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PAGE 16
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To color the flames in your fireplace
soak pine cones or pieces of wood in the following chemical solution
for 2 minutes and dry in a warm room.
Green flame to 1 gallon of water add 1
lb boric acid.
Blue flame two 1 gal water add 1 lb
copper sulphate.
Red
flame 2 1 gal water add 1 lb strontium strontium nitrate.
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PAGE 17
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Peace and
patientce go together.
Freedom and patientce go together.
Friendship and patientce
go together.
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PAGE 18
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The Cloverleaf
American
“Questioning”
I asked the New
Year, “What am I to do
The whole year through?”
The answer came,
Be true,”
I asked again,
“And what am I to say
To those who pass my way?”
“The kindest words,” he said,
“That you can say.”
“What thoughts am
I to think, day long, year long?”
and clearly as a quick-struck gong,
The answer,
“Think no wrong.”
“And what roads
take across the earth’s worn sod
Where many feet have trod?”
Swift, came the answer –
“Those that lead to God.”
-- Grace Noll
Crowell.
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Dear Rosemary: I am sending a small
plant for your “Garden.” If it is cultivated it will grow into a
beautiful flower – Mrs. Flora Stohler, Indiana.
As a candle in the night
Sends abroad its cheerful light,
So a little word may be
Like a lighthouse in the sea.
When the winds and waves of life
Fill the heart with storm and strife –
It’s a star some boat to guide
To a harbor glorified.
--
Unknown |
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PAGE 19
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Jan. 1937. I
decided to do this.
We must
learn to undress our mind at night as we do our body and to take real
rest. To do that we must take time off accasionally to think things
through.
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PAGE 20
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1941 I read Desert Gold, Yaquis Indian (Richard Gales)
The Robe by Douglas 1943
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PAGE 21
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Some things I
want to remember when I read the book Robe by Loyd C. Douglas.
Quiet. Quiet.
A
sort of stabilizing power that swept away all afflicting circumstance
suffused with a glow of curious kinship. Socrates Epicurus Herodo
Solon Aristotle Polyberus, Greeks. It is the heroes who live forever
in our publick gardens and men of peace, Yeshayah was a Jewish prophet
and he was foretelling the coming of a Jewish Messiah.
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External Links referencing above scripts: [Desert
Gold - Read text online at World Public Library]
[Zane Gray by
Wikipedia]
[The Robe -
Read text online at Gutenberg Project]
[Lloyd C.
Douglas by Wikipedia]
[The Robe by Wikipedia]
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PAGE 22
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Woodland Friends
I wish I could
write like a master,
And in words of a poet reveal
The beauty I find all around me,
And the love for wildlife that I feel.
The little lakes, crystal and quiet,
The streams that go scrambling along,
Each has for me something distinctive,
Its own sweet, particular song.
The trees in
their beautiful colors,
Bear their noble heads royally high.
While with their slim, delicate fingers
They reach up to beckon the sky.
My feather friends are all singing,
Below them the furry ones play;
There is nothing to mar their contentment,
Or mine, as I watch them today.
Friend, if you
are sad or unhappy,
Come out to the woods with your care;
You’ll find us all carefree and peaceful,
And ready our pleasures to share.
And as the bright forest enfolds you,
As you visit its folks for a day,
You’ll find that your troubles will vanish,
Blown, like the light woodsmoke, away.
Philip
Paquet, Greensboro, N. C.
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PAGE 23
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ADVENTURES IN FRIENDSHIP" (xxxxx)
MacTavish, instructor in sociology and supervisor of social work at
Ohio university was the speaker at the dinner meeting of the Blue
Triangle club held at the Y. W. C. A. on Seventh street on last
evening at six o'clock. He chose for his subject "Adventures in
Friendship" and developed the theme in a charming manner, early in his
talk drawing the clear contrast between an acquaintance and a friend.
Nor did he limit the use of the word
"friend" to the human being but cleverly included the contacts which
he has enjoyed with a favorite saddle horse and a pet dog, bringing
out the value of animal contacts at times when actions sometimes
suffice far more than words. For example, he described his
feelings of pleasure when he walks to the stable, doesn't say a word
but merely moves to the stall of his favorite mount and how
immediately she will turn and nuzzle his face with her soft mouth.
Friendships looming ahead as adventures
in understanding and mutual appreciation might have been the theme of
the talk. Before finishing Prof. MacTavish had told the girls
something of his experiences in a Pittsburgh social center where he
worked hard to gain the confidence and the friendship of a group of
boys from the most wretched homes in the metropolitan area. How
he chose to do this and the manner in which he said he eventually
succeeded, made an interesting story.
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PAGE 24
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Mrs. Pharo Statler
Mrs. Pharo Statler joined the
innumerable throng on the other side from her home near the fair
ground below Pennsboro, on Sunday afternoon at three o’clock, after a
brief illness of typhoid-pneumonia.
She was formerly Miss Belle Ferrell,
of Pennsboro, and was still young. She is survived by her husband and
three children.
The
funeral will take place today Tuesday, at two o’clock, from the U. B.
church and will be in charge of the pastor, the Rev. Mr. Gruder. |
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Mrs. Dora Cox
“A beautiful life ends not in death.”
“The End” was written to another beautiful volume of life on Wednesday
morning, February 21, 1912 at 4 o’clock when the gentle spirit of Mrs.
Alice Dora Cox winged its heavenward light from the home of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Tharpe near Summers after a year’s
illness of tuberculosis, the family enemy.
Mrs. Cox was the last survivor of the
family of the late Andrew Pritchard, and was a most estimable
Christian woman. She was born on March 2, 1876, and on April 30, 1905
she was happily married to Mr. Ira Cox, son of O. P. Cox of Coxes
Mills, who with one little daughter “Elsie Lucile,” aged five years
still survives, another little eleven-month old daughter, “Maxie”
having been laid away in August of last year.
She gave her heart to Christ at the
age of thirteen years, and united with the Methodist Episcopal church
and was an earnest, useful member to the close of her life; being a
skillful musician and a worker in the Sunday school. Some time before
the end she realized that earth was “fast receding” and though life
was sweet and her family ties dear, with unfaltering trust she calmly
faced the inevitable, and made all her arrangements, even to the
selection of her casket, pall-bearers, shroud and the hymns that were
to be sung.
The funeral took place on Thursday
afternoon at 1 o’clock from the South fork Baptist church and was very
largely attended. The service was in charge of the Rev. Cyrus Poling
of the M. E. church and her cousins, Messrs. C. H., Lakin and Shirley
Pritchard, Conrad Snodgrass, Peter and H. E. Wass were the pall
bearers.
She was laid away in her bridal dress
in a white casket covered with white lilies and pink roses. The hymns
used were “No Dying There,” “In that City,” “Nearer My God to Thee,”
“The Way seems Brighter” and as they carried her to her last resting
place in the churchyard, the congregation impressively sang “Till We
Meet again.”
Much
sympathy is felt for the husband and little one and the aged
grandparents who have been so repeatedly and sadly bereft.
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External Links referencing above script: [H.B.
Tharp & Ira D. Cox as mentioned in The Good-Will Community, A History
of Holbrook W. Va. by Bradford Spiker]
Transcriber's Notes:
Willa Dean Spiker
tells us that Dora's daughter, Elsie Lucile, married Judge Max DeBerry.
Their daughter, Mary Lucille, often stops by the Spiker Reunions to
visit with family.
We contacted Mary Luicille DeBerry soon
after the publication of this diary. On September 16, 2008, she
responded with the following information:
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I don't
know of any family relationship (between Gay and Dora) but heard
often what good friends their husbands (Ira D. and Jake) were as
well as fairly close neighbors. It wasn't far from the
Spiker home from Holbrook up toward Oxford just past the iron
bridge where the cement fence posts with the balls on top signaled
the arrival at the Tharp/Cox family home.
The
obituary (was) most likely written by Minnie Kendell Lowther who
wrote such for the Ritchie County paper.
I know that
Maxie Irene died of polio and that all of H.B. and Elizabeth
Tharp's children and grandchildren died young. Dora Alice's
parents are buried at Auburn. The dates in the Ritchie County
Cemetery Book are: Eliza Tharp Pritchard died Feb. 19, 1878 at 27
Y, 10M 19 D, wife of Andrew Pritchard who died March 10, 1878 at
28 years.
Their son Grant,
Dora Alice's brother is buried at South Fork Cemetery in Doddridge
County along with Dora Alice, H.B. and Elizabeth and little Maxie
Irene. |
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External Links referencing above
notations: [Descendents
of John Belconger]
[Ritchie
County native and writer, Mary Lucille Deberry - includes photo]
[West
Virginia History Heroes for 1999 - Mary Lucille DeBerry]
[History
of Richie County by Minnie Kendell Lowther] The data below is the text printed on the
reverse side of the newspaper clipping shown immediately above.
It is being provided for its historical relevance.
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The farmers (if
they rely on the old saying, that “a dry, cold winter means an early
spring”) are planning to get their plowing done early.
Fox hunting has
got to be a vocation in this vicinity.
We hope
there will be no one else come out for Sheriff, there will be nobody
left to vote after a while.
Ethel Smith who has been visiting home
folks has returned to E. Cokeley’s.
Warren Say and
Army Killingsworth has been pulling rods for the past few days.
O. W. Phillips
has gone to S.E. Rexroad’s to start another well.
Work is
progressing nicely on the G. E. Killingsworth well. The eight inch
casing was put in.
Andy Crothers,
the well known oil man got one of his toes mashed.
Cooche Phillips
is here attending court.
John Starr
informs his many friends that he will not make the race for sheriff
this time.
Marion Wright and
wife spent the in Harrisville.
Dolhe Layfield
has been visiting friends at Cantwell the past week.
Willie Phillips
is at home on a vacation for a few days.
A. R. Philips is
slowly improving.
CAIRO Route 2
We hail with gladness the approaching
spring-time, and we predict that our farmers’ wives will begin the
search for garden seeds, and this means that every tin can, tea pot,
paper bag and drawer must submit to a close inventory of its contents.
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. French, Mr. and
Mrs. W.J. Alkire, Floyd Ross, Clyde Ross, and Miss Fay Alkire were
visiting at J. H. Jones’ on last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. P. Emerick of
Parkersburg, will move to their farm on Marietta run Saturday.
The protracted meeting at Nutter Farm
closed Saturday night without additions.
Daniel Davis lost a good horse a few
days ago; this is the second horse he has lost in the last five
months. We sympathize very much Uncle Dan – but according to the old
adage – “those who have must lose.”
The Nutterfork literary society
extends to you an invitation to come on Friday evening and stay till
bed time.
Pres. Waller, road surveyor, of near
Petroleum, was in our town last Monday.
There is one more month of the
Nutterfork school.
Miss Letha Crooks was calling on Miss
Dessie Rinehart recently.
Geo. Amick made a trip to Borland
wells last week.
Frank Cain and John Sandy have been
clearing land for W. J. Alkire.
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PAGE 25
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Old age is no
such uncomfortable thing if one gives oneself up to it with good
grace.
Hypertrophy of the Heart. Sudden pain in heart muscles.
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