This document was published in about 1935 by the Worthington Civic and Commerce Association. Photos were furnished by the Blume Studio and Rickers Studio, both located in Worthington. It was printed by the Worthington Times.

It is a booklet of a size of about 3.9 inches wide by 8.4 inches high, physically made from nine pieces of paper each one 7.8 inches wide and 8.4 inches high, folded and stapled in the middle.

It was amongst documents found in my Fathers estate.

The booklet did not have printed page numbers.

I have digitally scanned the document ( at 600 dpi), sized and cleaned up the images, designed the HTML presentation, done the HTML coding and debugging, created the Photo Index and HTML documents for each photo, made clickable links from each photo to its own HTML document, created the About section and published it to Internet so that others could appreciate what Worthington was like in 1935.

The document was a series of individual pages, but is displayed here in 18 panels. Each panel, except one (panel 9), has a left side (page) and right side (page). The one exception (panel 9) does not have a left page and right page side because the layout there spans both sides ( two page spread).

The Internet presentation of this booklet goes BEYOND just providing images of the printed document and also includes;
1. A navigation system to allow viewers to move through the document using PREV NEXT page-by-page,
    OR move through the document at random using the header navigation bar links.
2. A larger version of each photo with some descriptive narrative is provided
    a) Each large photo is clickable from the document page photo: each photo links to its own HTML document that displays a
          larger version of the image  with some narrative
     b) Each large photo is clickable from the Photo Index list

3. An index of ALL 60 photos in the document is provided with links as noted above.
4. A separate home page table of topic contents is provided
5. An About section is provided with information on the document and the process of putting it on Internet

The photo narratives explain interesting features to the viewer and provide some information from other sources that relate to what is in a particular photo. The narrative thoughts are mine based upon other historical photos and conversations with many local people who I think have something to share.

Regards,
Bob Rohrer 4-30-2008