1911-1912 Academic Catalog

ENOOWMENT AND INCOME level, fertile, improved, and in every way suited for a pleasant residence. Any who have children to educate, and wish to be with them during their college course, can find no finer region and no better society than in this community. ENDOW ME NT AND I NCOME. INCOME. The income of Cedarville College consists of the in– terest from its endowment, voluntary subscriptions and offerings from friends, collections from the different con– gregations under the care of the General Synod of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, and the tuition fees of the studen ts. GIBSON FUND. The Cedarville College had its practical origin through the liberality of \.Villiam Gibson, Esq., of Cin– cinnati, who bequeathed $25,000 for the endowment fund of a college to be erected at Cedarville, Ohio, in memory of his father, Peter Gibson, for many years a prominent member and ruling elder of the First Reformed Presby– terian congregation of Cincinnati. COOPER F UND. By the will of the late Robert M. Cooper, a ruling elder in the Cedarville Reformed Presbyterian congre– gation, the College, in the Fall of 1903, came into posses– sion of two-thirds of his farm, valued at $6,000. lt

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