Story
time: (Thursday
morning at 10:00)
Pizza, Pasta, & Popcorn
Oct. 4
Fire Safety Week Oct 11
Spiders Oct 18
Halloween Oct. 25
Scarecrows Nov. 1
The
Bookmark Society will
meet on Thursday evening October 25 at 6:30. The selected book is
The
Madonnas of Leningrad by
Debra Dean, a story about memory, told through a Russian immigrant in
the Pacific Northwest suffering from Alzheimer’s who survived the
German assault on Leningrad by building a Hermitage based memory
palace.
October
celebrates books and science.
Banned Book Week comes first. (Please celebrate by reading whatever
you want to read.) Teen Read Week is Oct. 14 - 20 which also happens
to be Earth Science Week, followed by Chemistry Week.
Thank
You Consolidated Electric. The
Wornstaff Library’s participation in the COOL consortium will be
completed in March 2013 when we switch to the Evergreen catalog,
costing several thousand dollars for technical services plus the
labor of rebarcoding all the materials. We applied to the People
Fund for money to help with this process and are delighted that they
have awarded us $3500, contingent upon our finding some additional
funding. Thank you, thank you.
Kilbourne
Community Fall Festival,
October 6, 8:00a - 4:00p will include a Geek the Library booth
promoting awareness of library services and funding - plus breakfast,
a hog roast, a parade, displays, markets for food and crafts, and
yard sales.
Voter registration
deadline is Oct. 9, 9:00pm.

Jane
Horn officially
became the new director of the Wornstaff Memorial Public Library when
the library board announced her hiring at their September 10th
meeting. Ms. Horn has been a library employee since September 18,
2008 and volunteered at the library prior to that. She is a local
resident with three children in the Buckeye Valley School district,
an active member of the Kilbourne Methodist Church, and has a
master’s degree in Library Science. Please take time to
congratulate Jane Horn on her new position.
Lewis
(Junior) Kimble died
September 18, 2012. He was the library custodian for several years
and a long time village employee before that - and probably took with
him much knowledge about the inner workings of both. He has lived in
Arizona for the past several years.
Christmas
in Ashley is
being planned for Saturday, December 1. An open meeting will be held
7:00, October 11 at the United Methodist Church. Ashley is looking
forward to its third year. This has been a popular event with a lot
of local participation. Luminaries, the live nativity scene, and
carolers are on the list again. Homes for the tour are needed.
Contact Amy Ruggles (747-2804).
The School Halloween
Parade will leave the school 2:30 Wednesday afternoon, October 31.
Beggars Night in Ashley
is set for October 31 6:30 - 8:00. Turn on your porch light for
treats.
Chemistry
Week extras: Two basic (circulating) reference sets are The
Elements and ChemLab by Grolier. Uncle
Tungsten by
Oliver Sacks and Fire
Bubbles and Exploding Toothpaste by
Steve Spangler are for reading and exploring.
Good
weather for reading is ahead with shorter cooler days even though Daylight Savings Time does not end until November 4th.
Several large book donations have increased the book sale offerings.
All are available at the standard ten cents a book, $1 a bag price.
There’s no charge for unlimited browsing time.
The
Catfish tournament is
scheduled for Saturday, October 20, from 5:00 - 8:00 at the Ashley
reservoir. The tournament is open to children up to twelve years old
who should bring their own poles and be accompanied by an adult.
ODNR will be supplying fish. Prizes and refreshment will be
provided.
Illustrator/author
Derek Anderson will
be visiting BVEE on Wednesday, October 24th.
Ashley’s
Junior Fair: The
first Ashley fair was held in 1912 when a group of local farmers and
businessmen erected buildings and a race track. Area competition was
intense and by 1922 the board was plagued with debt. R. B. Warner,
the high school vocational agriculture teacher, suggested exhibiting
his boys’ pigs, an idea that was first spurned and then modified to
include girls’ baking and sewing projects. The 1923 fair was a
success and the junior fair idea was expanded. In 1925 after a rain
storm destroyed the junior fair tent a junior fair building was
constructed. Publicity about the demolished junior fair produced
many inquiries and information was disbursed. Morrow County became
the first in the state to organize a county wide junior fair.
Charlie Ashbrook accepted a job to help establish an Ohio State Fair
junior department for 1929. In the late thirties Delaware began a
junior fair which provided stiff competition especially when Grand
Circuit racing was added. In March of 1950 after 37 years of
operation the Ashley Fair Board voted to dissolve the fair. The
buildings and grounds were sold and all bills paid. The remaining
money was placed in an endowment fund to be used to support junior
fair work in Delaware County.
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