Ohio Cooperative Living - October 2019 - Mid-Ohio

Page 1

OHIO

OCTOBER 2019

Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative

Halloween spirit ALSO INSIDE What exactly IS a cooperative? Out-of-theordinary apple recipes Edison’s bulb turns 140


NATIONAL COOPERATIVE MONTH CO-OPS ARE COMMUNITY

Every October, we celebrate you.

After all, co-ops were built by members, for members, and are still owned by members like you. Thank you for being a part of your co-op!

ohioec.org/purpose


OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

INSIDE FEATURES 24 HALLOWEEN HAUNTS Head to one of these unusual Ohio attractions for a break from the regular pumpkin picking and hayrides.

30 SNUGGLE FOR SURVIVAL Far from being blood-sucking terrors of the night, vampire bats are actually models of cooperation.

32 HUNTING WORKS One Ohio group preaches the benefits — not just environmental, but also economic — that the sport brings to all areas of the state.

34 BRIGHT IDEA Happy 140th birthday to the lightbulb! Celebrate at the Edison Birthplace Museum in Milan.

Cover image on most issues: Kaylee Smith, daughter of South Central Power Company members Amy and Kris Smith of Carroll, poses on the perfect pumpkin during her preschool field trip to Pigeon Roost Farm in Hebron.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   1


UP FRONT

Celebrating the

cooperative business model P

eople working together for a common cause is nothing new. For those efforts to be sustainable over time requires operating principles — tenets that guide our actions and decisions. During October, we celebrate National Cooperative Month, recognizing that since the mid-1800s, our cooperative business model has not merely endured but flourished because it has remained committed to our values. While there seems to be a day or month celebrating nearly everything under the sun, National Cooperative Month is a bit different. At your electric cooperative and elsewhere, those 31 days are an opportunity for members, employees, trustees — everyone involved with the co-op — to renew our connection with each other and with the seven principles that guide us: Voluntary and Open Membership; Democratic Member Control; Members’ Economic Participation; Autonomy and Independence; Education, Training, and Information; Cooperation Among Cooperatives; and Concern for Community. Cooperatives operate in just about every sector of the economy, competing against privately held or investor-owned businesses in the process. It’s those seven principles, however, that set co-ops — whether your electric utility, the Ace Hardware store, the local credit union, or Land O’Lakes — apart from other businesses. We were formed by and exist solely for the benefit of our members. While we take special note of the value of our cooperative in October, we are honored to be an enduring and thriving part of our community, delivering vital services to you, all year long.

2   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

Pat O’Loughlin PRESIDENT & CEO OHIO’S ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES

Cooperatives operate in just about every sector of the economy, competing against privately held or investor-owned businesses in the process.


OCTOBER 2019 • Volume 62, No. 1

MORE INSIDE DEPARTMENTS

Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives 6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757 memberinteract@ohioec.org www.ohioec.org

4 POWER LINES

All about co-ops: Cooperatives of all kinds celebrate during National Cooperative Month.

6 CO-OP SPOTLIGHT

Patrick O’Loughlin President & CEO Patrick Higgins Director of Communications Jeff McCallister Managing Editor Rebecca Seum Associate Editor Anita Cook Graphic Designer Dava Hennosy Editorial Intern

Butler Rural Electric: Beneficial partnerships help the co-op improve the quality of life in and around Oxford, where it’s based.

Contributors: Brian Albright, Margo Bartlett, Colleen Romick Clark, Randy Edwards, W.H. “Chip” Gross, Catherine Murray, Damaine Vonada, and Patty Yoder.

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Elec­tric Co­op­eratives, Inc. It is the official com­mun­ ication link be­tween the elec­­­­tric co­operatives in Ohio and West Virginia and their mem­bers. Subscription cost for members ranges from $5.52 to $6.96 per year, paid from equity accruing to the member. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved.

8 CO-OP PEOPLE Feeling ‘Rustacious’: Whether singing, composing, or painting gigantic murals, Holmes County’s Renaissance man enjoys the fruits of his artistic passions.

River monsters: Deep in the channels of the mighty Ohio River lie some of the largest freshwater fish in the country.

Uncommonly good: Our October

Cheryl Solomon American MainStreet Publications 847-749-4875 | cheryl@amp.coop The fact that a product is advertised in Ohio Cooperative Living should not be taken as an en­dorse­ment. If you find an advertisement mis­leading or a product unsatisfactory, please not­ify us or the Ohio Attorney General’s Of­fi ce, Consumer Protection Sec­tion, 30 E. Broad St., Col­um­bus, OH 43215. Periodicals postage paid at Colum­bus, OH, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101

Cooperative members: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes.

8

12 WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE

15 GOOD EATS For all advertising inquiries, contact

4

12

recipes may help you think of apples in a whole new light.

19 LOCAL PAGES

News and important information from your electric cooperative.

37 CALENDAR

What’s happening: October/ November events and other things to do around the state.

15

40 MEMBER INTERACTIVE

Pumpkin patch: Readers and their kids and grandkids scatter far and wide to find the perfect gourd for holiday decorations.

40

Alliance for Audited Media Member Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives is an equal opportunity provider and employer.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   3


POWER LINES

So … what exactly is a BY PATTY YODER

T

he moment they open the door, Pattycake Bakery patrons are greeted with the smell of freshly baked Marry Me Blueberry muffins and Thrilla Vanilla cupcakes. Located in Columbus’ Clintonville neighborhood, the popular bakery strives to be conscientious in everything it does, like using all-natural ingredients, delivering orders by bicycle, and, in 2013, becoming a worker-owned cooperative. A cooperative is a business that is owned by and operated for the benefit of those who use it. With a worker-owned cooperative, workerowners have a say in business decisions and reap larger rewards for their efforts than

4   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

cooperative?

they would as employees. For Pattycake founder Jennie Scheinbach, converting her business into a co-op was an ethical decision. “A co-op creates a more democratic work environment,” Scheinbach says. “When you remove the manageremployee power dynamic from the equation, you operate as equals, and the result is more genuine, more authentic relationships. The business feels more like a family now.” There are some 65,000 co-ops in the United States, according to the National Cooperative Business Association. Pattycake is an example of a worker cooperative, one of the fastest-growing segments of businesses that use the cooperative model. The largest cooperatives are producer co-ops, a segment that includes such well-known brands as Ocean Spray, Ace Hardware, and Land O’Lakes — where, for example, dairy farmers collaborate to more efficiently process, market, and distribute their goods under a common label.


Seven Cooperative Principles 1. Open and Voluntary Membership 2. Democratic Member Control 3. Members’ Economic Participation 4. Autonomy and Independence 5. Education, Training, and Information 6. Cooperation Among Cooperatives 7. Concern for Community The most well-known type of cooperative is a consumer co-op, which often takes the form of retail outlets, such as local grocery stores, that are owned and operated by the consumers that purchase their goods. The nation’s nearly 900 private, independently owned, not-for-profit electric cooperatives are another type of consumer coop, owned by and serving an estimated 42 million people in 48 states. The 24 Ohio-based electric distribution cooperatives serve more than 380,000 homes and businesses — around 1 million people — in 77 of the state’s 88 counties, providing electric service to areas that for-profit utilities are generally reluctant to serve because of a lower profit potential.

for the betterment of those communities. Many create charitable foundations that their members contribute to, which then award grants to help those in need.

Instead of being profit-driven, though, cooperatives run on shared values. Every member has a right to participate in the governance process by voting for the board members who make decisions in the best interests of the co-op. Since they’re owned by and governed by their members, cooperatives are hyperfocused on service to those consumer-members — and in survey after survey, co-op customers report higher satisfaction rates than customers of similar for-profit companies.

Co-ops help communities thrive

Staying true to their values also allows cooperatives to forge their own paths and travel where corporate businesses cannot tread. In 2015, outdoor retail co-op Recreational Equipment, Inc. — better known as REI — made headlines for being closed on Black Friday, while its competitors kicked off holiday sales as early as Thanksgiving afternoon. Member-owners decided it was more important for REI employees to enjoy the holiday with their families, so they bucked the long-standing shopping tradition. How did consumers respond to such a radical move? By joining REI. The co-op saw a 9.3% increase in membership. Electric cooperatives, both owned and staffed by people who live in the communities they serve, work constantly

The cooperative structure offers other benefits, too. After paying its bills and setting aside funds for the future, the business distributes any remaining funds back to its members in the form of capital credits. Also, because coop shares are not traded on Wall Street, they’re not under pressure to show ever-increasing quarterly earnings, which means they can focus on long-term objectives.

A new co-op is bringing fresh food and sustainable jobs to Dayton’s Salem Avenue Corridor, a community that needs both. When construction is finished next year, Gem City Market will be a modern, welcoming, 15,000-square-foot grocery store. Until then, the market is hosting regular farm stands, community conversations, and walking groups to encourage people to join and to promote healthy living. Kenya Baker is outreach director of Co-op Dayton, the nonprofit that’s developing Gem City Market. Baker says the cooperative model will show people what they can do when they work together. “The members are the catalyst that drives the engine. They’re going to be part of this beautiful structure that offers quality service — and know that they made it happen,” she says. “This will open up a world of possibilities about other ways they can affect their communities. I am excited to watch them do this for themselves.”

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   5


CO-OP SPOTLIGHT

BUTLER RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE

L

ocated between Cincinnati and Dayton, Butler Rural Electric Cooperative (BREC) serves over 11,600 consumer-members in an area that values higher education and offers plenty of opportunity to get back to nature. BREC has built beneficial relationships to help improve the quality of life in and around Oxford, where the co-op is based.

Education first Butler Rural Electric maintains a long-standing relationship with Miami University’s Institute for the Environment and Sustainability, which allows the cooperative to stay informed on environmental issues. Each year, BREC awards a $3,000 scholarship to a student in the IES graduate program. Also, students from Miami’s School of Engineering use data from the co-op’s community solar array for a variety of research projects.

Outdoors The 3,000-acre Hueston Woods State Park, which lies in BREC territory, is perfect for outdoors enthusiasts, corporate outings, family getaways, and more. The park’s nature center is home to hawks, owls, and even a cougar. Fossil hunters can search the collection areas and take home any treasures they find. Acton Lake, in the center of the park, provides visitors with the opportunity to fish, boat, and swim and is also the launching point for the annual Fireworks Extravaganza, sponsored each year by BREC. The cooperative also provides electricity to Wilderness Ridge at PVM Retreat Center in Camden, an 83-acre campus in a picturesque setting with woods, a creek, and scenic waterfalls. The retreat has an open-air chapel, a cobblestone amphitheater, a pond, and a brand-new lodge that holds 200 people. The center hosts business events, corporate retreats, youth camps, and weddings.

Commitment to community Butler Rural Electric’s mission is to improve the quality of life in its community. Butler Rural Community Connection, a fund created to benefit nonprofit groups in the cooperative’s service territory, awarded more than $74,000 in grants to local organizations in 2018. The cooperative also awards local high school scholarships each year and supports and participates in local events. Cooperative employees and trustees volunteer for charities and youth activities and are a visible presence at events throughout the year.

6   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

Co-op Spotlight appears regularly in Ohio Cooperative Living to give a glimpse into the land and the people of Ohio’s 24 electric cooperatives.


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CO-OP PEOPLE

FEELING

‘RUSTACIOUS’ Holmes County’s Renaissance man enjoys the fruit of his artistic passion. STORY AND PHOTOS BY MARGO BARTLETT

R

usty Baker’s earnest love for life and his willingness to take chances have led him along a path few others could tread.

“Where my two feet are is the greatest place on earth,” says Baker, a Holmes-Wayne Electric Cooperative member — and it’s easy to believe he means what he says. Baker is a musician, world traveler, and self-taught artist whose work resides in more than 200 cities around the globe. Perhaps the most iconic and the most personal, however, is his own barn on Holmes County Road 150. Largerthan-life paintings of music legends from Beethoven to the Beatles and Janis Joplin to Minnie Pearl cover the walls.

“Passion is what drives this,” he says, adding that “passion” means not being afraid to take a risk and having confidence in yourself. “Ego’s good. Ego’s your atomic energy.” The barn’s enclosed entranceway features portraits of Ohio music greats, including Marilyn Manson, John Legend, Tracy Chapman, Rick Derringer, and others. The portraits are done in wood stain, using a technique Baker developed himself. The tricky part, he says, is fixing mistakes, since stain permeates wood immediately and can’t be wiped off. He’s figured out a way to do it, though he’s keeping his secret to himself. Inside, in the center of a vast open room, is a welcoming cluster of leather couches and chairs. Guitars and other instruments hang on every wall. A grand piano is in one corner, a drum set in another, ready-to-play guitars in a third. The fourth corner is a kitchen, with dozens of wines — some of them, like a complete set of Marilyn Merlot wines, not for everyday sipping.

Rusty Baker plays along with the ambient music during a tour of his barn in Holmes County, which is filled with a collection of various instruments and adorned outside with generations of music legends painted by Baker in giant murals — Hank Williams’ hat (opposite page, with the author posing in front), for example, is 10 feet wide.

8   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019


People often send him things, Baker says, pointing out signed guitars (Gordon Lightfoot, Dave Mason); a Helen Baker banjo by P.W. McKinley (it’s as heavy as a sledgehammer, giving one new respect for Helen, who was inducted into the American Banjo Museum Hall of Fame in 2010); a dulcimer made by C.P. Pritchard, inventor of the mountain dulcimer; and guitars, violins, mandolins, and sitars from all over the world. “I don’t really go looking for these things; they come looking for me,” Baker says. He puts on one of his own CDs — he’s recorded dozens of his own songs — and plays a sitar along with the recorded music. He opens a door to a room he calls “the vault,” full of cased guitars, including a Gibson Les Paul Robot, an instrument that tunes itself. Baker discusses painting and the challenges posed by “porosity and density” with the same enthusiasm he brings to life itself. “The secret to life is productivity,” he says, and notes that when he talks to young people, he tells them life’s three most important elements are opportunity, productivity, and the chance to enjoy what you’ve done. He grew up 5 miles from his current home, where he lives with his wife, Claudia Rozuk, a radiologist, and painted his first commissioned mural in McConnellsville in 1984. His current success, he stresses, didn’t come easy after he left the family oil business to pursue his artistic passions. “I did struggle, and I struggled a hell of a lot,” he says. Even so, he has this saying planned for his gravestone: “Every day is the best day of my life.” The philosophy is manifest as even a day of mundane chores gives him

an opportunity for joy. On a drive into town, for example, he pulls over several times to speak to friends and acquaintances: “Roger-Dodger and Scotty!” he hollers to men measuring a utility line in one of Baker’s own fields. Another friend is pushing a lawnmower. “Get a goat!” Baker shouts. At the lumber company, he strides upstairs to chat with people in the main offices, then back to the cafeteria. Along the way, he readily shares bits of his personal philosophy: “When you’re self-taught, you’re the teacher” and “People who read instructions don’t have a natural intuitive perception.” Then there’s the word he coined himself: rustacious. He describes it as, “When you wake up in the morning, stand up straight, and admit you’re going to be wrong all day.” “I’m feeling rustacious!” Baker says, and though he might claim to be doing it all wrong, it seems like he’s got something right.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   9


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10   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

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OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   11


WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE

MONSTERS

OHIO RIVER The river’s legendary for the giant catfish that roam the depths. BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSS

S

tories of huge catfish — channel cats, flatheads, and blues — lurking in the deep, murky, mysterious pools of the Ohio River have been whispered from angler to angler for hundreds of years. For instance, David Zeisberger, a missionary to the Delaware Indians in what would one day become Ohio, recorded in his 1780 book, History of the Northern American Indians, the following fish story: “In the Ohio [River] … [catfish] grow to an unusual size. In Pittsburgh, a man who had gone fishing at night, having bound the line to his arm and gone to sleep in his canoe, was dragged into the water by the catfish and lost his life. Man and fish were found close together several days later.”

Another large Ohio River catfish during pioneer times even provoked an Indian attack. In July 1782, near Wheeling, Tom Mills Sr. and two other men were fishing from a boat at the mouth of Glen’s Run, a small tributary of the Ohio along the north shore, when he hooked and landed a large flathead catfish. Unfortunately, a nearby war party of some 30 Shawnee Indians heard the trio whooping, celebrating their catch, and crept through the dense woods to investigate. Cocking their flintlock rifles, the Indians took aim and fired simultaneously, hitting Mills no less than 17 times. Miraculously, only one of the other two men was wounded, and Mills somehow survived his many injuries. Upon

Chris Rolph of Williamsburg and the 96-pound current Ohio state-record blue catfish, caught from the Ohio River in 2009. (photo by Tom Cross)

12   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019


Ohio’s state-record fish The Outdoor Writers of Ohio (OWO) is the official keeper of record-fish statistics in the Buckeye State. To view a list of all 47 species of Ohio’s state-record fish, or to download an Ohio Record Fish Official Application Form, click on the Programs and Events section of the OWO website (www. outdoorwritersofohio.org).

Carl Morris Jr. (left) of Johnstown and Rob Parsons (right) of Mount Vernon show off their Alabama blue catfish caught earlier this year that weighed nearly 115 pounds.

later learning that his trophy flathead catfish weighed 87 pounds, Mills quipped, “Almost makes it worth it.” Giant Ohio River catfish are not just a thing of the past. The largest fish currently on Ohio’s state-record list is a blue cat caught by Chris Rolph of Williamsburg on June 11, 2009, near Cincinnati. It weighed a whopping 96 pounds and measured 54.5 inches long! “It took me half an hour to land the big cat,” remembers Rolph. “When my fishing buddy, Jon Owens of Amelia, netted the fish, he immediately knew I had a new state record. We headed back to the dock to find a certified scale and have the fish weighed as soon as possible.” The fish was so large that the only place Rolph found to weigh it was a feed store. The record blue catfish was then released into a farm pond.

Peter Gross of West Chester hooks into an Ohio River catfish.

Two other Ohioans who are pretty good at catching large catfish are Rob Parsons of Mount Vernon and his fishing partner, Carl Morris Jr. of Johnstown. Earlier this year, the pair landed a blue cat that tipped the scales at 114.96 pounds. Unfortunately, the fish was not a new Ohio record, because it was caught from Wheeler Lake in Alabama, part of the Tennessee River system. “It stands as the largest catfish ever caught in the history of the Bass Pro Shops/Cabela’s King Kat Tournament Trail,” Parsons says. “All the catfish caught during the tournament were released following the official weighin, so some other lucky angler may catch that fish again someday — and by then it will be even larger.” Surprisingly, even with their big catch, Parsons and Morris did not win the one-day Alabama tournament. The winner was determined by the total weight of five catfish, and they caught only three that day, so they finished second. If you’d like to try your luck at catching your own trophy catfish, the annual Monsters on the Ohio (www. monstersontheohio.com) catfish tournament is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 12, 2019, in Owensboro, Kentucky.

Ohio River fishing guide Dale Broughton throws a cast net to catch baitfish for catfishing.

W.H. “CHIP” GROSS is Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   13


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UNCOMMONLY

The crunch of a fresh apple eaten out of hand is one of the pleasures of early fall, but these recipes might inspire you to think of the luscious fruit in a whole new way. RECIPES AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY CATHERINE MURRAY

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   15


SNAP PEA AND APPLE SALAD Prep: 15 minutes | Servings: 4 1/2 pound radishes, sliced into thin rounds 3 medium Crispin or Shizuka apples, sliced thin 1/2 pound sugar snap peas, some chopped, some split open 1/4 cup fennel bulb, sliced thin 4 tablespoons goat cheese

Shown on page 15

2 tablespoons fennel fronds, chopped 1/4 cup olive oil 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar 1/4 cup water 2 tablespoons honey 1/4 teaspoon salt 1/4 teaspoon pepper

Loosely arrange radish slices, apple slices, sugar snap peas, and chopped fennel on serving plates. Top with crumbled goat cheese and fennel fronds. In a small jar with a lid, shake or whisk olive oil, vinegar, water, honey, salt, and pepper together. Pour dressing over salads. For a milder flavor, marinate salad with the dressing overnight. Serve with focaccia bread (optional). Per serving: 329 calories, 18 grams fat (5 grams saturated fat), 39 grams total carbs, 7 grams fiber, 7 grams protein.

SPICED APPLE PORK LOIN Prep: 10 minutes | Cook: 1 hour, 30 minutes | Servings: 12 4-pound pork loin 1 teaspoon poultry seasoning 5 large Braeburn or Pink Lady apples, 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder sliced 1/2 inch thick 1 teaspoon salt 2 large sweet onions, sliced 1/4 inch thick 1/4 teaspoon black pepper 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 cup honey With fat side up, cut 10 to 12 apple-length slits in pork loin, approximately 3 inches deep into top of the pork. Set aside 12 apple slices. Place remaining apple and onion slices into the bottom of an oven-safe roasting pan with tall sides. Place pork loin on top of apples and onion slices, then slide reserved apple slices into the slits on the top of the pork loin. Mix together cinnamon, poultry seasoning, garlic powder, salt, and black pepper. Sprinkle seasoning mix over entire dish, then drizzle honey on top. Loosely cover pan with aluminum foil and place in 375 F oven on the middle rack for about an hour and a half or until middle of meat reaches 160 F with thermometer. Skim fat off with a small mesh strainer. Let meat rest 10 minutes before slicing. Note: This dish can be made in a slow cooker following the same instructions; cook 5 hours on low. Per serving: 469 calories, 21 grams fat (8 grams saturated fat), 27 grams total carbs, 3 grams fiber, 42 grams protein.

APPLE CHEDDAR TART Prep: 15 minutes | Cook: 20 minutes | Servings: 4 8-ounce puff pastry sheet 2 tablespoons salted sunflower seeds 1/2 cup applesauce 2 tablespoons raisins dash of cinnamon 1 medium Cameo, Cortland, or Baldwin apple, sliced thin 3/4 cup shredded cheddar Thaw puff pastry and roll out onto a piece of parchment in a rectangle shape. Place on a baking sheet. Spread applesauce evenly over puff pastry. Sprinkle some cinnamon on top, then 1/2 cup of cheddar cheese, sunflower seeds, and raisins. Evenly distribute apple slices and remaining 1/4 cup cheddar on top. Bake in oven at 400 F for 15 to 20 minutes or until pastry has risen and is golden brown and cheese has melted. Per serving: 428 calories, 25 grams fat (7 grams saturated fat), 41 grams total carbs, 3 grams fiber, 11 grams protein. 16   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019


CARAMEL AND CRISP STUFFED APPLES Prep: 15 minutes | Cook: 30 minutes | Servings: 4 4 large Gala, Honeycrisp, or 1/4 cup flour Granny Smith apples 1/2 cup old-fashioned oats 2 tablespoons granulated sugar 1/4 cup chopped pecans 1 teaspoon cornstarch 1/4 cup packed brown sugar 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg 1/8 teaspoon salt 1/8 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon lemon juice 3 tablespoons unsalted 1 teaspoon vanilla extract butter, cold 4 tablespoons caramel sauce Cut off the tops of 4 apples. Using a knife, core the apples, creating a bowl (leaving the bottoms intact). Using a grapefruit spoon, dig out the inside. Place hollowed apples onto a baking sheet or pan. Cut apple insides and tops into small chunks. In a bowl, combine granulated sugar, cornstarch, 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg, and 1/8 teaspoon salt. Mix until combined. Mix apple chunks, lemon juice, and vanilla into sugar mixture until coated. Spoon filling into the hollowed-out apples and pour 1 tablespoon caramel sauce into each apple. In a bowl, whisk together flour, oats, pecans, brown sugar, 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg, and 1/8 teaspoon salt. Cut in the cold butter until small clumps form. Sprinkle streusel over top of stuffed apples, allowing excess streusel to fall onto the bottom of the baking sheet. Place apples in a 375 F oven and bake for 25 to 30 minutes or until streusel is browned and filling is bubbly. Remove from oven and allow to cool 10 minutes before serving. Top with vanilla ice cream and more caramel sauce, if desired. Per serving: 429 calories, 12 grams fat (6 grams saturated fat), 80 grams total carbs, 8 grams fiber, 5 grams protein.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   17


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www.SafeStepShower.com With purchase of a new Safe Step Walk-In Shower. Not applicable with any previous walk-in shower purchase. No cash value. Must present offer at time of purchase.

Callfor more Now Toll-Free 1-877-738-9232 information and ask about our Senior Discounts. Financing available with approved credit.

18   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

NATIONAL CO-OP MONTH

YOUR

UNIQUE SOURCE OF POWER

Y

ou have a unique story to tell about yourself because you are part of an electric cooperative community. But if you’re like a lot of electric coop members, you might not feel you know enough to tell that story well. So, here’s some help. About one in 10 Americans receives their power the way you do, from an electric co-op. Electric co-ops belong to the people they serve — that would be you and your neighbors. Electric co-ops were first developed in the 1930s because city utilities, owned by investors wanting to make a profit, ignored rural America — they didn’t think there was enough money to be earned there. People in rural communities met with each other and formed their own local electric co-ops. October is National Co-op Month, the time of year when cooperatives across the country celebrate the many ways co-ops are unique and more importantly, the members they serve. This year, we’re focusing on our ties to the local community. Your co-op was built by the community, for the community, so let’s take a look at what that means for you, the members of the co-op.

Your co-op is here to stay. Since the co-op belongs to the members it serves with safe, reliable, affordable energy, it’s not going to move out of the country or even across the state. It’s staying right where it is. Your co-op knows you. No two co-ops are alike. Across the country, there are more than 900 electric co-ops. Because each of those co-ops belongs to the people who live there, the co-op listens to the community they are a part of. Whether it’s working with the latest energy efficiency technologies or keeping the electric grid safe and secure, your electric co-op can offer solutions that make the most sense locally. Your co-op cares about your community. The coop’s top priority is to power the community. It is not owned by faraway (or even nearby) investors looking only for a good return on their money. Your co-op also partners with local organizations on community events, fundraisers, youth programs, and more. We’re your friends and neighbors. By investing in the local community, your electric co-op supports economic development and prosperity for all, right here at home.

October is National Co-op Month.

Electric co-ops are proud to power more than 20 million American homes, businesses, farms, and schools in 48 states.

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   19


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES TRUSTEE ELECTIONS PARTICIPATE IN YOUR CO-OP'S

DEMOCRATIC PROCESS

Members in districts 7, 8, and 9 will receive trustee interest cards in October.

T

he principle of “Democratic Member Control” means you have a voice in the operation of your cooperative. Members receive capital credit dividends, vote on trustees and other important issues, and can play a larger role by serving as a co-op trustee. Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative is governed by a ninemember board of trustees. The board meets monthly to decide policies, review cooperative business and activities, and make decisions affecting the entire cooperative. The board also approves contracts, reviews operations, and approves all payments of patronage capital. The cooperative’s territory covers portions of 10 counties and is divided into nine districts. Each of the nine districts is represented by a board member. Every year, three board members are elected by and from the membership to serve a three-year term.

All trustees are members of the cooperative and must receive service in the district that they represent. Voting is conducted “at-large,” with all members voting for each district up for election. Trustees cannot be employed or financially interested in a competing enterprise or business selling electric energy or supplies to the cooperative, or business primarily engaged in selling electrical appliances, fixtures, or supplies to cooperative members. For more than 80 years, board members have been democratically elected by the cooperative’s membership. The election process begins when the board appoints a nominating committee at the August board meeting. This committee consists of one representative from each of the co-op’s nine districts. Their task is to select two representatives to be placed on the ballot for each district

HANCOCK

DISTRICT 7

DISTRICT 4

DISTRICT 1

WYANDOT ALLEN AUGLAIZE DISTRICT 2

DISTRICT 5

HARDIN

DISTRICT 9

LOGAN UNION

20   COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 20 OHIO OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MARCH2019 2017


that is up for election. This year’s districts are 7, 8, and 9. Trustee interest cards will be mailed in October to all members residing in these districts. Members who are interested in running for the board are invited to complete and return the interest cards. Each interested member who returns a card is mailed a trustee nomination information sheet to be sent back by mid-December. In January, an interview session will be held for all potential candidates. After that meeting, the nominating committee will select two nominees for each district up for election. In March and April, members will be asked to submit ballots by mail or online to elect trustees.

MARION

DISTRICT 8

TRLUECSTTIOENE E

TIMELINE

Election results are announced at the annual meeting of members.

Trustee interest cards mailed to members in each district up for election in 2020.

Official election packets are mailed out to members with instructions for voting by mail or online.

Trustee nomination information sheet to be mailed back to co-op’s attorney. Return deadline will be listed on sheet.

Candidate orientation and interview session for potential candidates. Nominating committee selects two candidates from each district to be voted upon by the membership.

CRAWFORD District 7: 1,189 members MORROW

Current trustee: Gene McCluer Townships: Auglaize, Jackson, Liberty, Marion, Perry

District 8: 903 members DISTRICT 3

DISTRICT 6

Current trustee: John Thiel Townships: Antrim, Bucyrus, Dallas, Grand Prairie, Marion, Scott, Tully, Washington

District 9: 736 members Current trustee: Robert Imbody Townships: Bowling Green, Claibourne, Dudley, Hale, Jackson, Washington

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20A


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES CAPITAL CREDITS

CASH ADDRESSES FOR

You could win a cash prize for helping Mid-Ohio Energy locate former cooperative members from the list below. Former members are owed capital patronage checks for their share of margins earned by the co-op during the time they lived on the system. Vouchers were sent to the last known addresses of these members but returned as undeliverable. We are asking for your help locating people from the list so we can deliver their checks. For each name from the list that you help us locate, you will receive one entry into the Cash for Addresses contest. All submissions are entered into a drawing to determine the winners. Remember, the more names you help us find, the greater your chances of winning! First prize wins $35, second wins $25 and third wins $15. The results will be announced in the January issue of Ohio Cooperative Living. Prizes can be awarded as cash or an energy credit. Send names and addresses to: Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative Inc., 1210 W. Lima St., Kenton, OH 43326. You may also take the information to the Kenton or Marion office of the cooperative. Several thousand dollars are refunded annually through help received from this contest. Thank you for your help! ABRAMS ANGELA K ABRAMS ATHENA ABRAMS MATTHEW ACCARDI JANICE ACHOR DANNIEL D ACKERMAN JOSEPH ACKERMAN MATHEW O ACKERMAN STEVE ADA AIRPORT ADAM JUDY ADAMS BRUCE ADAMS DARLENE D ADAMS DIANA ADAMS DONALD R ADAMS DOUGLAS S ADAMS GERTRUDE E ADAMS JAMES W ADAMS JOANNE ADAMS JOHN ADAMS JOHN C ADAMS LARRY ADAMS LEILA M ADAMS ROXANNE ADAMS SUSAN ADCOCK JAMES A ADDIS LYNN ADKINS TERRY AETNA INSURANCE AGER LISA M AGNER LAURA AGRIESTI ANTHONY J AHMAY FRED AKERS KATHY ALBANESE CHRISTIAN ALBANESE JOSEPH J ALBERT ANDREW ALBERT HAROLD ALBERT JOE ALBERT JOHN M ALBERT PHILIP C ALBERT TODD ALBINACK JOE ALBRIGHT BETSY ALBRIGHT CAROL S ALBRIGHT DAVID G ALBRIGHT JOSEPH E ALDRICH JEFF ALDRICH L’ANNIE ALDRIDGE KENNETH R ALDRIDGE LARRY W ALDRIDGE MICHAEL A ALDRIDGE SANDRA I ALEXANDER CHRISTINA M ALEXANDER IVORY DOLL ALEXANDER JEFF ALEXANDER KATRINA L ALEXANDER MICHELLE ALEXANDER PAMELA ALLARD SHARON ALLBAUGH BRENT ALLEN BRIAN D ALLEN C H ALLEN ETHAN H ALLEN JERRY

ALLEN KELLY A ALLEN KEVIN B ALLEN LESLIE ALLEN LOUISA A ALLEN MARJORIE ALLEN RICHARD O ALLEN RONALD C ALLEN STACY ALLEN WILLIAM J ALLER ERIN M ALLER MICHAEL V ALLOWAY TIFFANY ALLSUP JOSEPH J ALM VINCENT ALSPACH SHANNON ALT GERALD R ALTHOUSE JERRY ALTHOUSE JULIE M ALTSTAETTER DEAN AMBURGEY DUDGEON D AMERICN TELPHN & TELG AMES JIM A AMMONS ELOISE AMOCO OIL CO AMSTUTZ BUTCH AMSTUTZ DELORES AMWEG JUANITA ANDERSEN JON E ANDERSON BENJY ANDERSON CLARENCE L ANDERSON JEFFREY E ANDERSON JEFFREY S ANDERSON JILL S ANDERSON MEGAN ANDERSON MICHAEL J ANDERSON PAULA L ANDERSON SHERRY ANDREWS TREG ANGLES CHRISTIE ANSLEY JAMES ANSPACH DANIEL L ANTHONY LES APPLEFELLER JOSEPH APPLEGATE ALISSA APPLEGATE GERALD J APPLEMAN JENNIFER APTHORP DIANA K ARBOGAST SCOTTY ARCHABLE ROSCOE ARCHER L JEAN ARCHER SCOTT E ARMBRUSTER ASHLEY ARMBRUSTER LYNN ARMSTRONG APRIL L ARMSTRONG RODNEY ARN BETTY ARNETT BETTY ARNETT CHARLES R ARNETT JAMIE ARNOLD ARTHUR ARNOLD DOUGLAS D ARNOLD T M ARNOLD WILLIAM ARREOLA JUAN

ARREOLA SANCHEZ MARVL ARTHUR DEBORAH K ARTHUR JOSHUA ASHBA VERNA A ASHER RICK ASHLAND EXPLORATN INC AUGENSTEIN KELLY R AUGSBURGER MELIA AUL DEBORAH A AULD RON AULT CAROLYN AULT GARY AULT SCARLETT AULT TAMMY S AUSTIN CLARENCE AUTEN DAVID K III AXTELL HUNTER L AYALA DEASY AYRES CALE AZZARELLO’S REALTY B&B FARMS BACKUS ELIZABETH A BACOME JAMES BADEN JEANNE BADER SARA L BAER JOHN BAGO COLTON BAHNER GEORGE BAILEY ANN BAILEY DAVE BAILEY DEAN BAILEY FLOYD BAILEY JENNFIER BAILEY JERALD BAILEY JOHN E BAILEY KRISTEN BAILEY LORI BAILEY MICHAEL BAILEY MISTEE BAILEY RALPH BAILEY ROBERT BAIR JEFF BAISDEN RALPH H BAKER BECKY BAKER BRUCE H BAKER CHRISTOPHER BAKER DONALD W JR BAKER JONATHAN BAKER JUDITH BAKER KATHLEEN R BAKER KENNETH E BAKER LELETHEA BAKER LISA BAKER LOWELL R BAKER MARCUS BAKER MISTY BAKER SHARON L BAKER TRINA BAKER WILLIAM D BALDAUF DALE BALDRIDGE MICHAEL BALDRIDGE THOMAS L BALDUF APRIL BALDWIN DAVID E

20B   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

BALDWIN FRED BALDWIN GARY BALDWIN IRENE BALDWIN MICHAEL J BALDWIN RAY BALDWIN SARA BALE PAUL W BALLARD JANE BALLARD TEDDY H BALLENGER CHERYL A BALLENGER JUDY BALLINGER KARIN E BALLINGER LORI BALLINGER MARY ETTA BAMBAUER BRUCE BANK OF AMERICA BANK ONE BANKS CURTIS L BANKS DAVID L BANKS WILLIAM BARBER WHITNEY BARKER HELEN R BARKER JESS BARKLEY KEITH BARLOW TYLER M BARNES SCOTT BARNETT LEONARD D BARNETT NOAH BARNHART MICHELLE BARREIRO CARMEN BARRETT FLORENCE BARRETT JOHN BARRON ANDREA BARRY DAWN BARRY KEVEN BARTH MARGARET BARTLETT JAMES BARTON FRANKLIN BARTON WANDA L BARTZ HOWARD H BASEL FARMS BASEL TRISHA BASH JEFF BASH ROY W BATEMAN SONDRA J BATES DAVID D BATES MICHAEL K BAUER JOHN F BAUER TERRIE C BAUTISTA MARIA BAUTISTA OPAL BAXTER JOAN M BAYLES JAMIE BAYLES STEVE BAYS JERRY BAZZY OMAR J BB&T MORTGAGE BEACH DAN BEACHUM CARDELL BEAL ROBERT BEARD MARY E BEARDSLEY JIM BEARDSLEY RAY BEATTY DAVID L

BEAVER DAVID BECHTOL JOHN T BECHTOL TERRENCE BECKEL JOY F BECKETT DENNY BECKLEY CAROL BECKLEY DAVID BEEDY ROGER BEERS BRUCE BEERS WILMA BEERY LARRY WILLIAM BEERY MARK S BEGG DENNIS BELARDO ANGELITO BELDEN ZACH BELL IREAN BELL JEFFREY P BELL LEWIS S BELL LUELLA BELL MATTHEW E BELL PHILIP A BELL VANESSA L BELLAMY BEN W BELLFLY JOSEPH BELLVILLE KIM J BELSHE CONNIE BELT BRANDY BELT CHAD BELTZ ROBERT C BELTZ STACIE BEMILLER JOSEPH BENDING DAN BENJAMIN GARY H BENNER GARY G BENNETT & SIEG AUTO BENNETT CAROLYN BENNETT CHI-ENNE BENNETT DANA BENNETT JOHN E BENSON CHRISTIE BENSON DENNIS R BENTLEY DOUGLAS E BENTLEY JULIE J BERCAW GEORGE L BERG TIM BERGER JO A BERKSAN YURDANUR BERRY CECIL BERRY JAMES BERRY K JR BERRY KEVIN BERRY RAY E BERRY TAYLOR A BERVAS MIKAEL BETS TRUST BIBLE WESLYN MTHD CHU BIDWELL GARY E BIGELOW KIMBERLY K BIGGERMAN MARK BIGGERSTAFF H W BILGER CATHY BILGER DELBERT BILGER MANDY M BILL LINA M

BILLINGS DENNIS BILLINGS DOUG E BILLINGSLEY DOROTHY M BILLOCK DENNIS BILTZ ROBERT BINGHAM BOBBY BINKLEY CAREY BIRCH PAUL M BIRD PATRICIA K BISH DOROTHY BISH DOUGLAS S BISHOP ALLEN BISHOP CARLENE A BISHOP CURTIS BISHOP HARRY L BISHOP JOHN BISHOP RICHARD A BISHOP THOMAS E BLACK DEVIN BLACK EARL C BLACK ROBERT E BLACK STEPHANIE BLACK WILLIAM BLACKLEDGE BRIAN BLAIR DAVID BLAIR DUSTIN BLAIR TERRY L BLAKE DALE H BLANKENSHIP KEVIN BLANKENSHIP WAYNE BLANTON APRIL K BLEVINS EDDIE R BLEVINS REBECCA S BLEVINS VENARD BLEVINS WILLIAM BLINN JACK E BLM COMPANIES LLC BLOOMFIELD HAROLD BLOOMFIELD RUSSELL BLUE J R BLUE JONI BLUM DONALD E BLUMENSCHEIN AMANDA BLUMENSCHEIN SHERRY P BO MAR FARMS BOBLENZ WILLIAM A BOEDICKER BETTY J BOES JOHN BOES NICHOLAS BOGART PHILLIP BOGGS BRIAN BOGGS JOHN A BOGGS JOSH BOGGS JOYCE E BOGGS KEN L BOGGS LEROY BOGGS WARREN L BOLANDER LARRY BOLDUC MATT BOLEN JOHN BOLENBAUGH DUSTIN BOLIN CHRISTINA BOLIN MATTHEW G BOLINGER KELLY


BOLLINGER DONNA S BOLLINGER NANCY BOLTZ TONYA BOND ROBYN L BONSEL ASHLEY BONSEL ERIC BONSEL STACY BOOHER JOHN E BOOKAMER WESLEY H BORDEN GARY BORDNER DERRICK BORGER EDNA M BORN JACK R BORN JOHN BORN KENDRA BORROR JAMES D BOSART NICOLE BOSLEY ROBERT P BOSLEY TOM BOSSERMAN RICHARD K BOSTER MINDY BOSWELL DAVID K BOTCHLETT JAMES BOTCHLETT RHONDA BOURQUE J B BOUTWELL M J JR BOWDLE ALBERTA BOWDLE HERBERT BOWEN MAURICE BOWER DENNIS BOWER ERIC M BOWERS DENNIS BOWLBY ALLAN BOWLING DON BOWLING DOUGLAS W BOWLING JACK A BOWLING PHILLIP BOWMAN & RICHARDS PRP BOWMAN EUGENE BOWMAN HEATHER BOWMAN PHYLISS BOWMAN RUSSELL W BOWMAN STACEY BOWMAN THOMAS E BOWMAN WAYNE D BOYD DANNY L BOYD EUGENE BOYD GREGORY S BOYD JILL N BOYD JOHN A BOYD RICHARD O BOYER LEONARD L BOYER ROBERT L BRADFORD TORRI BRADISH LINDA BRADLEY CHARLES N BRADLEY JONATHON BRADLEY PATRICK O BRADY CARL BRAMMER SHODD BRANFORD LAVONNA S BRANHAM DAVID L BRASHEAR J E BRAVO ESTEFAN BRAY DONALD BRAY JOHN A BREECE BRADLEY R BREITENSTEIN DON BRENEK JUDY BRENNAN JAMES BRENNEMAN KIRK BRENZO STEVEN BREWER BARBARA J BREWER LAURA BREWER LOIS BREWER MARTHA L BREWER MICHAEL E BREWER NANCY J BREWSTER AMY S BRICKER B M BRICKER ROSE MARIE BRICKNER ROGER J BRIDENSTINE CAROL BRIDENSTINE ROBERT BRIDENSTINE WADE BRIDGES FLOYD A BRIGGS LARRY P BRIGGS WANDA BRIGHT BETTY R BRINDLEY DEBORA L BRISTEL EDWIN BROADWATER DAVID A BROCKMAN PAT BRODERICK GARY L BROOKS KIMBERLY K BROOKS MARGARET A BROOKS TED BROOKS WILLIAM T BROUGHTON DONALD E

BROWN ALICE A BROWN BRIAN BROWN BYRON BROWN CARL BROWN CHARLES BROWN CHESTER D BROWN CLARENCE BROWN DAVID A BROWN DAVID C BROWN DEBORAH S BROWN DONALD S BROWN DUSTIN R BROWN EDNA P BROWN GARY E BROWN GREGORY J BROWN HEIDI E BROWN JAY BROWN JOHN E BROWN JOHN V BROWN JOSH A BROWN JUDY BROWN LEONARD JR BROWN LINA BROWN LORETTA BROWN MARIANNE BROWN MARILYN D BROWN MICHAEL J BROWN MILLIE TRUST BROWN MRS DIANE BROWN PATRICIA L BROWN R JR BROWN RANDY BROWN RICHARD BROWN RICHARD ARTHUR BROWN ROBERT BROWN ROBERT J BROWN RONALD O BROWN RUSSELL SR BROWN SAM BROWN TRINA S BROWN VIRGINIA BROWN WILLIAM BROWN WILLIAM E BROWNING CHARLES BROWNING KATHERINE BROWNING PEGGY L BRUCE BRITTANY BRUMFIELD CHANTELLE M BRUMFIELD TIM BRUNER R C BRYAN BLAKE BRYAN MICHELLE BRYAN STEVEN D BRYAN WARREN BRYANT BETTY BRYANT FLOYD BRYANT MICHAEL E BRYANT RUSSELL BUCKLAND D JR BUCKLEY ANNETTE F BUCKLEY JOE BUENTELLO ABRAHAM BUHLER BRYAN BUIKEMA PAMELA BUNNELL WILLIAM G BUNTING CALVIN BURBA ALLEN BURCH BRIANNE A BURCH CHARLES R BURCH KEITH BURD JAMES BURDEN TAMMY L BURDICK R J BURDICK REBEKAH S BURGAN JAMES M BURGBACHER ROBERT A BURGE CHRISTOPHER M BURGE RORY BURGESS JESSICA BURGESS ROY E BURKA RYAN BURKE CALVIN E BURKE TONY BURKETT ED BURKETT STEVE BURKS APRIL D BURKS JODI BURLEY MARIE M BURNETT KIMBERLY L BURNETT KINDRA BURNS ANGIE BURNS CHARLES BURNS CINDY BURNS COLEN A BURNS NICHOLAS BURNSIDE CHARLES BUROKER STACEY BURREY T SR BURRIS CLIFFORD

BURRIS EILEEN BURRIS JERRY L BURRIS TODD BURTON ANGELA BURTON CAROL A BURTON EARL BURTON ERIC J BUSH PAUL BUTLER DON BUTLER ERNA BUTLER JAN D BUTLER LOWELL BUTLER STEVE BUTLER TAMMY BUTLER TRACY BUTLER WILLIAM BUTTERMAN CYNTHIA K BUTZ JERRY D BUYER JERRY L BYERS NICOLE BYLER JACOB D BYLER LIZZIE BYLER SUSIE J BYRD TAYLER BYRNE CHARLES CABELL WILBUR W CACERES ALFREDO JOSE CADE SAM CAGLE THOMAS K CAHILL LISA CAIN RICHARD J CALDERA GONZALO CALDWEL MIKE CALDWELL CATHY J CALDWELL JAMES C CALDWELL JOHN CALDWELL JOSEPH L CALDWELL JOSEPH M CALDWELL JULIA CALDWELL MARK CALDWELL MATTHEW J CALDWELL ROBERT L CALDWELL STEVE CALDWELL TIFFANY M CALDWELL WILLIAM M CALDWELL WILLIE CALLAHAN JOE CALLENTINE DANNY E CALLICOTTE VERONICA CALVARY TABERNACLE CAMBURN ROBERT M CAMETTI RICHARD L CAMPBELL DOREEN CAMPBELL JACQUELIN A CAMPBELL JANET L CAMPBELL JENNY CAMPBELL MICHAEL T CAMPBELL RITA CAMPBELL ROBERT CAMPBELL THURMAN CAMPBELL VIRGIL E CAMPBELL VIRGIL W SR CAMPERS HEPBURN CAMPO LEE CAMPOS MEAGAN A CANDEL GREG CANNODE ELIZABETH CANNODE GEORGE CANNON WELLES CANTER GARY CANTER JAMES D CANTERBURY JUSTIN CANTRELL HERB CANTRELL JOHN CAPLIN GARY L CAPRINO CHERYL L CAPSTONE QUALTY HOME CARAFA CRAIG A CARBO JERRY A CARDER DEBI CAREY CHAD M CAREY CHARLES H CAREY DANIEL R CARLSON LARRY W CARMEAN MARGARET D CARNAHAN MARL J CARNAHAN STEVEN CARNEY TAMARA CARPENTER ANGELA CARR AMBER CARR DANIEL R CARR DOUG CARRINGTON MORTG SERV CARROLL DONNA K CARRUTHERS CHRIS CARTE JACK CARTER CATHERINE CARTER DON CARTER KENNETH

CARTER MICHAEL L CARTER ROBERT E CARTER SYLVIA A CARTY DARRELL R CARULLI DAWN L CARY C JR CASE VIVIAN CASKEY ALEX CASKEY EARL CASKEY ROY CASPER ADAM J CASPERSON APRIL CASPERSON MIKE CASSADY LORI CASSIDY TIMOTHY CASTEELE RICHARD CASTLE CARL CASTLE DONALD CASTLE ELIZABETH CASTLE JAMIE G CASTLE LISA CASTLE LORETTA CASTLE ROGER CASTLE TERRI CASTLE WENDY L CASTO CHARLES F CATELLA MICHAEL B CATTELL ROBERT CAUDILL BETH S CAUDILL BEVERLY CAUDILL CHRIS CAUDILL LORA A CAVE MELISSA CAVES RICHARD CAVINEE HOWARD CAVINEE JOHN H CAVINEE KATHLEEN M CAVINEE NANCY CAVINEE SCOTT W CELESTINO ANTONIO CELESTINO JOSE CELLAR CHRISTOPHER CENLAR FSB CENTEL CABLE CERES FARMS LLC CHAFFIN STEVE CHAKEY KAREN M CHAKEY RICHARD B CHAMBERLIN EILEEN CHAMBERLIN KAYLA CHAMBERLIN MARY CHAMP JAMES W CHAMPER DOUGLAS CHANCE GEORGE A CHANDLER SARA CHANEY LONNIE CHAPMAN CHRISTENE CHAPMAN DORIS CHAPMAN ERNEST CHAPMAN KRYSTAL CHAPMAN PAM CHAPMAN RHEBA JOY CHAPMAN RICHARD CHAPMAN W JR CHARLES THOMAS CHARLES THOMAS S CHENEY LARRY CHENEY THOMAS CHESSER CHRIS CHEW SANDRA CHILDERS JAMES CHILES DAVID D CHIPMAN CHARLES M CHIVINGTON RYAN CHRIST MISSIONARY BAPT CHRISTIAN CONSTANCE CHRISTIAN DAMON CHRISTIAN DENVER L CHRISTIAN JACK L CHRISTNER TODD CHURAN THOMAS J CHURCH AUSTIN CHURCH REGINA DUTTON CHURCH RICHARD CIANFA JOHN CIBALLI RUSSELL V CIOLEK DIANE CIRKO VIRGINIA L CITI MORTGAGE CIVILS LINWOOD CLARD BIRT CLARK BETH ANN CLARK BONNIE CLARK CARROLL CLARK CHERYL L CLARK CHRISTOPHER CLARK DAVID CLARK EZRA C JR CLARK HELEN

CLARK JEAN CLARK JOHN S CLARK JOYCE CLARK LISA CLARK ROBERT CLARK ROLLYSON F CLARK SHAWNA CLARK STEVEN A CLAY DARRELL CLAY GARRY CLAYTON DANNY R CLEGG DAN CLEGG KEVIN M CLEMENS LISA CLEMENTS RANDALL CLENDENEN DANE CLEVELAND DAVID A CLEVENGER SARAH R CLEVER WILMA J CLICK CHARLES CLICK ELLIS CLICK RHONDA CLIFTON BENJAMIN T CLIMER MICHAEL CLINGAN JAMES CLINGER MATTHEW C CLINGER SHARON CLINGER WILMA J CLINK RENEE CLIXBY ROBERTA CLOSE KIM CLOWERS MARJORIE CLUFF MARY K CLUNK BRYAN W COBLENTZ MERLE COBURN JOLETTE COCHERL LARRY J COCHRAN DIRK COCKLIN RICHARD COE CHRYSTAL COFFEE BARRY COFFEE JULIE COFFEE MATTHEW COFFMAN ENCARCION G COGAN CARROLL COKER DAVID A COLBY DEAN COLBY MELVIN L COLDWELL PEARL COLE EMMA COLE FRANK COLE JESSE COLE LARNEY F COLE LYNETTE S COLE MARLYN COLE N C COLE TIFFANY COLEMAN KATHRYN COLEMAN LEXFORD COLLIER ROBERT COLLINS ALLIE COLLINS FRED COLLINS GARY COLLINS HAZEL COLLINS KENNETH F COLLINS RICHARD COLLINS RUFUS COLLINS VERNON C COLONIAL DEVELOPMENT COLWELL KENNETH COMBS DENVER COMBS ROBERT A COMBS ROBIN COMER JERRY COMPETITIVE PROPRT LLC COMPTON DAVID S COMPTON JAMES COMSTOCK L JANE COMSTOCK RANDY L COMWAVZ CONKLIN RICHARD CONLEY CHAD CONLEY ELIZABETH J CONLEY ERNEST CONLEY GARY CONLEY KAYLA CONLEY MRS O CONLEY PRESTON CONLEY R JR CONLEY RICK CONLEY ROSE ANN CONNER DAVID CONNER RETHA L CONNERS PAMELA S CONOVER HERBERT CONTE PAUL A SR CONVERSE JARRED COOK BRIAN R COOK JANET

COOK JOHN COOK WILLIAM D COOLEY ROBERT COOLEY THEODORE COOLIDGE DENNIS COOPER BENJAMIN H COOPER DAVID A COOPER JERRY L COOPER MIKE COOPER TINA COOPER WILLIAM COPE DANE COPE ROBERT COPELAND JON A COPLEY CINDY COPPLER GEORGE COPUS REBECCA SUE CORBET ARNOLD L CORBIN ALAN L CORBIN BRIAN CORBIN TAMMY CORDELL DANIELLE CORDLE MICHAEL COREY DAIRY LLC CORLEY KARI CORNWELL JAMES CORSO DANIEL A CORTLAND ENRGY CO INC COSTIGAN HUBERT L COTTRILL GLORIA COUCH THOMAS COULSON BECKY COULTER JOHN A COUNTS DANNY L COVINGTON DEREK COWAN NANCY COWEN JOHN S COX COMMUNICATIONS COX EMMA COX JIMMY COX JOSH COY DAVID COY JEFF COY JOHN C COY JOYCE COY MAXINE E COYKENDALL LARRY A COYKENDALL RICHARD CRABTREE DAVID E CRABTREE MYRON CRAFT DANE CRAFT DAVE CRAFT TERRY D CRAGER RHONDA CRAIG DEAN CRAIG ERIC CRAIG FRANCES CRAIG JENNIFER A CRAIG KEITH CRAIG LOUISE CRAIG RUSSELL J CRAMER AMY J CRAMER FAWN CRAMER JUANITA CRAMER MABEL CRAMER SHIRLEY CRAMNER HERMAN L CRAWFORD CHRIS CRAWFORD DON CRAWFORD PAUL L CRAWFORD RICHARD CRAY TIMOTHY A CRAYCRAFT BRENDA L CRAYCRAFT RICHARD A CREAMER ELDON E CREAMER SHAUN S CREIGHTON GENE W CRESS BRYAN CRESS VINAL CRESSE RHONDA CREVISTON JAMIE CRIBB MURL D CRIBLEY GARY A CRISP JOHN CRISP MIKE CRISWELL CARMEN CRISWELL DONAL E CRISWELL DWIGHT CRISWELL RYAN D CROMWELL ERICA CRONLEY KYLE CRONLEY LOIS M CROSBY TIFFANY CROSS DOUGLAS JOHN CROSS LEQUETTA CROSS SHAELYNNE CROSS TED CROSSMAN MIRANDA L CROWE GREG

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20C


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

CROWE JAMES CROWE KEVIN CROWNHART IRWIN CRUMP CATHY L CRUMP DALE L CRUMP JANET CUBER JOHN CUCCIO KRISTA CULP MARTIN CULP RONALD CULVER LARRY CULWELL BENJAMIN CUMMINGS ANDY M CUMMINGS BRIAN CUMMINGS JOSH CUNNINGHAM DOROTHY M CUNNINGHAM JEFFREY A CUNNINGHAM STEPHEN D CURL LYLE CURRIER TODD CURTIS DAN CURTIS DONALD E JR CURTISS FLOYD CUSTOM METAL WORKS CYPREXX SERVICES LLC CYRUS AMY DACHEN RONALD DAILEY KRISTINE E DAILY BRYAN L DAILY KIM DAILY MICHAEL I DAISY CONNIE DALTON C S DALTON JOHN DALY AMY DAMRON VIRGENA A DANIEL GLENN DANIEL ODELL DANIEL ODELL JR DANIELS DONALD E DANIELS JOSEPH W DANIELS MARK DANIELS MICHAEL W DANNER CLIFFORD DARLING MEAGAN DAUGHERTY GLENN DAUM ZOLA DAVENPORT DAMON W DAVIDSON DUEL DAVIE DEBORAH L DAVIS ANDREW DAVIS BETTY R DAVIS CHARLENE DAVIS CHARLOTTE DAVIS DAN R DAVIS ERNIE DAVIS GALE DAVIS GARY DAVIS JAMES A DAVIS JANE M DAVIS JULIE DAVIS L L DAVIS MARVIN DAVIS MATTIE M DAVIS OCHELL DAVIS STEPHEN C DAWSON DWIGHT DAWSON HOPE DAWSON JAMES D SR DAWSON JEREMY DAWSON LARKIN E DAWSON LEONARD DAWSON MISTY DE LONG MARTIN DEAN DANIEL DEAN DANIEL L DEAN FRANCES J DEAN VINCENT R DEARTH DEAN DEARTH GREGORY L DEBOER REBECCA J DECK EDITH DECKER ANGELA G DECKER BRYAN DECKER JACK STEVEN DECKER MELISSA DECKLING CHARLES DEETER DAN L DEGLER JASON DEL INVESTMENTS LLC DELANEY DARLENE DELAWDER BRIAN DELONG CAROL DELONG CHAD DELONG GREGORY A DELONG JACKIE A DELONG LAURIE DELONG ROBERT DELONG ROGER L

DELONG TERI L DELONG TINA DEMARENO TINA DEMETROFF RICK R DEMLER EVILUE J DEMPSTER LAWRENCE D DEMTSEY JOY DENDINGER ANGELA S DENHART JAMES R DENMAN DAVID P DENMAN JOEL E DENNEY RAY P DENNEY RICHARD P DENNEY RONALD DENNEY RONALD L DENNIS ARTHUR R DENNIS GARY DENNIS IRVIN S DENNIS LARRY W DENNIS PHILLIP G DENNIS RONALD DENNISON CHARLOTTE DENNISON MARK A DENNISON THOMAS D DEN-OUDEN KOOS DENTON JAMES A DERSHEM SHANE DERSHEN SHANE DETTY LORETTA DETWEILER MARY DETWILER BROC N DETZLER LEON C DEVEREAUX ROSEMARY DEVORE JOHN A C DEVORE TIM DEWALT PATRICIA A DEWITT CONNIE DIAL DEBBIE DIALS ORVILLE DIBLE ROBERT D DICK JAMES DICK MARY DICKASON BING DICKERSON JENNIFER L DICKERSON TERRY L DICKEY EVA DICUS HEATH DIEHL LEA DIERKES JOHN D DIERKES SONYA DILLINGER JERRY D DILLINGER JOHN DILLON WILLIAM A DILSAVER DEBBIE DILTS JAMES W DIMENSION CABLE SVC DIRMEYER RICHARD DIXON CATHY J DIXON DEANNA DIXON MELISSA DIXON R JR DODDS DEBRA S DODDS JASON DOERING STEVE DOERMAN GEORGE H DOLES REALTY DOLICK JEFF DONNAL RONALD B DOOLEY BRYAN K DOOLEY GLENN L DOOLITTLE ESTHER DOOLITTLE IRENE DOONAN RICHARD M DORFE APRIL S DORFE TERI DORN JOHN W DOSS DONALD DOTSON DELBERT DOTSON GARY K DOTSON IRA DOTSON JACK DOTSON RICK DOTSON SHANNON DOUCE E J DOUCE TAMMY DOUGLAS CHARLES L DOUGLAS CURT DOWDY MICHAEL DOWDY MIKE DOWING ROBERT DOWNER CHASSIDY L DOWNEY BRUCE E DOWNEY JEREMY DOWNEY KRISTY DOWNEY MARCIA L DOWNING BETH A DOWNING JERRY DOWNING MATT S DRAKE JEFFERY L

DRAKE JOSEPH P DRAKE LEROY DRAKE PERRY DRANE RUSSELL DRAPER FRANK B DREYER JEAN DRISCOL MICHAEL L DROLLINGER ROBERT E DRUMM JANET DRURY JAMES HOWARD DRURY KENNETH DUBOIS JEFF DUDGEON DOROTHY DUDGEON PHILLIP L DUGAN BRADLEY S DULEBOHN SHERRI DUNAWAY JOYCE DUNAWAY TOM DUNBAR ESTHER R DUNCAN BASIL DUNE RICHARD DUNLAP AMANDA DUNN GEORGE DUNN JACK R DUNN TANYA DUNSON MICHAEL J DUNSON REBECCA DUNSON TRINA DUPREY HOWARD D DUTT LARRY L DUTTON ALICE M DUTTON RANDY DUTTON SCOTT DWIRE KAREN DYE CLOVIS L DYE MICHAEL E DYE PAM DYER ANGELA DYER CHARLOTTE DYER CORY DYSART CAROLENA DYSERT BRIAN DYSERT PATRICIA EACHES JOHN SR EADS DUELL EADS LEE E EAGER LISA D EAKINS DAVID L EARHART CHARLES EARHART GERALD EASTERDAY MEGAN EASTMAN J B EASTON ABIGAIL EASTON D SCOTT EATON DALE E EATON FRANCES M EBERT SALLY EBERT SCOTT ECCARD CONNIE ECHELBERRY LYLE ECKARD EVELYN J ECKELS MAL ECKINGER JIM EDGINGTON RACHEL EDINGTON MARK EDINGTON TONY EDLEN SUSAN EDLER KATELYNN M EDLER RICHARD EDMONSTONE GREG J EDWARDS CHRISTOPHER EDWARDS STEPHEN D EDWARDS STEPHEN W EHRLICH R JR EHRMAN ADA EIBLING AUSTIN EISEMAN FRANK W EITEL MARVIN EKLEBERRY EMILY EKMARK DAVID ELCESSOR LOUIS ELDRED CHARLES M ELDRIDGE ANTHONY ELDRIDGE ARNOLD ELERICK EDWARD W ELLCESSOR MAX ELLEFSON DANA A ELLIOTT ARTHUR L ELLIOTT DANIEL E ELLIOTT JOHN W ELLIS STEPHANIE A ELWOOD CAROLINE EMBERLING RAY B EMC MORTGAGE CO #11262 EMERICK GATHYL B EMERY ROBERT N EMMONS CARLA EMPTAGE ELLEN ENDEL TED

20D   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

ENDSLEY KAREN ENGLAND CHERYL ENGLAND WILLIAM ENGLER STUART EPPERSON CHARLES JR EQUITABLE RELOCATN MA EQUITY HOMES EQUITY HOMES REALTY ERB STEVE J ERVIN CAROLYN ERVIN FREDERICK C ERVIN LARRY E ERWIN LOIS J ESKEY STEVEN ESPINOZA VIRGINIA ESPY VONNA M ESTRADA JUANITA ETGEN GEORGE EUBANKS KELLIE JO EUBANKS ROBERT EVANS GARY L EVANS GERALDINE EVANS JAMES EVANS JANET EVANS JEFFREY EVANS SARAH J EVANS TINA EVERHARDT CHAD EVERHARDT DAVELLE EVERLY WILLIAM L EWING JEFF EWING MELVIN K EZ HOMES LLC FAILOR LLOYD E FAIR AMANDA FAIRCHILD MARQUITA FAIRCHILD PAUL FAIRCHILD ROBERT A FALL DALE FANNIN CATHENA FANNON MICHAEL W FARLEY JAMES FARLEY JASON E FARNLACHER JOHN K FARRELL GINETTE J FARRINGTON WILLIAM FAS-AHM UTILITIES LLC FATE SARAH L FAULKNER CHARLES FAUROT KIYOKO FAUST J J FAY MARIE FELLABUM CLETIS J FELTY ANDREW L FERGUSON ALLEN F FERGUSON CHRISTIN FERGUSON RICK FERGUSON RONALD C FERGUSON WILLIAM D FERRELL RODNEY FETTER DEBRA FETTY TYLOR FEWELL TONI A FEYERABEND W C FIELD DAVID FIELD JON FIELD RICHARD FIELDS TERESA FILLINGER JOHN FINCHER ROBERT S FINCHMAN GLENNA FINCHUM VALERIE FINITZER DAVID FINK JONATHAN D FINLEY JERRY FINNEY DENNIS SR FIRIS PAMELA FISH CHARLES L FISH STEVEN D FISHER BARRY FISHER CHRISTOPHER FISHER CYNTHIA FISHER DAN K FISHER JOHN K FISHER MATTHEW FISHER ROBERT FISHER TIMOTHY I FITZGERALD DALE H FITZPATRICK CASSIE FITZPATRICK J D FITZPATRICK LORA LVG TST FLAGSTAR BANK FLEECE DAVID W FLEMING GERALD C FLEMING WALTER FLESHER KEITH R FLESHER MICHELLE L FLINN FLORENCE A FLINT DEBORAH

FLORES LORIE A FLOURNOY TACOMA J FLOWER JOHN R FLOWERS MERRITT FOCHT FRED F FOGGIN MRS C FOGGIN NELLIE M FOGLE JAMES E FOGLE P MICHAEL FOLCK ROBERT FOLK KENNETH C FOLTZ TERRI FOOR JOANN FOOR RICHARD J FOOS BARBARA FOOS JEREMY FORD ARDEN FORD BRADLEY W FORD JOHN FORD R L FORD SUSAN J FOREMAN CURT FOREMAN DONNA FOREMAN GARY FOREMAN HOYT S FOREMAN ORA W FORMAN J D FORRER HAYLIE FORSYTH BARBARA E FOSTER CHRIS W FOSTER NANCY J FOUST SCOTT FOUT ERIC T FOUT JERAMIE FOUT WINIFRED FOWN MARGARET FOWN TIMOTHY D FOX CALISTA FOX ELIZABETH A FOX JAMES E FOX PAMELA L FOX ROBERT FOX SHELLEY FOY JULIE FRAHER CHARLES J FRAHER LISA E FRALEY WILLIAM FRANK CYNTHIA FRANK MAREESA FRANK SAMUEL FRANKLIN DANIEL FRANKLIN DONNA FRANKLIN KENNETH FRANKLIN MARGUERITE FRANKLIN NATHAN FRANZ NAOMI C FRARY JEFFREY A FRAUNFELTER KENNETH D FRAZIER PENNY FRAZIER ROGER D FREDERICK ANNA FREDERICK FRANCES FREEMAN ROBERT E FRENCH WILLIAM FRESHOUR CARL E FRESHOUR STEVE FREVERT DANIEL FREY ANTHONY FREY CHARLES J FREY MARVIN R FREY RAY FRIDLEY LARRY FRIEND BRENDA FRIEND EVERETT FRIEND JEFFERY W FRIEND JESSICA I FRIEND SARA L FRIESNER TIMOTHY S FRISCH CARL FRONTIERVISION OPERATN FROST DONALD E FRUCHEY ROBERTA FRUEH MICHAEL FRY BETTY ESTATE FRY MARK FRY PERRY LANE FRY RALPH FRY RALPH E FRY SHANNA FRY SHIRLEY FRYE ARNOLD FRYMAN DONALD M FUCHS PAUL J FULL GSPEL CHRCH CHRST FULLER MAGGIE L FULTON BLAINE JR FULTON RICHARD FUNK EUGENE E FURER CHARLES

FURER LINDA FURR DEBRA FURRY THOMAS E FUSEK SANDI FUSON STEPHANI FYFFE DON GABRIEL JOE GADD JAMES D GAINES ANNETTE GALE GENNETTE GALLAGHER THOMAS J GALLANT JEFFREY R GALLANT RICHARD R GALLEGOS CLAUDIO GAMACHE KIMBERLY GAMBLE AL R GAMBLE CHARLES GAMBLE DANA I GAMBLE GLENN A GANDEE ROGER GARCIA GLORIA GARCIA JAY S GAREY STEVEN GARLAND ROYDEN L GARMAN ELIZABETH GARMON JAY H GARMON ROGER J GARNER PAMELA M GARNOW DUSTIN R GARTLEY DAVE GARVER JACK GARVERICK HARRY GARVIN ROGER GASS WILLIAM M GATCHEL NANCY L GATCHELL GALE GAULT DELBERT JR GAY DAVID E GAY DENISE GAYHEART KYLE R GEBOY RICHARD GELDMACHER ROBERT GEN COMMUNICATNS LLC GEORGE BRIAN GEORGE KEVIN R GERWIG CYNTHIA GETTINGS JENNA GEUY DONNA GEYER CHARLES GEYER DESIREE GEYER KEITH GEYER SUSAN GEYER TARA L GIBBS JACQUELINE K GIBSON CHRISTINE GIBSON EVERETT L GIBSON GLENN W GIBSON JACK SR GIBSON JEFFREY H GIBSON KEITH GIBSON KENNETH GIBSON LEE O GIBSON MANDY GIBSON QUINCY GIBSON RON GIBSON TERRY GIBSON VICKIE GIDDENS JOHN E GIEHL CHARLES GIERHART AMANDA GIERHART MARY C GIFFIN MANSELL GIFFORD KRISTIN GIFFORD RICHARD W GILBERT ABE GILBERT BENNY L GILBERT CATHY J GILBERT CHRISTI GILBERT RICHARD E GILLESPIE RONALD GILLEY BOB GILLFILLAN DALE GILLIAM GREGORY GILLIAM OPAL GILLISPIE CONNIE GILLISPIE JOYCE GILMORE VERNON D GINGERICH JAY GINTER JANIE GIST ELDON J GLADWELL YVONNE GLATHART FOREST GLAZE CHRISTOPHER P GLICK ROGER GLORIOSO JASON GOBLE JENNIFER L GODDARD CHARLES GOGLEY BEN GOLDEN MICHAEL W


GOLDSBERRY CHRISTINE E GOMPF ANNA G GONGELAS HEIDI GONZALES LINDA GONZALEZ MOSES GONZALEZ ROBYNN L GOOD BETTY GOOD BRENDA GOOD GENE A GOOD JAMES GOOD TIMOTHY E GOODRICH BARBARA GOODRICH WILLIAM GOODWIN CHARLES E GOSCHE FIRMIN A GOSSARD BYRON L GOSSARD CHARLES GOSSARD DERWIN GOSSARD JOSEPH D GOSSARD MARGARET GOSSARD MAURICE GOSSARD RONALD W GOSSARD RYAN GOTTFRIED JENNA M GOTTFRIED TERRI GOULD BRADLEY D GOULD RICHARD L GOWER LENA GRABER FRANKLIN GRABER JACKIE L GRACE CHRIS GRACELY LEE W GRAHAM MARY GRAHAM MAUREEN GRAHAM MONTY J GRAHAM ROBERT E GRAHAM TED GRANGER REALTY CO GRANLEE ANGELA M GRANT FAY GRASLEY JESICA GRATZ JERROL GRAY CHERYL A GRAYBILL EVELYN GRAYSON AARON GREATHOUSE ROBERT L GREEN CAMP TRAILR SALE GREEN JAMES D GREEN JOSEPH L GREEN JUSTIN GREEN MICKIE GREEN NORMA J GREEN ROBIN GREENE CHARLES S GREENE DONALD GREENE DUANE GREENE RICHARD E GREGORY CHARLES A GREGORY JO GREGORY JOHN GREGORY LUCILLE A GREGORY PAUL W GREGORY ROBERT L GREMUNG JANET LEE GRICE GARY GRIFFIN RONALD J GRINDELL MICHAEL GRITT MARTINI J GROSE KENNETH GROSS JOHN GROSS MICHELLE GROVE KEITH II GRUBER LARRY C GRUMBLING ROBERT D GRZYBOWSKI RONALD GUERRANT JEREMY GUIDER SABRINNA GUINN GREGG

GULASA LINDA GULLETT ADAM GULLETT BRAD GULLETT LOUESA GUMA LISETTE GUNDY HARDWICK GUNTER CHRISTOPHER GUTHERY THOMAS F GUTHERY WILLIAM S GUTIERREZ RIGOBERTO GUYTON LARRY GUYTON MARTIN R GUYTON RAYMOND E HAAS ROBBINS FREDERICK HABERMAN KURT HACKWORTH CNSTRUCTN HADDING ARTHUR HAFFELDER GLEN S HAGERMAN BERNARD HAGY CHARLES HAILE JAMES HAILE SHERYL HAINES D W HAKES VICTORIA HALDEMAN OLGUA M HALE GEORGE C HALEY CHRISTOPHER W HALEY JUDY HALEY LORI HALL CYNTHIA HALL DOUGLAS HALL EVA HALL GREG HALL JAMES H III HALL JAMIE HALL JO HALL KEVIN HALL LISA L HALL LORIE E HALL PETER C HALL PRINCESS K HALL ROBERT C HALL STACIA L HALL SUSAN HALL VIRGIL HALL WOODROW HALLORAN KEVIN P HAMBLIN MICHAEL HAMILL ROBERT HAMILTON ADAM HAMILTON ANTHONY HAMILTON DEBORAH K HAMILTON JAMES R HAMILTON JOHN HAMILTON JONATHAN D HAMILTON MICHAEL HAMILTON RICHARD HAMILTON SCOTT HAMM CAROLYN HAMM COURTNEY HAMM SHANNON HAMON JIMMY R HAMPTON ELMER HANCHETT KEVIN HANDELL AMY J HANDELL CHARLES T SR HANEY BONNIE HANEY KATHY L HANLOH ANDREW J HANSHAW JOE HARAC HOFFMEISTER KIM HARBOLT ROBERT S HARBOR LOUIE HARBULA D LEE HARDER JAMES HARDIN MARTHA HARE JO HARFORD ARCHIE

HARGIS TROY HARLEY GARRY L HARMON BERNICE C HARMON THELMA HARP DAN HARP GREGORY L HARP JEFFERY L HARP JERRY HARP MICHELLE L HARPEL BARB HARPER CLAIRE HARPER EDWARD HARPER KURT HARPER NANCY L HARPER STEVEN R HARPER THOMAS A HARRAH WILLIE C HARRELL BOBBY H HARRELL CHRIS L HARRIEL MARY HARRIS ANGELA O HARRIS BILLY J HARRIS DENNIS R HARRIS GERALDINE HARRIS JOHN W HARRIS MARY M HARRIS PATRICIA A HARRIS PHILIP L HARRIS ROBERT HARRIS STEVEN E HARRISON JOE HARRISON ROBIN R HARRISON SUE HARROD RUSSELL HARSH HOWARD HARSHFIELD ANTHONY HARSHFIELD BARBARA HARSHFIELD JAMES E HART CLENAN HART DAVID HART JENNIFER HART PAUL HART RICHARD D HARTLEY CODY HARTMAN BRIAN L HARTMAN M JR HARTMAN MICHAEL HARTZOG HOPE HARVEY KASSANDRA HASHMAN ISABELLE P HASKELL ROY D HASTINGS G R HASTINGS KATHY HASTINGS MERWYN HASTINGS PEG HASTINGS RICK HASTINGS THOMAS L HATTERY JERRY HATTERY RANDALL HATTERY STARIA K HAUBERT JANICE HAUBERT NICK HAUDENSCHIELD WILLIAM HAUGHT KATIE HAUSE JAMES M HAUSE WILLIAM JOEL HAWK PEGGY M HAWKE ROBERT L HAWKINS EDWARD HAWKINS MARY E HAWLEY RICHARD HAY HARRY R HAY JAMES HAYCOX KIMBERLY HAYCOX SAMANTHA HAYES SANDRA L HAYES SHEILA S HAYNES LYNNZIE

HAYNES TERESA HAYS RALPH HAYTER STEPHEN HAZELETT MARGO HEASTON DANIEL J HECKER B A HECKMAN CHRIS HEDRICK KRISTINA HEFFELFINGER JAMES HEFNER JEFF HEFNER STEVE HEIL GUY HEILMAN TIM HEISE PERRY HELF LAURA L HELLER PEARL C HELMS LOREN G III HELSER KATHRYN HELTON PATRICIA HEMPKER DARCY HEMPKER DENNIS HENDERSON LOWE APRIL HENDERSON RANDY B HENDERSON ROBERT L JR HENDRICKS NANCY L HENDRICKSON KERRY HENDRICKSON VIRGIL HENEGAR GEORGE HENGSTEBECK DOUGLAS HENKEL JOHN HENNING CATHERINE D HENRY RANDY HENRY RICKIE L HENSEL RUTH HENSEL VERNON E HENSLEY ROBER HENSLEY ROBERT HENSON MARTHA J HEPNER EARLE N HERMILLER BRIAN HERNANDEZ CARILLO A L HERNANDEZ VERONICA HERR KATHY HERRERA OTONIEL HERRING RICHARD HERRING RONNIE LEE HERRIOTT VIRGINIA L HERSHBERGER SIMON HERSHEY SHANE HERZOG SHAWN HESSON KIM R HETRICK LISA HETTINGER JAMES R HICKMAN AMANDA HICKMAN DIANA HICKMAN JAMIE HICKMAN JASON HICKMAN JOHN J HICKMAN ROBERT HICKS DAWN E HICKS ENOCH HICKS ORVILLE HICKS PEARL HIGGINBOTHAM L M HIGGINS BILLIE HIGGINS BRIAN HIGGINS RICHARD HILBORN MERL D HILDEBRAND LEROY HILDRETH DAN HILDRETH JAMES P HILDRETH STEVEN B HILE ANGELA HILL CHRIS HILL PATRICIA L HILL SCOTT HILLER DANIEL HILLER JOHN

HILLER KENNETH HINES HARRY HINES JEFF HINES KAREN HINKLE FARM AGENCY HINKLE TIARA L HINKLIN ROY A HINTON JAMES M HINTON PAUL E HINTON ROY HINZE KELLEY R HIPSHER CRAIG HIPSHER WES HIRNEISE PENNY HI-ROAD DRIVE IN HIRSCH WILLIAM HISER DAN HITE DAVID HITES MICHAEL R HITESHEW DAVID HOBACK LISA A HOCH K MICHAEL HOCH TAMI HOEFLER ERIC J HOENSHEL CHRIS HOEPF ARTHUR S HOFFMAN DALLAS HOFFMAN DANIELLE HOFFMAN FRANK HOFFMAN FRANK B HOFFMAN HOWARD W HOFFMAN JANE HOFFMAN KAREN R HOFFMAN KARL HOFFMAN LLOYD HOFFMAN PAUL J HOFFMAN PAULINE HOFFMAN SHARON L HOFFMAN STEPHANIE HOGG DONALD L HOGUE JUDY HOLBROOK FOREST HOLBROOK GLEN H HOLBROOK GLORIA HOLBROOK PAUL D HOLBROOK ROBERT HOLBROOK RUBY J HOLCOMB RICK HOLDERBY GEORGE HOLLAND CONSTRUCTION HOLLAND MARY ANN HOLLAR VICKIE HOLLARS JESSE L HOLLINS BARBARA HOLLON JAMES L HOLLOWAY CAROL HOLLOWAY MICHELLE HOLLOWAY STEWART J HOLM C DENNIS HOLMAN JAMES D HOLMAN VIRGIL HOLSINGER AMY HOLSINGER MARIAH HOLT RONALD HOLTSBERRY JENNY HOLTSBERRY MATT HOLTZ JULIE C HOLTZBERGER JOSEPH C HOLZWART HARLEY HOMAN BRIAN HOMAN INC HOME CENTRAL HOME EQUITY HONAKER MANDY HONDA OF AMERICA MFG HONEGGER HAL D HOOK JOHN C HOOVER KEVIN M

HOOVLER M WILLIAM HOPKINS BETTY L HOPKINS CRAIG HOPKINS KELLY A HOPKINS STEVE HOPKINS STORMY HOPKINS VALARIE HOPSON STEPHANIE HORD DANIEL HORD JEAN HORD KENNETH HORD WALTER H HORINEK ARTHUR HORN ANGELA HORN DELSON E HORNE PEGGY HORNER DAN HORNUNG CHARLES D HORTON BRENDA HOSIER CZARNECKI LISA L HOSKINS SARA HOST FRED J HOUCHINS BONITA HOUCHINS JEFF HOUCHINS MICHELE HOUK REX HOUSE MARY J HOUSE OF PRAYER HOUSE SAMUEL A HOUSEWORTH DONALD JR HOUSEWORTH DONALD SR HOUSEWORTH LINDA HOUSEWORTH STEVE HOVIS DAVID HOWARD DEBBIE HOWARD GEORGE W HOWARD GLEN HOWARD ROBERT HOWARD THERESA J HOWARD WILLIAM HOWELL DANNY HOWELL NORMAN E HOWELL TYLER HOWER ARTHUR HOWER GARY D HOWLETT JOHN HOY BONNIE HUBBELL TIM HUBER JACK HUCKABA ANGELA HUD % PRA REALTY HUDDLESTUN RICK HUDGEL CHARLES R HUDGEL REBECCA HUDKIN JOSEPH HUDKINS MARIA HUDSON LINDA R HUDSON SHIRLEY A HUFF GROVER HUFFMAN JENNIFER HUGHES A W HUGHES DANA HUGHES JAMES A HUGHES JAMES R HUGHES MARCY HUGHES MEGAN HUGHES RICHARD H HUGHES RICK HUGHES RYAN W HUGHES TRACI HULL CLINTON A HULL JOHN H HULL JOHN W HULSMEYER RANDALL L HUNNAMAN ROGER HUNSICKER EUGENE HUNT BRIAN HUNT DALLAS

Energy Efficiency Tip of the Month Heating requires more energy than any other system in your home, typically making up about 42% of your energy bill. With proper equipment maintenance and upgrades like additional insulation and air sealing, you can save about 30% on your energy bill. Mid-Ohio Energy offers energy credit rebates for qualifying efficiency upgrades. Visit MidOhioEnergy.com/rebates for details. Source: energy.gov

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20E


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HUNT EUGENE I HUNT JOHN E HUNT KYLIE HUNT TODD D HUNTER AMY HUNTER GARY HUNTER MICHAEL HUNTER TRINA HUNTLEY EUVADA HURLEY MICHAEL HURLEY ROBERT G HURT JOHN HURT LAURA L HUSH DAVID HUSS STANLEY HUTCHINSON BRAD HUTCHINSON DOROTHY HUTCHINSON RICHARD HUTCHISON FRANK HUTCHISON GINA HUTCHISON JASON HYLTON THERESA HYNDS ALEXANDER H IAMS RUBY ICKES OSCAR ICKES ROBERT ICKLER JESSIE IMBODY JIM INGLEDUE CHARLES R INGRAM ANDREA INNOTION ENTERPRISE INC IRELAND DONALD E IREY RICHARD C ISON MALEA IVEY JAMES IVY DARRELL J & L CONSTRUCTION SVC J G CLARK JACKMAN JOHN ADAM JACKSON CASSANDRA JACKSON CHARLES JACKSON DEBORAH M JACKSON DELORIS JACKSON DIANA F JACKSON FRANK JACKSON JACK JACKSON JAMES W JACKSON JANET L JACKSON JOHN JACKSON KENNETH JACKSON KRIS JACKSON LYNETTE E JACKSON LYNNE M JACKSON MARIA JACKSON ROBIN JACKSON TIFFANY JACOBS CHARLES M JAMES AMY E JAMES BARBARA J JAMES DALLAS JAMES HILBE JAMES LUCILLE JAMES MATTHEW S JAMES RONDA L JAMES WILLIAM JAMISON ERNEST B JANES KEITH A JANES KEVIN JANSON DAVID JANUARY E W JANUARY MARION D JAYCOX CHARLES JAYCOX HELEN F JBM RENTAL AND LEASING JEFFREY CHERYL KAY JEFFREY JERRY W JEFFREY VICKY JENKINS H W JENKINS HANNAH JENKINS KEN JENKINS LINDSEY JENKINS LONNIE JENKINS RONALD D JENNER JAY E JENNEY JAMES R JENSEN MICHAEL JER 29 CHAK FLP JEREW CHERYL A JERRY MOORE INC JETT WILLIAM JEWELL JAMES C JEWELL JEFFREY D JIVIDEN ERNEST JIVIDEN GERALD JIVIDEN RICK JOHNS CATHERINE M JOHNSON AMELIA JOHNSON BOBBY JOHNSON CARL E

JOHNSON CATHERINE JOHNSON CLYDE JOHNSON DREW JOHNSON ERIC JOHNSON ERNEST W JOHNSON GREG JOHNSON J K JOHNSON JOHN JOHNSON JOSEPH JOHNSON JOSH JOHNSON KARLETTA R JOHNSON KELLY LANE JOHNSON LINDA C JOHNSON LOGAN JOHNSON PATRICK JOHNSON R H JOHNSON ROBERT W JOHNSON RONALD A JOHNSON STEVE JOHNSON THOMAS L JOHNSON WAYNE JOHNSON WILLIAM K JOHNSTON HAROLD JOHNSTON JODI JOHNSTON JOHN JOHNSTON MONETTA JOHNSTON ROCKY A JOHNSTON STEVEN JONAS RONALD D JONES ALICE FAY JONES ANGELA JONES BILL JONES DAVID R JONES DOUG JONES ELLA JONES ERICA JONES ERNEST L JONES JEFFERY L JONES JOANNE JONES LINDA C JONES MICHAEL K JONES PATRICIA JONES PETER JONES SAMUEL J JONES SHARON JONES STEPHANIE JONES TERRANCE JONES TINA JONES VANESSA JONES VONDA JONES WESLEY JONSSON RICHARD JORDAN AMANDA JORDAN BROOKE JORDAN CINDY JORDAN DALE E JORDAN DOUG JORDAN JESSIE JORDAN LEE A JORDAN LOIS JORDAN TIM W JORDAN WILLIAM O JOSEPH BRIAN F JOSEPH ROBERT JOYCE WILLIAM JOYNER JON JP MORGAN CHASE BANK JURY CHARLES E JUSTUS CARTER KACSALA PATRICIA A KAHLEY RICHARD M KAHLEY TONYA J KAISER DAVID L KAJA HOLDINGS 2 LLC KALB MELANIE KANABLE DAVID P KANNIARD ANN KANTNER RICK KARAGIANIS CAROL KARCHER RICHARD KASER CHERYL R KAUBLE KATHY D KAUBLE THERESA KAUFFMAN GLEN KAVANAGH VICKI KAYLOR KEATON KAYLOR KYLE KEAR LINDA S KEARNS CLARA M KEARNS JOHN R KECK ALMA KECKLER JENNA D KECKLER SANDY L KEEHN DENISE A KEEL MARILYN KEEN PAUL KEEN SHELBY R KEENER ERMA KEENEY HARRY E

KEERAN AMY J KEERAN HEATHER KEETON RAYMOND E KEIFER DIANA KEIFER MARTIN KEIRNS KEVIN KELBEL JASON KELLER CONNIE M KELLER JULIE A KELLER RONALD A KELLER SCOTT KELLEY JEFF KELLOGG GERALD L KELLY DOROTHY M KELLY MICHAEL J KELLY SERGE KELLY SHANNON KEMMERE ASHLEY KEMMERE BLAINE KEMP JEANNE KEMP MERINDA KEMPTON CYNTHIA L KEMPTON JOSH KENDALL MARY KENDALL RUSS KENDRICK ALAN KENDRICK JOHN W KENG VICHEA N KENNARD CAROLYN L KENNDY KATI KENNEDY BILL KENNEDY DONOVAN KENNEDY KIM KENNEDY MARK A KENNISON RHONDA KENNY SABRINA KENT LONNY R KENTON COFFEE CUPS KEPFORD EDWINA KEPFORD FARMS INC KEPFORD MARILYN S KERN MATTHEW KERNS ELIZABETH KERNS JILL KERNS RICHARD E KERR SUE KESSEL ALBERT KESTEL ELIZABETH KESTEL MARY KETTEMAN RICHARD W KEYSOR DONALD KEYSOR SUZY KIA ORA FARMS KIBLER ANDY KIBLER FRANK G KIBLER PHILLIP E KIDD CLAIR E KIENER APRIL KIGHTLINGER TINA M KILBURN NANCY KILE DOROTHY O KILGORE HOWARD KILGORE LISA KILGOUR MICHELLE KILLEN CAROLYN K KILLEN RUSSELL KIMBERLING STEVE KIMMELL ALISHA KIN WELL OPERATING CO KINARK CORPORATION KINDELL DOUGLAS KINDLE FRIEDA N KINDLE GARY M KINDLE JAMES M KINDLE LULA KINDLE M HELEN KINDLE RONALD KING ALLENA KING CHRISOPHE KING CONSTRUCTION KING DIANE KING DONALD R KING FLOYD KING JAMES E KING JOE W KING KEVIN KING LORI A KING NELSON L KING ROBERT C KING SAMANTHA L KINKLE KEVIN KINNEY PHILLIP KINSLER EVELYN KINTER BRIAN L KIPP KATELYN KIRCHNER NORMAN O KIRK JESSICA N KIRK KENNY E KIRKPATRICK JANE A

20F   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

KIRKPATRICK JEFFREY S KIRKPATRICK LORI KIRKPATRICK WILL KIRTLAND ROBB KISOR KEVIN KISSLING ALVIN J KISSLING DEBBIE KISSLING LARRY E KISSLING ROBERT KISSLING WILLIAM KITCHEN WANDA KLAUS SHANA KLAUSING DAVID KLAUSING LEONARD R KLEMAN ROBERT L KLETT DANA KLINGEL BETTY KLINGEL DONALD L KLINGEL JEFFREY J KLINGER ERIC KLINGLER DENNIS KLINGLER TONJA KLOTTS TONY L KNAPP EDWARD KNAUL THOMAS KNAUL WANDA KNIGHT RYAN BICKHAM KNIPP JULIE A KNISLEY DEBRA L KNOEPFEL SHANE KNOTTS EVERETTE KNOTTS KENNETH KNOWLTON WILLIAM KNOX KEITH KOEPPEL KORRINA KOHLER ELIZABETH KOHLI RONALD E KOKAS JOHN KOKAS TRISTA KONVAS JOHN KOONCE CHRISTOPHER KOTTENBROCK TERRY KRAJEWSKI CAROL KRAM DENNIS W KRAMER RONALD KRANER CECIL KRANZ ANGIE KRESSLEY LAYNE KRETZ BETH KRICHBAUM STEVEN M KRITZLER JOEL D KROM TERRY L KROTINE SHELLY KRUG KENNETH J KRUGER EARL E KUBA AMANDA KUBE DAVID M KUENZLI PAUL L KUHLEN DAVID KUHN AMY KUNKLE THEODORE KUNTZ JOHN E LABOUNTY ALISHA LABOUNTY JACKIE LACKEY PRISCILLA SUE LAFERTY ANN LAHUGH CHARLES C LAING MARIA F LAIRD ANDREW LAIRD GEORGE D LAKE KENNETH LAKE SANITATION LAMA DONALD E LAMAN RONALD K LAMB DOUG LAMB J J LAMB JEREMY M LAMB JOSEPH LAMB MATTHEW LANDON ARDEN LANDON BROTHERS LANDON JENNIFER LANE AMBER M LANGE BRAD A LANGENKAMP JOHN LANGENKAMP JOHN B LANNING TIMOTHY J LANTHROM GARLAND E LAPRADE TRACY LARUE MARVIN D LATIMER HUGH M LATIMORE JOEY LAU WILLIAM R LAUBIS EMMA M LAUCHER TODD LAWHUN BRANDON LAWHUN SANDI LAWHUN TIM LAWRENCE BOBBY

LAWRENCE CAROL LAWRENCE CATHY LAWRENCE DARREN LAWRENCE ETHEL J LAWRENCE PATRICIA LAWRENCE RALPH LAWRENCE STEVE LAWSON JULIA LAWSON KATHLEEN LAWSON MARY L LAWSON RANDY M LAWSON RYAN D LAY LEONARD LAY ROBERT LAYNE JEFFREY LAYNE KEITH LAYNE LISA LAYNE PAMELA G LAYNE RICK LEACH ROY A LEADBETTER STEPHANIE LEADBETTER TODD G LEARY MARK LEASE LYNN LEBLANC GLORIA LEDESMA JULIE LEDFORD KEVIN N LEE INA R LEE JULIE LEE ROBERT E LEFFLER WILLIAM B LEGG MICHAEL J LEGGE CASSANDRA LEGGE CHRISTINA LEGGE DOROTHY LEGGE JOSEPH LEHMAN DENNIS LEHMAN GARY LEIGH GREG LEIMGRUBER JOHN LEISKE MARTIN LEITER CHAD LEITER SARAH LEMAR MICHELLE LEMAR PAMELA KAY LEMASTER BREYANA LEMASTER FRANK LEMASTER JACQUELINE LEMASTER JOANNE LEMASTER MICHAEL LEMKE CHARLES W LEONARD JAMIE LEPINSKI TOM LEPINSKI TOM J LESIEUR WILLIAM LESSIG DANIEL LESTER CHUCK LESTER JERRY L LESTER MARJORIE LESTER MICHAEL LEVALLY DOUG LEVECK JOHN R LEVERING THOMAS L LEVERINGS G N LEWIS BOBBI J LEWIS CALVIN LEWIS DAVID C LEWIS DAVID M LEWIS ED LEWIS KATHERINE E LEWIS THOMAS LICKWAR REBECCA A LIEBENTHAL FRANKLIN D LIGHTNER DEBORAH J LIGHTNER GARY LIKINS HELEN L ESTATE LILES RODNEY LILLY PATRICIA LIMBIRD ANNA LIMING G C LINCOLN LIFE INS LINDSEY DAVID LINES GEORGE T LINGO MICHAEL R LINN JACK E LINN WALLACE M LINTON SHERRI LIPINSKI TERRI LITTERAL DUSTIN LITTLE AMY LITTLE KIM LITTLE LOLA L LITTLER JOHN G LITZENBERG BRUCE LITZENBERG DAVID T LIVENGOOD MIKE J LIVINGSTON JOSH LLANES ANDRES LOCK CHERYL

LOCK JACK L LOCKRIDGE JOHN W LODGE WAYNE F LOFTON RAY E LOGAN SHANNON LOHR REBECCA LOHRBER SUSAN E LONES BRAD LONG BETTY A LONG BRIAN LONG CHRISTOPHER LONG DANIEL L LONG GARY LONG MARGARET C LONG NORMAN LONG RAYMOND E LONGACRE JERRY LONGANBACH STEVE A LONGANECKER SARAH LONYO MICHAEL S LOOKABAUGH BEN LOOKER DANIELLE LOOKER ERICA LOOKER RONALD LOPER GLENN A LORENZO NICOLE LOTH EMILY LOUBERT TERRY L LOUDERBACK DOROTHY M LOUDERBACK GARY LOUDERMILK MARVIN J LOUGH APRIL LOUGH HERMAN LOVETTE RUTH J LOWE DWIGHT D LOWE JOSHUA LOWE LOWELL R LOWE NANCY K LOWE SAMUEL LOWE TERRY LOWER DICK LOWMASTER ROGER LOWREY ROBERT LUCAS DARREN LUCAS DEBBIE LUCAS KENNETH M LUCAS MICHAEL D LUCAS THERESA S LUCE BRYAN LUDLUM HOUSTON LUDWIG LOUIS M LUEDTKE ELIZABETH LUGO CYNTHIA R LUHTA MIKE LUIKART LEONARD R LUND PENNY L LUSK JEFFREY RYAN LUST DEBORAH LUST RANDY LUTZ TIMOTHY A LYDAY PAUL M LYNCH TIM LYNNE DEBRA LYON RICHARD LYONS ERNIE LYONS JAMES LYONS MARK LYONS MIGNON LYONS PATRICIA L LYONS PAUL M & M MORTGAGE SVC M & S INC M & T BANK MABREY DAVE MABREY JIM D MACKAY SCOTT MACKENZIE LAWRENCE SR MADDEN MICHELE R MAGGERT RACHEL MAGNUSON RICHARD F MAGNUSSON I C MAHAFFEY DIANE MAHAFFEY THOMAS M MAHALIK MICHAEL P MAIN TRAVIS MAJOR SHARON MAJOROS TIBOR MALDONADA TAMMY MALONE MISTY MALONE TERRI MANAGEMENT EXPANSN CO MANGIN TODD MANIACI SHEILA MANLEY DIANE A MANLEY HOLLY MANN RANDALL K MANNASMITH RANDY L MANNS BRAD G MANNS CHARLES GENE


MANNS IRIS MANNS JEAN E MANNS LISA MANSHIP MICHAEL J MARANATHA BIBLE CAMP MARCUM ISHMAEL MARION CO INT’L RACEWAY MARION CONTRACTING CO MARION DIV INS ASSOC MARION POWER SHOVEL MARKLEY ERIC MARKLEY LESLIE MARKLEY STEPHAN MARKLEY WILLIAM MARKS ALBERT ALLEN MARKS CRAIG MARKS REX W MARKS ROBERT L MARKUS DAVID A MARSH CLAUDE MARSH NATHIAN MARSHALL EDWARD MARSHALL JAMES MARSHALL KAREN MARSHALL OPAL J MARSHALL PAULA K MARSHALL STEPHANIE MARSHALL STEPHEN P MARSHALL TROY M MARTELLO THOMAS MARTIN ANESSTA MARTIN BRITTANY MARTIN CHARLENE MARTIN CHARLES MARTIN CHRISTINE R MARTIN JERROLD A MARTIN JJ PEPPER MARTIN JOSEPH P MARTIN KENNETH E MARTIN MICHELLE MARTIN ROBERT K MARTIN SCOTT A MARTIN TRACIE MARTIN WILLIAM F MARTINEZ CLETA MARTINEZ JOYCE L MARVIN DONALD MASON GENE MASON INC MASON LAVONE MASON RICKY L MASON ROY MASSEY ANGIE MASSEY JANET MASSIE AUSTIN MASTERMAN NANCY MASTERS BRENNON MASTERS MARK A MATEER WAYNE D MATHERLY GLEN L MATHEWS LORETTA M MATSON BETTY F MATTESON DAVID MATTESON VERNARD MATTIX KENNETH MATTIX PAM MATTOX EDWARD E MAURO KENNY MAUTER GREGORY P MAW GORDON MAXSON RAYMOND E MAXWELL ALICE M MAXWELL RUSSELL MAXWELL YOLANDA MAY DAVID A MAY THOMAS G MAY TIM MAYHEW ROGER D MAYNARD STACY R MAYSE CHARLES R MAZE JAMES MCALPIN JANET MCAVOY MELINDA MCBRIDE DONALD E MCCALLISTER JOHN A MCCARLEY RHONDA MCCARTY JOYCE MCCARTY LAURA MCCHESNEY STEVE MCCLAIN WILLIAM R MCCLINTOCK GEORGE S MCCLINTOCK KENNETH E MCCLOSKEY DOUGLAS L MCCLOUD JEFF MCCLUER SCOTT MCCLURE EDITH ESTATE MCCLUSKY THOMAS E MCCOMBS DEAN MCCOMBS EVERETT M

MCCORMICK ETHEL MCCOY KELLY MCCOY MINNIE F MCCOY PHYLLIS MCCOY WILLIAM J MCCREARY JUDITH MCCULLAUGH STEVEN W MCCULLOUGH ALLEN MCCULLOUGH JANET MCCULLOUGH KERRY MCCULLOUGH LAURIE MCCURDY AUTUMN MCCURDY PHILLIP MCDANEL PAUL B MCDANIEL BEVERLY A MCDANIEL GLENN MCDOLE BRYAN MCDONALD GLEN M MCDONALD JACK MCDONALD TRUDY D MCDOWELL JAMES MCELHATTEN JAY MCELIECE CODEY MCELIECE PAULA MCELREE NEAL MCELROY BERNARD MCENTEE RICHARD C MCGHEE ANGIE MCGINNIS EARL MCGINNISS NATHANIEL MCGLONE DAVID O MCGLOTHLIN BILL W MCGLOTHLIN WILLIAM M MCGONAGILL JAMES MCGOWAN RHONDA MCGRATH RONALD E MCGRATH SHANNON MCGUE JERRY MCGUIRE ANGELA N MCGUIRE GARY MCGUIRE SUZANNE MCINTOSH TENZLEY MCINTYRE BRAD MCKEAN CRYSTAL MCKEAN JENNIFER MCKEAN KENNETH W MCKEE LONEY D MCKEE SCOTT MCKENSEY BILL MCKENZIE CANDY MCKENZIE JERICA MCKENZIE JUDY MCKENZIE ROBERT J MCKENZIE TRACI L MCKINLEY LINDA L MCKINLEY ROBERT C MCKINNISS BENJAMIN W MCKINNISS TAMI C MCLELLAN IRA W MCMILLION KAREN MCMILLON JENNIFER MCMONIGAL DONALD MCNAMARA CHRISTIAN MCNAMARA MARY JANE MCQUISTION JENNIFER MCQUISTION R A MCQUISTION TERRI MCWADE JOSHUA MEACHEM ALBERT MEAD JO ANNA MEAD MICHAEL MEAD SCOTT MEADE ANGELA MEADE HOWARD C MEADE ROY MEADE THOMAS J MEADOWS KENNETH MEADOWS LARRY A MEADOWS MARIANNE MEEKS DAVID JR MEEKS RAYMOND G MEISTER COLEEN MEISTER LINDA MELILLO JASON MELVIN MICHAEL MENCHHOFER DAVID MENDEL JOSEPH MATTHEW MENTZER KENNETH E JR MENTZER LARRY MERCEDES LIDIA MERCER BILLY MERCER LISA MERCHANT DAN MERCHANT KEVIN MERCHANT RYAN MERICLE BETHANY L MERRILL MARK MERRIMAN CRYSTAL MERRITT ROBERT

MERTZ THAD E MERTZ WENDELL W MESSENGER DOUG MESSENGER RICHARD H MESSENGER ROGER MESSENGER STEPHEN MESSENGER WILLIAM MESSMER LAWRENCE D METZ RICHARD METZGER JUDITH L METZGER MATTHEW MEYER E ELIZABETH MEYER GLADYS M MEYER GREG M MEYER STEVEN M MEYERS RYAN MICHAELS JAMES R MICHIEL OLIVER MID-OHIO CHEMICAL MIERZEJEWSKI KIM MILES RYAN MILEY JAMES MILEY PAMELA J MILLER ANASTASIA MILLER BETTY LOUISE MILLER BRUCE MILLER CALVIN L MILLER CARLEEN M MILLER DAN S MILLER DARREN MILLER DARYL MILLER DEBRA MILLER DELORES L MILLER DIANE MILLER EDWARD J MILLER EVELYN G MILLER GLORIA J MILLER GREGORY P MILLER JAMES R MILLER JAY G MILLER JEFFREY W MILLER JOHN MILLER JOHN P MILLER JON A MILLER KARL MILLER KENNETH MILLER KEVIN MILLER KEVIN L MILLER KEYSTONE INHERIT MILLER KIMBERLY S MILLER LANCE MILLER LARRY D MILLER LOWELL E MILLER MICHAEL MILLER MONIKA MILLER PATRICIA ANN MILLER ROBERT MILLER ROBERT A MILLER RONALD MILLER RONALD L MILLER SHANNON MILLER SUE E MILLER SUSAN L MILLER VICTOR MILLER WHITNEY MILLER WILLIAM E MILLER WILLIAM F MILLER WILLIAM J MILLINGTON LESLEE D MILLINGTON TERESA MILLS CHARLES MILLS GLENN MILLS LOIS J MILLS WILLIAM O MILLS WILLIAM T MILLS WILLIAM W MILTON DOROTHY MINER MIKE F MINGER DRUCILLA MINICH APRIL MINNER THOMAS J MIRACLE JAMES K MITCHELL ANTHONY MITCHELL DEBRA MITCHELL FRANK MITCHELL LINDA M MITCHELL MICHAEL D MITCHELL PAUL MITCHELL SARAH J MITCHEM SARAH MIU BARBARA MOATS CHRISTOPHER MOFFITT BRAD MOHLER DONALD MOHRE FLORENCE N MOLK EULAH M MOLL LARRY MOLLE DAVID MONFORT BOB

MONNIN TODD MONROE JUDY A MONTEE JAMIE MONTGOMERY MABEL MONTGOMERY MIKE MONTIS ANNETTE MONTIS JONES MARY MONTIS KARRAH MOODESPAUGH CHARLES R MOODESPAUGH ROBERT MOORE BRENT MOORE CRYSTAL L MOORE DIANNE M MOORE DOROTHY I MOORE ERIC L MOORE FREDA MOORE JERROLD MOORE JERRY MOORE JUNIOR MOORE KELLIE A MOORE LOLA A MOORE MICHAEL MOORE MIKE MOORE PENNY LEE MOORE QUINT E MOORE R JR MOORE RAYMOND L MOORE RICHARD A MOORE RICHARD L MOORE ROBERT E JR MOORE ROBERT L MOORE STEVEN R MOORE TERRIE LYNN MOORE TRACY MOORE WARREN MOOTS AMY MORAN ELBERTIEN MORAN THOMAS A MOREY DEREK MORGAN ALISHA MORGAN CHARLES MORGAN CHRIS MORGAN JUDY MORGAN MAX MORGANSTERN DAVE H MORGASON BRYAN K MORINO KEN MORNINGSTAR RAY MORRIS BARBARA MORRIS CONNIE MORRIS DAVID T MORRIS DONNA MORRIS F J MORRIS JEFFREY L JR MORRIS RICKY H MORRIS ROBERT M MORRIS VICTOR R MORRISON MEGHAN M MORRISON MIKE MORRISON ORVILLE MORRISON OVIE D MORRISON TERRY MORRISON TIM MORROW LARRY MORROW MICHAEL R MOSBACKER GARY MOSELEY JEFFREY W MOSER EMERSON E MOSES BASIL E MOSHER JAMES MOSS KEEGEN MOSSER CONSTRUCTN INC MOSURE JOSH E MOTTER TODD MOUNTS RONALD MOUSER CHARLES L MOWERY JEFF MOWERY MARILYN MOWERY PHILIP G MOYER MICHEAL A MT PLEASANT CHURCH MU CHUNG H MULHOLLAND KATHY MULLENNIX GILBERT MULLINS CHARLES MULLINS HARROLD MULLINS LOWELL MULLINS ROY MULLINS TAYLOR S MURFIELD FRANI MURPHY CARRIE MURPHY DALE L MURPHY DOUGLAS MURPHY HUGH F MURPHY IONA MURRAY RICHARD A MURRAY RUTH MURRAY THOMAS G MURRAYA LEE ANN

MUSHAW MASON L MUSIC CORA MUSIC SARA MUSSELMAN KARLA MUSSER JOHN MUSSON MELISSA MUSTARD TAMARA MUTERSPAUGH STAN MYERS GARRETT MYERS GEORGE T MYERS JAMES MYERS MARY MYERS STEVEN L MYERS VIRGIL MYLES TRAVIS NALLS DARYL NASH DORCAS J NASH KEITH NASH LEILA J NASH MELANIE NATIONAL CITY NATIONSTAR MORT LLC NAUS DONNA J NAUS PHIL NAYLOR GARY NEAL KATHY NEAL WILLIAM E NEEDS JESSICA NEELEY CLARENCE A NEELEY DAN NEELEY DONNA NEELEY JEREMY C NEELEY SADIE M NEELY JAMES L NEER CODI NEFF DAVID NEIDHART AMY L NELSON ANTHONY NELSON ELIZABETH NELSON HERMAN C NELSON JAMES NELSON LARRY NELSON P BOONE NELSON PATRICK NELSON ROBERT SHAWN NELSON ROBIN A NELTON WILLIAM NEVILLE DAVID NEWBERRY L DALE NEWELL C JR NEWHOUSE ANGELA D NEWKAM EDWARD NEWKIRK CHARLES NEWLAND EMMA KAY RUSH NEWLAND JERRY NEWLAND MICHAEL R NEWLAND T J NEWLAND WILLIAM NEWLAND WILLIAM J NEWMAN JUNE NEWMAN NICHOLAS NEWMAN PAUL NEWMAN RAY NEWMAN TODD NEWSOME BRANDON NEWSOME KATHRYN NEWSOME KEVIN NEWSOME NANETTE NEYMAN BRANDON NICHOLS EDDIE NICHOLS HARVEY A NICHOLS JAMES H NICHOLS KIMBERLY NICHOLS MICHAEL W JR NICHOLS PHIL NICHOLS SHANNON NICHOLS WILLIAM H NICHOLSON JACK NICKELL ELDA M NICKERSON JEFF NICKLAUS FREDERICK A NICKLES LESLIE NICOLOSI DEBRA NICOLOSI PAUL T NIDA ROSANNA ESTATE NIEDERKOHR STEVEN NIEMEYER MARLA NIEMEYER MICHAEL J NIGH PAMELA S NILES RICHARD NITCHIE JOHN A NOBLE KAY NOBLET EVELYN NOE RYAN NOFTZ GREG NOGGLE KEVIN J NOGGLE TERESA L NOLAN BONNIE E NOLTING JENNIFER J

NORDEN RACHEL L NORMAN LYNDA NORRIS DONNIE JR NORTON J JR NORTON ROBERT A NORVELL CHARLES NORVIEL DONALD NOVOTNY DAN NOZAWA KANA NUNGESTER KATE NUSS STEPHANIE NUSSER WILLARD II NUTT ROBERT SR NYE MATTHEW NYE MICHAEL A OAKLEY ANGELA OAKRIDGE ESTATES OATES SARA J OBENOUR M G OBERDIER DON D OBERDIER HERBERT H OBERT ROSALIE OBORN WILMA O’BRIEN MICHAEL S OBRINGER JEFF O’CONNELL JACQUELINE S OCWEN FINANCIAL CORP ODELL DEANNE O’DELL JAMES O’DELL LARRY O’DELL THOMAS J ODEN AMBER N ODER KAREN S O’DONNELL JAKE OEN IRENE OGLESBEE KEITH OGLESBEE RICK D O’GUINN TIMOTHY E OHIO POWER CO OHLER ROSS OILER KELSEY OLDHAM CLARICE OLDHAM ERIC OLIVER HELEN OLIVER RANDALL L OLIVER RICHARD OLSEN TYLER OLSON ANITA ONIFER CINDY OPPERMAN RODNEY O’QUINN SYLVESTER ORIANS DOUGLAS H ORIANS ROBERT W ORNDORFF ERIC O’RORKE CATHERINE ORTIZ MARYLOU OSBORN DONALD R SR OSBORN WILBUR E OSBORNE EMMITT OSBORNE J M OSBORNE JOSH P OSBOURN ERNEST R OSKINS LAWRENCE E OSTROM BRENT A OSWALD RICHARD A OTTAVIANO JOHN OTTEN CORT F OTTEN SARAH OTTER CREEK EXP INC OTTO MARTIN OUSLEY PAULINE OVERS AUDREY OVERS DOUG OVERS JEANETTE OVERTON DARRELL OWEN DALE OWEN JEFFREY W OWEN KENNETH R II OWENS CHRISTOPHER OWENS GARY OWENS RUTH OWENS TOBY OWSLEY WILLIE JR P K INVESTORS LLC PACER ROBERT PACK ARLEN PACK PAUL PAGE RALPH PAINTER HENRY PALMER H III PALMER MICHAEL E PALMER ROBERT PALMER WESLEY PAN ENERGY SYSTEMS PANNING DONALD PARISH SHANA PARKER DAVID R PARKER GARY PARKER JON M

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20G


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

PARKINS JACK PARKS WILBERT PARMER RANDALL V PARR BEVERLEE PARR DONALD PARR STEPHEN L PARSELL JANICE A PARSONS BETH L PARSONS STACEY PATCHETT JACK PATRICK BARBARA PATRICK DONALD J PATRICK FLOYD PATTERSON CHAMEINE PATTERSON DONNA E PATTERSON JOHN PATTERSON LEANNA PATTON DELMAR R PATTON HOLLY PATTON JACK PATTON LOWELL PAUGH MICHAEL D PAUGH R KENNETH PAULUS PATRICK PAYNE MAYME PEAK NISSA PEARSON HEATHER PEASE KEITH N PECK DIANE PECK JENNIFER M PEDDICORD JOSEPH M PEDRAZA SHANNON PEERY EDWARD L PELFREY MARILYN L PENDLETON DALE PENDLETON PERD E PENHORWOOD SAMUEL D PENIX BRENDA PENIX CANDACE R PENNER KEVIN PENNIMAN VIRGINIA PENNINGTON CHERI PENNINGTON MIKE PENNINGTON WANDA PENNY CECIL O PENWELL LINDA PEPPLER BRIAN PEREZ DANIEL PEREZ LEUS M JR PEREZ LUIS M PERKINS DALE PERKINS EDDIE PEROD ROGER PERSHING RICHARD E PERSINGER DAVID PERSINGER SEAN M PERTUSET HEATHER R PERTUSET SHANE PETAK ROSEMARIE PETERS GARY L PETERSON ARTHUR L PETRY JOHN PETTIT DON PFAHLER BRANDI PFEIFFER BERNETTA PFEIFFER JERRY PFEIFFER MARY I PFEIFFER MICHAEL J PFEIFFER STATN GEN STO PFLEIDER ROBERT PHALEN DENNIS L PHELPS ASHLEY K PHELPS LARRY PHILIP ROY PHILIP ROY C II PHILLIANS RANDY A PHILLIP LAURA PHILLIPS AMY PHILLIPS CHARLES M PHILLIPS DON E II PHILLIPS JACK W PHILLIPS JEREME PHILLIPS NORMAN K PHILLIPS RONALD W PHIPPS GARY L PIATT GREG PIATT WILLIAM K PICKENS JEREL PICKETT DOUGLAS J PICKETT JEFFREY A PICKETT MERLE PICKETT SHANNON PIERCE DALE PIERCE FREDERICK E PIERCE KAY PIERCE SHAUN M PIEROTTI DAVID L PILOSOFT INC PINNICK TERRY

PIPER PAUL PIPER WAYNE PITTS WILMA PLACE DANNY PLAIN RUN FARM TRUST PLAUGHER RICHARD PLEASANT DONNA PLOTT SHANNON PLOUGH CHRIS A PLOWMAN CHARLES PLUNKETT EDGAR D PODOJIL MERRY POINT RONALD L POLAND BLYNN A POLK CANDY PORTER ERVIN PORTER LARRY F POST JEFF POSTEL CRAIG POSTON DAWN POTTER JAMISON POTTER JESSICA POTTER MARY POULOS BENJAMIN POWELL EDWIN G POWELL JUDD POWELL RICHARD A PRAIRIE MAIZE PRATER BLOUNT PRATER CHARLES D PRATER CRYSTAL PRATER DEBORAH PRATER DOROTHY L PRATER KENNETH PRATER MICHELLE L PRATER RAYMOND PRATER SHIRLEY L PRATER WILMER PRATER ZEALLIE PRATT CRYSTAL D PRATT PATRICK W PRESCOTT ROD PRESTON DAIN PRESTON KYLEE PRESTON ROBERTA S PRESTON WILLIAM M PRICE ALEXIS PRICE ANGELA PRICE BARBARA PRICE DAVID PRICE DOROTHY J PRICE GARY PRICE GREG PRICE JEREMY PRICE JIM F PRICE JOHN F PRICE KARA PRICE LYNDA PRICE RAYMOND L PRICE RICHARD D PRICE ROBERT A PRICE TOMMY R PRIEST PAUL P PRINCE MIKE PRINICPAL RESIDNTL MORT PRITCHETT KATRINA PRITT CLIFFORD PRIVETT BARBARA PROCTOR KATHLEEN PROCTOR MELVIN W PROPER WILLIAM E PRYOR JEREMY PRYOR TRINA PUCKETT CATHIE PUCKETT KIM PURTEE JAMIE PURTEE ROY PUTMAN RENNIE PYATT ALISON QUAY GARY QUAY JAMES R QUAY WYATT E QUICK DIANNA S QUICKLE TERRY SR QURAISHI MOHAMMAD RADCLIFFE BRYAN RADCLIFFE MARK RADEL PATRICIA A RADFORD NANCY RAGER DONALD E RAGER JAY S RAGER ROBERT J RAINES DANIEL RAINES MICHAEL S RAKES HENRY E RALL PARRY RALPH DAN RALPH MIKE RALSTON CRAIG

RALSTON DENISE RALSTON JAMES E RALSTON KYLE J RAMBO DAVID RAMGE JED RAMGE MELANEY RAMIREZ ORLANDO RAMONEDA KEN RAMSDELL JASON RAMSDELL ROBERT E RAMSEY JAMES H JR RAMSEY KENNETH E RANDALL DUSTIN RANDALL FREDA P RANDELL TED D RANDLES ROBIN C RANDOLPH JAMES RANSBOTTOM LINDA RAPP & RAPP RAPP GIRLS RAPP LANNY RAREY ROGER RASEY BARBARA J RASEY EDDIE L RASEY EDGAR L RASEY EDWARD L RASNICK JAMES RASNICK JANIE RASNICK TOYNUA RATHBURN BRAD RATLIFF JEANIE RAUSCH AL RAY MARGARET RAY MILDRED A RAYBURN SCOTT REALTY PLUS REAM DAN REAMES TERRI REAMES WILLIAM REAPER SHYANN REASONER MICHAEL REDD DAVID REDD F E REDD JACK M REDD KELLY S REDMON JOHN A REDMOND BYRON REDMOND GLORIA REECE RONALD W REECE TODD A REED CHRISTOPH REED DONNA REED JARED REED KRISTY REED LISA REED LISA A REED MELISSA REESE CHRIS REESE MICHAEL L REEVE BRYAN REFFIT SARA REICHELDERFER JANE REICHERT MICHELLE REID ROBERT REIDLINGER KENNETH REIDY NORBERT REIFF FREDERICK REIFF JOHN F REIGLE MONTY E REINWALD KEITH RELIABLE MOBL HOME SVC RELOCATION REALTY RENDALL ROBERT J RENGERT CURTIS RENGERT DANIEL RENTSCHLER BEN REPPART ROY P RETTERER PHILIP RETTERER RORY REUTHER SHAWN REXROAD ASHFORD REYNOLDS COLIN D REYNOLDS HARLEY REYNOLDS RYAN REYNOLDS STEVEN L RHINEHART WILFORD RHOAD MARY J RHOAD WILLIAM RHOADS GLENN RHODES PAMELA RHODES TERESA RICE JUANITA R RICE MELANIE RICHARDS JEFF RICHARDS LISA RICHARDS RICHARD J RICHARDSON CARL RICHARDSON CAROLE SUE RICHARDSON HEATHER

20H   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

RICHARDSON RUSSELL RICHMOND LAURA RICHMOND STEPHEN M RICKER DOUG RIEBEL MARY L RIEDLINGER MICHELLE RIETH HERBERT RIFE RONALD A RIFE SCOTT M RIFE TINA C RIFFE BRIAN RIGDON DONALD RIGEL ROBERT ALLEN RIGNEY JAMES E RIGNEY KISHA RIGSBY JAMES W RILEY MURREL RILEY ROBERT W RINBOLT TRICIA RINDERLE MELINDA RINEHART CONSTANCE RING MICHAEL RIOS MARIA M VARGOS RISCH STEPHEN RISNER BEVERLY RISNER DEB RISNER KELLY RISNER MAX RISNER MICHAEL RISNER PENNY RISNER RONNIE G RISNER SAM RISNER SCOT RISNER SUSIE RISTER GARY L RISTER LESLIE RISTER TERRY RITCHEY HORACE RITCHIE DONALD E RITCHISON RICHARD RIVER VALLEY LIONS CLUB RIVERS CLAYTON J III RIZOR ROBERT J ROACH RAY ROACH W DELBERT ROACHE JESSICA ROBAR GEN FUNDING CO ROBBINS BILLY E ROBERTS ANDREW L ROBERTS CODY ROBERTS DANIEL W ROBERTS DEBBIE K ROBERTS DORIS M ROBERTS DORSEY ROBERTS JAMIE S ROBERTS KAMA ROBERTS KAREN ROBERTS KNUTE ROBERTS MICHELLE ROBERTS RICHARD A ROBERTS SARAH ROBERTS SARAH B ROBERTS SCOTT E ROBERTS THOMAS O ROBILLARD JOSEPH ROBINETTE ERNESTINE ROBINETTE ROBIN G ROBINSON BETTY ROBINSON ELLEN ROBINSON HARRY E ROBINSON JACKIE L ROBINSON KEVIN ROBINSON RUTH ROBIRDS RESSIE ROBY LEROY ROCKFORD HIDE & FUR CO ROCKHOLD & ROCKHOLD ROCKHOLD EFFIE ROCKHOLD MARGARET A ROCKSWALE ENTERPRISES ROCKWELL JACK W RODEFFER PATRICK E RODGERS KRISTIN RODMAN RONNIE RODRIGUEZ TAMI ROETHER DANA ROGERS CLARENCE F ROGERS GRACE ROGERS JO ANN ROGERS MELISSA ROGERS RAY ROHRS ARTHUR ROJAS LORI K ROLANDER STEVE ROLLISON CLAY R ROLLISON PAULETTE S ROLOSON KENNETH E ROLSTON CHARLES ROMERO MELISSA J

ROOF JENNIFER E ROOF ROBERT E ROOF TOBY ROSE A DUANE ROSE BILLIE J ROSE CODY ROSE DUANE ROSE GENE ROSE JACK ROSE MARILYN S ROSE PAULINE ROSE RHYS ROSEBERRY JAMIE ROSEBROUGH JULIE ROSHON CHAD A ROSHON MIKE D ROSS ANTHONY C ROSS DEBORAH L ROSS TERRY L ROSTORFER KEVIN L ROSTORFER MIKALA ROSTORFER TERESA ROSZMAN JOHN D ROSZMAN MARY E ROTH DENNIS ROTH JAMES ROTH JOHN ROTH TERESA J ROUSH CLIFFORD ROUSH DENNIS ROUSH PHYLLIS A ROVIRA JAMES J ROVTAR BRAD V ROW TERESA J ROWE DEAN ROWE DONALD ROWE DONALD E ROWE DOROTHY ROWE ERIC E ROWE GEORGE ROWE LARRY ROWE LORI ROWE LUCAS ROWE PAUL D ROWE SAMUEL ROWE SUSAN K ROWLAND BILL ROWLAND DONNA ROWLAND GEORGE G ROWLINSON WES ROYER JOHN S RUBINS EVERETT D RUBY RICHARD E RUDASILL STEPHANIE RUDD MARVIN RUDD RICHARD RUHLEN ROBERT RUMER ANDREW RUMPKE SCOTT A RUNNELS WILLIAM D RUNYON CATHY RUPE JERRY RUPE SHERRI LYNN RUSBULDT AL RUSH ANGELA RUSH BRUCE RUSH WILLIAM RUSHCREEK SPORTSMAN RUSMISEL RAY RUSSELL FRANKLIN RUSSELL FREDERICK N RUSSELL KENNETH RUSSELL THOMAS RUTAN SHARON L RUTH GENE E RUTH JACKIE RUTH JENNIFER D RUTH LYN RUTH ROBERT RUTH STEVEN L RUTHERFORD EVAN RUTLEDGE JERRY L SAAM JEREMY L SADDLER JACK E SADLER RICHARD SAFEGUARD PROPERTIES SAFT LARRY W SALAMANCA ENERGY LLC SALINAS FRANCISCO SALLEE ADAM SALTZMAN JUNE B SALYER LLOYD E SALYERS CODY SAMAYOA VIRNA LICETH M SAMONS LEISA SAMPSON JAMES SAMPSON JIM SAMS DUANE E SAMS ROGER

SAMUELS RAMONA SANCENITO JAMES J SANCHEZ PATTIE SANCHEZ SHEENA SAND MICHAEL L SANDELL DEBORAH J SANDERS BEVERLY SANDERS CHERIE SANDERS CHRISTOPHER B SANDERS JEFF SANDERS JEFFREY L SANDERS LIONEL V SANDERS PHYLLIS E SANDERS SALLY SANDERS SHAWN SANDERS, MD DR. JIM C SANDS ROBYN SANITATION LAKE SANNER RICHARD E SANTIZ ANSELMO GARCIA SARCO INC SARGENT TRACY SATTERFIELD SUSANNE SATTERFIELD TREVOR SAUNDERS JOHN SAUNDERS KENNETH R SAUNDERS ROSE M SAUNDERS VERNARD SAVAGE PEARL V SAVINGS OF AMERICA SAXTON LESTER SAYLOR WILLIAM SAYRE FRANK C SAYRE NORMA M SCARBRO JIMMY W SCHAADT STEVEE SCHACHT JEROME E SCHAFFET KENNETH SCHALK BROTHERS SCHARF DENNIS M SCHEFF ROBERT A SCHEFF TABITHA SCHEIDERER BRENT SCHENKEL JEFF SCHICK JEREMY SCHIEFER A SCHINDEWOLF MICHAEL P SCHLEENBAKER ROBERT E SCHMELZER DAVID SCHMELZER VICKY J SCHMIDT TERRI SCHMITZ GARY SCHNABEL SUMMER SCHNEIDER JAMES P SCHNEIDER JOHN SCHNEIDER KEVIN SCHRECK MARGARET A SCHRECK MATTHEW W SCHRECK SARA H SCHRIML DAVID A SCHRIML MICHAEL D SCHROEDER CLIFFORD SCHROEDER JANELLE SCHROEDER JOHN J SCHROEDER TOM SCHROTE ERNEST SCHROTE TRISTAN P SCHUBEL MARK SCHULER ADAM SCHULER DANIEL SCHULLER NADINE SCHUSTER ANGELA SCHWAB KENNY SCHWADERER GLEN M SCHWARTZ CALEB SCHWARZ JUNE SCHWENNING MATTHEW P SCHWERIN JEFF SCIOTO FARM INC SCOTT BARBARA A SCOTT DALE G SCOTT DAVID SCOTT DIANA L SCOTT GOLDIE SCOTT JOHN R SCOTT JOSEPH B SCOTT MARSHA SCOTT RONNIE DEAN SCOTT STEVEN W SCOTT TOM SCOTT WALLACE T SCRIBNER EXIE SCROGGINS KATHREN L SCROGGINS SHARON L SEABURN ROBERT N SEALSCOTT BRIAN SEAMAN DAVID L SEAMAN KENNETH R SEATON EDWARD E


SEDLOCK JERRY SEIGEL ASHLEY SEIGFRIED JOHN J SEITER DAVID SEITER MILDRED SELL ERIK SELLERS LORI SENTERS CALVIN K SERAMUR MELISSA SERENDIPITY FARMS LLC SESSLER SHARON SEVERNS LOUISE M SEXTON DELLA M SEXTON PEGGY SEYMOUR DEBBIE L SHAFER LINDA L SHAFFER CATHERINE SHAFFER NEIL E SHAFFER PAUL D SHAFFER PAUL E SHAMBAUGH GENE SHAMBLIN DONNA F SHAMROCK MUNITIONS SHANLEY DAVID SHAPPARD ROBERT C SHARK THOMAS L SHARP CARL J SHARP CLARA SHARP GLAYDEN D SHARP GUY SHARP SIDNEY A SHAVER SHERRI SHAW CHANDRA L SHAW DORCAS K SHAW KAREN SHAW LAWRENCE D SHAW RANDY E SHEARER JENNIFER SHEARROW CHARLES SHEETS SANDRA K SHEFFIELD ROBERT JR SHELDON MARI SHELTON MITCHELL T SHEPHERD AMANDA SHEPHERD BRANDI SHEPHERD DANNY E SHEPHERD IVORY SHEPHERD JEFF SHEPHERD KATHY L SHEPHERD KENNETH SHEPHERD LIL SHEPHERD PHILIP SHEPHERD RANDY SHEPHERD STEVE SHEPPARD WILLIAM SHERER JACK SHIELDS ANNETTE SHIELDS BRIAN C SHIELDS DONALD E SHILLING GEORGE SHINDLEDECKER RONNIE L SHINKLE ALBERT L SHIRK CHRISTINE SHIRK PAUL F SHIRLEY RICHARD O SHOAF DENNIS SHOAF MARK A SHOAF PAUL L SHOCKEY EMMA SHOCKLEY FRANCIS SHOEMAKER MARY SHOFFNER LISA SHORTRIDGE JAMES M SHOWERS ELEANOR SHRADER JESSICA SHRIVER DAVID W SHULAW MRS E SHULL RITA L SHUMAKER HELEN SHUMAKER JAMIE L SHUMAKER RONALD R SHUMAN SYDNEY SHUSTER SUNDEE L SIAS GARY L SIAS MARTIN J SIAS MELVIN SIAS NORMAN SICKLES RANDY SIEGENTHALER DALE SIEGENTHALER THOMAS C SIELING BRUCE SIFRIT JOSEPH SIMMONS DANIEL SIMMONS JON C SIMMONS LARRY SIMON ALBERT D SIMONES WILLIAM A SIMPKINS ROBERT W SINK-OILER JOEY F

SINZINGER DAN SISE PETER L SISLER JON SISSON BRITTANIE SKAGGS KENNETH SKEID STEVEN R SKIDMORE GEORGIA J SKY BANK SLADE ALAN B SLEEPER JAN SLEMMONS JUDITH A SLOAN JOHN SLOAN SHARON K SLOB KAY F SLONE BEN SLONE ELZIE SLUSHER-SCHROEDER CH SMELSER FELICIA SMITH ALISHEA SMITH AMBER N SMITH ANGELA M SMITH BETH A SMITH BOBBIE D SMITH CHARLOTTE SMITH CHRISTINE SMITH CRIS SMITH DAN SMITH DAVID R JR SMITH DAVID T SMITH DEBBIE SMITH DEBRA SMITH DELMAR SMITH DIANA SMITH DIANA L SMITH DON SMITH DWAYNE SMITH E JR SMITH ELEANOR C SMITH EMILY SMITH FAMILY FARM PRTNS SMITH FELICIA SMITH FRED L SMITH GLENN W SMITH GREG G SMITH H CURTIS SMITH HERBERT H SMITH ILENE SMITH JAY SMITH JEFFREY L SMITH JOHN M SMITH JUANITA SMITH KIMBERLY SMITH KRISTIN SMITH KYLEE SMITH LARRY SMITH LISA C SMITH LORA L SMITH MARY P SMITH MARYJO SMITH MELVIN SMITH MICHAEL L SMITH PAUL H SMITH R JR SMITH ROBERT D SMITH ROBERT J SMITH ROBIN D SMITH ROBIN SR SMITH ROBY L SMITH RUTH SMITH STEFFEN SMITH TIMOTHY SMITH VICTORIA D SMITH WAYNE N SMITH WILFORD L SMITH WILLARD D SNAY MICHAEL SNEARY CYNTHIA SNEARY JEFF SNEARY TERRY SNELL DAVID L SNELLENBERGER ELMER SNOPIK RICH SNOPIK ROBIN L SNOW ALISON V SNOW CODY SNYDER BERNARD SNYDER CALVIN SNYDER GARY L SNYDER OLEVA SNYDER RANDY SNYDER ROBERT E SNYDER SONJA SNYDER WHITNEY SOBAS CHRISTOPHER SOBAS TIFFANY L SOLIDAY CHERYL A SONNTAG DIANA SOPHER DENISE L SORRELL JOSEPH H

SORRELL KEITH L SOTO JENNIFER SOUSLEY WALTER SOUTHERLAND GARY SOWERS DONALD L SPANGLER ROBERT E SPARKMAN WILLIAM SPARKS EVELYN L SPARKS OAKLEY SPARKS RONALD SPARKS STELLA SPARLING ERIC SPARLING STEVEN G SPARLING WILLIAM P SPATH JANICE SPAULDING DEIDRE H SPAULDING NATHAN C SPAYDE JOHN T SPEAKMAN ROBERT SPEARMAN DEAN SPEARMAN SHARRON SPEELMAN JESSICA SPELLMAN MARY SPENCE JAMES L SPENCE MICHEALLE SPENCER AARON M SPENCER ANDY SPENCER JOE SPENCER MARCIA SPENCER ROBERT SPEROS J W SPICER ANN SPICER DONALD A SPICER DORIS A SPICER GREGORY SPIRES JOHN SPITZER DAWN R SPRADLIN AMANDA SPRADLIN CHARMAINE SPRADLIN JAMES SPRADLIN KENNETH SPRADLIN WILLIAM T SPRANG DENNIS SPRANG HEATHER SPRINGER DORIS M SPRINKLE MATTHEW D SPRIZZO JEANNA SPROULL STEVE E SPURLOCK CARL ST JOHN MARY L STAATS LARRY G STAATS LOIS M STAATS ROBERT STACY CALLEN STAHL S L STAHLER SANDRA K STAKEY LISA STALK DONALD STALK JENNIFER STALLARD BILLY STALLINGS BILL STALLINGS DORIS J STALLINGS PAUL E STALLSMITH RENEE STALNAKER DENNIS W STALNAKER HAROLD R STAMBAUGH ORVILLE STAMPER KIM STANBRO DEMERIL H STANFIELD MARY K STANLEY BRITTANY STANLEY JANICE R STANLEY KAREN STANSBERRY GARY STANSBERY GARY L STANSBERY TIMOTHY L STAPLETON FRANKLIN W STAPLETON JERRY STAPLETON ROY STARK BRIAN K STARKEY MATTHEW J STARNES ROBERT STAUFFER CHET STAUP KAYLA STAVER JEFFREY RAY STEARNS LEWIS M STEELE CHERI M STEELE LISA STEELE MICHAEL STEEN MICHAEL STEINMAN DEBBIE STELL BAMBI STEPHENS ASHLEY STEPHENS BERLIN STEPHENS BILL STEPHENS CHELSEY STEPHENS PAMELA STEPHENS PATRICIA A STEPHENS SOLA

STEPHENS THOMAS G STEPHENSON SHEILA STEPHENSON TARA A STEPP BILLY J STEPP JACK STERRETT JEFFERY STERRETT THOMAS P STETTLER JAY STEVENS DAVID STEVENS DOUGLAS A STEVENS EUGENE F STEVENS GREGORY A STEVENS GREGORY D STEVENS LAURINE G STEVENS THOMAS STEVENS TOM STEVENSON DREW STEVENSON KEITH STEWART EUGENE STEWART JOHN E STEWART MARGARET STEWART RICHARD STEWART TRAVIS STICH ROBERT STIEF ROGER STIFFLER ARTHUR R STIFFLER PAMELA S STILLINGS EVERETT STIMMELL DURWARD G STINSON MIKE STOLL AMY STOLTZ STEVE M STONE CHARLES A STONE ELMO STONE JACKIE STONE JAMES E STONE JERRY W STONE LUCILLE STOSE A M STOUT W ADAM STOVER BRIAN STOVER GARRY C STOVER KYLE M STOVER NICOLLETTE STOVER NINA STOVER TIM STOWE KRISTY STRAHM HELEN STRAIGHT CYNTHIA STRAKER CHERYL STRANSKY JUSTIN STRAW JOHN D STRAYER ROBERT D STREET DAN L STREETS MATTHEW B STREIB SUSAN A STRYKUL MICHAEL B STUBER JACKIE STUBER RICHARD STUCKMAN ROBERT P STUMP DANA STUMP JOHN W STURGEON BARBARA STURGEON HAROLD L STURGEON ROBERT E STURGILL CHRISTOPHER STYLES UNLIMITED SUAREZ JOSEPH H SULLIVAN DONALD SUMMIT HELEN SUTHERLAND AVONELL SUTKAY RON SWAFFORD PAULA SWANEY ROBERT SWANEY WILLIAM SWANSON RUTH E SWART LINDA SWART ROBERT L SWARTZ JIM SWAVEL CHARLES R SWAVEL JEFF L SWEARINGEN DELMAR SWEARINGEN EDWARD SWIGER T L SWINDELL JOSH SWINEHART JENNIFER A SWINEHART JOE A SWISSHELM JAMES SWYGERT GILES SWYGERT NICOLE SYCK BRIAN SYKES TERRY SYLVESTER EUNICE SYPHERD JOSHUA SYPHERD TRISTA SZEWCZYK NORMAN SZIPPL ANDREW F TACKETT CAROLYN J TACKETT CHARLES

TACKETT ESTILLE TACKETT EUGENE TACKETT EUGENE JR TACKETT MICHAEL P TAGGI JOHN TAGLE JUAN ALBERTO TAMILLO BARBARA TANNER HOWARD TANNER LAURIE TAPCO INC TARANTO REGINA TATE HAL D TAVIANO JOHN TAYLOR BRAD TAYLOR CAREY A TAYLOR CARLOUS TAYLOR CHARLES TAYLOR JEREMY TAYLOR JOHN R TAYLOR RICHARD TAYLOR ROBERT J TAYLOR RYAN TAYLOR SARA TAYLOR SHERRY TEAGUE JAMES TEAGUE MICHAEL TEEPLE JOHN TEETERS DONNA TEETERS ROBERT TEETS GREGORY TEETS MARY K TEETS MERCIE TEETS ROBERTS C JR TELLJOHANN JACKIE R TEM-COLE INC TEMPLE MARY TEMPLE MRS L TEMPLE STEVE TEMPLE THOMAS TENEYCK CARL D TENEYCK THOMAS E TENNAR BRETT TEPPER MICHAEL P TERRA NOVA IV TERRELL RON TERRY RICHARD TERRY STEVIE TERWILLIGER WALTER W THACKER BRENDA THACKER DARRICK THACKER HOLLY THACKER KELLY THACKER KELLY A THARP LINDA M THEIBAUT DENNIS N THEISEN GERALD THEW DOROTHY E THIBAUT RICHARD THIBODEAU BARBARA THIEL CHUCK THIEL PATTY THOMAS ANGELIQUE THOMAS BONNIE L THOMAS CHARLES THOMAS CHARLES E THOMAS CHERYL THOMAS DARLENE A THOMAS ERIC G THOMAS JOHNATHAN THOMAS LARRY THOMAS MARK THOMAS MINDY THOMAS PAMELA R THOMAS PAUL THOMAS ROBERT E THOMPSON ANGELA THOMPSON BRYAN K THOMPSON DAVID A THOMPSON DONALD THOMPSON GEORGE J THOMPSON JAMES K THOMPSON JAMES L THOMPSON JAMIE THOMPSON LACINDA M THOMPSON NORMAN R THOMPSON RAETTA THOMPSON ROBERT THOMPSON RUBY THOMPSON RUSSELL THOMPSON TRUDY THOMPSON VERNON J THOMPSON ZACHARY THOMSON JAMES F THOMSON LOCKER THOMSON TODD THORNBURG CHRISTIE L THORNTON LARRY TICE DONALD TILLEY KEVIN

TILLEY SHANNON TILTON ELAINE TIMMONS LORI TIMMONS M M TIMMONS TRISHA TIMNEY THOMAS J TIPPIE DAVID B TODD HEATHER A TODD SAM TOLER KENIS TOLLE ROBIN TOLLEY ROY L TOMPKINS MICHAEL A TOMSOVIC RUTH A TONEY PAMELA TOOMBS ROBERT JR TOZZER BRENT TRACEY ELIZABETH TRACY MALON A TRAUSCH MICHELE M TREMBLE CONSTANCE D TRENDEX INC TRENT CARLA L TRENT DAVID R TRENT WADE TRIMBUR GEORGE R TRINKO LYNN A TROIANO TOM TROMBLY TYSON TROUT JOHN TROXEL JOANNA TROXELL C LAWRENCE II TROXELL SHERRY TRUESDALE CASEY L TRUEX LARRY II TRUEX LARRY J TRUMBLE WALTER TRUSTY ALVIN TSCHUOR JAMES B TUCKER JENNIFER TURK THOMAS TURNER CANDY TURNER JOSEPH TURNER KENNETH TURNER MANDY TURNER TERRENCE TURNER TRUMAN D TUTTLE JOHN TYRA DAVID TYREE JEFF UHL MARGUERITE ULBRIGHT JIM ULERY NICOLE A ULRICH DAVID ULRICH DONALD F ULSH JUDITH K UMBAUGH CARL E UMBLEBY WALTER R UNDERWOOD DWIGHT R UNDERWOOD KEN UNDERWOOD ROBERT UNGERER GLENN UNITED RUBBER LOC #241 URESTI EULALIO UTLEY ARTHUR UTLEY RICKIE L VACON M L VAIL MACK B VALDEZ DANITA VALENTINE AL VALENTINE LINDA VALLADARES JAVIER VAN DYNE CHARLES VAN HOOSIER ADRIAN VAN HORNE GEVIN D VAN VICKI VANATTA JAMES VANATTA PAUL VANATTA WILLARD JR VANBUSKIRK GINA VANBUSKIRK GRETCHEN VANCE GLORIA VANDERHOOF MARK D VANDERPOOL JOHN L VANDYKE GERALD VANFOSSEN LAURA VANHOOSE CINDY M VANHOOSE KEITH VANHOOSE KENNETH VANIMAN R S VANSCODER LOLA M VANSCODER PATRICIA VANSKY RYNE M VANVLERAH LINDA S VANVLIET STEVEN C VANWILPE JAMES VARGAS ESPERANZA VARGAS FRANCISCO VARNER BONNIE R

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20I


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

VASQUEZ REYNALDO A VAUGHN ANNETTE VAUGHN VIRGINIA L VEHRS ANGELA J VELAZCO MARILYN VENT BEVERLY VERMILLION KIM VEST LIA K VIARS CHARLES VITTUR ARTHUR D VOISARD MARK VOLBERT R A VON KAENEL EUGENE VONKAENEL MICHELLE L WADDELL DONALD L WADDELL TRACY WADDLE DANNY THOMAS WADDLE DELORES J WADDLE JACK WADDLE RALPH L WADE DONNA R WADE JOSH M WAGGY MARY JANE WAGNER APRIL D WAGNER DAVID WAGNER WALTER L WAKELY KEVIN D WALDEN KATHY WALKER ALBERT WALKER BRIAN M WALKER CHERYL J WALKER JAN E WALKER LOIS M WALKER THOMAS WALKINS DAVID WALL LORI K WALLACE BOBBY K WALLACE JOHN R WALLACE MARK WALLACE PATRICIA WALLER JULIE A WALSH CAROL WALTER CURTIS WALTER JAMES D II WALTER PATSY WALTER TAMMY S WALTERS JAMES JR WALTERS JODI WALTERS MELODY WALTON HERBERT WALTON JON M WALTON WILLIAM WALTZ MAY WAMPACH JEFF WANAMAKER MIKE WARD DARLENE K WARD HARRY E WARD JAMES R WARD JANET M WARD JOHN WARD MARY F

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WILT MICHAEL W WIMER LAVONDA WINDLE KARL H WINDSOR DARYL WINEBRENNER CHARLES WINEGARDNER HARRY WINEGARDNER RANDALL WINEGARDNER SANDRA WINEGARDNER STEVE WINGFIELD ROBERT WINKLE DAVID WINKLE DAVID P WINKLER GREG WINSLOW STEVEN WINSOR LARRY D WINSTON STEVE WINTER L DEBRA WINTER RONALD WIREMAN DAVID WIREMAN DON WIREMAN HEATHER WIREMAN JENNIFER WIREMAN JOHN J WIREMAN KENNY WIREMAN LEE WIREMAN MARIE T WIREMAN MARY WIREMAN SADIE WIREMAN TERRY WISCHMEYERS DANIEL L WISE JONATHAN WISE JUNE A WISE LONNIE J WISE RAE JEAN WISHON RITA WITHROW JENNIFER M WITTER JOHN WITZEL MILO WODARSKI GARY WODARSKI LANORA WOLF LEMUEL J WOLF MARY J WOLFE BRENDA WOLFE CASSIE F WOLFE CHRISTINA WOLFE ROBERT J WOLFE TERRY WOLFORD RICK WOLFORD RONALD M WOOD JEFFREY S WOOD JENNIFER D WOOD JIM WOOD KENNETH L WOOD MARLENE WOOD THOMAS R WOOD WARREN R WOODARD DWAYNE WOODLAWN ENTERPRISES WOODRUFF JACKIE WOODRUFF PAUL WOODRUFF RAY

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Showing our appreciation for you! In late August, Mid-Ohio Energy held a summer member appreciation day at the co-op’s Kenton and Marion offices. Members enjoyed ice cream bars, drinks, and other refreshments. The cooperative would like to thank all of the members who attended, and for those unable to make it out, we hope to see you at a future member appreciation day (see below for 2020 dates) or co-op gathering such as our annual meeting of members! The event is scheduled just ahead of the due date for monthly bills, in an effort to reach the largest possible number of members in the office. However, members are invited to attend whether paying in-office or not. While visiting during member appreciation day, members can learn more about co-op programs and also draw to win prizes like energy credits, reusable cooler bags, LED mini-lanterns, and more.

20J   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

2020 member appreciation dates Jan. 24, 2020 July 24, 2020 Enjoy refreshments and giveaways when you stop in to visit and/or pay your bill!


Safety achievement: It takes the whole team Creating a culture of safety means everyone is involved, from line crews working around high voltage electricity on a daily basis, to safety reports and resolutions reviewed in the board room each month, and everywhere in between. The Rural Electric Safety Achievement Program (RESAP) helps to strengthen that culture by evaluating every aspect of an electric cooperative’s approach to safety. Since 2010, Mid-Ohio Energy has participated in RESAP, a national program that requires co-op trustees and employees to embrace safety as a core value and take ownership in creating a safe working environment. This summer, a team of safety professionals from around Ohio visited the co-op’s facilities to perform an in-depth evaluation of the safety culture and practices. The goal of the program is to help organizations prioritize safety as a core value and promote continuous improvement. This is Mid-Ohio Energy’s fourth completion of a RESAP program cycle (each cycle takes three years to complete).

The observation team acknowledged Mid-Ohio Energy’s commitment to safety. The final report noted that “Crew leaders and members were knowledgeable, open, and honest,” which are key attitudes of a safe working culture. Mid-Ohio Energy met or exceeded requirements in all 17 areas of safety that were evaluated during the observation. Areas include crew work practices, facilities, equipment, vehicles, substations, and more. A team of safety professionals from other Ohio co-ops visit to assess safety practices and provide suggestions for improvement. Linemen Solly Weihrauch, Casey Ledley, and Kip Luikart discuss a job before work begins. Prior to a job, all crew members participate in tailgate discussions to outline the scope and safety precautions of the job.

Electric hybrid van joins co-op fleet in style Mid-Ohio Energy’s new Chrysler Pacifica hybrid van is on the road with an eye-catching vehicle wrap designed to call attention to the growing transportation technology. The van is the first plug-in hybrid vehicle addition to the co-op’s fleet. In recent years, significant improvements have been made in battery technology. As a result, electric vehicles are becoming more affordable and efficient. We’re excited to support and evaluate electric vehicles and share our experiences with members. If you see the van out and about, feel free to ask us for a closer look.

Electric vehicle – Level 2 charger $250 energy credit rebate Members or businesses receiving power from Mid-Ohio Energy can receive a $250 energy credit for installing a new Level 2 (240-volt) charger for an electric vehicle! •

Charging units must be a new wall or pedestal-mounted charger installed at the member’s address.

Limit of two rebates per residential member home, or six rebates for a nonresidential, commercial facility.

Equipment must be installed in accordance with manufacturer specifications and meet applicable federal, state, and local standards.

Must be installed after Jan. 1, 2019, and requires co-op inspection to qualify.

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20K


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

SENDING HOLIDAY CHEER TO

TROOPS OVERSEAS Drop off personal care items at Mid-Ohio Energy offices to support Blue Star Mothers’ annual Christmas care package efforts.

A

s the Blue Star Mothers of Hardin County prepare to send annual Christmas care packages to troops deployed overseas, members of Mid-Ohio Energy are invited to drop off packaged, unopened personal care items at the cooperative’s Kenton or Marion offices to boost the group’s efforts. We will be collecting goods in October through Nov. 8. Members can bring in goods anytime during our normal office hours. Please see the box at the bottom right of this page for a list of needed items. The Blue Star Mothers’ annual Christmas care package donation sends personal care items, snacks, and other comforts to troops stationed in areas where it is hard to obtain such items. Last year’s shipment sent a total of 368 boxes to 11 different locations, including Afghanistan and Turkey. “Our impact keeps growing each year,” says Kathy Tracy, President of the Blue Star Mothers of Hardin County. With the help of Mid-Ohio Energy and its members, the group hopes to make this the biggest year yet! Mid-Ohio Energy is a proud supporter of the Blue Star Mothers’ efforts. The group uses Mid-Ohio Energy’s Community Room as a secure setup for sorting and assembling the care packages. The co-op’s loading docks serve as a convenient shipping option as the boxes of care packages are stacked onto pallets and loaded directly into the delivery truck. Before using the co-op space, the group had to collect all of the packed boxes and haul them to the post office. Collecting and compiling all of the generously donated goods can be quite the task. The group relies on its members and local volunteers to help throughout the process. This year, the group will hold a sorting day on Saturday, Nov. 16, followed by the packing day on Sunday, Nov. 17. Both events will be held in Mid-Ohio Energy’s Community Room (1210 W. Lima St., Kenton OH 43326), and volunteers are welcome.

20L   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

For any volunteer or donation inquiries, individuals or businesses are encouraged to contact the Blue Star Mothers’ Kathy Tracy at 419-674-3516 or email bsmktracy6@gmail.com. Blue Star Mothers is a nonprofit group of mothers, grandmothers, Top: Blue Star Mothers volunteers gathered and guardians with to pack 368 care packages last year. Bottom: Mid-Ohio Energy member service represenchildren serving in the tatives Karen Sutherland and Kim Middleton military, guard or reserves, were among the volunteers. or with children who are veterans. They focus on supporting U.S. troops, U.S. veterans, and the families of U.S. fallen heroes. Learn more by visiting the Blue Star Mothers of America, Hardin County page on Facebook.

Donations collected at co-op offices! Help us collect goods to send to troops stationed overseas! The Blue Star Mothers of Hardin County is accepting the following packaged, unopened personal care items to include in Christmas care packages: • • • • • • • •

Baby powder Deodorant (men and women) Eye drops (moisturizing kind) Foot powder Moleskin foot padding (e.g., Dr. Scholl’s foot padding) Q-tips Tissues (travel size) Toothbrushes (individually packaged)

Please limit items to 12 oz. packages or smaller for ease of packing and shipping.


Help us add even more cheer to the Blue Star Mothers’ Christmas care packages for overseas troops this holiday season! Decorate this page and return it to our offices (mail it in or drop it off) to be included in the care packages. Decorate as many as you like! For more copies and other festive designs, please visit MidOhioEnergy.com/care.

OCTOBER 2019 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   21


MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES NEWS & NOTES

Marvin hired as member service representative

Community Fund grant:

In July, Kelsea Marvin began her career with Mid-Ohio Energy as a member service representative. She will work in the cooperative’s Marion district office.

The Parent Teacher Organization (PTO) for East Elementary, a public school in the Upper Sandusky Exempted Village School District, recently received a grant from the Mid-Ohio Energy Community Fund. The $900 grant will help with the purchase of outside picnic/ seating tables.

Kelsea joins the co-op from her previous position as a customer specialist with Richwood Bank. She notes her experience with the small, community-based company will help her in her new role of providing support and resources for co-op members. Additional job duties include processing bill payments, service orders, and other co-op transactions. Kelsea lives in Richwood and enjoys spending time with family, camping, playing games, or simply relaxing. She also coaches youth basketball and softball. In her time with the co-op, she most enjoys the people she has met. “People have been very welcoming and made me feel like a part of the team. A wise woman once told me, ‘You may enjoy what you do but it’s the people around that make you love what you do,’ and so far I’ve felt that here at Mid-Ohio Energy.”

Upper Sandusky – East School Boosters

Previously, the PTO raised funds to build a new pavilion to be used as an outdoor learning space for students. Construction was completed earlier this summer. Currently, the group is working to add picnic tables to make it easier for classes to meet outside and get fresh air while learning. The group has a goal of purchasing at least four tables for the pavilion with hopes that full classes will be able to work in the pavilion all at the same time. Community members will also have access to the tables and pavilion during nonschool hours.

Kelsea Marvin Member Service Representative

MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE, INC.

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Robert Imbody CONTACT

Chairman

888-363-6446 www.MidOhioEnergy.com

Dan Harris Vice Chairman

HEADQUARTERS OFFICE

John Thiel

1210 W. Lima St. Kenton, Ohio 43326

Tony Hastings

DISTRICT OFFICE

2859 Marion-Upper Sandusky Rd. Marion, Ohio 43302 OFFICE HOURS

Mon.–Fri., 7:30 a.m.–4 p.m. 22   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2019

Secretary Treasurer

Paul Beineke Trevor Fremont Howard Lyle Gene McCluer Brice Turner Trustees

John Metcalf President/CEO

HAVE A STORY SUGGESTION?

Email your ideas to: member@midohioenergy.com


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Tired of standard-issue pumpkin picking and haunted hayrides? Head to one of these unusual Halloween attractions. BY BRIAN ALBRIGHT

H

alloween is an increasingly popular holiday, and more and more people are looking for ways to celebrate. According to the National Retail Federation’s 2018 data, spending on Halloween

has nearly tripled since 2005, growing from roughly $3 billion to more than $9 billion. In addition to the costumes and the candy, people are also looking for Halloween experiences — like haunted houses, corn mazes, pumpkin picking, ghost walks, and hayrides. If you’re looking for something a little different, however, Ohio has plenty of options that can help add a spooky twist to your Halloween itinerary this year.

24   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019


The Sleepy Hollow Experience at Haunted Mountain Summer at Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre in Chillicothe means Tecumseh! — the outdoor drama that has been entertaining audiences for decades. When the leaves start to turn and the autumn wind begins to blow, the theater turns into Haunted Mountain, and things get much spookier.

Sugarloaf began running Halloween programming five years ago. What started as a traditional haunted attraction has turned into a fully interactive and immersive theatrical experience built around Washington Irving’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” The program now includes a haunted trail, an escape room, and a play based on the Irving story, which can be Continued on page 26

Audiences get an immersive experience with the cast during performances of The Sleepy Hollow Experience at Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre in Chillicothe.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   25


Continued from page 25

experienced individually or via a combo ticket. “The play itself is not a traditional play,” says Brandon Smith, CEO of the Scioto Society, which runs the theater. “The audience moves onto the stage for a scene and then into the parking area for the final sequence. It’s an immersive experience, and the story continues if you go to the haunted trail.” Smith says the play is suitable for the same age range as Tecumseh! (6 and up), although that will depend on the individual child. The haunted trail is also PG-rated. “We do traditional old-school scares,” Smith says. “It’s family friendly. It will scare people, but we’re not going for the gross-out.” The Sleepy Hollow Experience, Thursday to Sunday, Oct. 3–Nov. 2, Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre, 5968 Marietta Road, Chillicothe, Ohio. Tickets are $30–$40. www.hauntedmountain.org

The presence and year-round popularity of Foy’s Halloween Store in Fairborn has spurred the creation of one of the largest Halloween festivals in the state.

Fairborn Halloween craze. “Foy’s has six stores downtown, and they are busy all year round,” Owen says. “We asked ourselves, ‘Why aren’t we hosting the Halloween festival to end all Halloween festivals?’ But we had no idea it was going to get this big.”

Fairborn Halloween Festival For those who are really serious about Halloween, a trip to Fairborn during the season should be in the works. According to Matt Owen, executive director of Fairborn’s Chamber of Commerce, the town’s Halloween festival is one of the largest in the state, drawing more than 10,000 visitors. At the center of it all — literally — is a wild, old-fashioned five-and-dime store called Foy’s. The store is run by Mike Foy, the third-generation owner of the 90-yearold business, and its footprint has expanded to include Foy’s Halloween Store, as well as adult- and kid-oriented costume shops. Foy’s gets the credit for starting the

26   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

The Foy family made a concerted effort to embrace the holiday. The store’s decorations are a prominent part of Fairborn’s Main Street, and the tourists who have been drawn to the stores inspired the town to kick off the Halloween festival eight years ago. The festival is decidedly family friendly. All of the downtown shops are open, as well as a host of street vendors, crafts, and art. There’s live entertainment, both on-stage and around downtown, as well as street performances such as Irish dancing and belly dancing. The festival also includes a beer garden, food trucks, and Halloween parade. “We’re also having the Zombie Mobile back, which was a big hit for us last year,” Owen says. The vehicle is a 1930s-style paddy wagon full of animatronic zombies. Fairborn Halloween Festival, October 18–20, downtown Fairborn. www.facebook.com/events/2443842752511798/ or www.foyshalloweenstore.com.


Shock Around the Clock If you love horror movies and have a spare 24 hours, then the Shock Around the Clock movie marathon at the Drexel Theatre in Bexley is right up your alley. The guest of honor at this year’s event will be acclaimed cinematographer Michael Gornick, who will introduce two of his films, Day of the Dead and Creepshow. The marathon features a dozen movies, including classics from the 1940s (Frankenstein Meets Wolfman) through current creepers (Ohio premieres of The Wretched and The Dark Red) with lots of cult favorites (Crash, Shaun of the Dead, Hitchcock’s The Birds) and more. There’s also a costume contest and a scream contest, with lots of prizes. Those who survive the entire 24-hour experience will be issued an official “Shock Certificate” as a testament to their dedication and stamina. Shock Around the Clock, noon to noon, October 12–13, Drexel Theatre, 2254 E. Main St., Columbus. Tickets are $47 and usually go pretty quickly (seating is limited). www.horrormarathon.com

All Hallows’ Eve The Ohio Village at Columbus’ Ohio History Center provides Victorian-era chills (and an appearance by the Headless Horseman) over two weekends in October. The village is a bit of a time machine on a normal day, but near Halloween, the staff transform the location into a spooky carnival with plenty of activities for adults and kids. You can learn about the history of popular Halloween traditions in the U.S. while carving pumpkins and making masks. There are fortune-tellers, Victorian parlor games, traditional dancing, and a 19th-century-style masquerade

party. Costumed historical characters roam the village and share stories about Halloweens of the past (as well as classic ghost stories). You can even visit the vintage funeral parlor and meet the top-hatted undertaker. The event is capped off with a live reading of “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” around a bonfire — watch out for a dramatic appearance by the Headless Horseman himself. All Hallows’ Eve, 5:30–9:30 p.m., Oct. 12 and Oct. 19, Ohio History Center/Ohio Village, 800 E. 17th Ave., Columbus. Tickets are $16 for adults and $12 for kids 4 to 12 (3 and under are free). www. ohiohistory.org/participate/event-calendar/ohio-village/hallows

Halloween campouts There is no shortage of scary movies based around illfated camping trips. You’re alone in the woods at night, miles from civilization and reliable cellphone coverage. What was that noise outside the tent? An animal? Or … something else? Fall camping is always fun, but Hocking Hills State Park adds a seasonal element with its annual Halloween Campout. The event includes a ghost hunt at Ash Cave, pumpkin decorating, a hayride, trick-or-treating at Old Man’s Cave, a costume contest, and a family-friendly spooky movie. There are also Halloween campouts at East Harbor (Oct. 4–5 and Oct. 11–12), Lake Loramie (Oct. 11–12), Paint Creek (Oct. 11–12), Mohican (Oct. 18–19), Indian Lake (Oct. 19–20), Continued on page 28

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   27


The Halloween Express You’ve heard of the Polar Express, but what about the Halloween Express? Each fall, the Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation operates a non-scary Halloween train ride for kids and adults. The volunteer group operates quarter-scale steam and diesel locomotives (which are used for the rides), and also has a museum and displays of full-size railroad equipment. Continued from page 27

and a number of other state parks. Visit parks.ohiodnr. gov/calendar for more information.

Escape From Blood Prison (Ohio State Reformatory) Scary haunted house attractions are everywhere in October, but few could boast the ambiance of the shuttered Ohio State Reformatory in Mansfield. For the past several years, the 19th-century prison, which closed in 1990, has hosted an intense haunted house attraction from late September through early November. Visitors wind their way through the cell blocks of the massive facility for a roughly 30-minute tour that includes encounters with axe-wielding maniacs, ghost inmates, and scary clowns. There is usually a live band playing outside, and this year the haunt also features the Hellzapoppin Circus Sideshow Review, which includes circus performers, magicians, and modern-day “freaks” like the tattooed Lizard Man. The reformatory also offers private and public ghost hunts on select Fridays throughout the year, as well as both guided and self-guided tours. Escape From Blood Prison, Sept. 27–Nov. 3, Ohio State Reformatory, Mansfield. Tickets are $25. www.bloodprison.com

28   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

Guests ride on a scale model 1950s steamliner called the Riverside Train (owned by the Hancock Historical Museum) and can view Halloween-themed light displays and other types of holiday displays along the tracks. The train operates from 6:30 to 9 p.m. The group also offers a Trick or Treat Halloween Train (afternoon and evening runs) on Oct. 19 and 26 that includes stops around the track so costumed riders can collect treats. Halloween Express, Oct. 5–Oct. 26, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation, 12505 C.R. 99, Findlay. Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for children 12 and under. A Pumpkin Train ride on Saturdays and Sundays through Oct. 20 includes a stop for pumpkin picking (for an additional charge). www.nworrp.org


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OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   29


SNUGGLE

FOR SURVIVAL

Far from blood-sucking terrors, vampire bats are models of cooperation. BY RANDY EDWARDS; PHOTOS COURTESY OF GERALD CARTER

long with skeletons and zombies, the fanged and hog-nosed visage of a bat is one of the most popular images for conjuring up fright at Halloween — and the vampire bat is the most celebrated of all bats known to the science of scaring.

A

even with those who are not related. Understanding why cooperation can enhance survival and reproduction in the bat colony helps us appreciate why other mammals, including humans, benefit from what Carter calls “the snuggle for survival.”

There’s no reason to be frightened, though: There are no vampire bats in Ohio, or even in Count Dracula’s Transylvania. The only three species of vampire bat haunt only the tropical forests of Central and South America.

“We often think humans are special because we are smart. But it’s our social smarts that really allow us to have the modern civilization that we do today,” Carter says. “If you took the smartest adult human and left them alone in a completely foreign environment, their best chance of survival is not to use their intelligence to fend for themselves, it would be to find a local tribe and then use their social intelligence to integrate into that society.”

Since they rarely target humans, there’s not much chance that an Ohioan will ever encounter one — unless that Ohioan is Gerald Carter, assistant professor in the department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology at Ohio State University. Carter studies bats, specifically vampire bats, and spent the past summer as he often does — capturing and studying vampire bats in the tropical forests of Central America. His research has helped us understand that far from being monsters, vampire bats are good parents, forge strong “friendships” with other bats, and generally are models of cooperation, altruism, and social bonding. The two-ounce bats form long-term bonds and frequently help one another in ways that are costly to themselves,

30   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

Cooperation is essential to evolutionary success throughout nature. Social grooming is well-documented across species. Many animals regurgitate food for offspring, which helps to ensure the survival of the juveniles and continuation of the parents’ genes. What makes vampire bats worthy of research is that they often will share their meal (which is, of course, another animal’s blood) with bats who are not related to them. This is no token gift — vampire bats are small (the common vampire bat weighs less than 2 ounces as an adult) and


therefore can’t store a lot of energy. Missing meals for more than a day or two could end in starvation or reproductive failure. So wouldn’t evolution tell us that bats most willing to share would be most likely to die off? The strategy seems to work, however, especially when the bat’s primary foodsharing partner is removed from the picture. Those bats with the most extensive network of food-sharing “friends” are the most likely to survive and their offspring to flourish. “The question is then, what prevents cheating?” Carter asks. “Why not just take others’ help and not help anyone else?” These are the questions Carter seeks to answer with his research, along with questions about how the social bonds form in the first place. One recent inquiry found that the development of social bonding is accelerated when two bat strangers are forced to live in close quarters (think college roommates, Carter says). As previously noted, there are no vampire bats in Ohio. Ohio’s 13 bat species, all of which feast solely on insects, are not known to share food or groom one another, at least not in the way the subjects of Carter’s research do.

Still, there’s much to admire about Ohio’s bats. They huddle for warmth in their nursery colonies and they care diligently for their young. But Carter doesn’t feel the need to defend bats. Despite the persistent and erroneous treatment of bats at Halloween, hostility toward bats is fading, he says. “Kids really love bats,” he says. “It seems to me sometimes that they are almost like the new dinosaurs. If you go to a library and look in the animal section of the kids area, you’ll see multiple books about bats and why we should care for them.”

Professor Gerald Carter’s research into vampire bats reveals a kind, nurturing nature to these creatures often used for Halloween scarefests.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   31


HUNTING WORKS

Ohio group spreads the word about the economic benefits of the sport.

STORY AND PHOTOS BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSS

F

or decades, hunters have done a great job of telling others what they, as a group, have done for wildlife conservation in America. If it weren’t for sport hunters gathering together more than a century ago and demanding hunting seasons, bag limits, and other such regulations, there would be little wildlife left in this country. It’s an inspiring story, and one that needs to be retold continually. But frankly, what hunters have not been good at in the past is telling their story in dollars and cents — how much sport-hunting benefits our national, state, and local economies. The National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) is attempting to correct that by sponsoring a nationwide program: Hunting Works for America. Begun in 2010, 18 states now have Hunting Works organizations, with two or three more states joining yearly. Ohio’s effort is led by six co-chairs, including sportsman and business owner Tom Vorisek. “It’s time for hunters to stand up and tell the public — the average person in America who may not hunt or

32   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

know much about the outdoors — what hunters and hunting means to them economically,” says Vorisek. “People should understand that they have a financial stake in hunting, even if they don’t hunt.” Melinda Huntley, executive director of the Ohio Travel Association, another Hunting Works for Ohio co-chair, lists some impressive statistics: • More than 400,000 people hunt in Ohio annually, 42,000 of whom are nonresidents. • Ohio hunters spend $321 million on trip-related expenses annually. • Ohio hunters spend $274 million on hunting equipment annually. • Each hunter spends an average of $1,400 per year in Ohio. • Hunter spending translates to $490 million in salaries and wages. • Hunting in Ohio supports more than 2,0 jobs. • Hunters generate $97 million in state and local taxes annually.


in rural areas. In Ohio, for instance, the top three counties for hunting-license sales are urban/suburban counties. So what’s the ultimate goal? Hunting Works for America and its many state affiliates plan to monitor public policy decisions and weigh in on hunting-related issues that impact jobs. Vorisek makes it clear that Hunting Works is not another political lobbying organization.

“My point is that hunters are very important to the Buckeye State economy,” Huntley says. “The ripple effect from sport hunting in Ohio is $1.4 billion annually.” Ohio, like other states in the program, is signing on partners to spread the message. “We started a year ago with a kickoff at the Ohio Statehouse and already have 58 businesses signed on,” Vorisek says. “Sporting retailers, restaurant owners, hotel and resort operators, gas stations and convenience stores, hunting and shooting organizations, and chambers of commerce, to name just a few.” There is no cost for a business to join a Hunting Works organization, and another benefit is the free advertising that joining provides. Also, the initiative should not be thought of as just for businesses or organizations located

“Our primary objective is public education,” he says. “Hunting Works does not get involved in endorsing various political candidates, but what we are doing and will continue to do in the coming years is to explain to people who do not hunt why they should care about the continuation of sport hunting in America.” Vorisek says Hunting Works for Ohio will continue to spread the word about the economic value of hunting in the Buckeye State. “If we can raise the consciousness of the public concerning the financial value of sport hunting, hopefully people will be more favorable toward the sport in the future.” If you’re a business owner or the head of an organization and would like to help, visit www.huntingworksforoh.com and sign on as a partner. Individual volunteers are also needed.

Hunting attracts a wide demographic, and it provides a huge economic boost to state and local economies.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   33


Brightest Idea THE WORLD’S

Celebrate the 140th anniversary of the incandescent lightbulb with an illuminating visit to the Thomas Edison Birthplace Museum. STORY AND PHOTOS BY DAMAINE VONADA

I

t took thousands of experiments before 32-year-old Thomas Edison finally succeeded in creating the first practical incandescent lightbulb. His eureka moment came 140 years ago, on Oct. 21, 1879, when he used electricity to heat a carbonized cotton thread housed in a glass vacuum bulb. The filament glowed continuously for 13.5 hours before burning out, and on New Year’s Eve 1879, Edison gave the first public demonstration of his “electric-lamp” at his laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey — dazzling visitors with his bright idea and telling a newspaper reporter, “We will make electricity so cheap that only the rich will burn candles.” Edison’s lightbulb would sever humanity’s dependence on daylight for work and play. It extinguished the age-old link between light and flames by rendering candles, kerosene, whale oil, and gaslights obsolete. After Edison patented the lightbulb in January 1880, his next stroke of genius was devising an efficient, cost-effective

34   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019


electrical distribution system to make it feasible to use. Edison opened the first American station for generating and delivering electricity in New York City in 1882, which sparked not only the electrical utility industry but also the power grid that energized the world. Although he was acclaimed as the “Wizard of Menlo Park,” Edison was an Ohioan. He was born in 1847 to Samuel and Nancy Edison in a modest red brick house that his father built in the then-booming canal town of Milan. Designed for schooners, the short but deep Milan Canal went directly to Lake Erie, and it turned Milan into an important lake port and shipbuilding center. “Just down the hill from the Edisons’ house was a canal basin with warehouses and shipyards, and farmers came to town with wagons filled with grain and produce,” says Edison Birthplace Museum director Lois Wolf. “It had to be a fascinating place for a little kid like Thomas Edison.” When he was 7, his parents moved the family to Michigan, but decades later, Edison bought back the house where he first saw the light of day. After he died in 1931, his second wife, Mina, and daughter Madeleine turned Edison’s birthplace into a museum. As its first administrator, Madeleine Edison Sloane acquired many of its artifacts, with a goal to inspire others. “She wanted people to know Edison as being not just a famous inventor, but as someone who had initiative, persistence, and endless curiosity about the world around him,” says Wolf. Since the Edison Birthplace highlights his early childhood, its remarkable collection includes items ranging from the family Bible to household furnishings. Tour guides highlight the small bedroom off the family sitting room where Edison was born, and they often tell visitors stories about the inquisitive boy who tried to hatch chicken eggs by sitting on a nest, tumbled into the canal and nearly drowned, and set fire to a barn just to see what would happen. “Milan,” notes Wolf, “was really Edison’s first laboratory.” The Edison Birthplace exhibits also include numerous examples of the prodigious array of inventions — including the phonograph, motion picture camera, alkaline storage battery, and of course, lightbulb — that his incessant experimenting produced. “Edison had 1,093 U.S. patents and hundreds of European patents, too,” says Wolfe.

The Edison Birthplace Museum in Milan is an unassuming building that houses artifacts from the inventor’s life, such as Edison’s hat and motoring cape (above). Inside the museum, tour guide Rhyan Opel shows visitors a soapstone used to warm beds. Ouside the Milan Town Hall stands a statue of Edison holding his two most well-known inventions: the lightbulb and phonograph.

During his last visit to Milan in 1923, the inventor of the lightbulb made an astonishing discovery — his birthplace was still illuminated with candles. “Edison immediately ordered the person living there to get electric lighting,” says Wolf. “It was certainly one of the great ironies of history.” The Edison Birthplace Museum, 9 N. Edison Drive, Milan, OH 44846. 419-499-2135; www.tomedison.org.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   35


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35 years onsite builder

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a. Total Numbers of Copies (Net press run) Mailed Outside County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS (1) Form 3541(include paid distribution above nominal rate, advertiser's proof copies, and exchange copies)

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Serving OH, WV, PA, KY, IND, MICH State/county codes/restrictions, delivery, and travel may be additional

M e t al Roofi ng & Pol e B arns Now Open : 4799 Salem Ave. Dayton , Oh io

302394

301683

301393

300702

0

0

0

0

0

0

301393

300702

999

983

0

0

0

0

Mailed In-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form b. Paid Circulation (2) 3541(include paid distribution above nominal rate, advertiser's proof copies, and exchange copies) (By Mail and Outside Paid Distribution Outside the Mails Including Sales the Mail) (3) Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid Distribution Outside USPS Distribution by Other Classes of Mail Through the (4) Paid USPS (e.g. First-Class Mail) c. Total Paid Distribution (Sum of 15b (1), (2), (3), (4)) or Nominal Rate Outside County Copies (1) Free included on PS Form 3541 d. Free or or Nominal Rate In-County Copies included on (2) Free Nominal PS Form 3541 Rate Distribution (By Mail and Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed at Other Classes Outside the (3) Through the USPS (e.g. First-Class Mail) Mail) or Nominal Rate Distribution Outside the Mail (4) Free (Carriers or other means) e. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (Sum of 15d (1), (2), (3), (4)) f. Total Distribution (Sum of 15c and 15e)

1613

1686

2612

2669

304005

303371

g. Copies not Distributed

0

0

304005

303371

99.14 %

99.12 %

a. Paid Electronic Copies

0

0

b. Total Paid Print Copies(Line 15C) + Paid Electronic Copies

0

0

c. Total Print Distribution(Line 15F) + Paid Electronic Copies

0

0

0.00 %

0.00 %

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ManseaMetal. com 36   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

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2019

CALENDAR NORTHWEST

OCT. 13–14 – Oak Harbor Apple Festival, downtown Oak Harbor. Parade, contests, kiddie tractor pull, classic car show, 5K Apple Run, 1-mile kids’ run, and more. “Applepalooza” Sat. 8 p.m., $5: live bands and beer tent. 419-898-0479 or www.oakharborohio.net. OCT. 18–19 – Van Wert County Apple Festival, Van Wert Co. Fgds., 1055 S. Washington St. (Rte. 127), Van Wert. Free. Everything apple, fun, and shopping! Wagon rides, cider making, 5K run, 1-mile kids’ fun run, crafts, and entertainment for all ages. www.visitvanwert.org. OCT. 18–20 – Disney’s Jungle Book Kids, Encore Theatre, 991 N. Shore Dr., Lima, Fri./Sat. 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. The jungle is jumpin’ with song and dance in this exciting stage adaptation of the Disney classic musical. 419-223-8866 or www.amiltellers.org. OCT. 18–20 – World War Two Living History Weekend, Lauer Farms 1944, 800 Roush Rd., Lima, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. Free. A living history event set during the Lorraine Campaign, Battle of Metz, October 1944. www.facebook. com/LauerFarms1944. OCT. 19 – Folklore and Funfest, Wood County Historical Ctr. and Museum, 13660 County Home Rd., Bowling Green, 4–9 p.m. Free. Horse-drawn wagon rides, kid-friendly activities in Boo-ville, apple cider press, working oil derrick, and tricks and treats for all ages. 419-352-0967 or www. woodcountyhistory.org. OCT. 19–20 – Oak Ridge Festival, 15498 E. Twp. Rd. 104, Attica, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $7, Srs./C. (8–12) $5, under 8 free. Military vehicles and weaponry, antique farm equipment, handmade crafts, kids’ activities, and live entertainment. 419-426-0611 or www.oakridgefestival.com. OCT. 19, 26 – Trick or Treat Halloween Train, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, 6:30–9 p.m. (19th and 26th), 1–4 p.m. (26th). $3, ages 12 and under $2. Take a ride around our tracks and enjoy the Halloween displays as our train makes trick-or-treat stops. No scary sights — just fun and treats for all! 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www.facebook.com/nworrp.

WEST VIRGINIA

THROUGH OCT. 27 – Blennerhassett Voyage Package, North Bend State Park, 202

ExpEriEncE

OCTOBER/NOVEMBER COMPILED BY COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK

OCT. 20 – Pumpkin Train, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, 1–5 p.m. $3; ages 12 and under, $2. Ride a quarter-scale train to the pumpkin patch to find that special pumpkin, then take one more trip around the track to return to the station. Pumpkins $5 each, but no purchase required for the train ride. 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www.facebook.com/nworrp. OCT. 24 – Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, Veterans Memorial Civic & Convention Ctr., #7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. The inspiring true story of one woman’s remarkable journey from teenage songwriter to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, featuring over two dozen of her pop classics. www.limaciviccenter.com. OCT. 25 – Friday Night Folklore Trick, Treat, and Tour, Wood County Historical Ctr. & Museum, 13660 County Home Rd., Bowling Green, 7–10 p.m. $15. Reservations appreciated but walk-ins welcome. Bring a flashlight! 419352-0967 or www.woodcountyhistory.org. OCT. 26 – Makerfest, Allen Co. Fgds., 2750 Harding Hwy., 9 a.m.–12 p.m. A career expo to celebrate our “maker community” as a catalyst for building our workforce in advanced manufacturing, design, engineering, and the skilled trades. Open to all professionals, local employers, interns, students, and job seekers of all ages. http://linklima.com. OCT. 26 – Murder/Mystery Dinner Theater: “Murder Under the Big Top,” Sidney, 6:30–10 p.m. Location to be determined. Tickets available online. 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org. OCT. 26–27 – Woodcarver’s Show and Sale, Sauder Village, 22611 St. Rte. 2, Archbold, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Skilled woodcarvers showcase handcrafted wildlife, fish, birds, bowls, ornaments, pens, and much more. Vendors, demos, workshops, and live music. 800590-9755 or www.saudervillage.org. NOV. 1 – First Fridays Downtown, 109 S. Ohio Ave., Sidney. Participating shops and restaurants stay open later and many offer a First Friday discount. 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org. NOV. 2–3 – Homespun Holiday Art and Craft Show, Stranahan Great Hall, 4645 Heatherdowns Blvd., Toledo, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Free admission and parking. Jump-start your holiday shopping with handmade crafts and gifts. Bring household/food items to benefit Cherry Street Mission Ministries. 419-842-1925 or www. toledocraftsmansguild.org. NOV. 8–9 – Buckeye Farm Antiques Annual Swap Meet, Shelby Co. Fgds., 655 S. Highland Ave., Sidney, Fri. 8 a.m. till dark, Sat. 8 a.m.–5 p.m. Tractor parts and related items, crafts, and antiques. 419-302-6017, 937-726-2485, or www. buckeyefarmantiques.com.

North Bend Park Rd., Cairo. $130 package includes one night of lodging for two at North Bend, two tickets for a sternwheeler ride to and from Blennerhassett Island, a wagon ride tour of the island, a tour of the mansion, and museum passes. 304-643-2931, www.northbendsp.com, or www. blennerhassettislandstatepark.com. OCT. 17–20 – Mountain State Apple Harvest Festival, Martinsburg. Pie baking contest, pop-up shops and art fair, contests, music, square dancing,

car show, and more. Grand parade on Saturday. www.msahf.com. NOV. 9–JAN. 1, 2020 – Winter Festival of Lights, Oglebay Resort, Wheeling, 877-436-1797 or https:// oglebay.com. Featuring 300 acres of twinkling lights over a 6-mile drive. 3D holographic eyewear transforms every point of light into a magical display. Per-car donation requested; valid for the entire festival season. https:// oglebay.com/events/festival-of-lights.

Continued on page 38

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OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   37


2019 CALENDAR

OCTOBER/NOVEMBER

Continued from page 37

NORTHEAST

baling, and tractor pulls daily. Tractor parade Fri./Sat., car show Sun. 330-866-2048 or www.ccacc.webs.com. OCT. 18–19, 25–26 – Ghost Tours of Zoar, 198 Main St., Zoar. Adult $15, child $10. Tour the buildings of historic Zoar by lantern light as the ghosts of Zoar tell you their haunted tales. Reservations required — no refunds. 330-874-3011. OCT. 19 – Kidron Red Beet Festival, Sonnenberg Village, 13515 Hackett Rd., Kidron. 330-857-9111 or www. kidronhistoricalsociety.org. OCT. 19 – Sweetest Day Train, Lorain & West Virginia Railway, 46485 St. Rte. 18, Wellington, 6 p.m. Enjoy a THROUGH NOV. 2 – Corn Maze, Beriswill Farms, variety of wines and receive a sampling of chocolates as 2200 Station Rd., Valley City, Tues.– Sun. 11 a.m.–6 p.m. we travel leisurely through southern Lorain County. Ride Flashlight Nights: Saturdays during October, open until lasts approximately 11/2 hours. Tickets available on our 10 p.m. Test your sense of direction in this 5-acre maze. website. 440-647-6660 or www.lwvry.org. 330-350-2486 or http://beriswillfarms.com. OCT. 19–20 – Colonial Trade Fair, Schoenbrunn Village, OCT. 7–19 – “Riverboats on the Ohio” Exhibit 1984 E. High Ave., New Philadelphia. Experience what life and Programs, Historic Fort Steuben, 120 S. 3rd St., was like on the Ohio frontier in the 18th century. 330-663Steubenville, Mon.–Sat. 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 6610 or www.schoenbrunnvillagefair.org. p.m. Free. 740-283-1787 or www.oldfortsteuben.com. OCT. 19–20 – Fall Foliage Tour, Lorain & West Virginia OCT. 18 – Wine on Rails, Lorain & West Virginia Railway, 46485 St. Rte. 18, Wellington, 7 p.m. Enjoy tasting Railway, 46485 St. Rte. 18, Wellington, 1:30 p.m. Tickets available at the station on days of operation. 440-647a variety of wines as we travel leisurely through southern 6660 or www.lwvry.org. Lorain County. Ride lasts approx. 11/2 hours. Tickets available on our website. 440-647-6660 or www.lwvry.org. NOV. 2 – “Building a Model Railroad,” Painesville Railroad Museum, 475 Railroad St., Painesville, 10 a.m.–3 OCT. 18–20 – Antique Power Show, Carroll Co. Fgds., p.m. Free. Learn the basics of layout framing, laying track, St. Rte. 9, Carrollton. $1 each, or 6 for $5. Presented by wiring, scenery, and model building. promoday@mcr5.org the Carroll County Antique Collectors Club. Threshing or www.mcr5.org. demos, corn husking/shredding, corn shelling, straw

NOV. 2 – Buckeye Book Fair, Fisher Auditorium, 1680 Madison Ave., Wooster, 9:30 a.m.–4 p.m. $2. Nearly 100 Ohio writers, illustrators, and photographers will be on hand to meet readers and sign copies of their newest books. Workshops, presentations, and activities for the whole family. 330-262-2103, buckeyebookfair@gmail.com or www.buckeyebookfair.com. NOV. 2 – Traci Manning: “The Pivotal Right: A History of the Women’s Suffrage Movement,” Zoar Schoolhouse, 254 4th St., Zoar, 11 a.m.–noon. Free. Learn about the brave and outspoken women who fought to gain voting rights in the 19th and early 20th centuries. https://historiczoarvillage.com. NOV. 9 – “Christmas by the River” Craft Show, Black River Education Ctr., 257 Co. Rd. 40, Sullivan, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Contact Joanne Maslanka at 419-736-3304. NOV. 9 – North East Train Society Model Train Show, Highland Heights Community Ctr., 5827 Highland Rd., Highland Heights, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $5, under 12 free. All-gauge show. New and old trains to buy, sell, or trade; parts, repair manuals, kits, and more for purchase. Operating layouts in O gauge, HO scale, and N scale. 440-357-8890 (Jim Wendorf), wendorf@cvelimited.com, or www.northeasttrainsociety.com. NOV. 9–10 – Olde Stark Antique Faire, Stark Co. Fgds., Exhibition Bldg., 305 Wertz Ave. NW, Canton, Sat. 9 a.m.– 4 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–2 p.m. $5; under 13 free. Antiques and collectibles from over 100 dealers and collectors. Free appraisals. 330-794-9100 or find us on Facebook.

SOUTHEAST

NOV. 2 – “Welcome to the Holidays” Craft Show, Sardis Community Ctr., 37184 Mound St., Sardis, 10 a.m–3 p.m. Crafts and homemade food. 740-213-5843 or www. facebook.com/sardisohcc. NOV. 2 – Miller’s Automotive Swap Meet and Cruise-In, Ross Co. Fgds., 344 Fairgrounds Rd., Chillicothe, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. (vendors admitted 7 a.m.). $7; free for women and children under 14. Free parking. Cars, trucks, tools, parts, signs, race parts, rat rod, and more. Vendor info: call Nate Miller at 740-701-3447 or Brian Miller at 740-701-2511. Car show info: call John Rogers at 740-703-2589. www. millersswapmeet.com or find us on Facebook. NOV. 2–DEC. 15 – National Museum of Cambridge Glass: Winter Hours, 136 S. 9th St., Cambridge, Fri./Sat. 12–4 p.m. $5, Srs. $4, under 12 free. 740-432-4245 or CambridgeGlass.org. NOV. 3 – Gingerbread House Class, Guernsey County Senior Citizens Ctr., Cambridge, 1–3 p.m. $15 per adult and includes up to two children ages 6 and up. 740-4396681 or www.guernseysenior.org. NOV. 5–16 – “Wonderland of Trees” Gala Dinner and Auction, Southeastern Ohio Regional Medical Ctr./ Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., Cambridge. Nov. 5–15: trees available for viewing at SEORMC. Fri., Nov. 16: gala dinner at 6:30 p.m. with auction to follow at Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr. 740-439-7009 or www.pritchardlaughlin.com. NOV. 8–DEC. 13 – Gingerbread House Contest and Display, Guernsey County Senior Citizens Ctr., Cambridge. Free. Winners announced on Dec. 13. 740-439-6681 or www.guernseysenior.org. NOV. 11 – Veterans Day Parade, Historic Downtown Cambridge, 10 a.m. Includes a performance by the Cambridge City Band. 740-439-9180.

THROUGH NOV. 2 – The Sleepy Hollow Experience at Haunted Mountain, Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre, 5968 Marietta Rd., Chillicothe, Thur.–Sat. 7:30 p.m., Sun. 3 p.m. $30–$45. The Headless Horseman rides into Sugarloaf Mountain on a quest for his next victim! www.tecumsehdrama.com. THROUGH JAN. 5 – “Space: A Journey to Our Future,” Bossard Library, 7 Spruce St., Gallipolis. Free. Interactive exhibition as seen at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Presented in cooperation with NASA. www.bossardlibrary.org. OCT. 18–20 – Fall Festival of Leaves, downtown Bainbridge, Fri./Sat. 10 a.m.–10 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. Celebrate the beauty of the season and region while enjoying arts and crafts, entertainment, midways, parades, pedal tractor pull, and more. Take the four self-guided Paint Valley Skyline Drive tours to see the fall foliage. www.fallfestivalofleaves.com. OCT. 18–20 – Tractor, Toy, and Machinery Show, 202 N. Main St. (east of the Historical Society building), Bainbridge. Hosted by the Paint Valley Antique Machinery Club during the Fall Festival of Leaves. 740-634-2162 or 270-792-8417.

38   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

OCT. 18–20 – Muskingum Valley Trade Days, 6602 St. Rte. 78, Reinersville. Large flea market. 740-558-2740. OCT. 26 – Chillicothe Halloween Parade, downtown Chillicothe, 7–8:30 p.m. Annual parade presented by the Chillicothe Jaycees and Lions Club. http:// visitchillicotheohio.com. OCT. 26 – ROAR Day (Rural Ohio Appalachia Revisited), Lake Hope State Park, McArthur, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. A celebration of Appalachian culture through food, crafts, music, and traditional skills. 740-596-4938 or https://vintoncountytravel.com/roar-day. OCT. 26 – Trail of Treats, Deerassic Park Education Ctr., 14250 Cadiz Rd., Cambridge, 2–3 p.m. Local businesses pass out goodies on our kid-friendly trail, geared for those under 14. 740-435-3335 or www.deerassic.com. OCT. 27 – Annual Toy and Craft Show, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., 7033 Glenn Highway, Cambridge, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. 740-439-7009 or www. pritchardlaughlin.com. NOV. 1–2 – Sherlock Holmes Murder Mystery Weekend, downtown Cambridge. 740-432-2022 or www. visitguernseycounty.com. NOV. 1–JAN. 1 – Dickens Victorian Village, downtown Cambridge. Stroll the streets to view scenes depicting life in 1850s England, featuring life-sized, handmade mannequins wearing real vintage clothing. 800-933-5480 or www.dickensvictorianvillage.com. NOV. 1–JAN. 1 – Guernsey County Courthouse Holiday Light Show, Cambridge, 5:30–9 p.m. nightly. Four different light and music shows performed each evening. 800-933-5480 or www.dickensvictorianvillage.com.


CENTRAL

THROUGH OCT. 26 – Delaware Farmers Market, N. Sandusky St. (between William and Winter), Delaware, Wed. 3–6 p.m., Sat. 9–12 p.m. 740-362-6050 or www. mainstreetdelaware.com/event/farmers-market. THROUGH OCT. 26 – Zanesville Farmers Market, Muskingum Co. Fgds., 1300 Pershing Rd., Zanesville, every Sat. 9 a.m.–12 p.m. www.zanesvillefarmersmarket.org. THROUGH OCT. 27 – Rock Mill Weekends, Stebelton Park at Rock Mill, 1429 Rockmill Place NW, Lancaster, every Sat. and Sun. 12–4 p.m. Free. Tour the restored 1824 gristmill, walk on the iconic Rock Mill Covered Bridge, and enjoy Hocking River Falls. 740-681-7249 or www.fairfieldcountyparks.org. THROUGH OCT. 31 – Corn Maze and Pumpkin Patch, McDonald’s Greenhouse and Corn Maze, 3220 Adamsville Rd., Zanesville. $7. 740-452-4858 or www. mcdonaldsgreenhouse.com. OCT. 11–12 – Historic Ghost Tour, presented by the Canal Winchester Historical Society, Frances Steube Senior Ctr., 22 S. Trine St., Canal Winchester. Tickets on sale beginning at 6:30 p.m. Tours start at 7 p.m., with the last one at 7:30. 614-833-1846 or http://cwhistory.org. OCT. 16–19 – Circleville Pumpkin Show, downtown Circleville. Free. Ohio’s oldest and largest pumpkin celebration. Seven different parades. 740-474-7000 or www.pumpkinshow.com.

SOUTHWEST

OCT. 18–20 – Apple Butter Stirrin’ Festival, Historic Roscoe Village, 600 N. Whitewoman St., Coshocton, Fri./ Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $5, under 12 free. Sample fresh apple butter cooked over an open fire. Handmade crafts, exhibits and demonstrations, outdoor stage entertainment, canal boat rides, and other activities. Lantern tours Fri./Sat. 7 p.m. 740-622-7664 or www.roscoevillage.com. OCT. 19 – A Grand Night Entertainment and Wine Tasting, Marion Palace Theatre May Pavilion, 276 W. Center St., Marion, 7:30 p.m. $16 show; $5 flight of 4 wines; $15 cheese/food board. 740-383-2101 or www. marionpalace.org. OCT. 19–20 – Education of Yesterday Farm Show, 3685 Cass Irish Ridge Rd. (intersection of St. Rtes. 16 and 60), Dresden, Sat. 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Parking donation. Antique tractors, trucks, and train rides. 740-754-6248, educationofyesterday@gmail.com, or www.facebook.com/EducationofYesterday. OCT. 25–26 – Halloween Campout, Dillon State Park, 5265 Dillon Hills Dr., Nashport. Join us for this frightfully good time! Costume contest, site decorating contest, pumpkin decorating, and trick-or-treating. http://parks. ohiodnr.gov/dillon. OCT. 26 – Applebutter and Horseradish Day, Lawrence Orchards, 2634 Smeltzer Rd., Marion, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. Apple butter is cooked in a copper kettle over a wood fire, while the horseradish crop is ground fresh. 740-3893019 or www.lawrenceorchards.com. OCT. 26 – Family Funday Monster Mash, Marion Palace Theatre May Pavilion, 276 W. Center St., Marion, 5 p.m. $12 for a family of 4; each additional member $3. Enjoy a spooky (but not too spooky) event featuring party music, line dancing, games, goody bags, and a costume contest. 740-383-2101 or www.marionpalace.org. NOV. 1 – First Friday Art Walk, downtown Zanesville, 5–8 p.m. First Friday each month (except August), stroll the streets of downtown while touring over 35

Club Halloween parade at 7 p.m. 513-867-5835 or www. gettothebc.com/events/uptown-trick-or-treat. NOV. 1 – Bluegrass at Butler County Bluegrass Association, 5113 Huston Rd., Collinsville, 7–9 p.m. Free. Enjoy an evening of lively bluegrass music with the lightning-fast instrumentals, close harmonies, and entertaining novelty songs of Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. 513-410-3625 or www.fotmc.com. NOV. 8 – Atwater-Donnelly Duo Concert, Germantown Church of God, 760 Farmersville Pike, Germantown, 7 p.m. $10. Traditional American, Celtic, and old-time duets by Aubrey Atwater and Elwood Donnelly. Mountain OCT. 5, 12, 19, 26 – Lantern Light Wagon Ride and dulcimer, banjo, guitar, harmonica, tin whistle. 937Corn Maze, Bonnybrook Farms, 779 St. Rte. 132, 689-9855, st.carney4@gmail.com or daksm53@gmail. Clarksville, 7:30–10:30 p.m. Wagon ride $14; corn maze com, www.atwater-donnelly.com, or on Facebook: $8; combo $21. Under 5 free. 937-289-2500 or www. Germantown Dulcimer Society. bonnybrookfarms.com. NOV. 8–9 – Southern Ohio Indoor Music Festival, OCT. 19 – Tipp City Harvest Fest, downtown Tipp City. Roberts Convention Centre, 123 Gano St., Wilmington, Free. For age 21 and older with ID. Be prepared for a noon–11 p.m., doors open at 10 a.m. $35–$75. One of the spooktacular night filled with costume contests, live music, food, and a beer tent! www.downtowntippcity.org. Midwest’s premier bluegrass events. 937-372-5804 or www.somusicfest.com. OCT. 20 – Music at the Mound with Steve Free, Serpent Mound, 3850 OH-73, Peebles, 1 p.m. Free with $8 parking NOV. 8–9 – Springfield Swap Meet and Car Show, Clark Co. Fgds., 4401 S. Charleston Pike, Springfield, fee. http://arcofappalachia.org/steve-free. Fri. 8 a.m.–5 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.–3 p.m. $8, under 12 OCT. 24 – Uptown Trick-or-Treat, 14 W. Park Place, free. 937-376-0111, info@ohioswapmeet.com, or www. Oxford, 5–9 p.m. Free. Family-friendly entertainment ohioswapmeet.com. for all! Trick-or-treating, pet costume contest, and Lions

participating galleries, studios, and local businesses. Many offer demonstrations, make-and-take activities, and complimentary refreshments. Free shuttle service available as well. www.artcoz.org. NOV. 1 – John Michael Montgomery, Marion Palace Theatre, 276 W. Center St., Marion, 7:30 p.m. $32–$50. 740-383-2101 or www.marionpalace.org. NOV. 2 – Dinner with the Presidents, Dayspring Wesleyan Church, 2431 Marion-Mt. Gilead Rd., Marion, 5:30–8:30 p.m. $32–$38. Presented by Marion County Historical Society. Buffet dinner of favorite foods of the featured presidents taken from the White House Cookbook, followed by presentations from those presidents. 740-387-4255 or www.marionhistory.com/ event/dinner-with-the-presidents. NOV. 2 – Oakthorpe Church Annual Craft Fair, 6075 Oakthorpe Rd., Thornville, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. Handicap accessible. Hand-quilted items, handmade cards, wood crafts, Christmas and fall décor, and much more. Baked goods and lunch served all day. 740-475-7708 or joycemoyer59@gmail.com. NOV. 9 – Veterans March and Ceremony, Canal Winchester, 10 a.m. March begins at Frances Steube Community Ctr., 22 S. Trine St., and ends at Stradley Place, 36 S. High St., for the ceremony. Free pancake breakfast for veterans and their families 8:30–10 a.m. at the Community Ctr. 614-834-9915 or www. canalwinchesterohio.gov. PLEASE NOTE: Ohio Cooperative Living strives for accuracy but urges readers to confirm dates and times before traveling long distances to events. Submit listings AT LEAST 90 DAYS prior to the event to Ohio Cooperative Living, 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229 or events@ohioec.org. Ohio Cooperative Living will not publish listings that don’t include a complete address or a number/ website for more information. NOV. 8–DEC. 22 – Holiday Welcome Weekends, locations throughout Miami County. Visit five towns and 100-plus unique shops, restaurants, and events over multiple weekends. www.homegrowngreat.com. NOV. 9 – Atwater-Donnelly Duo Workshops, Germantown Church of God, 760 Farmersville Pike, Germantown, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $20/person for each workshop. Traditional American and folk music, singing, and playing. 937-689-9855, st.carney4@gmail.com or daksm53@gmail.com, www.atwater-donnelly.com, or on Facebook: Germantown Dulcimer Society. NOV. 9 – Holiday Horse Parade, downtown Piqua. Free. See horse-drawn carriages, hitches, and riders, all outfitted with holiday lights, making their way down Main Street. Christmas banners and decorated street trees will create an amazing backdrop for this dazzlingly fun family-friendly event. 937-773-9355 or www.mainstreetpiqua.com. NOV. 9–10 – A Winter’s Yuletide Gathering, downtown Tipp City. The perfect start to the holiday season awaits you in the historic downtown, where the shopkeepers warmly invite you to their open house. Don’t miss the visit by Santa, strolling carolers, musicians, and carriage rides. 937-667-0883 or www.downtowntippcity.org.

OCTOBER 2019  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   39


MEMBER INTERACTIVE 1

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3 1. My grandchildren, Lucas, Dexter, and Amelia, picking pumpkins at Young’s Jersey Dairy. Betty Bonnoront Pioneer Electric Cooperative member 2. Our granddaughter, Gabriella Conley, sitting on some pumpkins. Skip and Ellen Conley Logan County Electric Cooperative members

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3. This picture was taken with a pumpkin that we grew in our own garden. Our oldest has now graduated and this is still one of my favorite pictures of our girls, Laura, Amber, Maria, and Lucy. Kendra Stoller Paulding Putnam Electric Cooperative member 4. We had my granddaughter Lily sit on one of the giant pumpkins at our local produce auction in Mt. Hope. Kathy DeHass Holmes-Wayne Electric Cooperative member

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5. Here is the pumpkin I would pick! Cutest one in the patch! This is my youngest grandson, Cohen Evans. Sue Priest Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative member 6. My granddaughter, Alizah, picked the special pumpkins she wanted at Aunt Helen’s house — her own private pumpkin patch. Catherine Grubba South Central Power Company member

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7. Our grandchildren, Jaime and Jeffrey, harvesting pumpkins that they planted in our backyard. Patty and Larry Quaglia South Central Power Company members 8. Pumpkins! I love fall. Michelle Wittensoldner The Frontier Power Company member

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9. These are my two grandchildren, Noah and Jonah, helping with the pumpkins from the garden. Carla Callehan Carroll Electric Cooperative member

Send us your picture! For January, send “Slumber Party” by Oct. 15; for February, send “Coming Up Roses” by Nov. 15. Upload your photos at www.ohioec.org/memberinteractive — and remember to include your co-op name and to identify everyone in the photos. 40   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  OCTOBER 2019

10. Miss Millie Gore, a special little friend of the family, contemplating her very important pumpkin choice at ECO Center’s fall festival. Emily Ollervides Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative member


NATIONAL CO-OP CONNECTIONS DAY OCTOBER 5, 2019

Connect and save! Use the app, website, or Co-op Connections Card

www.connections.coop

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