated by the United States govern-

ment, went into effect January 1, 1913, the first package out of Dela-

ware being a violin sent by J. W. Bonham to Melvin, Iowa. Seven-

teen parcels were mailed from the local office the first day. Parcel

post is a new way of sending packages, and there are three distinct-

ively new features:

1. The postage you pay depends on the weight and the distance

your package goes. Exception: Packages weighing four ounces or

less are so small that they will be sent at the old flat rate of 1 cent

an ounce everywhere.

2. You can now send packages weighing up to eleven pounds, 

instead of only four pounds.

3. You must use a new kind of stamp for parcels. Ordinary

letter stamps are not good on these packages, and the new parcel

post stamps are not good on other mail matter.

"ZONE SYSTEM" EASY.

The "zone system" is easy to understand. Just remember that

whatever you may be, you are the center of the whole system. The

accompanying parcel post map and table contain all the necessary

references. Use them every day--they're valuable!

SOME DON'TS.

Don't use ordinary stamps; the distinctive parcel post stamps

must be used.

Don't seal your pacakge; wrap and tie it securely.

Don't fail to put the sender's name on the outside of package.

Don't forget to mark your package "Perishable" or "Fragile," if 

the contents are of that nature.

PARCEL POST RATES.

Parcels weighing four ounces or less are mailable at the rate of

1 cent for each ounce or fraction of an ounce, regardless of distance.

Parcels weighing more than four ounces are mailable at the pound

rate, as shown by the following table, and when mailed at this rate

any fraction of a pound is considered a full pound:

		*1st Zones	2nd	3rd	4th	5th	6th	7th	8th

		Local	Zone	Zone	Zone	Zone	Zone	Zone	Zone	Zone

Weight.		Rate.	Rate. 	Rate.	Rate.	Rate.	Rate.	Rate.	Rate.	Rate.

1 pound........$0.05	$0.05	$0.06	$0.07	$0.08	$0.09	$0.10	$0.11	$0.12

2 pounds.......  .06	  .08	  .10	  .12	  .14	  .16	  .19	  .21	  .24

3 pounds.......  .07	  .11     .14	  .17	  .20	  .23	  .28	  .31	  .36

4 pounds.......  .08	  .14	  .18	  .22	  .26	  .30	  .37	  .41	  .48

5 pounds.......  .09      .17	  .22	  .27	  .32	  .37	  .46	  .51	  .60

6 pounds.......  .10	  .20	  .26	  .32	  .38	  .44	  .55	  .61	  .72

7 pounds.......  .11	  .23	  .30	  .37	  .44	  .51	  .64	  .71	  .84

8 pounds.......  .12	  .26	  .34	  .42	  .50	  .58	  .73	  .81	  .96

9 pounds.......  .13	  .29	  .38	  .47	  .56	  .65	  .82	  .91	 1.08

10 pounds......  .14	  .32	  .42	  .52	  .62	  .72	  .91	 1.01	 1.20

11 pounds......  .15 	  .35	  .46	  .57	  .68	  .79	 1.00	 1.11	 1.32

_____

*The local rate in the first zone applies to parcels sent by a city man

to someone in the same city, or on a rural route starting out of that city,

and also to parcels sent by someone on a rural route to someone on the

same rural route, or to the city from which that route starts, or to some-

one on another route starting out of the same city. The zone rate for the

first zone applies to packages sent between cities.

86

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                    <text>[page 91]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 87 of Delaware Blue Book]

[map of Delaware parcel post zones]

PARCEL POST MAP--ZONES FROM DELAWARE.</text>
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                    <text>[page 92]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 88 of Delaware Blue Book]

The Travellers Insurance Co.				F.M. Marriott B.F. Freshwater

Cf Hartford, Conn.						E.M Wickham

The Pioneer Accident Company--The Leader in

Accident Insurance. Safest Life Insurance and Em-	Marriott, Freshwater

ployers' Liability Insurance. Travellers' Accident	&amp; Wickham

Policies increase in value each year and insure ben-

eficiary also. The Best Ever! Travelers' Low Cost	ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW

Life Insurance Saves Money. Call ERNEST

JAYNES, Agent, Citizens Phone 405.			Phone 135 78 North Sandusky Street

STARR'S 						B. P. BENTON

Prescriptions Accurately Compounded			Successor to Jewell &amp; Benton

Toilet Articles Camera Supplies

Box Candies Cigars					ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

Open Sundays:--8 to 11 a.m.; 3:30 to 8 p.m.		Reid Block Delaware, Ohio

DRUGS							Citizens Phone 376</text>
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                    <text>[page 93]

[corresponds to page 89 of Delaware Blue Book]

RURAL ROUTES.

There are eight postal rural routes out of Delaware, maintained

at a salary expense of $8,514--four carriers at $1,056, three at

$1,100 and one at $990, all salaries based on mileage covered. The

general directions of these routes are as follows:

Route 1, north, Marion pike, Norton, etc.; 2 east on Sunbury

pike, Kilbourne postoffice, west on Bowtown road; 3, south, east and

west of Olentangy river; 4, southeast, Berlin township; 5, southwest,

Bellpoint, Rathbone, Girls' Industrial Home; 6, west and northwest,

Radnor pike to Warrensburg, east on Marysville pike; 7, Horseshoe

and Panhandle roads, Windsor's Corners, etc.; 8, southwest, be-

tween routes 3 and 5, Liberty township.

The rural carriers are as follows: Route 1, E. W. Simpson;

2, Douglass Moore; 3, J. A. Dennis; 4 C. A. Welch; 5, Harry Berlet;

6, H. O. Breece; 7, Clifton Main; 8, H. O. Courter.

C. O. Jones has the contract for carrying mail to and from the

trains.

City Facts.

DELAWARE HAS:

Six and one-half miles of paved streets.

Thirty miles of macadam streets.

Approximately fifteen miles of cement sidewalks.

Thirteen miles of sanitary sewer, with three more miles to be con-

structed in 1913. (Over 1,100 houses are connected with the

system.)

Twenty-three miles of water pipe, four to sixteen inches in diameter.

Five miles of street railway, with fifteen-minute service.

One hundred and fifty-two electric arc lights, at $72 a year, each.

Two hundred and sixty-two fire hydrants, at $40 a year, each.

Ten-year contract with Delaware Water Company expires December

31, 1920.

Ten-year contract with Delaware Electric Light Company expires

November 30, 1918. 

Five-year heat contract expires November 20, 1915.

Delaware county has 525 miles of pikes, besides gravel roads.

OAK GROVE CEMETERY.

Ninety acres in extent, located southern part of Delaware, west

of Sandusky street. Dedicated July 20, 1851. Became city property

May 25, 1863. Under control of Oak Grove Cemetery Company

since February 13, 1906. Number of graves, approximately 30,000,

including graves removed from old cemeteries.

Officers of Oak Grove Cemetery Company--Dr. E. M. Hall, presi-

dent; Dr. C. G. Lewis, vice president; G. W. Powers, treasurer;

David Grinton, superintendent, for twenty-three years. Expense of

maintenance 1912, $5,094.71; $1,008.35 in treasury January 1, 1913.

Perpetual care fund totals $15,370.50.

St. Mary's Catholic cemetery adjoins at the south.

89</text>
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                    <text>[page 94]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 90 of Delaware Blue Book]

Automobile

Service, Economy and Efficiency

-Are Combined in the-

Ford 

THE UNIVERSAL CAR

No other car approaches it in minimum of price, and

its service is just as pleasing as that of many costlier

cars. We would be pleased to demonstrate the su-

periority of the Ford.

COOK'S GARAGE

65 East William Street Phone 596

Our repair department is always at your

service with a fully equipped machine

shop. First-Class Service Guaranteed</text>
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                    <text>[page 95]

[corresponds to page 91 of Delaware Blue Book]

City Financial Statement.

RECAPITULATION 1912.	

Total expenditures............................. $32,560.57

Unpaid accounts, 1912..........................  16,067.45

*Street cleaning...............................   2,269.18

						 _________

Actual expenditures, year 1912................. $50,897.20

*Street cleaning this year was assessed against the property;

heretofore was paid through the service fund. It is figured in the

actual expenditures of the above year of 1912.

EXPENDITURES.

Public Service Fund--

Street lighting (seven months)................   6,678.00

Engineering ..................................   1,501.07

Street repairing .............................   1,665.57

Total expenditures, service fund ............. $14,710.88

Public Safety Fund--

General administration........................ $   316.38

Police department ............................   4,441.35

Fire department ..............................   5,743.26

						 ________

Total expenditures, safety fund............... $10,500.99

Total expenditures, health fund............... $ 1,362.15

Total expenditures, general................... $ 5,986.55

COMPARATIVE STATEMENT.

1904--

Total receipts............................. $45,593.89

Total expenditures.........................  43,033.68

1908--

Total receipts............................. $53,362.03

Total expenditures.........................  52,882.28

1912--

Total receipts............................. $32,763.27

Total expenditures.........................  50,897.20

The amount levied in 1911 under the old law, based on a levy

of 10 mills on a duplicate of the real and personal property tax of

$4,000,000, showed in receipts $40,000. Now, the amount appor-

tioned to the municipal funds by the Budget Commission under the

Smith 1 per cent bill for 1912, with a levy of 3.35 mills on a dupli-

cate of $8,730,035, shows receipts of only $29,245.62, making a de-

crease in property tax revenues alone of $10,754.38. This, with the

amount cut off by the loss of the bridge and Dow tax of $10,000

(estimated) will show an actual shortage in city revenues each year

of $20,745.38, unless the Budget Commission increases the mill levy,

or unless the real and personal tax duplicate is made greater than

that of the year 1912. To make the same revenue as received for

property taxes in 1911, the appraised valuation of the city should be

placed at $12,000,000 (instead of $8,730,035), on which, with the

levy of 3.35 mills, the amount received would equal $40,200, or $200

in excess of the amount received in 1911.

91</text>
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                    <text>[page 96]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 92 of Delaware Blue Book]

Hocking Valley Ry.

Is Now Operating

HIGH CLASS ELECTRIC LIGHTED

PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS

EVERY NIGHT BETWEEN

DELAWARE

AND

CHICAGO,

DETROIT

and TOLEDO

Train leaves Delaware 10:57 p.m., arriving LaSalle Sta-

tion, Chicago, 7:59 a.m.; M.C. Station, Detroit, 7:20 a.m.,

and Union Station, Toledo, 1:50 a.m. (Car to latter point

may be occupied until 7:30 a.m.) Your patronage of these

lines will be appreciated.

Train Mgr.	W. H. FISHER		H .H. PIERCE

H B. DUNHAM,	Gen'l Pass. Agt.	Agt. Delaware.</text>
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                    <text>[page 97]

[corresponds to page 93 of Delaware Blue Book]

CITY OF DELAWARE--DUTIES OF OFFICIALS.

Elective Officials--Mayor, City Auditor, City Solicitor, Treasurer and

seven councilmen, one from each of the four wards, and three

elected by the entire city. Mayor appoints Service Director and

Safety Director, with whom he completes the Board of Control. 

Mayor acts as judge of police court.

City Council--Purely legislative, making laws, passing ordinances,

resolutions, etc., and directing the various officials by their leg-

islation to execute the same.

City Auditor--Financial officer of the city. All moneys are paid out

by his warrant on the City Treasurer, and approved by the 

necessary officials.

City Solicitor--Law department of the municipality. He approves all

ordinances and resolutions presented to council. Advises on

matters before the city.

City Treasurer--Pays all just warrants issued by the Auditor. He is

also treasurer of the School Board.

Director of Public Service--Has charge of all streets, sewers, water-

works, street lighting, engineering, parks and city buildings.

Director of Public Safety--Has charge of police and fire departments,

and all buildings connected with said departments which are not

a part of the city building. Police and firemen are under civil

service.

Board of Control--Approves all contracts made by the city and di-

rects the execution of the contract.

Sinking Fund Trustees--Four members, four years each, have

charge of payment of all bonded indebtedness; pay final judg-

ments when ordered by court.

Board of Health--Five members, serving five years each; governs

sanitary interests of the city; fixes salaries of own employes, as

does Library Board. All other salaries are fixed by Council.

Library Trustees--Six members, three years each; manage affairs of

City Library.

OLENTANGY AND SCIOTO RIVERS.

Olentangy river rises in the north-central part of Ohio and flows

generally southward. It is the Scioto's chief tributary, uniting at

Columbus. The Olentangy is 100 miles long, and the watershed is

generally flat, and is for the most part cultivated.

John Pfannstiel

DENTIST

Phone 896 56 1-2 North Sandusky Street

93</text>
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                    <text>[page 98]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 94 of Delaware Blue Book]

DELAWARE'S LEADING NEWSPAPER

The Delaware Gazette

Daily and Semi-Weekly

Established in 1818, it is a family

favorite in a large percentage of

Delaware County homes.

UNEXCELLED IN ITS

NEWS SERVICE

Both local and foreign--by any pa-

per similarly located in ohio. The

most effective and most used

ADVERTISING MEDIUM

in the county. Sworn circulation

figures on application.

The Best Job Printing Office

In Delaware

Estimates Cheerfully Given</text>
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                    <text>[page 99]

[corresponds to page 95 of Delaware Blue Book]

Scioto river starts in eastern Auglaize county. For sixty miles

its course is eastward, but in Marion and Delaware counties it takes

up a permanent southern course. It drains an area of 6,430 square

miles. The Scioto travels down through Columbus, and a short dis-

tance below Chillicothe the hills close in on both sides and the re-

mainder of the river's course is through a deep valley, bordered by

hills 400 feet or more in height.

From Here to There in Rhyme.

Here's a distance table in rhyme. If you live in Delaware and 

want to know how many miles you are from a neighboring village,

or if you live in the rural districts and want to know the distance to

the county seat, just take a glance:

From Hyattville to Delaware it's six good miles they say;

At least that's what a witness draws in travel fees one way.

But if you are from Ashley, you've ten and half to travel,

While an Olive Green man, on foot or horse, full thirteen must un-

ravel.

It's just six miles from Bellpoint, when walking's good or ill;

Galena twelve and Powell ten, nineteen from Centerville.

With eight small miles behind him, the Lewis Center man would be

here;

A Kilbourne man requires two less, or a half dozen in the clear.

From Leonardsburg it's six and a half, from Rome it's past half

twenty;

From Radnor it's a lovely eight, and Stratford three--that's plenty.

A Cheshire man has eleven big miles of road on which to hike it;

A Harlemite but sweet sixteen, and most the way could pike it.

A long, lean man from Warrensburg could reach here in an hour,

For with just six miles to travel, he doesn't need much power.

An Ostrander man counts nine short miles before we chance to greet

him,

A White Sulphur man goes half a dozen miles ere he gets where we 

can meet him.

Rathbone's busy pilgrims live just twelve miles from the hub;

And Norton farmers, when in town, drive nine full miles for grub;

And it's not because they're stingy that they drive home for a meal;

'Most any restaurant habitue knows exactly how they feel.

Now Sunbury town and Delaware have a dozen miles between;

And a Condit man can reach this town by pacing off eighteen.

To Berkshire, too, upon my word, it's just nine miles, they say;

While "wet" Columbus, twenty-four, is down hill all the way.

95</text>
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                    <text>[page 100]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 96 of Delaware Blue Book]

Tip Top

Ice Cream

THE

TASTE

THAT

TELLS

Made by The Dela-

ware Creamery Co.</text>
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                    <text>[page 101]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 97 of Delaware Blue Book]

Studebaker "25" More, we believe, than $885

		has ever bought before

[image of automobile]

Five passenger, four cylinders, 3 1-2 inch bore x 5 inch stroke, 102 inch wheel base

With 30x3 1/2 iuch [sic] Goodrich Tires		Silk mohair top			Tire holders		$885

     Stewart &amp; Clark Speedometer		Full elliptic springs		Full set of Tools

     Acetylene gas primer			Full 10 inch upholstering	Tire repair kit

     Studebaker Jiffy curtains			Ventilating windshield		Tool box

     Electric horn				Demountable rims		Extra rim

     Prest-o-lite tank				Robe rail and Foot rail

C. A. WHITE, 21=23 S. Sandusky St.</text>
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                    <text>[page 102]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 98 of Delaware Blue Book]

Why Use Poor Light When the

Best Light is Cheap?

For Satisfaction and Utility, Nothing Pleases as Much as

Electric Light

The Delaware Electric Light,

Heat and Power Company Will

be Pleased to Wire Your Home

-USE-

MAZDA Lights

And Cut Down Your Light Bills

ONE-HALF
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                    <text>[page 103]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 99 of Delaware Blue Book ]

The

Journal-Herald

Publishing Co.

Call and See Us in Our New Home

65 NORTH SANDUSKY ST.

(THE HYATT BLOCK)

Fully Equipped With Modern Appliances for High-Class

Job Work. Bring in Your Order Whether It's Great or

Small.

OF COURSE

We publish a wide-awake Daily and Semi-Weekly. All the news

while it IS news. Be sure The Journal-Herald comes to your home.

You are welcome at our office at any time. Bring in your friends.

The Journal-Herald

Publishing Co.</text>
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                    <text>[page 104]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 100 of Delaware Blue Book]

Dr. E. F. Michener						A. E. JONES

Ear, Eye, Nose and Throat				Fire Insurance, Surety on Bonds, City

	SPECIALIST						and Farm Property

Hours 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. -- 2:00

to 5:30 p.m.

GLASSES FITTED						PHONE 376	REID BLOCK

Office over Marriott, Freshwater and Wickham.

WM. E. KNIGHT						PHONES			OFFICE HOURS

DENTIST							Res. 201		8 to 11:30

CLOSED EVERY WEDNESDAY					Office W 143		1 to 5:30

Over New York Cash Store					RAY MILLER

								DENTIST
			
							EVENING BY APPOINTMENT.

							OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK DELAWARE, O.</text>
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                    <text>[page 105]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 101 of Delaware Blue Book]

Dr. T. P. TouVelle

DENTIST

Over Home Store

South Sandusky Street Delaware, Ohio

There are Just Two Kinds of

REALLY GOOD SHOES

Shoe			THE			For

Repairing		W. L. Douglass		Men,
	
Promptly		AND			Women,

and Rightly		The Bostonian		Children

	--You Get Them Both of--

MICHAEL NAPPI	

34 South Sandusky Street</text>
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                    <text>[page 106]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 102 of Delaware Blue Book]

C. W. MORRISON

&amp; SON

Best of Ambulance

Service Day or Night

PHONE - 442</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="11159">
                    <text>[page 107]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 103 of Delaware Blue Book]

[inside of back cover]

[image of man waving his hat in the air]

CREDIT 

TO ALL

I Say!

Blair 

&amp; Co.

Those big

House

Furnishers

Delaware, Ohio

Want to extend

you credit on your

purchases of any-

thing in Furniture,

Stoves, Carpets,

Wall Paper,

Queensware,

Lace Curtains and

Pianos.

The Big People with the

Small Price</text>
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                    <text>[page 108]

[corresponds to back cover of Delaware Blue Book]

THE Commercial Club

DELAWARE, OHIO

Stands for a Bigger

and Better Delaware

Free sites for new industries

Information about the city cheerfully given

BERT D. ARMSTRONG,

President.

W. D. THOMSON,

Secretary.</text>
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Delaware--Politics and government--Directories</text>
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                <text>President Bert D. Armstrong; Secretary W.D. Thomson</text>
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                    <text> [page 1]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
MINUTES &#13;
&#13;
OF THE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Sixth Annual Session&#13;
&#13;
OF THE&#13;
&#13;
OWL CREEK HARMONY REGULAR&#13;
&#13;
BAPTIST ASSOCIATION,&#13;
&#13;
BEGUN AND HELD WITH&#13;
&#13;
MARLBOROUGH CHURCH,&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE COUNTY, O.,&#13;
&#13;
ON THE&#13;
&#13;
30th &amp; 31st of Aug., &amp; 1st of Sept., 1878.&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE, OHIO:&#13;
&#13;
GEO. H. THOMSOM &amp; CO.,&#13;
&#13;
LAMB'S BLOCK. </text>
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                    <text>Minutes of the Forty-Sixth Annual Session of the Owl Creek Harmony Regular Baptist Association Begun and Held With Marlborough Church, Delaware County, O. (p 1.)</text>
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                    <text>Minutes of the Forty-Sixth Annual Session of the Owl Creek Harmony Regular Baptist Association Begun and Held With Marlborough Church, Delaware County, O. (p. 2)</text>
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                    <text> [page 2]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 2 of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
MINUTES.&#13;
&#13;
Friday, August 30th, A.D. 1878, 10 o'clock, A.M. The introductory sermon&#13;
&#13;
Was preached by Elder Wm. Dodd, from 2d Tim. 3d chapter, 16th 17th v.&#13;
&#13;
The letters from the several churches were called for by Moderator and read,&#13;
&#13;
and the Messenger's names enrolled and statistics noted as follows:&#13;
&#13;
CHURCHES		MINISTERS		Experience,	Baptism		Received by Letter	Restored	Dismis'd by Letter	Excluded,	Died,	Total	Contributions, 	&#13;
&#13;
AND			AND&#13;
&#13;
MESSENGERS.		TIME OF HOLDING&#13;
&#13;
			CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
			MEETINGS.																		   $ cts&#13;
&#13;
Wayne, Knox Co.		Elder David Jenkins,			  2								2				  2	  51	   5 00&#13;
&#13;
Reuben Metler,		4th Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Denman,&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Tulloss.&#13;
&#13;
Harmony, Morrow		Elder L. B. Sherwood,			  2												  3	  65	   6 50&#13;
&#13;
County.			1st Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
Morgan Kerney,&#13;
&#13;
Benjamin Rusk,&#13;
&#13;
Newton McClucken,&#13;
&#13;
Marlborough, Dela-	Elder L. B. Sherwood,													   1		  1	  49	   4 80&#13;
&#13;
ware Co.		3d Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
Eld. L. B. Sherwood,&#13;
&#13;
Levi Bishop,&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Main.&#13;
&#13;
Mt. Pisgah, Morrow	Elder John Prichard,	   1		  1			1				        2				   2	  115	   11 17		&#13;
	&#13;
County.			3d Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
Eld. David Jenkins,&#13;
&#13;
Jessie Mason,&#13;
&#13;
David Ulery,&#13;
&#13;
Alum Creek. Dela-	Elder L. B. Sherwood,											3				   1	   16	    3 50&#13;
&#13;
ware Co.		2d Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
L. D. Sherwood,&#13;
&#13;
Wellington Shoemaker,&#13;
&#13;
M. P. Ashbrooks.&#13;
&#13;
Westfield, Morrow	Elder Peter Powell,															    	    8	    1 00	&#13;
&#13;
County.			4th Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
Eld. Peter Powell,&#13;
&#13;
*E F. Place,&#13;
&#13;
B. W. Williams.&#13;
&#13;
Hartford, Del. Co.	Elder L. B. Hanover,			1													    21	    3 00&#13;
&#13;
John Clark		2d Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
Jessie Stith,&#13;
&#13;
Geo.Clark.&#13;
&#13;
Refuge, Del. Co.	Elder Peter Powell,						 1										    14 	    2 00&#13;
&#13;
A. J. Olmstead,		3d Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
J. C. Hanover,&#13;
&#13;
Geo Coons&#13;
&#13;
Monroe, Licking Co.	Elder T. P. Ashbrook,																    10	    1 50&#13;
&#13;
Eld. T. P. Ashbrooks,	4th Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
*Jesse Evans,&#13;
&#13;
Salem, Morrow Co.	Elder M. B. Smith,			1										  1		  3	    26	    3 00&#13;
&#13;
Nelson Vandorn,		4th Sabbath.&#13;
&#13;
David Buckingham,&#13;
&#13;
Eld. M. B. Smith.&#13;
&#13;
Adjourned for one hour.		Benediction by Elder Wm. Dodd.&#13;
&#13;
*Absent.		</text>
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                    <text> [page 3]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 3 of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
One o'clock p. m.--Association met pursuant to adjournment.&#13;
&#13;
Praise and prayer by Elder T. P. Ashbrooks.&#13;
&#13;
1. Messengers names called.&#13;
&#13;
2. Organized for the present session by choosing David Jenkins&#13;
&#13;
Moderator, and Joseph Main, Clerk.&#13;
&#13;
3. Visiting brethren invited to a seat with us in Council. Mod-&#13;
&#13;
erator appointed Elder J. C. Reed and Elder John Prichard to&#13;
&#13;
preach on the stand this p. m.&#13;
&#13;
4. Committees appointed by Moderator as follows: On preach-&#13;
&#13;
ing--The Messengers of Mt. Pisgah church and Reuben Metler,&#13;
&#13;
M. A. Kerney, Levi Bishop, M. P. Ashbrook, Nelson Vandorn,&#13;
&#13;
Henry Stith, J. C. Hanover and T. P. Ashbrooks. On Finance--&#13;
&#13;
On motion Joseph S. Denman was appointed Treasurer, and Mat-&#13;
&#13;
thew Bonar, Assistant Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
5. Churches wishing to unite with this Association called for.&#13;
&#13;
6. Correspondence from sister Associations called for and pre-&#13;
&#13;
sented as follows:&#13;
&#13;
SCIOTO--Elder D. G. Barker, with minutes.&#13;
&#13;
SANDUSKY--Minutes no Messenger.&#13;
&#13;
MIAMI--Elder J. C. Reed, with minutes.&#13;
&#13;
MUSKINGUM--Elder Samuel Meredith, with minutes.&#13;
&#13;
7. Associations wishing to open correspondence with this Asso&#13;
&#13;
ciation called for.&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Messengers to sister Associations were appointed &#13;
&#13;
as follows :&#13;
&#13;
SCIOTO--Elder Peter Powell.&#13;
&#13;
SANDUSKY--Elders M. B. Smith and T. P. Ashbrooks.&#13;
&#13;
MIAMI--Elder L. B. Sherwood and Bro. Levi Bishop.&#13;
&#13;
MUSKINGUM--Elders L. B. Hanover and David Jenkins.&#13;
&#13;
Circular Letter written by Elder L. B. Sherwood and Correspond-&#13;
&#13;
ing Letter by Brother Matthew Bonar, read and received to be&#13;
&#13;
printed.&#13;
&#13;
Adjourned to meet at 9 o'clock to-morrow morning.&#13;
&#13;
Praise and prayer by Elder M. B. Smith.&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY, AUG. 31ST, 9 O'CLOCK A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Association met pursuant to adjournment. Praise and prayer by&#13;
&#13;
Elder L. B. Sherwood.&#13;
&#13;
Messengers names called.&#13;
&#13;
On motion J. M. Struble was appointed to write the Circular&#13;
&#13;
Letter and John Clark the Corresponding Letter.&#13;
&#13;
Committee on Preaching report as follows:&#13;
&#13;
Saturday, a. m.--Elder S. Meredith, Isiah 40, I. P. M.--Elder&#13;
&#13;
M. B. Smith, Luke 14, 16. Elder D. G. Barker, John 6, 44.&#13;
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                    <text>Minutes of the Forty-Sixth Annual Session of the Owl Creek Harmony Regular Baptist Association Begun and Held With Marlborough Church, Delaware County, O. (p. 3)</text>
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                    <text> [page 4]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 4 of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
Sabbath, a. m.--Elder Wm. Dodd, Revelations 2, 25. Elder&#13;
&#13;
J. C. Reed, Philippia 2, 12. P. M.--Elder D. G. Barker, I Peter&#13;
&#13;
2, 18.&#13;
&#13;
On motion the Association decided to meet with the Marlbor-&#13;
&#13;
ough Church, seven miles North of Delaware and five miles West&#13;
&#13;
of Ashley on the C. C. C. &amp; I. Railroad, on Wednesday after the&#13;
&#13;
fourth Sabbath in August, A. D. 1879, at 10 o'clock a. m.&#13;
&#13;
Brethren coming by rail on C. &amp; T. Railroad will be met at&#13;
&#13;
Radnor, and those on the C. C. C. &amp; I. Railroad will be met at&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, and conveyed to place of meeting.&#13;
&#13;
On motion it was ordered that the Clerk superintend the printing&#13;
&#13;
and distribution of the minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Contributions for minutes and correspondence.&#13;
&#13;
The Treasurer reports funds received as follows:&#13;
&#13;
Total contributions of the churches $41.47, appropriated as fol-&#13;
&#13;
lows :&#13;
&#13;
For Clerk and minutes, . . . . . . $11.20&#13;
&#13;
Correspondence Miami, . . . . . . .  7.25&#13;
&#13;
Correspondence Sandusky, . . . . . . 7.25&#13;
&#13;
Correspondence Muskingum, . . . . .  9.52&#13;
&#13;
Correspondence Scioto, . . . . . . . 6.25&#13;
&#13;
On motion the Association adjourned to meet with the Marlbor-&#13;
&#13;
ough Church, on Wednesday, after the fourth Sabbath in August,&#13;
&#13;
A. D. 1879 at 10 o'clock.&#13;
&#13;
Praise and benediction by Elder D. G. Barker.&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH MAIN,			DAVID JENKINS,&#13;
&#13;
Clerk.				Moderator.&#13;
&#13;
The past session was made all the more agreeable by the re-union &#13;
&#13;
of Salem Church. The love and harmony that prevailed to see&#13;
&#13;
those friends with us once more could be enjoyed, but not describ-&#13;
&#13;
ed. &#13;
&#13;
				CLERK.&#13;
&#13;
VISITATION MEETINGS.&#13;
&#13;
Visitation meetings were appointed as follows:&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE--Fourth Lord's day in June, A. D. 1879, Friday and&#13;
&#13;
Saturday preceding at I o'clock, Elder J. Harvey Oliphant to &#13;
&#13;
attend.&#13;
&#13;
HARMONY--Fifth Lord's day in March, A. D. 1879, Friday and&#13;
&#13;
Saturday preceding at I o'clock Elders D. G. Barker and David&#13;
&#13;
Jenkins. Also third Lord's day in May, A. D. 1879, and Friday&#13;
&#13;
preceding at 10 o'clock a. m., Elders J. C. Reed and L. B. Sher-&#13;
&#13;
wood to attend.&#13;
&#13;
ALUM CREEK--Fourth Lord's day in May, A. D. 1879, and Sat-&#13;
&#13;
urday preceding at I o'clock p.m., Elders Wm. Dodd and David&#13;
&#13;
Jenkins to attend.&#13;
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                    <text>Minutes of the Forty-Sixth Annual Session of the Owl Creek Harmony Regular Baptist Association Begun and Held With Marlborough Church, Delaware County, O. (p. 4)</text>
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                    <text>[page 5]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 5 of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
HARTFORD--Third Lord's day in October, A. D. 1878, and Sat-&#13;
&#13;
urday preceding at 10 o'clock a.m., Elder M. B. Smith to attend.&#13;
&#13;
MARLBOROUGH--Second Lord's day in November, A. D. 1878, &#13;
&#13;
and Saturday preceeding at 11 o'clock, Elder John Prichard to&#13;
&#13;
attend&#13;
&#13;
SALEM--Fifth Lord's day in September, A. D. 1878, and Satur&#13;
&#13;
day preceding at 10 o'clock a.m., Elder John Prichard to attend.&#13;
&#13;
MT. PISGAH--Third Lord's day in June A. D. 1879, and Friday&#13;
&#13;
preceding at 1 o'clock p.m., Saturday at 11 o'clock a.m., Elders&#13;
&#13;
J. Harvey Oliphant and M. B. Smith to attend.&#13;
&#13;
REFUGE--Third Lord's day in November, A. D. 1878, Saturday&#13;
&#13;
preceding at 10 o'clock a.m., Elders Peter Powell and M. B.&#13;
&#13;
Smith to attend.&#13;
&#13;
ALUM CREEK--Fifth Lord's day in March, A. D. 1879, and Sat-&#13;
&#13;
urday preceding at I o'clock p.m., Elders John Prichard and M.&#13;
&#13;
B. Smith to attend. Also third Lord's day in December, A. D.&#13;
&#13;
1878, and Saturday preceding at I o'clock p.m., Elder J. C. Reed&#13;
&#13;
to attend.&#13;
&#13;
MINISTERS OF THE ASSOCIATION AND ADDRESS.&#13;
&#13;
Elder L. B. Sherwood, . . Ashley, Delaware County, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder David Jenkins, . .  Sparta, Morrow County, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder Peter Powel, . . .  Marengo, Morrow County, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder L. B. Hanover, . .  Center Village, Del. Co., O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder T. P. Ashbrooks, .  Bennington, Morrow Co., O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder M. B. Smith, . . .  Shaucks, Morrow County, O.&#13;
&#13;
CLERKS OF ASSOCIATE CHURCH AND ADDRESS.&#13;
&#13;
Wayne--Matthew Bonar, Fredericktown, Knox county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Harmony--Barton Lewis, Woodview, Morrow county O.&#13;
&#13;
Marlborough--Joseph Main, Delaware, Delaware county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Mt. Pisgah--J. D. Bruce, Chesterville, Morrow county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Alum Creek--Wm. Ashbrook. Ashley, Delaware county O.&#13;
&#13;
Westfield--B. W. Williams, Cardington, Morrow county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Hartford--George Clark, Condit, Delaware county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Refuge--James Hoover, Center Village, Delaware county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Monroe--Samuel Carson, Johnstown, Licking county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Salem--David Buckingham, Shaucks, Morrow county, O.&#13;
&#13;
POST.OFFICE ADDRESSES OF VISITING MINISTERS PRES-&#13;
&#13;
ENT AT THIS ASSOCIATION.&#13;
&#13;
Elder S. Meredith, Lynnville, Licking county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder Wm. Dodd, Centerville, Montgomery county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder D. G. Barker, Pleasantville, Fairfield county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder John Prichard, St. Louisville, Licking county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder J. C. Reed, Blanchester, Clinton county, O.</text>
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                    <text>Minutes of the Forty-Sixth Annual Session of the Owl Creek Harmony Regular Baptist Association Begun and Held With Marlborough Church, Delaware County, O. (p. 5)</text>
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                    <text>[page 6]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 6 of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
POST-OFFICE ADDRESS OF MINISTERS.&#13;
&#13;
Elder Lewis Seitz, Bloomville, Seneca county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder John J. Vanhorn, Zanesville, O., box 320.&#13;
&#13;
Elder T. N. Robertson, Young's Creek, Orange county, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
Elder A. S. Shoemaker, Osceola, Clark county, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Elder S. C. Main, Everette, Cass county, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
Elder Ephraim Barker, Gratiot, Licking county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder Wm. Lippincott, St. Paris, Champaign county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder E. Stevens, Florence, Boone county, Ky.&#13;
&#13;
Elder J. P. Taylor, Hope, Franklin county, O.&#13;
&#13;
Elder Zachariah Thomas, Albian, Noble connty, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
Elder Jas. Harvey Oliphant, Buenavista, Jefferson Co., Ind.&#13;
&#13;
TIME AND PLACES OF HOLDING ASSOCIATIONS WITH&#13;
&#13;
WHOM WE CORRESPOND.&#13;
&#13;
MUSKINGUM--To meet with the Falls of Licking Church, at the&#13;
&#13;
lower house, commencing on Wednesday before the fourth Lord's&#13;
&#13;
day in August, A. D. 1879, at 10 o'clock a.m.&#13;
&#13;
SANDUSKY--To be held with the Vanburen Church, Hancock&#13;
&#13;
county, O., (seven miles North of Finlay and four miles from&#13;
&#13;
North Baltimore and Bairdstown, on the B. &amp; O. Railroad,) com-&#13;
&#13;
mencing on Friday before the second Lord's day in June, A. D.&#13;
&#13;
1879, at 10 o'clock a.m.&#13;
&#13;
SCIOTO--Pleasant Run Church, seven miles each from Lancaster,&#13;
&#13;
where brethren by railroad will be met, commencing on Friday&#13;
&#13;
before the third Lord's day in August, A. D. 1879, at 10 o'clock&#13;
&#13;
a. m.&#13;
&#13;
MIAMI--Nettle Creek Church, Champaign county, O., (four&#13;
&#13;
miles west of Urbana, at Westville, on the P. C. &amp; St. L, R. R.,)&#13;
&#13;
commencidg [sic] on Friday before the second Lord's day in September, &#13;
&#13;
A. D. 1878, at 10 o'clock a. m.&#13;
&#13;
CORRESPONDING LETTER.&#13;
&#13;
The Owl Creek Harmony Regular Baptist Association to her sister&#13;
&#13;
Associations with whom she corresponds, sendeth christain [sic] salutation.&#13;
&#13;
DEAR BRETHREN:--Through the kind and tender mercies of our&#13;
&#13;
beloved, we are once more permitted to meet, and we feel to praise&#13;
&#13;
Him for the many tokens of his love to us. And as we have the&#13;
&#13;
favor of meeeting [sic] our brethren from the different associations with&#13;
&#13;
whom we correspond, we hope that the good of Zion may be kept&#13;
&#13;
in view, and that we all may speak the same thing. Beloved&#13;
&#13;
Brethren, as the Bride is but one and has but one Husband, so let&#13;
&#13;
us strive for the unity of the Spirit, bearing one another's burdens,&#13;
&#13;
and so fulfill the law of Christ, praying that peace may reign in&#13;
&#13;
our borders, and that love may abound, and we appear like Jesus'&#13;
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                    <text> [page 7]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 7 of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
bride, and that our prayer may be that the chosen on Zion walls&#13;
&#13;
may give the trumpet the certain sound.&#13;
&#13;
Brethren, we close by commending you to God and to the word&#13;
&#13;
of His Grace, desiring a continuance of your correspondence as&#13;
&#13;
long as we are both mutually blest.&#13;
&#13;
Finally, brethren, farewell.&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH MAIN,			DAVID JENKINS,&#13;
&#13;
Clerk.				Moderator.&#13;
&#13;
CIRCULAR LETTER.&#13;
&#13;
The Owl Creek Harmony Regular Baptist Association, held with the&#13;
&#13;
Mt. Pisgah Church, Morrow County, Ohio, August 30th, 31st, and &#13;
&#13;
September 1st, 1878, To the several Churches composing the same.&#13;
&#13;
Greeting :&#13;
&#13;
DEAR BRETHREN IN THE LORD:--As it is the custom of the&#13;
&#13;
Association to send a Circular Letter with her Minutes, we will&#13;
&#13;
address you on the subject of the Holy Ghost, as revealed in the&#13;
&#13;
Bible. The Apostle John tells us there is three that bear record in&#13;
&#13;
Heaven; the Father; the Word and the Holy Ghost; and that these&#13;
&#13;
three are one. Hence we learn that the record of these three, is but&#13;
&#13;
the record of the Eternal God. God is a spirit; and they that&#13;
&#13;
worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth. Therefore,&#13;
&#13;
Brethren, we conclude the Heaven, where these three bear record,&#13;
&#13;
is the Church of God. For when we look in the Bible, the reveal-&#13;
&#13;
ed Word of God, we find in creation that the Spirit of God moved&#13;
&#13;
upon the face of the waters. And God said let there be light, and&#13;
&#13;
there was light. And when God said let us make man in our&#13;
&#13;
image after our likeness, so God created man in his own image;&#13;
&#13;
and the Lord God formed man of the dust of the earth, and&#13;
&#13;
breathed in his nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living&#13;
&#13;
soul. Turning to the gospel according to St. John, 1st chapter and&#13;
&#13;
3d virse, we find that all things were made by him, (the word) &#13;
&#13;
and without Him was not enything made that was made. Showing to&#13;
&#13;
the Church of God the comforting conclusion of the work of Crea-&#13;
&#13;
tion by the three that are one, to the overthrow of all the false no-&#13;
&#13;
tions of men concerning Creation. And oh, the wonderful wisdom&#13;
&#13;
and power of God manifested in Providence over all the workman-&#13;
&#13;
ship of His hands, according to his own eternal perfection; and&#13;
&#13;
throughout the Old Testament it is described the spirit of God.&#13;
&#13;
But when we come to the New Testament we find it called the&#13;
&#13;
Holy Gost [sic]. With reverence and humility let us look at some of&#13;
&#13;
the teachings of the New Testament. O, poor, sinful man, be as-&#13;
&#13;
tonished, the marvelous work of the Holy Ghost, (contrary to the&#13;
&#13;
weak capacity of mans' understanding,) the power of the highest&#13;
&#13;
overshadows the Virgin Mary and prepares her to be the mother&#13;
&#13;
of Jesus, the only saviour of sinners. Matthew 1st ch., 18th 20th&#13;
&#13;
virses, tells us it is of the Holy Ghost. Of all the millions that is&#13;
&#13;
born of woman, there is none like Him, for He is the Christ the&#13;
&#13;
Son of God, and he was full of the Holy Ghost, and if Jesus was&#13;
&#13;
full of the Holy Ghost and called the Son of God, how can dying</text>
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                    <text>[page 8]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unlabeled page 8 of Baptist Assoc. Minutes 1878]&#13;
&#13;
men and women be known as the Sons of God to that church known &#13;
&#13;
in the Bible as the Church of the First Born, unless they are spirit-&#13;
&#13;
ually taught for this Jesus is the express image of the invisible God,&#13;
&#13;
the first born of every creature. This Jesus, born in Bethleham, &#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
ing of the Holy Ghost. So we find that men taught by the Holy&#13;
&#13;
Ghost looked for the coming of Jesus, and received him when he&#13;
&#13;
came. This same Jesus came to John the Baptist, his forerunner,&#13;
&#13;
and demanded baptism, and when they were coming up out of the &#13;
&#13;
water the Holy Ghost appeared in the form of a dove and lighting&#13;
&#13;
upon him--and a voice from heaven saying. this is my beloved Son&#13;
&#13;
in whom I am well pleased. Thus the Holy Ghost bearing witness&#13;
&#13;
in heaven. (the church,) the testimony who receives it, that person&#13;
&#13;
that enjoys the gift of eternal life. This eternal life is the Holy&#13;
&#13;
Ghost, for says Paul know you not that your body is the temple of&#13;
&#13;
the Holy Ghost, and all the New Testaments examples exhibit the&#13;
&#13;
power of the Holy Ghost in teaching no man can call Jesus Lord,&#13;
&#13;
but by the Holy Ghost. And oh, dear brethren, the Holy Ghost&#13;
&#13;
acts as a sovereign like the wind that bloweth where it listeth, and&#13;
&#13;
thou heareth the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh&#13;
&#13;
or whither it goeth, so is every one that is born of the Spirit. And&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
of God. If children, then heirs of God and joint heirs with&#13;
&#13;
the Lord Jesus Christ. Seeing our need of understanding, where&#13;
&#13;
will we go dear brethren, to the world or to the institutions of the&#13;
&#13;
world, which may all be good in their places, but can do us no&#13;
&#13;
good spiritually. But to God, the Father, through the mediation&#13;
&#13;
of Jesus our Saviour, and in his name we ask the Father, and the&#13;
&#13;
Father has promised to give the Holy Ghost to them that ask him,&#13;
&#13;
and it is one of the names that we are baptized in when we&#13;
&#13;
put on Jesus by profession. The Holy Ghost is to be teacher and&#13;
&#13;
guide through all our pilgrimage, it gives the children of God to feel&#13;
&#13;
the love of God in their hearts, and enables them to enjoy fellow-&#13;
&#13;
ship with the Father and the Son, and it always leads the children&#13;
&#13;
of God to love one another, and to be patient in trials, viewing in&#13;
&#13;
Father, Son and Holy Spirit, one God from whom all blessings&#13;
&#13;
flow. To his praise and glory in the church throu hout all ages,&#13;
&#13;
by Christ Jesus. World without end. Amen.&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH MAIN,		DAVID JENKINS,&#13;
&#13;
Clerk.			Moderator.&#13;
&#13;
Received of Joseph Main $10 for printing 600 copies of Minutes.</text>
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                    <text>[page 1]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to cover of OWU Bulletin 1901]&#13;
&#13;
BULLETIN OF OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
Vol. 1	June 1901  No. 1&#13;
&#13;
NEW EDITION: Revised and Enlarged&#13;
&#13;
OHIO &#13;
&#13;
WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
[red pennant reading "OWU"]&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE&#13;
&#13;
OHIO&#13;
&#13;
FULLY ILLUSTRATED&#13;
&#13;
PERSONNEL OF UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
SCHOOLS AND DEPARTMENTS&#13;
&#13;
COURSES AND DEGREES&#13;
&#13;
UNIVERSITY LIFE AND IDEALS&#13;
&#13;
WHAT IT COSTS&#13;
&#13;
HOW IT PAYS&#13;
&#13;
Entered as second-class matter at the Post-Office at Delaware, Ohio</text>
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                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="10978">
                    <text>[page 2]

[corresponds to inside of cover of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[blank]</text>
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                    <text>[page 3]

[corresponds to page I of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Foreword.

The college graduates in the United States throughout her history

have averaged one to seven hundred and fifty of the adult male popu-

lation. And yet from this small fraction of our people have come

thirty-two per cent of all our Congressmen, forty-six per cent of our

Senators, sixty-five per cent of the Presidents, and seventy-three per

cent of the Judges of the Supreme Court. Putting this striking fact

in another form, college training has increased the young American's

possibilities of reaching the House of Representatives three hundred

and fifty-two times; of reaching the Senate five hundred and thirty-

nine times; of reaching the Presidency thirteen hundred and ninety-two

times; and of reaching the Supreme Court of the United States, two

thousand and twenty-seven times.

Examining in a similar manner the fifteen thousand one hundred  Who's Who

and forty-two Americans whose names appear in the Encyclopedia of

American Biography as having reached eminence throughout our 

history, President Thwing finds that a college education has multiplied

the possibilities of young men reaching fame four hundred and

three fold. Examining the college record of the six thousand and

twenty-nine Americans whose names appear in Who's Who in America, we find that a college educa-

tion increases the possibilities of young men reaching success today one thousand and forty-three fold.

[portrait of President Bashford]

JAMES.W.BASHFORD.Ph.D,D.D.

THE PRESIDENT.

I</text>
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                    <text>[page 4]

[corresponds to page 2 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of campus buildings]

UNIVERSITY HALL. THE LIBRARY. STURGES HALL.

The larger advantages of college-bred young men today are due to the improvements in modern 

education, and also to the fact that while the ratio named above holds good of our entire history as a 

nation, nevertheless the ratio of college graduates has been rapidly increasing during the last quarter of

a century until they now number one in ninety-one of men twenty-one years of age and over.

2</text>
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                    <text>[page 5]

[corresponds to page 3 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Not more striking, but perhaps more surprising is the fact that a similar study of the educational

advantages of the known millionaires in the United States shows that the college graduates have furnished

four hundred and forty times as many men of wealth as their numbers entitle them to. In other words,

if a young man is aiming only at material success, the discipline of a college gives him four hundred and 

forty times as many possibilities of becoming rich as his untrained brother enjoys. To summarize the     In the Hall of

external advantages of a higher education in a sentence we may say that a college education increases a  Fame.

young American's possibilities of winning influence and gaining distinction as an author, teacher,

preacher, physician, lawyer, statesman, business man, inventor, reformer, from three hundred and fifty

to two thousand fold.

But these are only the advantages which can be measured by wordly standards. How immeasur-

able are the advantages of an education to the man himself! One's life consisteth not in the abundance

of the things which he possesseth. Education, as the word implies, means the development of all one's

faculties to the highest power. It aims at character, as well as scholarship. It insures the highest

preparation for life on one's own part, and for service for his family, his country, and his God. The

difference between barbarism and civilization is the difference between a life of the sense and a life of

faith. The barbarian lives from hand to mouth; the civilized man treats the harvest of today as the

seed-corn for tomorrow. So the heedless and indifferent young people of our land are living chiefly

for a good time today; those who are seeking education are preparing themselves for the services and

the blessedness of the morrow and of the new century now begun. 

Young people of America who take themselves at all seriously will not fritter away their oppor-		An Open Door.

tunities. The way to an education is wide open to all who have eyes to see and hands and hearts to

do and dare. This brochure sets before all an open door, and describes one of the institutions where

preparation may be made for this "more abundant life."

3</text>
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                    <text>[page 6]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 4 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo]

Public Library. 	Court House.		Business Center.	City Building.

		William St. M.E. Church.

	The Lucy Webb Home,

	under the trees.

OUTLOOK FROM THE BELL TOWER OF ST. PAUL M.E. CHURCH.

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                    <text>[page 7]

[corresponds to page 5 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Ohio Wesleyan University.

Long before the University was dreamed of, Delaware was noted for beauty and for health. The

rolling ground, the mild climate and the healing waters made this spot the headquarters for rest and

recreation of the Delaware Indians after they had been driven from their eastern home. The first

white settlers soon learned that the fame of the sulphur springs rested not on Indian legend but on

established facts. The famous White Sulphur Spring on the College Campus is only one among many

of the springs within easy distance. The spring abounds in romantic associations, one of the most

interesting of which is the fact that at this spot young Rutherford B. Hayes first met Lucy Webb, the

first girl admitted to the College classes.

Delaware, originally known only as a watering-place but now far-famed as a college town, is grown		Location.

to a city of eight thousand inhabitants. It is located twenty-three miles north of COlumbus, very near

to the exact geographical center of the state. Three railroads--two divisions of the Big Four (Cleveland

to Cincinnati, and Springfield to Delaware), the Hocking Valley, and the Sandusky Short Line, besides

an inter-urban trolley line now being built from Columbus through Delaware to Marion--make it easy

of access from every direction; while electric cars and lights, the new system of heating buildings and

residences by a central hot-water plant, the modern sewer system now being constructed, shady streets,

good schools, churches, and beautiful homes make it an almost ideal dwelling place.

The College grounds embrace the fine rolling Campus in the heart of the city, the beautiful Mon-		Campus and

nett Campus in the west end, and the picturesque Observatory Park and Merrick Glen, forty-three			Buildings.

acres in all.

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                    <text>[page 8]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 6 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of Sulphur Spring]

THE FAMOUS WHITE SULPHUR SPRING.

One of the many springs of various chemical qualities, which are making Delaware

increasingly attractive as a health resort.

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                    <text>[page 9]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 7 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

From "The College Song"

C. S. ANDERSON	BY PERMISSION.	E. T. O'KANE.

[musical score in 6/8 time, key of C major; text printed below]

4. Our spring is our glo-ry and pride (and pride);To quaff from its crys-tal tide (its tide),

Will cool us all off, from the Prep and the Soph To the Sen-ior so dig-ni-fied (be-side),

Re-fresh-ing both bod-y and soul (and soul); By a drink from its flowing bowl (its bowl),

Our voi-ces made clear, We're read-y to cheer, And thus will our mel-o-dy roll:

CHORUS (The College Yell.) Vivace.

O-wee, wi, wow, Al-lee ka-zee, zi, zow, Ra-zee, zi, zu,

Vi-va! Vi-va! O...... W..... U...........</text>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 9)</text>
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                    <text>[page 10]						

[corresponds to page 8 of OWU Bulletin 1901]		Twelve substantial buildings stand

							upon the College Campus, including:

							University Hall and Gray Chapel,

							Slocum Library Building,

							Science Hall,
	
							Elliott Hall,

							Sturges Hall,

							The Gymnasium,

							Monnett Hall,

							Music Hall,

							Art Hall,

							Hartupee Missionary Home,

							Perkins Observatory.

							The Equipments include:

							The Laboratory for Chemistry,

							For Physics,

							For Botany, and

							For Zoology,

[photo of Elliott Hall]

THE GYM. 

ELLIOTT HALL.

The Original University Building.

Laboratories	The Mann Cabinet of Paleontology,	The William Wood Cabinet of Casts and Fossils,

and Cabinets.	The Museum,				The Merrick-Trimble Cabinet of Mineralogy,

		The Prescott Cabinet of Biology,	The Weber-Merrill Cabinet of the Holy Land, and

		The William Walker Cabinet of American Archaelogy.

8</text>
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                    <text>[page 11]

[corresponds to page 9 of OWU Bulletin 1901]			[photo of library stacks]

The libraries include: The General Library,			Estimated 

Monnett Hall Library,						Capacity of

Lacroix Memorial Library, Hebrew and German,			Five Fire-proof

Library of the Department of History,				Stack-rooms,

Library of the Department of English Literature,		175,000

Library of the Department of Physics,				Volumes.

Library of the Department of Chemistry,

Library of the Department of Sociology,

Library of the School of Oratory,

Library of Comparative Religions and Missions,

Edward Nelson Memorial Library, Zoological,

L. D. McCabe Memorial Library, Philosophical,

John Williams White Classical Library,

Number of volumes in the libraries, 38,000.

Our space permits of a description of only five of the latest additions to the stately group of			University Hall

buildings, the first and most imposing of which is University Hall and Gray Chapel, completed in 1893. 		and Gray

It is worth a quarter of a million dollars. It is a massive Romanesque structure, one hundred and fifty		Chapel.

by one hundred and sixy feet in dimensions, four stories high, crowned by a stately tower one hundred

and forty-eight feet in height. It unites under one roof the administrative offices of the University,

twelve recitation rooms, six literary halls, lecture rooms and Gray Chapel. This Chapel, with its

magnificent Roosevelt organ, and with a seating capacity of nearly three thousand, has been pronounced

the most spacious and beautiful college chapel in America. A noted educator who had visited the

leading colleges in the United States and Europe pronounced University Hall and Gray Chapel the

finest college building in the land.

9</text>
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                    <text>[page 12]

[corresponds to page 12 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Perkins		The Perkins Astronomical Observatory, in Observatory Park, occupies the most commanding site

Observatory.	in the city. It is a handsome pressed brick building, with a frontage of sixty-two feet, containing a

		transit room, clock room, computing and library room and dome. The telescope contains a refracting

		glass nine and one-half inches in diameter, made by J. W. Brashear for exhibition at the World's Fair.

		Astronomical experts have pro-

		nounced it in clearness of defi-

		nition superior to many noted 

		glasses of twice its size. It en-

		ables the student to see a far

		larger number of worlds than

		could Sir John Herschel, who			[photo of Perkins Observatory]

		declared that 18,000,000 stars

		were within the range of his 

		monster telescope.

The Library.	The Slocum Library Build-

		ing is the central structure in

		the College group. It is one

		hundred and fifteen by one hun-

		dred and twenty-five feet in

		dimensions, built of the famous

		Bedford limestone, three stories high, and fireproof throughout. The stack room has an estimated

		capacity for 175,000 volumes, while the reading room, sixty by one hundred feet, finely lighted from

		above, is one of the largest and most beautiful college reading rooms in America. The classic design,

		superior materials, scientific appliances for light and heat and air, the fine facilities for preserving,

12</text>
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                    <text>[page 13]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 13 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of people looking into large telescope]

"When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars,

which thou hast ordained;

What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest

him?" Psalm viii: 3, 4.</text>
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                    <text>[page 14]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 10 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of reading room]

SLOCUM LIBRARY READING ROOM.</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
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                    <text>[page 15]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 11 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of Gray Chapel]

UNIVERSITY HALL AND GRAY CHAPEL.</text>
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                    <text>[page 16]

[corresponds to page 14 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

The New

"Old Mon-

nett."

classifying and cataloguing books, and the admirable reading room make the building a model structure

for a university library.

Monnett Hall, the home for the young women, is situated at a convenient walking distance from

University Hall on a beautiful campus of ten acres. The building is a large brick structure, and with the

extensive additions and improvements of recent years is completely transformed.

The latest improvement is due to the gen-

erosity of Hon. D. S. Gray, President of the

University Board of Trustees. It stands as a

memorial to his sister, Miss Lida Gray, a stu-

dent from 1860-62. It takes the form of a 

basement story of Delaware limestone, a broad			[photo of porch]

flight of stone steps, and a porch twelve and			THE NEW PORCH AT MONNETT.

one-half by sixty-seven feet in dimensions, with

Doric stone columns, a tile floor, and a suitable

entrance to the Hall. The work was designed

by the well-known architect, Mr. J. W. Yost,

of New York City, and has been completed at

a cost of between five and six thousand dollars.

Only those who have seen the old and the new

entrance can realize how much it adds to the 

solidity and dignity and beauty of the building

which it graces.

In addition to a sufficient number of rooms or suites of rooms, to accommodate 225 young

women, the Hall contains library and reading room, gymnasium, assembly room, Y.W.C.A. hall,

14</text>
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                    <text>[page 17]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 15 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of Monnett Hall]

MONNETT HALL.</text>
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                    <text>[page 18]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 16 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of building]

CLEVELAND COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.

Dedicated September, 1900.</text>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 18)</text>
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                    <text>[page 19]

[corresponds to page 17 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

handsome parlors and three elegant literary society halls. An elevator is provided and is operated at

such times as to remove, to a large degree, all necessity of climbing stairs. Every room and corridor

is furnished with steam heat and gas light. Hot and cold water are supplied on every floor.

The general health of the young women has been remarkably good. During the past seventeen

years, with from one hundred and fifty to two hundred or more persons constantly in the Hall, not a 

single death has occurred.

The new Medical College Building, which has been two years in process of erection, is			Medical

now occupied by our Cleveland College of Physicians and Surgeons, constituting the Medical		College.

Department of the University. The building is a noble structure of classic design situated on

the corner of Brownell street and Central avenue, Cleveland, O. In addition to offices for administra-

tion, lecture rooms for the various professors, amphitheater, and Y.M.C.A. room, it contains

Laboratories of General and Medical Chemistry, Pharmacology, Bacteriology, Embryology, Comparative

Anatomy, Anatomy, Histology, Physiology, and Pathology. 

The building and grounds are worth $76,000. Men of information assert that no building more 

convenient and adequate for the purposes of medicine and surgery is to be found in the United States.

The total value of buildings and grounds of the University is $657,000; the total endowment of 		Buildings,

the University exceeds $700,000. The Colosseum at Rome, devoted to the destruction of human life,	Grounds and

covers some six acres of ground and is the most august monument of heathen civilization upon the face	Endowments.

of the globe. The Ohio Wesleyan University boasts no Colosseum. But the aggregate floor space of all

the buildings here consecrated to the service of mankind is over seven acres, thus surpassing the space

embraced by the most imposing ruin of the ancient world.

17</text>
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                    <text>[page 20]

[corresponds to page 18 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Personnel of the University.

			Of far greater importance than buildings and equipments are the

			teachers of a college. The former are only the tools; the latter are

			the workmen, receiving the finest material in the universe and devel-

			oping talents and shaping character. The devotion of the members

			of the Faculty to the Ohio Wesleyan University has been marked from

			the beginning. Doctors Williams, McCabe, Merrick and Thomson

			gave the College its early fame. The eloquent Thomson was soon

			called by the voice of the church to more public but not to more

[photo of Thomson]	important service. But the three pillars of the University remained

EDWARD THOMSON.LLD.	unmoved by flattering calls to other colleges, and devoted them-

President 1844-60.	selves with unwearying diligence to the building up of the Ohio Wes-

			leyan University and to the spread of Christian education throughout

			the world. Their half century of united labor as members of the same

			Faculty is without a parallel in the history of American colleges.

			During the past few years especially the Faculty has been rapidly

			enlarged and strengthened. One hundred and three teachers are

			now employed in all the departments of the University. Many mom-

		bers of the teaching corps have recently studied in Europe. To the age, experience and tried

The Faculty. 	ability of the older members of the Faculty, the new members have brought the enthusiasm of youth,

		the most recent advances in learning and the latest methods of instruction. The lecture, the library

18</text>
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                    <text>[page 21]

[corresponds to page 19 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

and the laboratory supplement the text-books. Eleven depart-		New Means

mental libraries have been opened recently; and the professors		and Methods.

are placing in reach of the students the freshest literature upon

every subject under investigation. More books have been secured

for the University during the last five years than during the preced-

ing twenty years. Within the past seven years the Trustees have

doubled the number of professors and equipments in science in the

college, so that much special

work is now possible; while the

old-time standard of thorough-

ness in the classics and mathe-					[photo of Payne]

matics is fully maintained. The					CHARLES H. PAYNE.LLD.

Department of History was re-					President 1876-88.

organized in 1893, with largely

increased equipments. The De-

partment of Missions and Com-

parative Religions was opened in

1894. Candidates for the foreign field can now secure private in-

struction in six of the oriental languages. The Ohio Wesleyan

University, which has more representatives in the foreign field and

more foreign students within its gates than any other college in

Methodism, now offers facilities for studying the great religions and

civilizations of the world unsurpassed by any other university in

Methodism. A complete new course in Pedagogy was added in

[photo of Merrick]

FREDERICK MERRICK,LL.D.

President 1860-73.

19</text>
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                    <text>[page 22]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 20 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo]

PART OF THE "CENTURY CLASS."

Entrance to University Hall.</text>
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                    <text>[page 23]

[corresponds to page 21 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

1900, and the Department of English Language and Literature was reorganized in 1900 with require-

ments and courses very much enlarged to meet the new demands of the expanding Anglo-Saxon world.

The University opened in 1844 with twenty-nine students, all from Ohio. The enrollment at the 			Undergraduates

beginning of 1900 was more than thirteen hundred and included representatives from thirty-one states		and Alumni.

and eight foreign countries--Canada, England, Argentina, India, China, Japan, Persia and Turkey.

Twenty-two thousand students have been in attendance since 1844. The rapid recent growth of the

University is shown by the fact that more students completed courses and received degrees from

1889-00 inclusive than during the preceding forty-six years. The University, including the College of

Physicians and Surgeons, has conferred degrees upon 4,263 persons. Her graduates include over one

thousand physicians, over five hundred ministers and more than one hundred missionaries, some three

hundred and fifty lawyers, fifty editors, two hundred college presidents and professors, nearly four

hundred teachers in the public schools, and over fifteen hundred persons engaged in various business

occupations or in home duties.

University Life and Ideals.

The average non-collegiate is invariably impressed most by the buildings and grounds and long			The Making of

faculty list of an institution of learning; and on these he is apt to base his choice of a college. But		a Man.

every initiate into university life, whether undergraduate or alumnus, knows that colleges are as dissimilar

as families; that every college puts its own peculiar stamp upon its students; and that the determining

fact in choosing between colleges should be not only faculty and equipments, but, above all, the tradi-

tions and ideals dominating the life of the institution. The Ohio Wesleyan University is the outgrowth

of the strenuous life of pioneers who realized that in the making of a man, as in the making of a nation,

culture and character are as essential as brawn and muscle.

21</text>
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                    <text>[page 24]

[corresponds to page 22 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

					The conditions of mod-
Athletics.
					ern life have so changed

					from those of early days

[photo of gymnasium]			that if no one is to maintain

					health and strength he
GYMNASIUM.
					must take time and make

					specific provision for exer-

					cise and recreation. The 

					Gymnasium is as vital to

					the Ohio Wesleyan as a 

					library or laboratory. It

					is equipped with apparatus

					for class work and with an

					excellent system of shower

					baths and lockers. Regu-

					larly organized classes exer-

					cise under instructors every

					afternoon and evening.

		Equally important is the Athletic Field, with its facilities for baseball and football and the

		numerous collegiate and intercollegiate games.

Military.	The Military Department, which was organized originally by the students themselves, came to be

		recognized ultimately as a system of exercise unexcelled for physical development and manly bearing.

		An eminent physician has found by actual measurement of our student cadets such decided physical

		improvement that he regards systematic military drill in the open air and under the direction of a

22</text>
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                    <text>[page 25]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 23 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[three photographs]

OFFICERS' MESS--ANNUAL ENCAMPMENT.	FOOT-BALL SCRIMMAGE.

UNIVERSITY BATTALION--ANNUAL INSPECTION BY U.S. GOVERNMENT OFFICER.
</text>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 25)</text>
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                    <text>[page 26]

[corresponds to page 24 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of sports]	competent officer as of

			priceless moral and hygienic

			value. Its value, more-

			over, towards superseding

			the necessity for a large

			standing army by develop-

			ing a clean, intelligent and

			conservative citizen sol-

			diery, and also in securing

			recognition for military

			skill, is shown by the fact

			that twenty-nine of our ca-

		dets and fifty alumni who have been cadets entered the volunteer army during the Spanish War, and twenty-

		eight of the seventy-nine volunteers received officers' commissions. The department is open to all young

		men who elect the course, but the work is not required of any. It is under the direction of Lieuten-

		ant-Colonel Adams of the late Spanish War, who is now Assistant Adjustant-General of Ohio. Colonel

		Adams has had many years of military experience in connection with the national guard of Ohio, and

		by his ability and popularity and manly character has risen from the ranks to his present position.

Social Life. 	Every undergraduate soon comes to realize that while scholarship is first and foremost, and he

		cannot hope to retain the respect of his fellows if he allows himself to be diverted from the main

		purpose, yet the social life of a college is nearly, if not quite, half of one's education. Personal friend-

		ships and social relations here established are lifelong. The endless round of diversions peculiar to

		the student world, including faculty and student receptions, class banquets, parties, picnics, athletic

		exhibitions, concerts and recitals, art exhibitions, oratorical and debating contests, literary entertain-

24</text>
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                    <text>[page 27]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 25 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of women's basketball team]

BASKET BALL TEAM -- MONNETT HALL GYM.

[photos of dorm rooms]

"GRINDING."	AN OCCASIONAL DIVERSION.

SNAP SHOTS AT MONNETT.</text>
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                    <text>[page 28]

[corresponds to page 26 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

ments and lecture courses,--

all contribute towards a 

wholesome environment and

an elevated social life.

But the undergraduate is

almost invariably one who is

still in the formative period of		[photo]

his life. If he is mindful as			ELEVATOR LOBBY AT MONNETT HALL.

he should be of his own best

interests, he will covet for

himself such associations as

put a premium upon character

and make right conduct so 

much the more easy. He

will not be attracted by a uni-

versity life like that of Ger-

many, which is so full of dis-

sipation that Bismarck said

"one-third of the students

die as a result of their vices;

one-third fritter away their opportunities; and the remaining one-third rule the empire." The same

is undoubtedly true, in a measure, of some American universities. But statisticians tell us that, while

of all the young men of America only one in twenty is a Christian, yet of the college young men one

in three is a Christian. And in institutions like the Ohio Wesleyan, where religion is given its rightful

preeminence, the Christian young men outnumber all others more than four to one.

26</text>
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                    <text>[page 29]

[corresponds to page 27 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

The young men of the Ohio Wesleyan have no dormitories, but board and room according to their			In Town.

own convenience and tastes in places duly accredited by the University authorities. A few live in

private families, others in fraternity houses, the majority secure their table board in clubs, while some

board themselves. 

The young women of the University, except a few with friends in town or at home with their

parents, live at Monnett Hall. Here they are in residence with the Dean and his family, the

Preceptress, and several of the teachers. The ideal of the instituion is that of a family, in which all

the members who hold sacred the privileges of the household are allowed every liberty consistent with

the welfare of each and all. The young women attend classes on the same footing with young men and		In the Class

mingle freely in the social life of the University. Their refining influence, the respect and consideration	room.

with which they are treated, the absence of scandal and the constant manifestation of things good and

beautiful and true, all testify to the inevitable advantages of the normal association of the best young

people of the country under the auspices of a great University.

We need scarcely add that the University requires every student who enters her portals to bring a 

certificate of good character, and also, if he comes from another college, a letter of honorable

dismissal; and she reserves the right to terminate her relations with a student at any time, when the

authorities are convinced that his influence is harmful to other students, or that his continuance is

unprofitable to himself.

The Ohio Wesleyan University is not sectarian; it has among its students members of all churches		Religion.

and persons who are not members of any church. It is not a theological schools; it has not even a

theological department. But it accepts good faith the universally received definition of education as

the harmonious and highest development of the individual in body and mind and spirit. It holds that a

university which adequately fulfills its mission must make provision for more than the body and the

mind, it must have more than athletics and libraries and laboratories and a faculty; it will be wholly

27</text>
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                    <text>[page 30]

[corresponds to page 28 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

lacking in the foremost requirements

for an education unless it provides

also for the spirit and ministers to

the religious life. Man has a body

and a mind; but he is neither body

nor mind, he is a spirit as God is a			[photo]

spirit; and he must be educated as			Y.M.C.A. ASSEMBLY ROOM.

such, if his education is to meet all

the requirements of his manhood.

The profound religiousness of

men is evidenced in nothing more

emphatically than in the fact that

vital godliness is more prevalent

among the educated than among the illiterate; and in the additional fact that in the University the

ordinary means of grace, including the daily worship in Gray Chapel and the weekly church services

and the montly lectures by the President and the annual revival meetings, beginning with the Day of

Prayer for colleges, are not sufficient to satisfy the demand. The University has been obliged to offer

elective courses in the Bible, both in English and in the original languages. And in addition the

students, of their own accord, have organized classes for special study of the Bible; class prayer-meet-

ings are held; and the Y.M.C.A. and the Y.W.C.A. both are maintained in vigorious condition,

with a paid Y.M.C.A. secretary supported by the students and faculty and devoting his whole time

to the work of the Association. The religious life is the normal life, and if all but a small minority pf

the gradutes of the University are professing Christians it is due to normal influences and conditions.

28</text>
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                    <text>[page 31]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 29 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of inside Gray Chapel]

MORNING WORSHIP AT GRAY CHAPEL.

Sittings for 2,500 People.</text>
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                    <text>[page 32]

[corresponds to page 30 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Departments of the University.

JAMES W. BASHFORD, A.M., PH.D., D.D., PRESIDENT.

The University embraces: --			III. The School of Business.

I. The College of Liberal Arts with		IV. The School of Oratory.

	1. The Classical Course.		V. The School of Music.

	2. The Scientific Course.		VI. The Art Department.

	3. The Literary Course.			VII. The Cleveland College of Physicians and

II. The Academic Department.				Surgeons.

I. The College of Liberal Arts.

TRUMBULL G. DUVALL, A.M., Ph.D., Dean.

I. ADMISSION.

By Certificate. (I) The University furnishes, on application, blanks to the superintendents of schools and to

	principals of high schools and academies. When these blanks are properly filled, they afford a better

	knowledge of the student's acquirements than examinations can reveal. Hence such certificates are

	accepted in lieu of examinations, so far as the work in quantity and quality corresponds with the work

	required for admission. Advance work brought from another college is accepted in the same manner,

	so far as it is satisfactory to the professor in charge of the department in which such work is offered.

By Examina-	(2) If the student offer himself without a certificate of scholarship, he is directed to the proper profes-

tion.		

30</text>
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                    <text>[page 33]

[corresponds to page 31 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

sor who ascertains, by 

conversations with

him and by such oral

and written examin-

ations as he finds

necessary, the studies

and classes which

seem best adapted to

each student and			[photo of Williams]

assigns him provis-			PROFESSOR WILLIAMS--THE NESTOR OF THE FACULTY.

ionally to the same.			Since 1844 he has taught in this same room in Elliott Hall.

2. COURSES AND 

REQUIREMENTS.

The College of Lib-

eral Arts offers three

courses, viz.: The

Classical, the Scien-

tific, and the Liter-

ary, leading to the 

degrees of Bachelor

of Arts, of Science, 

and of Literature re-

spectively.

31</text>
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                    <text>[page 34]

[corresponds to page 32 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Requirements	All candidates for the Freshman Classes must offer the following studies to the extent named, or

for Freshmen.	their equivalents:

		(I) English.--English Grammar and Rhetoric. In addition the student should read during his

		preparatory course the list of books recommended by the Joint Conference of colleges and secondary

		schools and now published in the catalogues of the leading high schools. He should study carefully,

		under the direction of a teacher, four or five of the leading speeches, essays or poems named in the list.

		Whatever else a student lacks, he should have a correct command of his mother tongue. No student

		will be passed into the college classes in English whose speech or writing is markedly defective in spell-

		ing, punctuation, grammar or expression.

		(2) History.--Eggleston's History of the United States; Myers' Short History of Greece and the

		Eastern Nations; Allen's Short History of the Roman People; Myers' Mediaeval and Modern History;
	
		or as much as is included in the manuals named above.

		(3) Mathematics.--Higher Arithmetic; Complete Algebra, by Olney, Wentworth, or Ray; Went-

		worth's Plane and Solid Geometry, with original problems.

		(4) Geography.--Descriptive and Physical.

		The four subjects named above are required for entrance to the Freshman class in all the courses.

For the Clas-	In addition to the four requirements named above, the candidate for the Classical Course must

sical Course.	present:

		(5) Natural Science.--Elementary Physics; Gray's Botany, including the analysis of fifty flowers;

		Martin's Human Body, Briefer Course. In lieu of part or all of the sciences named, the student may

		offer an equal amount of Chemistry or of some other physical science.

		(6) Latin.--Latin Grammar, including Prosody; Latin Prose Composition; four books of Caesar;

		four orations of Cicero; twelve books of Vergil. The Roman pronunciation is used in the University.

		(7) Greek.--Greek Grammar; four books of Xenophon's Anabasis; three books of Homer's Iliad.

32</text>
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                    <text>[page 35]

[corresponds to page 33 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

In addition to the subjects

and amounts of the classics

named above, the student is

advised to complete Homer's

Iliad, and six more books of 

the Aeneid, or four additional			[photo of Gray Chapel and Merrick Hall]

orations of Cicero and the			Gray Chapel.		Merrick Hall of Science.

Eclogues and three books of			VIEW FROM ELLIOTT HALL.

the Georgics. If a student

has not this additional work

in the classics, but has addi-

tional work in science, history

or English beyond the require-

ments for entrance, or in

French or German, which are

not required for entrance,

he may offer an equivalent

amount of such work in lieu of the additional work called for in Latin and Greek, otherwise the

additional Greek and Latin named are required for entrance.

In addition to the four requirements mentioned above the candidate for the Scientific Course must	For the Scien-

present:												tific Course.

(5) Natural Science.--Elementary Physics; Gray's Botany, including the analysis of fity flowers;

Martin's Human Body, Briefer Course. In lieu of part or all of the sciences named, the student may

offer an equal amount of Chemistry or of some other physical science.

33</text>
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                    <text>[page 36]

[corresponds to page 34 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

(6) Latin.--Latin 

Grammar, including

Prosody; Latin Prose

Composition; four

books of Caesar; four

orations of Cicero; 

twelve books of Ver-			[photo]

gil. In lieu of the			BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY.

four orations of Ci-

cero the student may

offer additional work

in Vergil.

(7) German.--

Joynes-Meissner's

German Grammar;

Bronson's German

Prose and Poetry en-

		tire; three plays of Goethe or Schiller. In lieu of the German prescribed, an equivalent amount of 

For the 	German may be presented from other text-books. In addition to the four requirements mentioned 

Literary 	above the candidate for the Literary Course must present:

Course.		(5) Natural Science.--Martin's Human Body, Briefer Course, or an equivalent amount of some

		other physical science.

		(6) Latin.--Latin Grammar; Prose Composition; four books of Cicero; four orations of Cicero.

		(7) German.--Joynes-Meissner's German Grammar; Bronson's German Prose and Poetry to

34</text>
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                    <text>[page 37]

[corresponds to page 35 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

page 169. In lieu of the German prescribed, an equal amount of German may be offered from

other text-books. 

3. ELECTIVES.

An elaborate series of electives in connection with the Classical, Scientific, and Literary Courses of the

College of Liberal Arts, begins

with the Freshman year, and in-

cludes the following groups:

I. Ancient Languages.

II. Modern Languages.

III. English and English

Literature.

IV. Elocution and Oratory.			[photo of Sturges Hall]

V. Physical Culture.				STURGES HALL--CHEMISTRY AND MINERALOGY.

VI. Advanced Music.

VII. Art History and Fine

Arts.

VIII. Advanced Courses in

Business Methods.

IX. Mathematics

X. Natural Sciences.

XI. History.

XII. Political Sciences.

XIII. Philosophy and Peda-

gogy.

XIV. Comparative Study of Religions, and Missions. XV. English Bible.

We have already referred to the new provisions recently made for a fresh variety of courses in

English Language and Literature. We would also call attention to the special course in Pedagogy which

35</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
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                    <text>[page 38]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 36 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[four photos]

CHEMICAL LABORATORY ON A LARK.			GEOLOGIZING EXPEDITION.

MEASUREMENTS ROOM--PHYSICAL LABORATORY.		BOTANICAL GREENHOUSE.</text>
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                    <text>[page 39]

[corresponds to page 37 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

we are now able to offer along with our thorough course in Psychology. Prospective teachers will

recognize in this new course one more advantage added to those which they already enjoy in being

brought into daily contact with instructors who have reached eminence in the teacher's profession and

whose examples are an incalculable help and inspiration. Moreover, all the studies pursued by candi-

dates seeking preparation for teaching are credited on the books of the University, and at any later

date these credits can be counted toward a degree, if the teachers should decide to complete a college

course. Hundreds of young people who came to the University for a later course of study, not dream-

ing that a degree was within their reach, have found themselves by unexpected opportunities or else by

gradual achievements able to complete a college course and thus to fit themselves for lofty service in

their chosen profession.

4. SPECIALIZATION.

The offer of so many electives is an encouragement to specialization. And we owe it to young

people to remind them that all educators advise against haste in entering upon technical or professional

studies and insist upon a preliminary course in the so-called liberal arts. Indeed, the technical and

professional schools are discouraging more and more the admission to their courses of any except college

graduates. Following this consensus of opinion and our own convictions born of experience, we have

not made preparation for that superficial education which results from excessive specialization. We

insist that the graduates of the University lay broad and deep foundations of general culture. Upon

the other hand we recognize the desire of students, who have decided upon their professions, to select

studies which will advance them in their preparation for life. Again, elective courses enable students

who have not yet selected their future work to secure, along with their general culture, special training

in those subjects for which they have tastes and talents. Hence in the three courses open to our

students, and in the relative amounts of prescribed and elective work fixed upon, we have tried to

37</text>
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                    <text>[page 40]

[corresponds to page 38 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

guarantee thoroughness in general culture along with

adaptation to practical requirements.

II. The Academic Department.

JOHN H. GROVE, A.M., Principal.

A person fifteen years old, of good moral char-

acter, and with sufficient knowledge to enter the classes

organized, will be admitted to the Aca-

demic Department. In admitting students, 

the Princiapl learns by personal questions,

but without formal examination, what

preparation the candidate is seeking and

what studies he can profitably pursue,

and assigns him to classes accordingly.

The Principal reserves the right of ad-

vancing the pupil or of placing him in

lower classes, as his recitations reveal his

needs.

[photo]

Balcony leading

to Seminar

Rooms--above

Library Reading

Room.

[photo]

THE CHARLES E. SLOCUM LIBRARY BUILDING.

38</text>
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                    <text>[page 41]

[corresponds to page 39 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

One can save time by entering our Academic Department, where he can pursue each study

demanded for entrance to the college, and where he is not required to pursue studies not needed for

admission to the Freshman class. Besides, young people doing their preparatory work at Delaware,

enjoy many advantages of the University, associate with classmates moving toward the same goal, and

feel the inspiration of college life.

III. The School of Business.

LYCURGUS L. HUDSON, A.M., Principal.

The School of Business affords and excellent training for a practical career, and also opportunities

for business training upon the part of those who are completing the college courses. It embraces

courses in Bookkeeping, Banking and Business Practice, Commercial Law, Commercial Arithmetic,

Stenography, Typewriting and Correspondence, Penmanship and Telegraphy. The course of study is

equal to that offered by any modern business college, and the student in addition enjoys all the advan-

tages of the University. This department has had a remarkedly rapid growth under its present

efficient Principal and his able corps of five assistants. Many students are here securing rapid prepara-

tion at small expense for successful business careers; while professional students are securing that

practical training which will insure them the respect and co-operation of successful business men. The

department is open throughout the year and students can enter it at any time. For special catalogue

address the Principal.

IV. The School of Oratory.

ROBERT I. FULTON, A.M., Dean.

The School of Oratory under the charge of an experienced Dean and two able assistants, offers an

39</text>
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                    <text>[page 42]

[corresponds to page 40 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

extended and thorough course in all branches pertaining to the art of expression. The schools seeks

attainments rather than numbers. It confers degrees only upon college graduates, thus maintaining a 

standard equal to the highest professional schools, a standard not maintained by any other school of

oratory in the land. It aims to fit its pupils for the large and increasing demand for cultivated teachers

of oratory in schools and colleges; and to prepare ministers, lecturers, elocutionists and lawyers for

greater influence and usefulness in the higher walks of life. The instruction is given by principles which

are applied from the first lesson, thus making the student's work practical throughout. All attempts

to make form take the place of fact, and art the place of truth, are discouraged. The exercises are

prescribed for the purpose of freeing nature's avenues of expression and of enabling the student to

present with clearness and grace and power the convictions which he holds.

The enrolment [sic] in the School of Oratory for the present college year will include more than two

hundred separate students. The rapid growth of the school is due to the reputation of the Dean and the

excellence of the teachers employed to assist him in his work and to the very reasonable charges for tuition

in this school, supported in part by endowments, as compared with the ordinary schools of elocution

which are supported entirely by the fees of the students. This is the first school of oratory established

in connection with a great university demanding the completion of a college course of study by all of

its graduates, and thus taking an established rank as a real professional school. For catalogue address

the Dean.

V. The School of Music.

CHARLES M. JACOBUS, Director.

The rapid growth of the School of Music led the Trustees in 1899 to erect a Music Hall upon the

Monnett Hall Campus. This is a plain building with thirty rooms, furnishing offices, rooms for

instruction, practice rooms and a recital hall. With the rooms in a small building adjoining there are

40</text>
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                    <text>[page 43]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 41 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[picture]

"SENIOR RHETORICALS" --SCHOOL OF ORATORY.</text>
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                    <text>[page 44]

[corresponds to page 42 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

now thirty-nine rooms for the accommodation of the school. The students in the school have an

opportunity for broadening their technical training by literary culture and thus securing for themselves

a recognized position in the world of letters. Full courses are offered in voice, upon the organ, the

piano, the violin and all wind instruments. In addition to such technical training thorough courses in

Theory, Harmony, and the History of Music are offered. Among the advantages of the school are the

privilege of membership in the Choral Society, open to competent students; the privilege of participa-

tion in Commencement Concerts given by the Choral Society and by eminent artists; practice in

ensemble playing; the privilege of attending weekly lectures in musical esthetics, recitals by advanced

pupils, concerts given by the members of the Faculty of the School of Music and chamber and solo

concerts given by distinguished artists from abroad. These privileges, with the use of the reading-

rooms and the libraries of the University and participation in University life, add peculiar attractions to

the study of this noble art in the School of Music in the Ohio Wesleyan University. The Roosevelt

Grand Organ in Gray Chapel is the finest organ in Ohio and worthy of comparison with the leading

organs of America. For further information send for catalogue to C. M. Jacobus, Director, or to C.

B. Austin, Dean of Monnett Hall.

VI. The Art Department.

SARAH E. VEEDER, B.P., Director.

The Art Department has been reorganized recently with a woman of European culture at its head,

and with a superior assistant. It embraces classes in Drawing, Painting, Sketching, Wood-carving,

China-painting, Tapestry-painting and Decorative Art. In 1895, Mrs. V. T. Hills, of Delaware,

purchased for this department reproductions of some of the masterpieces of art which are of great value

to the student. The thorough courses in History of Art offered by the college furnish the scientific

42</text>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 44)</text>
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                    <text>[page 45]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 43 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of band]

THE UNIVERSITY BAND.</text>
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                    <text>[page 46]

[corresponds to page 44 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

principles for the appreciation

of the fine arts and for the

technical work of the Art De-

partment. These opportun-

ities make the connection of

the Art Department with the			[photo of Art Hall]

University of inestimable ad-			ART HALL.

vantage to art students.

In 1897 the University pur-

chased the grounds and the

handsome stone building on

the corner of Winter and

Elizabeth streets, fronting the

Monnett Hall grounds on the

east. These commodious and

beautiful quarters give the

Art Department much needed

recognition and suggest the possibility of its future development into a School of Fine Arts. These

wise and generous plans upon the part of the Trustees, account in part for the recent growth of the Art

Department. For further information address the Director.

VII. The Cleveland College of Physicians and Surgeons.

MEDICAL DEPARTMENT OF THE OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY.

CHARLES B. PARKER, M.D., Dean.

The new College Building with its administrative and lecture-rooms and its nine well-equipped labora-

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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11023">
                    <text>[page 47]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 45 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo]

INTERIOR OF ART HALL.</text>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 47)</text>
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                    <text>[page 48]

[corresponds to page 46 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

tories has already been described in this brochure. It marks a most important advance in the evolution

of the University. We need only explain that the College of Physicians and Surgeons is located at

Cleveland rather than Delaware because of the necessity for large clinical advantages which can be

adequately supplied only in a great city. The students of our Medical Department have extraordinary

advantages in that while they share in the clinics of the City Hospital, the Faculty of the College of

Physicians and Surgeons own and control the Cleveland General Hopsital, so that the students of our

College enjoy exclusive use of its clinics. More than eight hundred patients were treated in ward in

the General Hospital in 1900, besides more than eight thousand cases in the Free Daily Dispensary.

There were also twenty-seven students in the Training-School for Nurses. The combined clinics of the

two hospitals are unsurpassed by any other medical college in the country, and bring yearly additions 

to the senior class from other medical schools in Ohio and even from medical schools in Michigan, 

New York, and Philadelphia.

The Faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons is composed of nearly fifty of the leading

physicians in Cleveland, some of whom, although young, have established a national reputation by their

researches. No physician is kept in the faculty simply upon his great reputation either as a practi-

tioner or as an investigator; but every member of the Faculty attends conscientiously to his duties as

an instructor and comes in personal contact with the students in their personal investigations under his 

directions. For a catalogue address the Dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, corner

Brownell street and Central avenue, Cleveland, O.

46</text>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 48)</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11025">
                    <text>[page 49]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 47 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo of hospital]

CLEVELAND GENERAL HOSPITAL.	DEACONESS' HOME.	NURSES' HOME.

The Cleveland General Hospital extends from Woodland Avenue, as seen above, the depth of

one square through to Orange Street.</text>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 49)</text>
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                    <text>[page 50]

[corresponds to page 48 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

						What It Costs.

		The information given here is intended to indicate only in outline the various scales of expenditure

		of students. For the benefit of young men and young women who desire fuller details, the University

		has recently issued two leaflets entitled "What it Costs a Young Man at Ohio Wesleyan University"

		and "Expenses at Monnett Hall." These cover almost every point of inquiry. The former is of

		value to persons who are concerned about the matter of self-support. Either leaflet will be mailed on

		request. 

Honor Gradu-	Any young man, or young woman, who completes the course of study in the community in which

ates from 	he or she resides, and is designated by the Principal of the High School or the Superintendent of

High Schools. 	Schools as the first honor student in the graduating class, is entitled to a Free Scholarship in the Ohio

		Wesleyan University during his college course. This Honor Scholarship is granted to only one graduate

		each year of each school applying for it. If the High School offers two or more courses of study, the

		Principal selects the honor graduate from the course which offers the best preparation for entrance to

		college. The Free Scholarship covers the tuition for the entire four years' course at college, but does

		not cover the incidental or laboratory fees. The printed form, officially signed, will be forwarded at

		once on application to the President.

Two Dollars	It is believed that there is no institution in the country with an equally high grade of scholarship

for One Dollar.	where a liberal education can be secured at less expense. Tuition alone in the leading colleges in the

		East is from $100 to $150 per year. Upon the other hand, thousands attend some school offering

		comparatively slight advantages because they suppose the expenses must be far less there than at a large

							48</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 50)</text>
                  </elementText>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11027">
                    <text>[page 51]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 49 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo]

THE OLD LIBRARY IN TRANSFORMATION INTO A GEOLOGICAL MUSEUM.</text>
                  </elementText>
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              <element elementId="50">
                <name>Title</name>
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                <elementTextContainer>
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                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 51)</text>
                  </elementText>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11028">
                    <text>[page 52]

[corresponds to page 50 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

and well-equipped institution. 

The mistake is a natural one,

but facts show that just the

reverse is true. Private

schools and institutions with

little or no endowment must

of necessity be supported en-

tirely by the students attend-			[photo of house]

ing themm, while in a large and			RACHEL HARTUPEE MISSIONARY HOME.

well-endowed college the ex-

penses are largely met by the

benevolence of friends. The

Ohio Wesleyan University 

possesses property in build-

ings, grounds, endowment

funds, etc., valued at $1,-

357,000; its professors are

paid in part by the income of the endowment. Every student attending the University enjoys his full

share of all benevolent contributions which have been made to it. It is conducted not for the purpose

of making money, but to dispense the benefactions of generous donors. The total tuition, incidental

and laboratory fees paid by the students meet scarcely more than one-third of the total expenses of the

University each year. Hence for every dollar which a student pays in fees the University places

nearly two dollars by the side of it and expends the three dollars for the benefit of the student. It

is no disparagement to private schools to say that they cannot offer their students the advantages which

an institution endowed as is the Ohio Wesleyan affords.

50</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="154956">
                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 52)</text>
                  </elementText>
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      </file>
      <file fileId="9324">
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        <authentication>a9ad84e6d4b184ba338947e4f2b9cca0</authentication>
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              <element elementId="41">
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11029">
                    <text>[page 53]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 51 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

It is somewhat difficult to estimate the expenses of a young person in college, because the cost of		Necessary

living varies with the habits, tastes and financial ability of people. To a large number of students, the 	Expenses.

cost of an education is not a matter of consideration; they have parents or friends who are more than 

willing to pay the bills, if they will only do the work. To a larger number, the question of cost is a 

more serious problem; for their parents or friends are unable to pay more than a portion of the expense,

and they must supplement their limited income with earnings from day to day or during vacations. To

very many others, the most serious problem is that of expense; they are without income or assistance

from parents or friends, and are wholly dependent upon their own endeavors. To this self-dependent

class have belonged hosts of men and women whose names are among the immortals--Ralph Waldo

Emerson who blacked the boots of the President of Harvard College, and Martin Luther who sang in 

the streets for pay.

The cost of living in Delaware is not high; it is much less than in a city. Indeed, one of the			Item by Item.

advantages of residence in Delaware is that it is within thirty-five minutes of Columbus by any one of

three railway routes, with a trolley line projected, and at the same time retired enough for quiet study

and wholesome recreation and fullness of life at a reasonable expense. Some conception of the total

expense of the University, aside from the cost of clothing and traveling, may be formed by the follow-

ing itemized estimates:

Incidental fee, per term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8.00 to $12.00

Scholarship, per term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3.33 to   5.00

Table board in private family, per week . . . . . . . . . . .  2.50 to   3.00

Table board in club, per week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  1.75 to 	 2.50

Self board, per week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.00 to   1.25

Furnished rooms for two persons, each person per week . . . .   .50 to   1.25

51</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="154957">
                    <text>Bulletin of Ohio Wesleyan University (p. 53)</text>
                  </elementText>
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                    <text>[page 54]

[corresponds to page 52 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Fuel, light, and washing, per term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00 to $35.00

Text-books, per term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.00 to  30.00

Laboratory fees, per term, usually . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .            3.00

We know students who are boarding themselves and bringing their actual expenses at the College

down to $35 per term. Others boarding at clubs are bringing their expenses down to $50 per term.

Others are living better and spending more for books, entertainments, etc., whose legitimate expenses

are $75 to $100 per term. Fuller information will be given on application to the President of the 

University, the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, or the Dean of Monnett Hall.

					How It Pays.

Measurement	It is vastly better to attend any school where there are earnest teachers and ambitious pupils

of Values.	struggling for an education than to remain unfitted for the work of the twentieth century. But there

		are varying values in education as there are varying values in clothing or lands. The lowest priced

		goods are seldom the cheapest. To determine the value of institutions of learning, compare the

		original cost of an education with the value of the advantages offered by each. The chief cost of an

		education is not in the money which one pays for tuition, but in the value of the time spent at the

		college. You have only one youth in which to secure preparation for a lifetime of service to the world.

		Can you afford therefore, for the sake of a slight difference in tuition, to spend your golden years of

		preparation in a college destitute of the equipments necessary for educational work, and lacking in funds

		with which to command the ablest teachers, when a slight increase in expenditures will secure the

		enjoyment of all the advantages which come from more than a million dollars in buildings and equip-

		ments and endowments?

52</text>
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                    <text>[page 55]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 53 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo]

DINNER AT MONNETT HALL.

Nearly Two Hundred Young Ladies at Table.</text>
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                    <text>[page 56]

[corresponds to page 54 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Scholastic		But will not this same argument lead young people to seek older universities, where the tuition and

Honors for		the rates of living are much higher than at Delaware? Our students are securing as good results as

Our Graduates.		could be secured in the East; and at one-half the expense. Three of our students recently completed

			graduate courses at Yale, where they were brought into competition with graduates from the leading

			colleges in the land. Yet two of our three graduates secured special recognition based upon scholar-

			ship. Seven of our graduates were enrolled in Harvard recently, four of whom secured special

			recognition for their scholarship. Five of our graduates have recently studied at Johns Hopkins in

			competition with three hundred graduates from the leading colleges of the land. Three of them won

			fellowships of $500 each offered to the twenty best students in the University. Five of our graduates

			completed the theological course in the Boston University recently in a class of forty-six. Our five

			representatives secured two of the four honors awarded on graduation day. The Theological School

			of Boston University and Drew Theological Seminary have recently established fellowships for foreign

			study. Our graduates have won nearly half of these fellowships, although they number less than one-

			tenth of the students in these schools. It was such facts as these which led President Hayes to 

			remark that he was familiar with the great colleges of the land, and that he believed the Ohio Wesleyan
			
			University and Oberlin had the cream of American students.

Honors in		Although the classes are divided into relatively small sections for recitations, yet the large attend-

Oratory and		ance at the University awakens enthusaism and secures a broad testing of one's powers such as only

Debate.			numbers can ensure. Again, students are in attendance at present from eighty-six out of the eighty-eight

			counties in the state. The number, the distribution and the close fellowship of the graduates are of

			inestimable advantage to a young man planning to engage in a profession or to enter upon a public

			career in Ohio. While the University has always fostered scholarship, she has remained in touch with the

			great outside world. Our eleven literary societies lead our students to discuss the problems of the day.
	
			For fifteen years the University was associated with ten of the leading colleges of the state in oratorical

54</text>
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                    <text>[page 57]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 55 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo]

MUSEUM OF BIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY.</text>
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                    <text>[page 58]

[corresponds to page 56 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

contests. The practical cast of our

college life together with the advan-

tages of the School of Oratory enabled

our representatives to win against the

entire field seven of these fifteen con-

tests. In 1897 the University de-

cided to secure literary foemen

worthy of her steel. She withdrew

from the State Oratorical Association			[photo]

and joined with Cornell University,			LITERARY SOCIETY HALL.

Ithaca, New York, and with the

State Universities of Ohio, Indiana

and Illinois in forming the Central

Oratorical League. She also joined

with Oberlin College, the State Uni-

versity and the Western Reserve

University in forming the Ohio De-

bating League. In the Debating

League the Ohio Wesleyan University is thus far in the lead, having won four of the five annual debating

contests; while in the Central Oratorical League she has won the first place against the field in the three

contests which have thus far taken place.

During the last few years our students have listened to lectures or addresses by such teachers as

Professors White of Harvard, and Raymond of Princeton, and Bowne of Boston University; by such

college presidents as Bascom and Raymond and King and Rogers and Warren; by such representatives

56</text>
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                    <text>[page 59]

[corresponds to page 57 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

of other lands as Doctors

Gracey and Scott and Tho-

burn of India, Butler of Mex-

ico, and Drees of South

America; by such preachers

as Foster and Warren and

Fowler and Payne and Stalker				[photo of house]

and George Adam Smith; by 				PRESIDENT'S RESIDENCE.

such lecturers as Conwell and

Dixon and Graves, Booker T.

Washington and Gunsaulus and

Edward Everett Hale; by

such statesmen as Sherman

and Gordon and McKinley;

by such reformers as Parkhurst

and Woolley and Miss Willard.

As Demosthenes was inspired

to eloquence by listening to the speeches of Isaeus and Isocrates, so the young people at Delaware have

been awakened to successful effort by listening to the masters of the age.

We cannot close without urging two considerations upon every young American. First, not the			Food for

least of the inspirations in the life struggle comes from college friendships. The charm is of its kind		Reflection.

and has no fellow. By it one may keep in touch with thinkers, moral giants, and seers with widened

vision. Fill your eye with the glorious work that Oxford has wrought in the unfolding of England;

or that Cambridge has won through her gifted children; or that Harvard and Yale and our own Ohio

57</text>
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                    <text>[page 60]

[corresponds to page 58 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

colleges have gained in American history from the names of those who delight to bless the memory of

college days. Back of Gladstone at Oxford were Eliot, martyr for parliamentary liberty, and Pym,

Hampden, Locke, Wesley, Butler and Peel. Back of Macaulay at Cambridge were Cromwell, Newton,

and Milton, and the undergraduate filled his soul with the achievements of the noble men whose names

adorned the rolls of his alma mater. The class spirit never dies out while, as at old Miami, such names

as Harrison, Walden, Halstead and Gray still lift the little class out of the ordinary and stir to nobler

deeds its surviving members.

In our turn, we covet for you the distinction which very many of our graduate host have won.

Science, politics, journalism, reform, education, and religion lift the proud finger to the names of

Dolbear and Conklin, of Fairbanks and Hoyt, of Mendenhall and Edwards, of Gunsaulus, Thomson,

Woolley and Wheeler, of McDowell, Mansell, Thirkield and the Lowrys.

New Occasions	Second, unless we mistake the signs of the times, there dawns a day which will force upon us a

New Duties.	most exacting struggle. It is not for us to brush it aside. What signal advance the race is to organize,

		and what master stroke our own land is to supply, we may not say; but of one thing we are assured:

		that the direction of affairs will be assumed by disciplined minds and hearts. Too much is at stake to

		allow options to the capricious incompetence of novices. The Higher Education will lead off in the

		future as it has in the past whenever the race has fronted a crisis. The Higher Education achieved th

		conquest of England under William of Normandy, and became a godsend to the English people. It

		was the Higher Education that unified the English in the fourteenth century, when Wyclif and Chaucer

		taught England her tongue of melodious energy with which to order the march of later ages. The

		Higher Education swung Germany out from the sinister paternalism of the papacy into the free activities

		of adult life. The same power lifted Scotland up among the princes of thought. Not otherwise was

		it when the Oxford students of the last century helped God turn a corner in human history. Higher

		Education aroused and then leagued Germany against foreign opposition in the early days of this

58</text>
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                    <text>[page 61]

[corresponds to page 59 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

century; it trained a new band of leaders under Cavour and Mazzini for the unification of Italy; it shook

Bulgaria free a generation ago and made a nation out of waning hopes and suffling officialism. It has

done no less for us many times over.

Nor is its work done. It is to set the true standard of might. The one-fifteenth-of-one-per-cent 	The Hood of

man--for that is the proportion of college men to the whole population--is to do the hard and high	America.

tasks of coming days. The small is to lead the huge. History is to repeat itself in the coming glories

of the Higher Education. You will not fail to apply the true criterion of power when you think of

Athens, which may be covered with the finger tip, or of Judea, the tiny fulcrum upon which a divine

lever was laid for the uplift of whole ages, for Pericles and Plato still eye the world from the little city

of Greece, and David and his Greater Son still calm the world's tumults from the mountain town

between the river and the sea. Not size but worth, not extent of land, but trained character are

wanted. When one asked where Italy was six centuries ago, the answer came: "Under the hood of

Dante!" Higher Education is to be the hood of America for the twentieth century.

Line up with the leaders! Fill your soul with the ambition of the great Cambridge college youth,

and may you be "inflamed with the study ofN learning and the admiration of virtue, stirred up with high

hopes of living to be brave men and worthy patriots, dear to God and famous to all ages."

59</text>
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                    <text>[page 62]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 60 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[photo]

VIEW FROM THE EAST END OF THE COLLEGE CAMPUS.

One who is familiar with the grounds can locate the Gymnasium, Elliott Hall, Sturges

Hall, the Library, Gray Chapel, and Merrick Hall of Science.</text>
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                    <text>[page 63]

[corresponds to page 61 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

Send to the President or to any member of the Faculty, Delaware, O., for catalogue showing

latest changes in courses of study and requirements for admission. The General Secretary of the

College Y.M.C.A. expects to be able to send to every student who notifies us of his intention to

enter the University, a new illustrated booklet containing a map of Delaware and valuable and detailed

information not otherwise available for new students.

61</text>
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                    <text>[page 64]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 62 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[image of person holding OWU diploma]</text>
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                    <text>[page 65]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 63 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[blank]</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11042">
                    <text>[page 66]

[corresponds to unlabeled page 64 of OWU Bulletin 1901]

[blank]</text>
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