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ALL THE REAL NEWS AND SPECIAL FEATURES CAREFULLY EDITED -.READ BY BRIGHT PEOPLE It SHINES FOR ALL THE PEOPLE IN NORTHERN STARK COUNTY READ BY BRIGHT PEOPLE An Independent Newspaper That'Plays No Favorites Among Advertisers or Subscribers, and With One Price To AH —- , ; ^ ■ i' ■■■»■!. „ , _," ...■■■■-, ■ - —.. — i. . ■..*-.. ..in- y'r —_... , ■- ■■ , . . i- ■ . ■ ■ ' Vol. 6—NO. 34 NORTH CANTON* STARK COUNTY,,,OHIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1928. $2.00 PER YEAR Told Without Varnish Beautiful Old Williamsburg, Virginia, Where John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Is Going To Spend Millions Restoring Buildings. An By BEN J. LONG interesting announcement to WILLIAM AND MARY COLLEGE WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA -*»<, Above is a picture of William and Mary college, Williamsbuig, Va. It was designed by Sir .Christopher Wren. It is to be restored at a cost of $400,000. The restoration plans call for fireproofing the structure, which was designed after Christ Hospital at Chelsea, England., After its restoration'the structure will be turned into a memorial hall. ' Three Presidents of the United States, Jefferson, Monroe, and Tyler; Chief U. S. Justice John Marshall, four Justices of the- Supreme Court, four signers Of the Declaration of Independence, three speakers of the come its governing official. He had passed on years before. Now that John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has agreed to restore the college and the buildings many persons no doubt will visit the town. If they do this much is certain: They will be prouder than ever that they are Americans, for in all my experience among men and women in different parts of this country I never met more wholesome people that I met in historic Williamsburg, Virginia. GOIN WEE PLAY "In Love With' Love" Arouses Much Interest Around Here. house of Representatives, 21 governors of Virginia, 21 judges of the Virginia Court of Appeals, and many other notables were educated in the ancient structure. On a visit to that ancient town'many years ago, Ben. J. I*ng, now on the editorial staff of The Sun, was shown over the building by Col. Benjamin Ewell, the president of the college. Its halls were silent then, but the spirits of famous Americans seemed to hover above the desks, and now that it is, to be restored one can easily imagine the spirits of Jefferson, Monroe, Taylor and others congratulating each other. • ImiANKWw From information furnished The Sun, the Grand,theatre, Canton, „will be Visited this week, by many persons living in 'Nb'rtn'^Canton, Greentown, Uniontown, Hartville, Greensburg and other sections served by' this newspaper. The play staged this week by The Wright Players has captured Canton by storm, and everywhere you go in that city you hear what a "wonderful play" is "In Love With Love." Monday and Tuesday nights every seat was occupied. On Tuesday the dramatic critic of the Canton Repository reviewed the play in a column article, and he pronounced it "one of the most brilliant and hilarious bits of comedy seen in Canton in many a moon. If you don't feel like laughing long and heartily, stay away from the Grand, for the fun is infectious from the first curtain until the last. The players are an excellent cast." Mary Tary, the leading- lady; Lex Lindsay, the leading man; Herbert Butterfield and Fred Hall all come in for the warniest praise. Herbert De Guerre, the new director, and one of the few really great actors on the stage today, received well deserved credit for his directing and his acting from the Repository critic. Dennis Smith, widely known for his criticisms, said in his comment in the Daily News on Tuesday that " 'In Love With Love" is a comedy that crackles with the keenest kind of humor and sparkles with clever lines . . . there is never a slow moment in its merry-making." Mr. Smith praises the stage work of Miss Tarry, Lex Lindsay, Herbert Butterfield, Fred Hall, Kitty Cosgriff and Peggy Shipman. Of course he hands a large bouquet to Herbert De Guerre, saying that "as the father he gives one of the sincere and capable performances which audiences expect from him." He Spent His Early Days In and Around North Canton. PSBipfp HwWHjBffij^'-'l !■*■ HI Ek ■*'JBH^H l^flHH millions of Americans is that John D, Rockefeller, Jr., has agreed to pay the cost, estimated at between $4,000,000 and $5,000,000, of restoring the 1ns- ' troic town of Williamsburg, Virginia, by rebuilding , more than 100 structures, including the House of Burgesses, where Patrick Henry m 1705 made his historic outburst, "Csesar had his Brutus, Charles the First his Cromwell,' and George the Third may profit by their example." Williamsburg, founded in 1632, in: 1699 succeeded Jamestown as the capital of the colony of Virginia. More than forty public and private buildings, which stand there now, were standing before the Revolution. **'..*"■ It has been many years since this writer, now on the editorial staff of The Sun, strolled over the village - green, walked around the town and spent several pleasant days in Williamsburg, Va., with persons whose names are familiar to readers of ' American history: Armstead, Harrison, Tyler, Randolph, Bowen, Ewell, Coleman, Wise and others. As a young newspaper man I stepped off the evening train I had boarded at Newport News, then a mere shell of a town, although the Hotel Warwick was open for business, and -'' a fine hotel it was, too. It' had always been my an.ibition to visit Williamsburg, Jamestown and other historic points in Old Virginia, " . and at last I stood iri a town known , to every intelligent American. That night I slept in a large mansion across the road from William and Mary college where many famous men received their education. The next morning I heard a bell ringing and learned that it belonged to William and Mary college, and that every morning'an aged negro tolled it. "The college has been closed since the Civil War," explained my host, "but Colonel Ewell, brother of General Ewell, resides in the college house and he was president of the college the day it was closed. He loves the old institution and he believes, that some day it will reopen its dobi's." We went down the path in the centre of my host's lawn and entered the , yard surrounding the college. A little later I was shaking hands with Colonel Benjamin Ewell. A modest, cultured gentleman, well advanced in years. He took my arm and we strolled around the rooms while he explained what it meant to Virginia and to the nation to reopen the doors of the old college. * $ * .,- Later I met Colonel Robert T. Arm- stead, a relative of the famous Arm- stead who led Pickett's brigade in that desperate charge at Gettysburg. Colonel Armstead was one of the leading lawyers of Virginia. A dashing, handsome man with light-colored ' hair and mustache, it was not difficult to imagine him riding side by side with Gen. J. E. B. Stuart or Gen. Fitzhugh Lee. One man. I distinctly recall was Captain Harrison. Tall ancl straight, he always wore a military coat and carried a cane. Two Presidents of the United States belonged to this family.. Dr. Coleman was another fine example of birth and breeding. His wife was a descendant pf Pocahontas. One son, Charles, wrote good poetry for Lippincott's magazine and special articles for the New York Evening Post. The Tyler mansion was at the end of the main street. A President of the United States added prestige to that familv; t * t Richard Wise, a brother of John, and son of Governor Wise, who put down John Brown when he attempted to arouse the slaves, was living in Williamsburg at the time. He had left the Democratic party and had joined Riddleberger and Cameron. When the latter was elected Governor he appointed Richard Wise superintendent of the large lunantic asylum ih Williamsburg. There were many other old families—F. F. V.'s—First Family Virginia—and they were splendid people to meet. It is true they were not overburdened with wealth, but they were "to the manner born" and in their homes or on the street, they gave every evidence of their refinement and culture. t t t " I was shown everything- in the town. The old powder horn, the courthouse, the Episcopal church, the graveyard and other buildings associated with the days before the Revolution. Colonel A"rmstead had a case in court during my visit, and as Williamsburg was the county seat of Warwick county, I had an opportunity to meet a number of men whose forefathers helped to make American history, among them being Judge Bowen. One place also interested me: The office of the Williamsburg Gazette, the first newspaper to print in full the Declaration of Independence. The office was located next to the Armstead mansion on the main street, directly opposite the postoffice. The editor was an able writer, and Colonel Armstead was associate editorof the paper. ± t ± + ->• + The Sun is pleased to learn that p„L.-t.^..,.„ at , of Virginia are In. later years the State Legislature now. negotiating for the purchase of the oldest house of English construc- came to the assistance of William and j «on in America today. It is the Warren property, lying about 15 miles Mary college and opened its doors, but from'Williamsburg. This house is commonly known as Smith's Fort. It Colonel Benjamin Ewell did not be- was built for the son of John Rolfe and Pocahontas, and he-lived in-its cbn- iines for many years. , • '.'„•■ EX-JURORS TO PICNIC Good Program Has Been Arranged Here For Saturday, June 30. ■ The above picture is a little too -fine for newspaper printine-*, but it will give you an idea of Frank T. Bow, one of the finest young men in Canton, according to his friends, and the latter by the way, take up nearly every page in the directory. To know Bow is to like him. He is so straightforward, so manly, and so genial that you cannot imagine even in your wildest dreams Frank trying to "high hat" anyone. Of course, a gentleman is never a snob. Anil snobs, be it understood, exist in overalls just as they do in $150 suits. Snobs spring from nothing, or next to nothing, which is about the same thing. Frank Bow has good Ohio blood in his veins, and blood counts in the human just as it d°es in a dog or a horse. Candidate For Probate Court Many persons in North Canton and the district served by The Sun will be interested in Frank Bow when they learn that he is a candidate for Judge of the Probate Court, subject to the Republican primaries. Frank spent a number of years of his yduth in North Canton when he lived on the Tangle- wood farm with his parents. He is the son of the late Judge Charles C. Bow, and Anna K. Bow,, and, received his grammar school education at the Pleasant Grove school in Plain township, having been taught by Arthur Willaman, during the period of time that he attended the district school. Honored By Bar Association In recent years Mr. Bow has been known to be one of the successful younger members of the Stark County Bar, and has gained the respect and confidence of clients, attorneys and Judges. At the present time, Mr. Bow is serving as a member of a committee of nine lawyers picked from the State of Ohio by the President of the Ohio IS RECOVERING W. C. Findlay Underwent Operation In Aultman Hospital, Saturday. W. C. Findlay of Wise street was taken suddenly and seriously ill on Friday night. He.was rushed to Aultman hospital. An operation was performed on Saturday and tlie last report to The Sun is that he is getting along nicely, Mr. Findlay is the father of Mrs. F. M. Evans, Mrs. John.Ris.-gle, Mrs. John Schrantz and Mrs. R. Skiver, all of North Canton. THE REY. F.R. SUTTER TO LEAVE N. C. AUG. 7 HORSESHOE TOURNAMENT t Is Open To Every Man Hereabouts On Thursday Night. All aboard for the town-wide horseshoe tournament, planned for the Community Building courts this week. W. H. Wood the efficient horseshoe manager, as well as efficient "Anything - you-waiit-in-physical-work-and -sports-line," informs us that he is planning ra horseshoe tournament for Thursday night of this week. This is not to particularly deterrtiine the forever-more champion of North Canton, but to determine as near' a.s possible the standing of all tossers. This is open to anybody from North Canton or vicinity. The entrance fee will be 15c per man' and the fellow who eliminates everybody else to his own satisfaction and the satisfaction of the judges will be given a handsome, well-balanced, bronzed pair of horseshoes. Of course the judges won't insist that the winner wear the horseshoes on the lapels of his coat or around his neck or dangling from his wrist watch. But they can be used to' defend his title as long as he has one to defend. BOYS GO NORTH Seven of Them, Under Carl Kschbach, Are Headed For'Canada. Pastor of Zion Lutheran Church Accepts Call To Become, the Pastor of Clinton Heights Congregation In Columbus. SERVED HERE TEN YEARS The Rev. F. R. Sutter, pastor of Zion Lutheran church, Noi'th Canton, tendered his resignation to the church membership on Sunday to take effect on August 1. Mr. Sutter said that he had been called to Clinton Heights Lutheran church, corner of North High street and Clinton Heights avenue, Columbus. The church is in a •"■•apidly growing residential section and the Rev. Mr. Sutter feels that he can increase the membership substantially within the next few years. , His resignation here also affects Well, they are gone again! Carl Eschbach, boys' work director, and Tiny Roberts, the genial -betasJrian of the Hoover truck of the community Building educational trip.--, shook the wrinkles out of their hiki.it suits, donned them once more, and with a new group of' boys started h.r Niagara Falls, Hamilton, Ontario, and the Finger Lake region on Monday morning. They both wore their customary snides and showed their tbual enthusiasm which it is easy tn catch from the groups which accompany them on these trips. Carl confessed, though, that one trip following another so cIom-Iv, with the necessity of doing his own rooking and sleeping on the ground, i-n't like being in his own comfortable home, with Mrs. Eschbach and the now Margaret Ann. But Carl, always with' his interest in the boys, is read) to go with them any place. He says the real value of these trips can nut be realized in a summer, or even in a' year, but will develop more and more over a period of years. The boys who accompanied Eschbach on this trip were: Meryl Musgrave, Billy Blubaugh, Robert Kreighbaum, Harry Storch, Kenneth Grove, Dale Forster, Howard Shaeffer. This group will return Friday night or Saturday morning. COUNCIL MEETING Members Willing To Assist In Keeping Down Weeds and Dust. BASEBALL BATTLE HERE ON THURSDAY MARK GRAVES Tax Commissioner of New York will address the Public Affairs Institute in August at the University of Virginia. Mayor Logan \V. Becher of North Canton has been invited by the University officials to be present. INVITE BECHER Mayor of North Canton Asked To Attend Public Affairs Meet. THE REV. F. R. SUTTER Mayor Logan W. Becher has been invited to attend the second national Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, from Aug. (! to 18, inclusive. He said this Wednesday morning- that he would go if he "found it convenient. More than two score of the nation's leading figures will be on the institute program. Dr. Charles G. Ma- phis, dean of the_ summer quarter of the universitv, will direct the event. Dr. John Black, professor of agricultural economics at Harvard;, Mrs. Aurelia Henry Reinhart, president of Mills College, in California, and also of the American Association of College Women; Dr. John H. Latane, of Johns Hopkins; Dr. Thomas J. Reed, of the University of Michigan: Kirk H. Porter, University of Iowa; Editor Victor Rosewater, A. R. Hatton, of Northwestern University; Mark Graves, tax commissioner' of New York, and several others already have accepted invitations to take part in the institute. Presidential candidates of both parties will be asked to present their Strike-out Taylor ancl Bowers In the Box In Witwer Park When North Canton Faces the Live Fellows From East Canton. GAME STARTS AT 5:30 P. M. tional attention and was the medium; through which many of the nation's leaders discussed problems of na- arrangc- State Bar Association, for the purpose of rewriting and revising the Probate Code. As a member of this Those who have done jury duty in i committee Mr. Bow represents four Stark county are again reminded that a picnic for Stark County jurors and their families will be held in Witwer park on Saturday, June 30. Bring a basket and enjoy the day. A program will follow the picnic meal at noon. ten counties, and has had assigned to him for special attention, the "subject of "Land Sales." This committee will reach its conclusion some time prior to the next meeting of the State Legislature, at,which time their sug- [Continued on page eight] On Monday night several men , residing in the neighborhood of Cordelia road asked Council about a storm water sewer they wanted. Mayor Becher, Engineer Rice ami Council discussed the subject and acreed to construct a sewer on Cordelia road from South Main street. A petition asking that calcium chloride be placed on Ro\cr street to keep down the dust ami weeds was read. Council agreed, and the Mayor authorized The Sun to .-ay that the village will put it on any unpaved street needing it if the pniperty own Hope Lutheran church of Zoarville, 25 miles south of North Canton. This is an active little congregation of about 75 communicants, The Sun has been informed. In North Canton , 10 Years The Rev. F. R. Sutter was installed pastor of Zion Lutheran church, North Canton, on Sunday, June 8, 1918, by the Rev. Claudius Freseman of Akron. Mr. Sutter's father, the Rev. ,. , . , ™ . Henry G. Sutter, served his major pas-1ll0,lal importance. This year torates in Bellevue walk, Ohio. He was his ability in the pulpit ganizer. His father, tlu. ft.~..,.*ow.^ , . . . ,. - „ . . of the Rev: F. R. Sutter, was a pio-' features of the program. Special neer pastor in Fairfield county, Ohio,! headquarters will be arranged for vis- when that section of the state was : iting newspaper men and every cour- somewhat rough. j tes>' wl11 he extended to them. Historians say that Grandfather | ° Sutter was a godly man, hut he would stand for no nonsense. Once he tamed two bullies and they became not only earnest christians but they made it their business to see to it that no one ever disturbed Pastor Sutter on his long horseback journeys from place to place. A clergyman's life in those early days --Aras anything hut a life of ease and it was necessary to be stalwart as well as godly. As he was a success, it is plain that Pastor Sutter was both. It was from such sturdy American pioneer stock that the Rev. F. R. Sutter sprang, and no doubt that is the reason he has no | time to waste on shams. [Continued on page five] o Booster day, Thursday evening (tomorrow), June 21, at SiSO in Witwer park, North Canton. Teams: North Canton versus the team from East Canton, with Strikeout Taylor pitching for the visitors, and R. Bowers doini*- the heaving for North Cantom Object: To raise money to purchase uniforms for the team representing this town. Last week The Sun printed an article in this column in which it was pointed, put that the North Canton players do not receive a cent for their services; that they are in the game for the love of the sport and that they are a good advertisement for the town. All of which is absolutely true. Now the players are not asking something for nothing. On the contrary, they are going to engage ih a game of baseball with a team they defeated once, and which they, hope to beat tomorrow evening in Witwer park. To do so, however, is a man's job, as players in other towns are willing to acknowledge. Taylor vs. Bowers Strike-oUt Taylor has a great record* and he is said to be at his best right now.' Bowers is anything but a ' selling plater when it comes to speed and we have seen him work when he- looked very much like a stake horse. So if our dope is right, and we think . it is, the fans are going to see a pitch- • ers' battle on Thursday evening with every man on both teams backing up the "fellow in the box. Good pitching is necessary to win a game, but unless the heaver has good support he cannot expect victory. Many a star twirler has seen his teammates boot a game. The North Canton Idds declare they will give' their heaver gilt-edge support. So let us go out on Thursday afternoon and do some rooting for the views, and Charles Evans Hughes has ]oca, team. It w111 be good fol. our been invited to make an address. :, , it wi„ make- the bovs feeI Last year the institute drew nn- - .... that we appreciate them. The following is the North Canton line-up: C. Evans, captain, 1st base; H. Scharver, 2nd base; Ed Warstler, short stop; Wm. Bonnel, 3rd base; HARPOLD MOTOR CO. GET NEW QUARTERS Will Move About July 1 Into the Building Built and Now Occupied By the Moose Bros. On South Main Street. ON THE SCREEN Milton Sills Here On Friday and Ken Maynard On Tuesday. The picture on Friday night, June 22, is Milton Sills in ""Hard-Boiled Haggerty." Supporting him is Molly O'Day, and what this clever pair of movie stars do must be pnen to be appreciated. Talk about your thrills! Well, you'll get them when you see Sills do a 300 feet nose dive in a burning airplane and then go back for more. And IS THE FORD DEALER HERE Oldest House of English Construction In America Today Located 12 Miles From Wilhamsbuift for a girl that once protected him. If ers'wiff send a petition to Councifan'd ! >'6" !,a,ve a, weak heart, stay away! agree to pay $2 per propeity. The vil-! Blake of Scotland ^ urd, and a « •»* lift » * .« . *-'H-l%-l»r.m-'\/-»lr-| -*•*"* 4-4^rt Af.l*m. , \4Vl age will deliver and put on the cal cium chloride. This is actual cost for handling the stuff. WILL EAT STRAW 1SERRIES Jr. Men's Class of Zior Church To Be HiKt. The Junior Men's cla formed church will hold tlieir annual strawberry feast for the members and | their families, also the board and teachers of the church, in the church basement on Tuesday, June 26. A soft ball game will ! • staged in Witwer park at 6:30 p. -:i. Married Men vs. Single Men. At the close of the game all will p-o to the church for the feast of strawbei'ies. news reel are the other offerings. I Cowboy King On Tuesday | Ken Maynard, the cowboy star in "The Wagon Show," does a number I of stunts of western life and his work i is always colorful. This picture on | Tuesday night, June 2(i, ha§ every- Reformed ! thing a "thriller" carries, and the cir- ! cus features are true in every par- j ticular. I - A comedy will be shown. Prices re- uf Zion Re-1 main 15c, 20c and 30c. R. M. Harpold of the Harpold Motor company, Ford dealer in North Canton, has leased the garage, built and occupied by the Moose Brothers, on South Main street, and will move his business to that building about July 1. Mr. Harpold has found the change necessary because of increasing business and he has outgrown his present quarters. Came Here From Akron Mr. Harpold came from Akron just a year ago, and will in his new location continue to sell and service Ford cars, extending the service to any make of car. All Ford parts will be carried at all times, and tlie same courtesy will be extended that has always been the Harpold Motor company policy. In the new quarters wili lie installed a thoroughly modern greasing and oiling system, and all service will be of the best. Mr. and Mrs. Harpold and family moved to North Canton from Akron recently and they occupy a house on Harman street. Grant, infield; H. Werstler, outfield. Pat Nelius is manager. JUNIOR BASEBALL Director Wood Is Training Boys Ho Wants More In Game. and W. H. Wood will continue the Junior baseball leagues for a time. There is room for some more good players, and places for beginners to get into the game. Here is where the future shop league is being trained, anil believe it, they are being trained. Just drop around some morning and listen in. COMMUNITY BUILDING Members of Board of Managers Will Be Chosen On Friday. An election of new members for the Board of Managers will be held at the Communitv Building on Friday, June 22, from !»:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. All members of good standing, over 18 years of age, are entitled to vote. The nominating committee has placed in nomination the following names, three to be elected: E. P. Smith, Max Messerly, Earl Herbruck, Edwin Warstler, Lloyd Taylor. Standing of Factory Baseball League W L Pet. Assembly 5 0 1000 Print 2 2 500 Engineers 1 o 333 Office 1 2 333 Business Men 1 2 333 Paint Shop .... 1 3 250 o MISS MARGARET SHICK LOST FRATERNITY PIN L. T. L. MEETING Every Member Wanted In Park On Thursday. Witwer The older children belong to> the B division of the L. T. L. are requested to meet in. Witwer park on.Thursday afternoon and assist in making plans for a. hike. Three o'clock is the hour when the members' meet. ;Be there, please.-" \. . * -,•»- TO PRESENT PLAY 'The Path Across the Hill" Will Be Given Thursday Night. If you Find One Then Make Helen Voneman Happy. ."Miss Miss Helen Voneman lost a fraternity pin this week somewhere near tlie Square. Naturally she feels the loss keenly, for pins to young people mean more than they do later in life. So if you find one containing three Greek letters just call Miss Voneman, Members of the dramatic company of Faith Luther League of Massillon will present in the Community Building tomorrow night (Thursday), June • phone 408 R, or leave it at her home, 21, at 8:00 o'clock "The Path Across : 220 Portage street.- The smile you will the Hills," for the benefit of the or-; gl't aml tlie pleasant "thank you" will gan fund of Zion Lutheran church, .'make you feel pleased with yourself North Canton. fur the next six months Takes Charge of Playground During the Absence of Miss Widdoes. This company appeared here once and from what The Sun hears the members put on a play in the right way. so "The Path Across the, Hills" ought, to go over in first-rate style. Admission: Adults, 40c; children,- 25c. i All reserved;seats, 00 cents, ■'if4. ■ Yep, He Smiled! Welcome Henderson had a 250-lb. pump fall on him, .-.Tuesday, which skinned his little finge^,'raised a knot on his head and hurt;his hip.—Wat- seka Republican..-. ?< > • . - ;r-*y-. ■ ..".y-Siiit;--. ■ The playground will see a new face for six weeks this summer, yet one familiar to North Canton. While Miss Margaret Widdoes, the efficient physical director of women and girls' work director in the Community Building, is attending Ohio State University, Miss Margaret Schick will be in charge at the playground. She is a native of North Canton, but has been attending Ohio University at Athens, for the past two years, and has been specializing in physical education and playground work. The reports that sift in from the* playground are to the effect that "We like her, she's fine," and in about ninety-nine cases out of a hundred the judgment of the children is to be trusted in such matters. Miss Widdoes is at Ohio State with the object of working toward her master's degree. She is taking advanced work in physical education and sociology. She is a graduate of Otterbein University. Miss Widdoes will return to her duties in North Canton about July "25. . .- . "'
Object Description
Title | The Sun. (North Canton, Stark County, Ohio), 1928-06-21 |
Place | North Canton (Ohio); Stark County (Ohio) |
Description | Beginning June 28, 1995, published as The sun journal. |
Searchable Date | 1928-06-21 |
Submitting Institution | North Canton Public Library |
Rights | This item may have copyright restrictions. Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn88078462 |
Description
Title | 1928-06-21-001 |
Place | North Canton (Ohio); Stark County (Ohio) |
Description | Beginning June 28, 1995, published as The sun journal. |
Searchable Date | 1928-06-21 |
Submitting Institution | North Canton public Library |
Image Height | 5089 |
Image Width | 5089 |
File Size | 712459 Bytes |
Full Text | ALL THE REAL NEWS AND SPECIAL FEATURES CAREFULLY EDITED -.READ BY BRIGHT PEOPLE It SHINES FOR ALL THE PEOPLE IN NORTHERN STARK COUNTY READ BY BRIGHT PEOPLE An Independent Newspaper That'Plays No Favorites Among Advertisers or Subscribers, and With One Price To AH —- , ; ^ ■ i' ■■■»■!. „ , _," ...■■■■-, ■ - —.. — i. . ■..*-.. ..in- y'r —_... , ■- ■■ , . . i- ■ . ■ ■ ' Vol. 6—NO. 34 NORTH CANTON* STARK COUNTY,,,OHIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1928. $2.00 PER YEAR Told Without Varnish Beautiful Old Williamsburg, Virginia, Where John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Is Going To Spend Millions Restoring Buildings. An By BEN J. LONG interesting announcement to WILLIAM AND MARY COLLEGE WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA -*»<, Above is a picture of William and Mary college, Williamsbuig, Va. It was designed by Sir .Christopher Wren. It is to be restored at a cost of $400,000. The restoration plans call for fireproofing the structure, which was designed after Christ Hospital at Chelsea, England., After its restoration'the structure will be turned into a memorial hall. ' Three Presidents of the United States, Jefferson, Monroe, and Tyler; Chief U. S. Justice John Marshall, four Justices of the- Supreme Court, four signers Of the Declaration of Independence, three speakers of the come its governing official. He had passed on years before. Now that John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has agreed to restore the college and the buildings many persons no doubt will visit the town. If they do this much is certain: They will be prouder than ever that they are Americans, for in all my experience among men and women in different parts of this country I never met more wholesome people that I met in historic Williamsburg, Virginia. GOIN WEE PLAY "In Love With' Love" Arouses Much Interest Around Here. house of Representatives, 21 governors of Virginia, 21 judges of the Virginia Court of Appeals, and many other notables were educated in the ancient structure. On a visit to that ancient town'many years ago, Ben. J. I*ng, now on the editorial staff of The Sun, was shown over the building by Col. Benjamin Ewell, the president of the college. Its halls were silent then, but the spirits of famous Americans seemed to hover above the desks, and now that it is, to be restored one can easily imagine the spirits of Jefferson, Monroe, Taylor and others congratulating each other. • ImiANKWw From information furnished The Sun, the Grand,theatre, Canton, „will be Visited this week, by many persons living in 'Nb'rtn'^Canton, Greentown, Uniontown, Hartville, Greensburg and other sections served by' this newspaper. The play staged this week by The Wright Players has captured Canton by storm, and everywhere you go in that city you hear what a "wonderful play" is "In Love With Love." Monday and Tuesday nights every seat was occupied. On Tuesday the dramatic critic of the Canton Repository reviewed the play in a column article, and he pronounced it "one of the most brilliant and hilarious bits of comedy seen in Canton in many a moon. If you don't feel like laughing long and heartily, stay away from the Grand, for the fun is infectious from the first curtain until the last. The players are an excellent cast." Mary Tary, the leading- lady; Lex Lindsay, the leading man; Herbert Butterfield and Fred Hall all come in for the warniest praise. Herbert De Guerre, the new director, and one of the few really great actors on the stage today, received well deserved credit for his directing and his acting from the Repository critic. Dennis Smith, widely known for his criticisms, said in his comment in the Daily News on Tuesday that " 'In Love With Love" is a comedy that crackles with the keenest kind of humor and sparkles with clever lines . . . there is never a slow moment in its merry-making." Mr. Smith praises the stage work of Miss Tarry, Lex Lindsay, Herbert Butterfield, Fred Hall, Kitty Cosgriff and Peggy Shipman. Of course he hands a large bouquet to Herbert De Guerre, saying that "as the father he gives one of the sincere and capable performances which audiences expect from him." He Spent His Early Days In and Around North Canton. PSBipfp HwWHjBffij^'-'l !■*■ HI Ek ■*'JBH^H l^flHH millions of Americans is that John D, Rockefeller, Jr., has agreed to pay the cost, estimated at between $4,000,000 and $5,000,000, of restoring the 1ns- ' troic town of Williamsburg, Virginia, by rebuilding , more than 100 structures, including the House of Burgesses, where Patrick Henry m 1705 made his historic outburst, "Csesar had his Brutus, Charles the First his Cromwell,' and George the Third may profit by their example." Williamsburg, founded in 1632, in: 1699 succeeded Jamestown as the capital of the colony of Virginia. More than forty public and private buildings, which stand there now, were standing before the Revolution. **'..*"■ It has been many years since this writer, now on the editorial staff of The Sun, strolled over the village - green, walked around the town and spent several pleasant days in Williamsburg, Va., with persons whose names are familiar to readers of ' American history: Armstead, Harrison, Tyler, Randolph, Bowen, Ewell, Coleman, Wise and others. As a young newspaper man I stepped off the evening train I had boarded at Newport News, then a mere shell of a town, although the Hotel Warwick was open for business, and -'' a fine hotel it was, too. It' had always been my an.ibition to visit Williamsburg, Jamestown and other historic points in Old Virginia, " . and at last I stood iri a town known , to every intelligent American. That night I slept in a large mansion across the road from William and Mary college where many famous men received their education. The next morning I heard a bell ringing and learned that it belonged to William and Mary college, and that every morning'an aged negro tolled it. "The college has been closed since the Civil War," explained my host, "but Colonel Ewell, brother of General Ewell, resides in the college house and he was president of the college the day it was closed. He loves the old institution and he believes, that some day it will reopen its dobi's." We went down the path in the centre of my host's lawn and entered the , yard surrounding the college. A little later I was shaking hands with Colonel Benjamin Ewell. A modest, cultured gentleman, well advanced in years. He took my arm and we strolled around the rooms while he explained what it meant to Virginia and to the nation to reopen the doors of the old college. * $ * .,- Later I met Colonel Robert T. Arm- stead, a relative of the famous Arm- stead who led Pickett's brigade in that desperate charge at Gettysburg. Colonel Armstead was one of the leading lawyers of Virginia. A dashing, handsome man with light-colored ' hair and mustache, it was not difficult to imagine him riding side by side with Gen. J. E. B. Stuart or Gen. Fitzhugh Lee. One man. I distinctly recall was Captain Harrison. Tall ancl straight, he always wore a military coat and carried a cane. Two Presidents of the United States belonged to this family.. Dr. Coleman was another fine example of birth and breeding. His wife was a descendant pf Pocahontas. One son, Charles, wrote good poetry for Lippincott's magazine and special articles for the New York Evening Post. The Tyler mansion was at the end of the main street. A President of the United States added prestige to that familv; t * t Richard Wise, a brother of John, and son of Governor Wise, who put down John Brown when he attempted to arouse the slaves, was living in Williamsburg at the time. He had left the Democratic party and had joined Riddleberger and Cameron. When the latter was elected Governor he appointed Richard Wise superintendent of the large lunantic asylum ih Williamsburg. There were many other old families—F. F. V.'s—First Family Virginia—and they were splendid people to meet. It is true they were not overburdened with wealth, but they were "to the manner born" and in their homes or on the street, they gave every evidence of their refinement and culture. t t t " I was shown everything- in the town. The old powder horn, the courthouse, the Episcopal church, the graveyard and other buildings associated with the days before the Revolution. Colonel A"rmstead had a case in court during my visit, and as Williamsburg was the county seat of Warwick county, I had an opportunity to meet a number of men whose forefathers helped to make American history, among them being Judge Bowen. One place also interested me: The office of the Williamsburg Gazette, the first newspaper to print in full the Declaration of Independence. The office was located next to the Armstead mansion on the main street, directly opposite the postoffice. The editor was an able writer, and Colonel Armstead was associate editorof the paper. ± t ± + ->• + The Sun is pleased to learn that p„L.-t.^..,.„ at , of Virginia are In. later years the State Legislature now. negotiating for the purchase of the oldest house of English construc- came to the assistance of William and j «on in America today. It is the Warren property, lying about 15 miles Mary college and opened its doors, but from'Williamsburg. This house is commonly known as Smith's Fort. It Colonel Benjamin Ewell did not be- was built for the son of John Rolfe and Pocahontas, and he-lived in-its cbn- iines for many years. , • '.'„•■ EX-JURORS TO PICNIC Good Program Has Been Arranged Here For Saturday, June 30. ■ The above picture is a little too -fine for newspaper printine-*, but it will give you an idea of Frank T. Bow, one of the finest young men in Canton, according to his friends, and the latter by the way, take up nearly every page in the directory. To know Bow is to like him. He is so straightforward, so manly, and so genial that you cannot imagine even in your wildest dreams Frank trying to "high hat" anyone. Of course, a gentleman is never a snob. Anil snobs, be it understood, exist in overalls just as they do in $150 suits. Snobs spring from nothing, or next to nothing, which is about the same thing. Frank Bow has good Ohio blood in his veins, and blood counts in the human just as it d°es in a dog or a horse. Candidate For Probate Court Many persons in North Canton and the district served by The Sun will be interested in Frank Bow when they learn that he is a candidate for Judge of the Probate Court, subject to the Republican primaries. Frank spent a number of years of his yduth in North Canton when he lived on the Tangle- wood farm with his parents. He is the son of the late Judge Charles C. Bow, and Anna K. Bow,, and, received his grammar school education at the Pleasant Grove school in Plain township, having been taught by Arthur Willaman, during the period of time that he attended the district school. Honored By Bar Association In recent years Mr. Bow has been known to be one of the successful younger members of the Stark County Bar, and has gained the respect and confidence of clients, attorneys and Judges. At the present time, Mr. Bow is serving as a member of a committee of nine lawyers picked from the State of Ohio by the President of the Ohio IS RECOVERING W. C. Findlay Underwent Operation In Aultman Hospital, Saturday. W. C. Findlay of Wise street was taken suddenly and seriously ill on Friday night. He.was rushed to Aultman hospital. An operation was performed on Saturday and tlie last report to The Sun is that he is getting along nicely, Mr. Findlay is the father of Mrs. F. M. Evans, Mrs. John.Ris.-gle, Mrs. John Schrantz and Mrs. R. Skiver, all of North Canton. THE REY. F.R. SUTTER TO LEAVE N. C. AUG. 7 HORSESHOE TOURNAMENT t Is Open To Every Man Hereabouts On Thursday Night. All aboard for the town-wide horseshoe tournament, planned for the Community Building courts this week. W. H. Wood the efficient horseshoe manager, as well as efficient "Anything - you-waiit-in-physical-work-and -sports-line," informs us that he is planning ra horseshoe tournament for Thursday night of this week. This is not to particularly deterrtiine the forever-more champion of North Canton, but to determine as near' a.s possible the standing of all tossers. This is open to anybody from North Canton or vicinity. The entrance fee will be 15c per man' and the fellow who eliminates everybody else to his own satisfaction and the satisfaction of the judges will be given a handsome, well-balanced, bronzed pair of horseshoes. Of course the judges won't insist that the winner wear the horseshoes on the lapels of his coat or around his neck or dangling from his wrist watch. But they can be used to' defend his title as long as he has one to defend. BOYS GO NORTH Seven of Them, Under Carl Kschbach, Are Headed For'Canada. Pastor of Zion Lutheran Church Accepts Call To Become, the Pastor of Clinton Heights Congregation In Columbus. SERVED HERE TEN YEARS The Rev. F. R. Sutter, pastor of Zion Lutheran church, Noi'th Canton, tendered his resignation to the church membership on Sunday to take effect on August 1. Mr. Sutter said that he had been called to Clinton Heights Lutheran church, corner of North High street and Clinton Heights avenue, Columbus. The church is in a •"■•apidly growing residential section and the Rev. Mr. Sutter feels that he can increase the membership substantially within the next few years. , His resignation here also affects Well, they are gone again! Carl Eschbach, boys' work director, and Tiny Roberts, the genial -betasJrian of the Hoover truck of the community Building educational trip.--, shook the wrinkles out of their hiki.it suits, donned them once more, and with a new group of' boys started h.r Niagara Falls, Hamilton, Ontario, and the Finger Lake region on Monday morning. They both wore their customary snides and showed their tbual enthusiasm which it is easy tn catch from the groups which accompany them on these trips. Carl confessed, though, that one trip following another so cIom-Iv, with the necessity of doing his own rooking and sleeping on the ground, i-n't like being in his own comfortable home, with Mrs. Eschbach and the now Margaret Ann. But Carl, always with' his interest in the boys, is read) to go with them any place. He says the real value of these trips can nut be realized in a summer, or even in a' year, but will develop more and more over a period of years. The boys who accompanied Eschbach on this trip were: Meryl Musgrave, Billy Blubaugh, Robert Kreighbaum, Harry Storch, Kenneth Grove, Dale Forster, Howard Shaeffer. This group will return Friday night or Saturday morning. COUNCIL MEETING Members Willing To Assist In Keeping Down Weeds and Dust. BASEBALL BATTLE HERE ON THURSDAY MARK GRAVES Tax Commissioner of New York will address the Public Affairs Institute in August at the University of Virginia. Mayor Logan \V. Becher of North Canton has been invited by the University officials to be present. INVITE BECHER Mayor of North Canton Asked To Attend Public Affairs Meet. THE REV. F. R. SUTTER Mayor Logan W. Becher has been invited to attend the second national Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, from Aug. (! to 18, inclusive. He said this Wednesday morning- that he would go if he "found it convenient. More than two score of the nation's leading figures will be on the institute program. Dr. Charles G. Ma- phis, dean of the_ summer quarter of the universitv, will direct the event. Dr. John Black, professor of agricultural economics at Harvard;, Mrs. Aurelia Henry Reinhart, president of Mills College, in California, and also of the American Association of College Women; Dr. John H. Latane, of Johns Hopkins; Dr. Thomas J. Reed, of the University of Michigan: Kirk H. Porter, University of Iowa; Editor Victor Rosewater, A. R. Hatton, of Northwestern University; Mark Graves, tax commissioner' of New York, and several others already have accepted invitations to take part in the institute. Presidential candidates of both parties will be asked to present their Strike-out Taylor ancl Bowers In the Box In Witwer Park When North Canton Faces the Live Fellows From East Canton. GAME STARTS AT 5:30 P. M. tional attention and was the medium; through which many of the nation's leaders discussed problems of na- arrangc- State Bar Association, for the purpose of rewriting and revising the Probate Code. As a member of this Those who have done jury duty in i committee Mr. Bow represents four Stark county are again reminded that a picnic for Stark County jurors and their families will be held in Witwer park on Saturday, June 30. Bring a basket and enjoy the day. A program will follow the picnic meal at noon. ten counties, and has had assigned to him for special attention, the "subject of "Land Sales." This committee will reach its conclusion some time prior to the next meeting of the State Legislature, at,which time their sug- [Continued on page eight] On Monday night several men , residing in the neighborhood of Cordelia road asked Council about a storm water sewer they wanted. Mayor Becher, Engineer Rice ami Council discussed the subject and acreed to construct a sewer on Cordelia road from South Main street. A petition asking that calcium chloride be placed on Ro\cr street to keep down the dust ami weeds was read. Council agreed, and the Mayor authorized The Sun to .-ay that the village will put it on any unpaved street needing it if the pniperty own Hope Lutheran church of Zoarville, 25 miles south of North Canton. This is an active little congregation of about 75 communicants, The Sun has been informed. In North Canton , 10 Years The Rev. F. R. Sutter was installed pastor of Zion Lutheran church, North Canton, on Sunday, June 8, 1918, by the Rev. Claudius Freseman of Akron. Mr. Sutter's father, the Rev. ,. , . , ™ . Henry G. Sutter, served his major pas-1ll0,lal importance. This year torates in Bellevue walk, Ohio. He was his ability in the pulpit ganizer. His father, tlu. ft.~..,.*ow.^ , . . . ,. - „ . . of the Rev: F. R. Sutter, was a pio-' features of the program. Special neer pastor in Fairfield county, Ohio,! headquarters will be arranged for vis- when that section of the state was : iting newspaper men and every cour- somewhat rough. j tes>' wl11 he extended to them. Historians say that Grandfather | ° Sutter was a godly man, hut he would stand for no nonsense. Once he tamed two bullies and they became not only earnest christians but they made it their business to see to it that no one ever disturbed Pastor Sutter on his long horseback journeys from place to place. A clergyman's life in those early days --Aras anything hut a life of ease and it was necessary to be stalwart as well as godly. As he was a success, it is plain that Pastor Sutter was both. It was from such sturdy American pioneer stock that the Rev. F. R. Sutter sprang, and no doubt that is the reason he has no | time to waste on shams. [Continued on page five] o Booster day, Thursday evening (tomorrow), June 21, at SiSO in Witwer park, North Canton. Teams: North Canton versus the team from East Canton, with Strikeout Taylor pitching for the visitors, and R. Bowers doini*- the heaving for North Cantom Object: To raise money to purchase uniforms for the team representing this town. Last week The Sun printed an article in this column in which it was pointed, put that the North Canton players do not receive a cent for their services; that they are in the game for the love of the sport and that they are a good advertisement for the town. All of which is absolutely true. Now the players are not asking something for nothing. On the contrary, they are going to engage ih a game of baseball with a team they defeated once, and which they, hope to beat tomorrow evening in Witwer park. To do so, however, is a man's job, as players in other towns are willing to acknowledge. Taylor vs. Bowers Strike-oUt Taylor has a great record* and he is said to be at his best right now.' Bowers is anything but a ' selling plater when it comes to speed and we have seen him work when he- looked very much like a stake horse. So if our dope is right, and we think . it is, the fans are going to see a pitch- • ers' battle on Thursday evening with every man on both teams backing up the "fellow in the box. Good pitching is necessary to win a game, but unless the heaver has good support he cannot expect victory. Many a star twirler has seen his teammates boot a game. The North Canton Idds declare they will give' their heaver gilt-edge support. So let us go out on Thursday afternoon and do some rooting for the views, and Charles Evans Hughes has ]oca, team. It w111 be good fol. our been invited to make an address. :, , it wi„ make- the bovs feeI Last year the institute drew nn- - .... that we appreciate them. The following is the North Canton line-up: C. Evans, captain, 1st base; H. Scharver, 2nd base; Ed Warstler, short stop; Wm. Bonnel, 3rd base; HARPOLD MOTOR CO. GET NEW QUARTERS Will Move About July 1 Into the Building Built and Now Occupied By the Moose Bros. On South Main Street. ON THE SCREEN Milton Sills Here On Friday and Ken Maynard On Tuesday. The picture on Friday night, June 22, is Milton Sills in ""Hard-Boiled Haggerty." Supporting him is Molly O'Day, and what this clever pair of movie stars do must be pnen to be appreciated. Talk about your thrills! Well, you'll get them when you see Sills do a 300 feet nose dive in a burning airplane and then go back for more. And IS THE FORD DEALER HERE Oldest House of English Construction In America Today Located 12 Miles From Wilhamsbuift for a girl that once protected him. If ers'wiff send a petition to Councifan'd ! >'6" !,a,ve a, weak heart, stay away! agree to pay $2 per propeity. The vil-! Blake of Scotland ^ urd, and a « •»* lift » * .« . *-'H-l%-l»r.m-'\/-»lr-| -*•*"* 4-4^rt Af.l*m. , \4Vl age will deliver and put on the cal cium chloride. This is actual cost for handling the stuff. WILL EAT STRAW 1SERRIES Jr. Men's Class of Zior Church To Be HiKt. The Junior Men's cla formed church will hold tlieir annual strawberry feast for the members and | their families, also the board and teachers of the church, in the church basement on Tuesday, June 26. A soft ball game will ! • staged in Witwer park at 6:30 p. -:i. Married Men vs. Single Men. At the close of the game all will p-o to the church for the feast of strawbei'ies. news reel are the other offerings. I Cowboy King On Tuesday | Ken Maynard, the cowboy star in "The Wagon Show," does a number I of stunts of western life and his work i is always colorful. This picture on | Tuesday night, June 2(i, ha§ every- Reformed ! thing a "thriller" carries, and the cir- ! cus features are true in every par- j ticular. I - A comedy will be shown. Prices re- uf Zion Re-1 main 15c, 20c and 30c. R. M. Harpold of the Harpold Motor company, Ford dealer in North Canton, has leased the garage, built and occupied by the Moose Brothers, on South Main street, and will move his business to that building about July 1. Mr. Harpold has found the change necessary because of increasing business and he has outgrown his present quarters. Came Here From Akron Mr. Harpold came from Akron just a year ago, and will in his new location continue to sell and service Ford cars, extending the service to any make of car. All Ford parts will be carried at all times, and tlie same courtesy will be extended that has always been the Harpold Motor company policy. In the new quarters wili lie installed a thoroughly modern greasing and oiling system, and all service will be of the best. Mr. and Mrs. Harpold and family moved to North Canton from Akron recently and they occupy a house on Harman street. Grant, infield; H. Werstler, outfield. Pat Nelius is manager. JUNIOR BASEBALL Director Wood Is Training Boys Ho Wants More In Game. and W. H. Wood will continue the Junior baseball leagues for a time. There is room for some more good players, and places for beginners to get into the game. Here is where the future shop league is being trained, anil believe it, they are being trained. Just drop around some morning and listen in. COMMUNITY BUILDING Members of Board of Managers Will Be Chosen On Friday. An election of new members for the Board of Managers will be held at the Communitv Building on Friday, June 22, from !»:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. All members of good standing, over 18 years of age, are entitled to vote. The nominating committee has placed in nomination the following names, three to be elected: E. P. Smith, Max Messerly, Earl Herbruck, Edwin Warstler, Lloyd Taylor. Standing of Factory Baseball League W L Pet. Assembly 5 0 1000 Print 2 2 500 Engineers 1 o 333 Office 1 2 333 Business Men 1 2 333 Paint Shop .... 1 3 250 o MISS MARGARET SHICK LOST FRATERNITY PIN L. T. L. MEETING Every Member Wanted In Park On Thursday. Witwer The older children belong to> the B division of the L. T. L. are requested to meet in. Witwer park on.Thursday afternoon and assist in making plans for a. hike. Three o'clock is the hour when the members' meet. ;Be there, please.-" \. . * -,•»- TO PRESENT PLAY 'The Path Across the Hill" Will Be Given Thursday Night. If you Find One Then Make Helen Voneman Happy. ."Miss Miss Helen Voneman lost a fraternity pin this week somewhere near tlie Square. Naturally she feels the loss keenly, for pins to young people mean more than they do later in life. So if you find one containing three Greek letters just call Miss Voneman, Members of the dramatic company of Faith Luther League of Massillon will present in the Community Building tomorrow night (Thursday), June • phone 408 R, or leave it at her home, 21, at 8:00 o'clock "The Path Across : 220 Portage street.- The smile you will the Hills," for the benefit of the or-; gl't aml tlie pleasant "thank you" will gan fund of Zion Lutheran church, .'make you feel pleased with yourself North Canton. fur the next six months Takes Charge of Playground During the Absence of Miss Widdoes. This company appeared here once and from what The Sun hears the members put on a play in the right way. so "The Path Across the, Hills" ought, to go over in first-rate style. Admission: Adults, 40c; children,- 25c. i All reserved;seats, 00 cents, ■'if4. ■ Yep, He Smiled! Welcome Henderson had a 250-lb. pump fall on him, .-.Tuesday, which skinned his little finge^,'raised a knot on his head and hurt;his hip.—Wat- seka Republican..-. ?< > • . - ;r-*y-. ■ ..".y-Siiit;--. ■ The playground will see a new face for six weeks this summer, yet one familiar to North Canton. While Miss Margaret Widdoes, the efficient physical director of women and girls' work director in the Community Building, is attending Ohio State University, Miss Margaret Schick will be in charge at the playground. She is a native of North Canton, but has been attending Ohio University at Athens, for the past two years, and has been specializing in physical education and playground work. The reports that sift in from the* playground are to the effect that "We like her, she's fine," and in about ninety-nine cases out of a hundred the judgment of the children is to be trusted in such matters. Miss Widdoes is at Ohio State with the object of working toward her master's degree. She is taking advanced work in physical education and sociology. She is a graduate of Otterbein University. Miss Widdoes will return to her duties in North Canton about July "25. . .- . "' |
Media Type | Image |
File Name | 1928-06-21-001.tif |