OHIO
SEPTEMBER 2021
COOPERATIVE Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative
Superfan ALSO INSIDE Making coal cleaner Ohio remembers 9/11 With a name like …
(and more)
Reliable Energy
Looks Like This
Coal-based power plants, such as our Cardinal Plant, are a core component of reliable power generation resources in Ohio. Our power generation teams are dedicated to keeping the lights on, year-round.
ohioec.org/generation-resources
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
INSIDE FEATURES 26 SUPERFAN Buckeyeman Larry Lokai is equally well known as a Buckeye fan and as a stalwart of Ohio agriculture.
30 WITH A NAME LIKE ... Celebrate 100 years of Smucker’s with a trip to the J.M. Smucker Co. store and café.
34 THE DAY THAT CHANGED THE NATION Memorials throughout the state recall the horror and honor the heroism of Sept. 11, 2001. Cover image on most editions: Larry Lokai gets ready for his 24th year as Ohio State’s superfan, Buckeyeman. But his renown goes well beyond handing out buckeyes (photo courtesy Michael Birt, MB Images). This page: FDNY’s Ladder 18 is part of Motts Military Museum’s collection of 9/11 artifacts, which is the second-largest such collection in the nation — though most of the other items are in storage until funds can be raised to construct buildings to display them (photo by Damaine Vonada).
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 1
UP FRONT
Cardinal rule P
roducing electricity for the benefit of the communities we serve requires a continual balancing act among cost, reliability, and environmental impact. We take those oftencompeting objectives into account as we make decisions and take action.
As you’ll read in our continuing series on power generation on page 4, your primary source of electricity — our Cardinal Power Plant — endures as one of the cleanest facilities of its kind. It’s the result of sustained investment in a plant that helps keep our power supply both reliable and affordable. The benefits that Cardinal brings to cooperative consumer-members has justified the $1.2 billion in eco-friendly investments we’ve made over the years to reduce the plant’s environmental footprint. Electric cooperatives’ decisions regarding the best way to meet your needs for electricity supply are tempered by thoughtful consideration of our responsibility to the nearly 1 million Ohioans whose lives and livelihoods depend upon both a healthy environment and the provision of affordable, reliable electricity. It’s a charge that we don’t take lightly. In fact, power generation is a 24/7/365 exercise that requires us to dependably adjust our output to meet your needs — regardless of the weather, the time of day, or other conditions affecting supply and demand. Most of all, it takes a steadfast commitment to serve the best interests of our consumer-members.
Remember that September Looking back, we remember — as if we could forget — and honor the victims and families of that unimaginable day 20 years ago that forever changed our country and the world. The term “9/11” will be with us for generations, as we continue to observe the day and learn from the tragedy. We honor the memory of Sept. 11, 2001, in our story on page 34 and in our Member Interactive feature on page 44. Never forget.
2 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
Pat O’Loughlin PRESIDENT & CEO OHIO’S ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES
The term “9/11” will be with us for generations, as we continue to observe the day and learn from the tragedy.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • Volume 63, No. 12
Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives
4
6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757 www.ohiocoopliving.com
DEPARTMENTS
Patrick O’Loughlin President & CEO Patrick Higgins Director of Communications Jeff McCallister Managing Editor Rebecca Seum Associate Editor Anita Cook Graphic Designer Contributors: Michael Birt, Jodi Borger, Colleen Romick Clark, Getty Images, Hunter Graffice, W.H. “Chip” Gross, Vicki Johnson, Catherine Murray, Damaine Vonada, and Margie Wuebker. OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. It is the official communication 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. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101. Periodicals postage paid at Pontiac, IL 61764, and at additional mailing offices. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved. 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.
4 POWER LINES
Cleaner coal: Your co-op’s years of investment lighten Cardinal Plant’s environmental footprint.
8 Fresh face: A well-known food blogger
8
is excited to serve at the Farm Science Review cooking demonstration.
10 WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE
Disappearing act: Outdoors Editor Chip Gross looks into the mystery of the vanishing grouse.
10
14 CO-OP PEOPLE
Crushing it: Midwest Electric members make some dough with an innovative method of processing grain.
17 GOOD EATS
Coffee cuisine: Give your taste buds a jolt by adding java to the job.
14
21 LOCAL PAGES News and information from your electric cooperative.
41 CALENDAR
What’s happening: September/ October events and other things to do around Ohio.
For all advertising inquiries, contact
Cheryl Solomon American MainStreet Publications 847-749-4875 | cheryl@amp.coop
17
44 MEMBER INTERACTIVE
Remembering 9/11: That fateful day
Cooperative members: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes.
in 2001 sparks reflection from electric cooperative members.
Alliance for Audited Media Member
44
Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Visit Ohio Cooperative Living magazine online at www.ohiocoopliving.com! Read past issues and watch videos about our articles or our recipes. Our site features an expanded Member Interactive area where you can share your stories, recipes, and photos and find content submitted by other co-op members across the state. SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 3
POWER LINES
CLEANER COAL Your co-op’s investment lightens Cardinal Plant’s environmental footprint. BY JODI BORGER
Y
ears ago, if you drove past Cardinal Power Plant, you likely saw a gray cloud emerging from the towers — that color was caused by fly ash and a few other various byproducts of burning coal. Today, the billowing cloud is pure white and nearly all water vapor. It’s a clearly visible indicator of the investments Buckeye Power has made in emissions control equipment, making Cardinal Power Plant one of the cleanest power plants of its kind in the world. Located along the Ohio River in Brilliant, Ohio, Cardinal is Buckeye Power’s baseload source for power generation, meaning it supplies Ohio’s 25 electric cooperatives with
electricity 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It’s also a main economic driver in the region, providing more than 300 jobs. The coal-fired plant consists of three units: one owned by AEP and two owned by Buckeye Power. All are managed by Buckeye Power.
Good stewards Becoming a clean plant didn’t happen overnight, but Buckeye Power, Cardinal, and Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives are dedicated to providing affordable electricity that’s as environmentally responsible as possible. Years of investment, monitoring, and adapting to changing regulations and requirements brought Cardinal to where it is today and ensures that it can produce electricity for years to come.
Coal-fired steam generator
Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system
SO3 mitigation system
NOx removed
Low-NOx burners
Electrostatic precipitator Ammonia gas injection SO3 removed
Pulverized coal
Fly ash removed
This illustration is conceptual. Relationships — in size and volume — may not be accurately portrayed. 4 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
Ammonia production system
“We want this plant to survive, and we want it to remain one of the cleanest power plants in the world,” says Bethany Schunn, Cardinal Operating Company’s plant manager. “We believe we play an important role in keeping the grid reliable and electricity affordable.”
“We want this plant to survive, and we want it to remain one of the cleanest power plants in the world,” says Bethany Schunn, Cardinal Operating Company’s plant manager. “We believe we play an important role in keeping the grid reliable and electricity affordable.” The environmental affairs department at OEC constantly monitors and reports data to ensure that the plant complies with or even exceeds environmental standards and regulations. “We work individually and with other utilities, along with Ohio EPA, to find common-sense compliance approaches that protect the environment and are in the best interests of our members,” says Caitlin Schiebel, OEC’s director of environmental affairs.
Cooling water vapor plume Flue gas water vapor plume
Reducing emissions One of the first controls to be implemented on all three units at Cardinal was electrostatic precipitators, which remove the fly ash from the exhaust gas stream. Fly ash from burning coal now passes through electrically charged plates, which pull the ash particles out of the stream. When the plates are full, the fly ash is moved to a hopper at the bottom of the plate. The process removes more than 99% of the fly ash particles produced by burning coal.
Flue Gas Desulfurization (FGD) absorber
Catalyst layers
SO2 removed
Continual Emissions Monitoring System
Induced draft fan Air heater
Limestone Slurry
Cooling tower Gypsum
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 5
In the early 2000s, Buckeye Power and AEP added equipment that works much the same way in which an automobile’s catalytic converter removes nitrogen oxide (NOx) from engine exhaust — thereby reducing Cardinal’s NOx emissions by about 90%. Around 2010, Cardinal began attacking another coal-burning byproduct, sulfur dioxide (SO2), which contributed to acid rain. Known as scrubbers, the system is actually a large tank containing a mixture of limestone and water, and it removes over 98% of SO2 from the plant’s emissions. The process to remove SO2 is like blowing bubbles through a straw. The gases are sent to the bottom of the limestone slurry, and as it bubbles up, the calcium in the limestone reacts with the SO2 to form water and gypsum, which is recycled and sold to wallboard companies. “With that process, not only do we eliminate nearly all sulfur dioxide from our emissions,” Schunn says, “but we can make a little money by selling the gypsum and avoid disposing of it in our landfill.”
Mission control Gas emissions are continuously monitored by an automated mission control system, which helps ensure compliance with clean air requirements for SO2, NOx, and carbon dioxide emissions. “We have systems in place that measure air emissions 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and we complete daily and weekly inspections of Cardinal’s facilities,” Schiebel says. “We submit reports on a monthly, quarterly, and annual basis that certify our compliance with regulations.” Depending on the political landscape, environmental regulations continue to get stricter, and at the same time,
technology continues to improve — which combine to constantly set new benchmarks for Buckeye Power to reach. Regardless, plant operators stay transparent. “It doesn’t matter if it’s a small thing or a big environmental issue — we make sure to list everything that happens here,” says Schunn. “We share those events each month to help make ourselves even better.”
Cost of doing business Ohio electric cooperatives have invested more than $1 billion of their members’ money over the past 20 years in systems that minimize Cardinal Plant’s environmental impact. The cooperatives collaborated in the 1960s to build the plant to provide electricity to their members and have made constant, consistent investments in the years since to ensure that Cardinal can reliably provide that power in an environmentally responsible way. “It’s extremely important for the co-ops to make sure that their members’ investment isn’t wasted,” says Pat O’Loughlin, CEO of Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives. “That’s why we need to make sure we do everything we can to keep our largest and most valuable asset doing its job until that investment is paid in full.” Buckeye Power has been working to pay down the debt more quickly in recent years so that it can invest in other power sources — including renewables — as they become cost-effective.
SO2, NOx emissions trend from Cardinal Plant During the time period that Ohio electric cooperatives invested about $1.1 billion in emissions controls. SO2 Emissions (Tons)
According to the United States
120,000
Environmental
100,000
emissions from transportation exceeded that of electricity by 4%.
Tons per Year
Protection Agency, in 2019,
NOx Emissions (Tons)
140,000
80,000
60,000
40,000
20,000 0 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
6 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
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Fresh face A well-known food blogger is excited to serve at the Farm Science Review cooking demo. BY HUNTER GRAFFICE
F
rom an early age, Jennifer Osterholdt recognized the importance of farming and agriculture. She lived on a livestock and crop farm and participated in 4-H, where she learned to cook. That was the background she took with her to Ohio State University, where she earned degrees in agriculture and business economics. She’s now a marketing consultant who travels the country for her speaking engagements, serves on the local Farm Bureau board, and helps her own kids on their journeys through 4-H. Along the way, Osterholdt realized that there was a lack of both understanding and positive information available about farming and agriculture. So she decided to start a blog dedicated to her life on the farm. Eventually, she began sharing recipes, which she says afforded her the opportunity not only to share her love of cooking with the world, but also to offer that positive information about farming and agriculture. Now she’ll get to share both with a live audience as she serves as the new host of the cooking demonstrations in the Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives building at the 2021 Farm Science Review, Sept. 21–23 at the Molly Caren Agricultural Center near London.
Osterholdt’s blog draws hundreds of thousands of viewers each month. One of the things she emphasizes for her audience is accessibility. “There are a lot of people who have misconceptions about large farms versus small farms, GMOs, and other things, where there is no easy, single answer,” she says. “I know that we have a safe food supply, so I don’t use specific ingredient requirements in the recipes. I want all families to be able to enjoy my recipes and not have to worry about breaking the bank.” She says she’s excited to make the live appearance at Farm Science Review, where she’ll share recipes prepared in air fryers, pressure cookers, and slow cookers. “It’s going to be a lot of fun because there are a lot of people who want to learn about those tools and how to use them,” Osterholdt says. She plans to make air fryer broccoli, crockpot peanut clusters, Instant Pot hard-boiled eggs, and slow cooker pulled pork. She’s also excited simply to connect. “I look forward to just being with people, especially now,” she says. “I love hearing other people’s ideas and recipes and twists that you can put on food and make it into a completely new dish. I’m always looking for recipes for my family and my community, and getting to share them through my website is so special.”
Co-op members can enter to win a $100 electric bill credit by bringing the entry form found inside the back cover of this magazine to the OEC Education Center on Wheat Street at the 2021 Farm Science Review, Sept. 21–23.
8 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
Last State Restricted Silver Walking Liberty Bank Rolls go to state residents Residents of the shaded states listed on the map below get first dibs on last remaining Bank Rolls loaded with U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberties dating back to the early 1900’s some worth up to 100 times their face value for just the $39 minimum set for state residents - all other state residents must pay $118 per coin if any remain after 7-day deadline “It’s a miracle these State Restricted Bank Rolls IMPORTANT: The dates and mint marks of the U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking even exists,” said Laura Lynne, U.S. Coin and Cur- Liberties sealed away inside the State Restricted Bank Rolls have never been rency Director for the National Mint and Treasury. searched. Coin values always fluctuate and there are never any guarantees, but For the next 7 days the last remaining State any of the scarce coins shown below, regardless of their value that residents Restricted Bank Rolls loaded with rarely seen U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberties are actually may find inside the sealed Bank Rolls are theirs to keep. being handed over to residents of 49 states who call the State Toll-Free Hotlines listed in today’s newspaper publication. “Recently National Mint spoke with a retired Treasurer of the United States of America who said ‘In all my years as Treasurer I’ve only ever seen a handful of these rarely seen Silver Walking Liberties issued by the U.S. Gov’t back in the early 1900’s. But to actually find them sealed away in State Restricted Bank Rolls still in pristine condition is like finding buried treasure. So anyone lucky enough to get their hands on these Bank Rolls had better hold on to them,’” 1919-P 1921-S 1938-D 1916-P Lynne said. Mint: Philadelphia Mint: San Francisco Mint: Denver Mint: Philadelphia “That’s because the dates and mint marks of Mintage: 962,000 Mintage: 548,000 Mintage: 491,600 the U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberty Half Mintage: 608,000 Collector Value: $32 Collector Value: $80 Collector Value: $60 Collector Value: $55 Dollars sealed away inside the State Restricted $515 $800 $160 $265 Bank Rolls have never been searched. But, we do know that some of these coins date clear back to RESIDENTS IN 49 STATES: COVER JUST $39 MINIMUM PER COIN the early 1900’s and are worth up to 100 times their IF YOUR STATE IS SHADED BELOW CALL: 1-800-997-8036 RWL2125 face value, so there is no telling what U.S. residents will find until they sort through all the coins,” Lynne went on to say. If you are a resident of one of the shaded “Rarely seen U.S. Gov’t issued silver states shown left you cover just the coins like these are highly sought after, $39 per coin state minimum set by the but we’ve never seen anything like this private National Mint and Treasury, that’s before. According to The Official Red Book, a Guide Book of United States fifteen rarely seen U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Coins many Silver Walking Liberty Walking Liberty half dollars some worth Half Dollars are now worth $115 - $825 up to 100 times their face value for just each in collector value,” Lynne said. $585 and that’s a real steal because all “So just imagine how much these last remaining, unsearched State Restricted other residents must pay $1,770 for each Bank Rolls could be worth someday,” said state restricted bank roll. Just be sure to Lynne. call the State Toll Free Hotlines before The only thing readers of today’s newspaper publication need to do is call the the deadline ends 7 days from today’s State Toll-Free Hotlines before the 7-day publication date. R1022R-1 deadline ends. ■ NATIONAL MINT AND TREASURY, LLC IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. MINT, THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, A BANK OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 30 DAYS FROM SHIPMENT YOU ARE DISSATISFIED, RETURN THE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING AND RETURN POSTAGE. THIS SAME OFFER MAY BE MADE AVAILABLE AT A LATER DATE OR IN A DIFFERENT GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION. OH RESIDENTS ADD 6.5% SALES TAX. NATIONAL MINT AND TREASURY, PO BOX 35609, CANTON, OH 44735 ©2020 NATIONAL MINT AND TREASURY.
WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE
Disappearing act
Where have all the grouse gone? STORY AND PHOTOS BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSS
S
everal successive Ohio winters in the late 1970s were brutal, with temperatures often dipping below zero and heavy snow lasting for months on end. It also happened to be the time when I was attempting to become a ruffed grouse hunter.
A group of friends had invited me to join them at their hunting cabin in the rugged hills of Meigs County to chase those then-abundant gamebirds for a few days. During one of our hunts, I noticed a neat, round, 4-inch-diameter hole in a snowdrift, and a grouse tail feather lying on the surface of the snow beside the hole. Curious but unsure as to what I was seeing, I bent down to pick up the feather and a ruffed grouse exploded from the hole, showering my face with snow. I was too stunned to raise my shotgun and shoot. All I could do was watch the bird whir away, zigzagging around trees. What I had just learned — the hard way — is that ruffed grouse sometimes dive into snowdrifts to roost during severe weather, the insulating quality of their feathers keeping them cozy and warm. Ruffed grouse were plentiful in Ohio during the second half of the 20th century, but no more. Human hunters are not to blame, as their seasonal take of the birds has always been negligible. Rather, it is the bird’s own habitat that is gradually turning against it, and according to the national Ruffed Grouse Society,
10 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
that change is taking place across much of the ruffed grouse range — some 18 states — from the upper Midwest to New England, the Mid-Atlantic region, and Appalachia.
Ask
chip!
Email Chip Gross with your outdoors questions at whchipgross@gmail.com. Be sure to include “Ask Chip” in the subject of the email. Your question may be answered on www.ohiocoopliving.com!
www.ohiocoopliving.com
“In Ohio, ruffed grouse inhabit the heavily forested eastern and southern counties,” says Mark Wiley, the Ohio Division of Wildlife’s forest gamebird biologist. “It’s about the size of a small chicken, and it prefers young forest habitat that grows after logging, the abandonment of pastures and farmland, or the reclamation of surface mines. Unfortunately, grouse numbers have declined considerably in Ohio since the early 1980s. Ohio’s total forest acreage has increased since that time, but the amount of young forest — prime ruffed grouse habitat — has decreased more than 65%.” Wildlife biologists and foresters call it “succession,” that constant, ongoing, natural transition of forests from seedlings to mid-sized pole timber to mature trees. It’s in the early stages of the process that ruffed grouse populations thrive. But only a small percentage of Ohio is publicly owned, so wildlife managers working to create more grouse habitat on those lands are having only minimal effects on the grouse population. Private landowners, who own 85% of Ohio’s woodlands, must do the majority of the heavy lifting if Ohio’s ruffed grouse population is to be turned around. If you own or control woodland acreage within Ohio’s traditional ruffed grouse range and would like to help, Wiley suggests seeking advice from Ohio’s wildlife and forestry experts. “The ODNR, Division of Wildlife privatelands biologists and Division of Forestry service foresters can bring a wealth of knowledge and experience to forest management decisions — and their advice is free,” he says. “They are professionals who will help you understand your property’s potential, identify problems, and develop plans to achieve your management goals.” “Whether you want to improve populations of ruffed grouse, white-tailed deer, bobcats, or songbirds, it’s very likely that the creation of some amount of young forest habitat will be recommended — in other words, the cutting of some mature trees,” he says. “Young forests benefit various species, and is often the missing habitat component in many areas of our state.” Habitat change, while hindering some wildlife species, such as ruffed grouse in this case, often helps others. For instance, two other popular Ohio birds — wild turkeys and pileated woodpeckers — have benefited from the maturing of the Buckeye State’s forests, their populations increasing notably over the past half-century.
If you’d like to hear the drumming of a ruffed grouse, one can be heard on the Ruffed Grouse Society website: www.ruffedgrousesociety.org.
Harvesting timber can help improve ruffed grouse habitat.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 11
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SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 13
CO-OP PEOPLE
Crushing it Midwest Electric members make some dough with an innovative method of processing grain.
PHOTO FROM GETTY IMAGES
STORY AND PHOTOS BY MARGIE WUEBKER
14 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
C
hris Bihn is a born educator, and while he may have left the classroom, he’s more committed than ever to teaching. These days, his lesson plans involve the production of nutrient-rich and easily digestible food through an innovative process of crushing grain. Bihn, a former high school teacher and a member of St. Marys-based Midwest Electric, heads a family business known as Our Fathers Food, which uses a patented technique for preparing organic grain and seed for human consumption that yields unlimited shelf life without chemicals, preservatives, enrichments, or nutrient loss. Chris’ father, John Bihn, used a background in tooland-die-making, farming, and engineering to design and build the Bihn Incremental Crusher. He received a patent for the machine in 2014, as well as a patent for the actual grain-crushing process three years later. The process is quite different from traditional flour milling, so the younger Bihn often makes it his mission to educate the public about its benefits. He says the innovative technique leaves cells in grains like wheat, corn, oats, flax, buckwheat, and quinoa unbroken — leaving the natural plant oils in the germ unexposed to oxidation and the nutrient breakdown that comes from it.
Chris Bihn uses a machine patented by his father to produce crushed — rather than milled — grains, which don’t require enrichment.
Traditional flour milling involves cutting and heating wheat — steps that curtail a certain amount of the nutritional value. The resulting flour is usually then enriched to restore lost nutrients. “Whatever God puts in grain, we keep it in,” Bihn says. “We don’t take anything out, so we don’t have to put anything back.” Bihn is quick to point out, however, that the company’s whole-cell crushed products can’t be defined as “flour” in accordance with Department of Agriculture guidelines. Instead, they’re labeled by the amount of particles they contain. For instance, the crushed wheat No. 1 has the finest texture, and is a 1:1 replacement for traditional flour. Numbers 2, 3, and 4 contain increasing levels of density and sizes of particles. “My wife, Amy, hasn’t had a bag of traditional flour in the house for at least 10 years,” Bihn says. “She uses our whole-cell crushed products in everything from bread to cookies to noodles.” The family often hosts informational programs as a means of introducing prospective customers to the Our Fathers Food product line — they find that providing samples of bread and cookies usually satisfies any curiosity about taste and texture. They also bring products to the weekly farmers market at the Mercer County Fairgrounds in Celina. Bihn says the majority of the company’s clients are people who want to eat healthy food and those who
deal with health issues like high blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes, digestive problems, and allergies. He cites Johnson and Wales University food scientist Paula Figoni, who says in her book How Baking Works that when wheat cells are not destroyed, the proteins cannot form gluten. “We have never claimed our bread is gluten free,” Bihn says. “However, we talk to people who are gluten intolerant who report having no problems after eating it.” The Bihns also give crushed grain to their livestock, but they have not pursued the marketing of animal feed. Their goal is to reach people in search of quality food products without additives. “We all need to eat better to feel better,” he says. “That’s what I’m teaching these days.”
Our Fathers Foods: www.healthygraincrushing.com or 419-790-8868 for purchase information. SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 15
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A) Microphone B) Program Control C) Volume Control D) Magnetic Charging Port & Rechargeable Battery E) Digital Processor F) Receiver (Speaker) G) Sound Tube H) Replaceable Dome
How do we do this? It’s simple. We sell direct, eliminating the middleman and expensive retail locations that can add thousands to the overall cost. Then we go one step further and ignore the suggested retail price! Your lightweight and discreet GO hearing aids work at a fraction of the cost of name brand hearing aids, and are ultra-convenient. With the GO’s FREE Charging Station, you won’t have to worry about those pesky little batteries. Simply charge at night and go all day. The GO is pre-programmed for most mild to moderate hearing loss, with no expensive professional adjustments needed. Simply take them out, put them in, and GO. For just $199 each, they’re perhaps the best value in America, because we pack in so much technology. And our customer care team is made up of seasoned professionals, committed to bringing you the best service and information available. Purchasing is risk-free with our iron-clad money-back guarantee. We’ve been in business for 25 years with an A+ BBB rating. Start hearing all that life has to offer again. Call today before prices go up.
GO Features! Digital sound processing chip provides crystal clear sound and makes speech easier to understand with less feedback than old analog technology Don’t worry about replacing batteries! Your Charge Gives a Full Day of Use! (Free Charging Station Included) Automatic Noise Reduction & Feedback Canceler 100% Money Back Guarantee
FREE Charging Dock!
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GOOD EATS
Coffee cuisine
Give your taste buds a jazzy jolt by adding java to the job. RECIPES AND PHOTOS BY CATHERINE MURRAY
IRISH COFFEE POPSICLES Prep: 10 minutes | Freeze: overnight | Servings: 10–12 2 cups brewed coffee 11/3 cups plain yogurt 2/3 cup Bailey’s Irish 1/3 cup sweetened cream liqueur condensed milk Whisk together all ingredients. Pour into popsicle molds or paper cups. Insert sticks a few hours into the freezing process. Freeze until firm, preferably overnight. When you’re ready to take the popsicles out of the molds, quickly dip the molds in hot water for a few seconds to loosen the popsicles. Per serving: 131 calories, 4 grams fat (3 grams saturated fat), 15 milligrams cholesterol, 55 milligrams sodium, 13 grams total carbohydrates, 0 grams fiber, 3.5 grams protein.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 17
DOUBLE CHOCOLATE ESPRESSO COOKIES Prep: 20 minutes | Cook: 15 minutes | Servings: 24 1 cup flour, spooned and leveled ½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, room temperature 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder 1 cup granulated sugar 1 tablespoon espresso powder 2 large eggs 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon vanilla extract ½ teaspoon coarse salt 12 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips Note: Finely ground espresso or dark-roast coffee can be substituted for the espresso powder. Preheat oven to 350 F. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, espresso powder, baking powder, and salt. Set aside a half cup of the chocolate chips. Place remaining chocolate chips in a heatproof bowl and microwave 20 to 30 seconds at a time, stirring in between until almost melted, then stirring one last time. Set melted chocolate aside to cool. In a large bowl with an electric mixer, beat butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Continue beating while adding eggs, vanilla, and melted chocolate. With mixer on low, gradually add flour mixture, until just combined. Drop spoonfuls of dough 3 inches apart onto ungreased baking sheets. Top each cookie with some of the remaining chocolate chips. Bake approximately 13 to 15 minutes, rotating sheets halfway through, until edges are dry and tops are cracked. Let stand 3 minutes, then transfer to wire racks to cool. Makes about 2 dozen cookies. Per serving: 314 calories, 16 grams fat (7 grams saturated fat), 51 milligrams cholesterol, 242 milligrams sodium, 42 grams total carbohydrates, 1.5 grams fiber, 3 grams protein.
RED-EYE GRAVY AND HAM Prep: 5 minutes | Cook: 10 minutes | Servings: 4 1 pound thick sliced ham ¼ teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter or ¼ teaspoon black pepper bacon grease 1/8 teaspoon sugar 3 tablespoons flour 1 cup good-quality brewed coffee Red-eye gravy and ham goes equally well with biscuits, grits, cornbread, or hash browns. In a large skillet over medium heat, brown ham on both sides with the butter or bacon grease, about 2 minutes per side. Remove ham and set aside. Turn heat to medium-low and whisk flour into the remaining butter/grease left over in the skillet and brown into a roux, about 2 to 3 minutes, until flour begins to smell nutty. Slowly pour coffee into the pan, whisking constantly. Gravy will begin to thicken. Whisk in salt, black pepper, and sugar, adjusting to taste. If gravy becomes too thick, thin it out with a tablespoon of water at a time until desired thickness is achieved. Serve gravy with the ham slices and your favorite breakfast items. Per serving: 237 calories, 16 grams fat (7 grams saturated fat), 80 milligrams cholesterol, 1,668 milligrams sodium, 5 grams total carbohydrates, 1.5 grams fiber, 19 grams protein.
18 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
COFFEE AND PEPPER SPARERIBS Prep: 10 minutes | Chill: overnight | Cook: 2½ hours | Servings: 4 4 pounds pork spareribs ½ teaspoon garlic powder 3 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon finely 1 teaspoon cocoa powder ground coffee 1 medium yellow onion, chopped 1 tablespoon ground 1 tablespoon olive oil black pepper ¼ cup red wine vinegar 2 tablespoons salt ¼ cup tomato paste 1 teaspoon ground ginger Mix 3 tablespoons of the ground coffee, black pepper, salt, ginger, garlic powder, and cocoa powder. Rub this mix on both sides of ribs, cover in plastic wrap, and refrigerate overnight. Remove ribs 20 minutes before cooking. Preheat oven to 350 F. Unwrap ribs and place in a metal oven dish. Cover tightly with foil and cook for 2½ hours. Meanwhile, begin making the barbecue sauce by sautéing onion in olive oil for 5 to 7 minutes until soft. Mix in red wine vinegar and cook until the liquid has mostly evaporated. Mix in remaining ingredients (including the 1 teaspoon of ground coffee) and cook on low, stirring occasionally, until sauce thickens, about 30 minutes. Allow to cool, then blend with a hand blender or food processor. After 2½ hours, baste both sides of the ribs with sauce and cook uncovered for 15 minutes, flip, and cook another 15 minutes. Serve with the rest of the barbecue sauce.
¾ cup of honey 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce ½ cup water
1 tablespoon chili powder ½ teaspoon crushed red pepper (optional) ½ teaspoon cumin ¼ teaspoon cinnamon
See a video of some of our tasty dishes being prepared.
Have you tried one of our recipes? Do you have a recipe to share with other Ohio co-op members? Visit the Member Interactive page on www.ohiocoopliving. com to find recipes submitted by our readers and to upload yours.
www.ohiocoopliving.com
Per serving: 834 calories, 43 grams fat (15 grams saturated fat), 206 milligrams cholesterol, 1,471 milligrams sodium, 46 grams total carbohydrates, 3 grams fiber, 65 grams protein. SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 19
Congratulations
t o the winners of the 2021 #WhoPowersYouOhio contest!
Nikki Lude
Susan Davis
Lewisville, Ohio South Central Power Company
Hillsboro, Ohio South Central Power Company
Ron Carlton
Kevin Dennis
Carrollton, Ohio Carroll Electric Cooperative
Vinton, Ohio Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative
Joe Conrad
Curt Stauffer
Morgan Township, Ohio Butler Rural Electric Cooperative
Wooster, Ohio Holmes-Wayne Electric Cooperative
inspiration
Visit ohioec.org/wpyo to find the
20 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
behind each winner.
MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES
MEMBER EVENT RECAP
MEMBERS TEST ELECTRIC
VEHICLES, TOOLS
Charge & Go event educates members on the benefits of EVs and battery-powered tools
A
sunny August day, a warehouse full of vehicles, free food, and nearly 200 attendees set the scene for Mid-Ohio Energy’s first public member event in more than two years. The only thing seemingly missing was noise! As a steady stream of electric vehicles embarked on test drives throughout the day, the quiet performance of electric vehicles was on full display.
Mid-Ohio Energy would like to thank all who attended. The event is part of our mission to be your trusted resource and partner for emerging electric technology. For more info on electric vehicles, tools, and more, please give us a call or visit MidOhioEnergy.com.
Mid-Ohio Energy brought a selection of six different electric vehicles (EVs) from Tesla, Chevy, Nissan, and Kia for members to view and drive. As EVs continue to grow in popularity, many members are curious about their pros and cons and whether an EV may be a fit for them. Among the benefits are fuel cost savings, less maintenance (no oil changes ever!), and reduced emissions. The Charge & Go Expo provided these members with an opportunity to find out firsthand by speaking with EV owners and getting behind the wheel for a short trip. Milwaukee Tool also showcased a wide array of electric battery-powered tools. Members tested blowers and trimmers for yard work and even tried heavy-duty saws. Electric tools have the benefit of excellent performance with reduced noise, vibration, and maintenance. Mid-Ohio Energy also provided free food from local food trucks, electric line equipment displays, a kids’ photo booth, and electric mower demonstrations for members.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 21
MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES ONLINE BILL PAYMENT PORTAL UPDATE
ENERGY CENTER:
FRESH LOOK, CONVENIENT FEATURES Mid-Ohio Energy’s online bill payment site upgraded for user-friendly navigation, improved mobile experience
M
embers familiar with Mid-Ohio Energy’s Energy Center online bill payment portal will notice a new look when making use of the site’s convenient features for bill payment, account management, energy use analysis, and more. While the site’s look is new, the same great features remain. Members can access bills and other account information and make a payment. Better yet, you can securely save a payment profile for “one-click” payments in the future or use the new Quick Pay feature to make a payment without logging in. One of the most notable differences for users will be when using a mobile device such as smartphone or tablet. A responsive page design means the site will look great on your mobile device while retaining the same look and features available to users accessing the site from a desktop computer.
20 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MARCH 2017 22 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
If you have any questions regarding the new site or features, please don’t hesitate to give our offices a call at 888-363-6446.
Account Number or User ID
123456001
To log in, you must include last 3 digits of your account number
Sign In Please note: If you previously used only your member number (your account number without the last 3 digits, such as -001, etc.), you will now need to include these last 3 digits, without hyphen, when logging in. For example, a member with the member number 123456, will now need to enter 123456001 to log in. Members who have established a User ID can continue to use the ID for login without change.
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Electronic communications update We’re always looking for improved ways to communicate with our members and keep you up to date on important matters that affect your service. You may notice new email communications (such as our Co-op Current e-newsletter and other important reminders) from Mid-Ohio Energy. This is part of our efforts to keep you informed of the latest news, events, and programs in place to improve your service experience and engagement as a member-consumer. So that we can best serve you, we encourage members to periodically review and update your contact information. You can do this quickly and easily via the online billing portal (page 22) or by calling our offices. We value your privacy. Mid-Ohio Energy will not solicit you to request payment or ask you to submit personal information by email or phone. We will never sell your information to a third party.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 22A
MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES CAPITAL CREDITS
UNCLAIMED
CAPITAL PATRONAGE
The following members have unclaimed capital credits that were retired in 2017. These amounts represent members’ share of margins that were generated by Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative during the years these people were living in the cooperative’s service areas and purchasing electricity from Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative (or formerly United Rural Electric or Marion Rural Electric). Attempts to reach these people by mail were returned because of incorrect or insufficient addresses. These names appeared in Ohio Cooperative Living magazine in 2017 and several times since. As required by Mid-Ohio Energy’s Code of Regulations, four years following the mailing of retired patronage and 60 days after two consecutive notices in Ohio Cooperative Living magazine, the unclaimed funds revert to the cooperative to be reallocated to active patrons. This is the second notice. ABRAMS ANGELA K ADA AIRPORT ADAM JUDY ADAMS BRUCE ADAMS DONALD R ADAMS DOUGLAS S ADAMS GERTRUDE E ADAMS JAMES W ADDIS LYNN AGER LISA M AGNER LAURA AGRIESTI ANTHONY J ALBERT ANDREW ALBERT HAROLD ALBERT TODD ALBINACK JOE ALDRIDGE LARRY W ALDRIDGE MICHAEL A ALDRIDGE SANDRA I ALEXANDER JEFF ALEXANDER MICHELLE ALEXANDER PAMELA ALLEN ETHAN H ALLEN KELLY A ALLEN MARJORIE ALLEN RICHARD O ALLER ERIN M ALSPACH SHANNON AMMONS ELOISE AMWEG JUANITA ANDERSON CLARENCE L ANDERSON JEFFREY S ANDERSON PAULA L ANDERSON SHERRY ANGLES CHRISTIE ARBOGAST SCOTTY ARNETT BETTY ARNOLD ARTHUR ARNOLD DOUGLAS D ARNOLD T M ARNOLD WILLIAM ARREOLA JUAN ASHLAND EXPLRATN INC AUL DEBORAH A AULT CAROLYN AUSTIN CLARENCE AUTEN DAVID K III BACKUS ELIZABETH A BADEN JEANNE BADER SARA L BAILEY DEAN BAILEY MISTEE BAISDEN RALPH H BAKER JONATHAN BAKER MISTY BALDAUF DALE BALDRIDGE MICHAEL BALDWIN DAVID E BALDWIN MICHAEL J BALLARD JANE BALLARD TEDDY H BALLENGER JUDY
BANK ONE BANKS WILLIAM BARNETT LEONARD D BARRON ANDREA BARRY KEVEN BARTON WANDA L BARTZ HOWARD H BASEL FARMS BASH JEFFREY J BATEMAN SONDRA J BAUTISTA MARIA BAYLES JAMIE BEACHUM CARDELL BEARD MARY E BECHTOL TERRENCE BECKLEY CAROL BEGG DENNIS BELARDO ANGELITO BELL MATTHEW E BELL PHILIP A BELL VANESSA L BELLAMY BEN W BELLVILLE KIM J BELSHE CONNIE BELT CHAD BELTZ ROBERT C BEMILLER JOSEPH BENJAMIN GARY H BENNETT & SIEG AUTO BENNETT DANA BENSON DENNIS R BENTLEY DOUGLAS E BERG TIM BERRY JAMES BIBLE WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH BIGGERSTAFF H W BILL LINA M BILLINGS DENNIS BILLINGS DOUG E BILTZ ROBERT BINGHAM BOBBY BISH DOROTHY BISH DOUGLAS S BISHOP HARRY L BISHOP RICHARD A BISHOP THOMAS E BLACK ROBERT E BLACK WILLIAM BLACKLEDGE BRIAN BLANKENSHIP WAYNE BLANTON APRIL K BLEVINS WILLIAM BLUE JONI BLUM DONALD E BLUMENSCHEIN SHERRY BOGART PHILLIP BOGGS JOSH BOGGS JOYCE E BOGGS KEN L BOGGS LEROY BOLANDER LARRY
BOLLINGER DONNA S BOND ROBYN L BONSEL ASHLEY BONSEL STACY BORN KENDRA BORROR JAMES D BOSLEY ROBERT P BOURQUE J B BOUTWELL M J JR BOWER DENNIS BOWLING DON BOWMAN PHYLISS BOYD DANNY L BOYD JOHN A BOYD RICHARD O BRADISH LINDA BRADLEY CHARLES N BRADLEY JONATHON BRADLEY PATRICK O BRADY CARL BRENEK JUDY BRENNEMAN KIRK BRENZO STEVEN BREWER MARTHA L BREWSTER AMY S BRICKER B M BRICKNER ROGER J BRIDGES FLOYD A BRIGGS WANDA BROADWATER DAVID A BROOKS KIMBERLY K BROOKS MARGARET A BROOKS TED BROWN CLARENCE BROWN DAVID A BROWN DEBORAH S BROWN DIANE BROWN DONALD S BROWN EDNA P BROWN HEIDI E BROWN JAY BROWN JOHN V BROWN JOSH A BROWN LEONARD JR BROWN LINA BROWN LORETTA BROWN MARIANNE BROWN MARILYN D BROWN MILLIE TRUST BROWN RANDY BROWN RICHARD ARTHUR BROWN ROBERT J BROWN RONALD O BROWN TRINA S BRYAN BLAKE BRYANT FLOYD BRYANT RUSSELL BUCKLEY JOE BURBA ALLEN BURDICK REBEKAH S BURGAN JAMES M
22B OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
BURKS JODI BURLEY MARIE M BURNETT KIMBERLY L BURNS ANGIE BURNS CINDY BURRIS CLIFFORD BURRIS EILEEN BURTON ANGELA BUTLER TRACY BUTZ JERRY D BYERS NICOLE BYLER JACOB D BYRNE CHARLES CALDWEL MIKE CALDWELL CATHY J CALDWELL JOSEPH L CALDWELL JULIA CALDWELL MARK CALDWELL STEVE CALLENTINE DANNY E CAMPBELL JACQUELIN A CAMPBELL JENNY CAMPBELL MICHAEL T CAMPBELL THURMAN CAMPBELL VIRGIL E CAMPBELL VIRGIL W SR CANDEL GREG CANNODE GEORGE CANNON WELLES CANTER GARY CANTRELL HERB CAPLIN GARY L CARDER DEBI CAREY CHAD M CAREY DANIEL R CARNAHAN MARL J CARNEY TAMARA CARR DANIEL R CARR DOUG CARRUTHERS CHRIS CARTY DARRELL R CASPERSON APRIL CASPERSON MIKE CASTEELE RICHARD CASTLE CARL CASTLE DONALD CASTLE ELIZABETH CASTLE TERRI CASTLE WENDY L CAUDILL BETH S CAVE MELISSA CAVINEE HOWARD CAVINEE KATHLEEN M CHAKEY KAREN M CHAMBERLIN MARY CHAMP JAMES W CHAMPER DOUGLAS CHANEY LONNIE CHAPMAN DORIS CHAPMAN KRYSTAL CHAPMAN PAM CHEW SANDRA
CHIVINGTON RYAN D CHRIST MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHRISTIAN DENVER L CHRISTNER TODD CHURCH AUSTIN CIBALLI RUSSELL V CITI MORTGAGE CLARK BETH ANN CLARK BONNIE CLARK CARROLL CLARK CHERYL L CLARK JOYCE CLARK LISA CLARK ROBERT CLAYTON DANNY R CLEGG DAN CLENDENEN DANE CLEVELAND DAVID A CLEVENGER SARAH R CLEVER WILMA J CLICK CHARLES CLIMER MICHAEL CLINGAN JAMES CLINGER MATTHEW C CLINGER WILMA J CLINK RENEE CLOSE KIM CLUFF MARY K COBLENTZ MERLE COCHRAN DIRK COFFMAN ENCARCION G COKER DAVID A COLBY DEAN COLBY MELVIN L COLDWELL PEARL COLE LYNETTE S COLEMAN LEXFORD COLLINS HAZEL COLLINS RUFUS COLLINS VERNON C COMBS DENVER COMBS ROBIN COMWAVZ CONLEY CHAD CONLEY PRESTON CONLEY R JR CONNER RETHA L CONOVER HERBERT CONTE PAUL A SR COOK BRIAN R COOLEY THEODORE COOPER BENJAMIN H COOPER JERRY L COPELAND JON A CORBIN ALAN L CORBIN TAMMY COREY DAIRY LLC CORSO DANIEL A CORTLAND ENERGY CO INC COTTRILL GLORIA
COUCH THOMAS COULSON BECKY COULTER JOHN A COWAN NANCY COX COMMUNICATIONS COY JEFF COY JOHN C COYKENDALL RICHARD CRABTREE MYRON CRAFT TERRY D CRAIG ERIC CRAMER AMY J CRAMNER HERMAN L CRAWFORD DON CRAWFORD RICHARD CRAYCRAFT BRENDA L CREAMER SHAUN S CRESS BRYAN CREVISTON JAMIE CRISP JOHN CRISWELL DONAL E CRISWELL RYAN D CROSSMAN MIRANDA L CROWE GREG CROWE JAMES CRUMP DALE L CRUMP JANET CULP MARTIN CULP RONALD CULVER LARRY CUMMINGS ANDY M CUNNINGHAM DOROTHY CURRIER TODD CURTIS DAN DAILY BRYAN L DAILY KIM DAILY MICHAEL I DALY AMY DAMRON VIRGENA A DANIEL ODELL JR DANIELS DONALD E DANIELS JOSEPH W DANNER CLIFFORD DARLING MEAGAN DAUM ZOLA DAVENPORT DAMON W DAVIS ANDREW DAVIS BETTY R DAVIS CHARLOTTE DAVIS JANE M DAVIS MARVIN DAVIS MATTIE M DAVIS STEPHEN C DAWSON MISTY DEAN FRANCES J DEAN VINCENT R DEBOER REBECCA J DECK EDITH DECKER ANGELA G DECKER BRYAN DECKER MELISSA DELONG MARTIN
DELONG TERI L DELONG TINA DEMARENO TINA DENHART JAMES R DENMAN JOEL E DENNEY RICHARD P DENNIS IRVIN S DENNISON CHARLOTTE DENNISON MARK A DENNISON THOMAS D DETWEILER MARY DETZLER LEON C DIEHL LEA DIERKES SONYA DILLINGER JERRY D DILSAVER DEBBIE DILTS JAMES W DIMENSION CABLE SERVICES DIXON CATHY J DIXON DEANNA DIXON R JR DODDS DEBRA S DOERING STEVE DOOLEY GLENN L DORN JOHN W DOUCE E J DOUCE TAMMY DOUGLAS CURT DOWNEY BRUCE E DOWNING JERRY DRAKE JEFFERY L DRAKE JOSEPH P DRAKE LEROY DRAKE PERRY DRANE RUSSELL DRURY JAMES HOWARD DRURY KENNETH DUBOIS JEFF DUDGEON DOROTHY DULEBOHN SHERRI DUNAWAY JOYCE DUNBAR ESTHER R DUNN TANYA DUTTON RANDY DUTTON SCOTT DWIRE KAREN DYER CHARLOTTE DYER CORY EADS DUELL EAGER LISA D EASTON ABIGAIL EATON FRANCES M EBERT SALLY ECCARD CONNIE EDGINGTON RACHEL EDLEN SUSAN EDLER RICHARD EDMONSTONE GREG J EHRLICH R JR EHRMAN ADA EKLEBERRY EMILY ELDRED CHARLES M ELDRIDGE ANTHONY ELLCESSOR MAX ELLEFSON DANA A ELLIOTT ARTHUR L EMBERLING RAY B EMERICK GATHYL B EMERY ROBERT N EMMONS CARLA ENDSLEY KAREN ENGLAND CHERYL ENGLAND WILLIAM
ENGLER STUART EQUITY HOMES REALTY ERVIN FREDERICK C ERWIN LOIS J EUBANKS ROBERT EVANS SARAH J EVANS TINA EWING JEFF FAILOR LLOYD E FAIRCHILD MARQUITA FAIRCHILD PAUL FAIRCHILD ROBERT A FARRINGTON WILLIAM FAUROT KIYOKO FELTY ANDREW L FERGUSON RICK FERGUSON WILLIAM D FIELD DAVID FIELDS TERESA FINCHER ROBERT S FINITZER DAVID FISHER DAN K FISHER MATTHEW FISHER ROBERT FITZPATRICK CASSIE FITZPATRICK J D FLEMING GERALD C FLOWER JOHN R FOGGIN C FOLTZ TERRI FOOR RICHARD J FOOS JEREMY FORD JOHN FORD SUSAN J FOREMAN DONNA FORMAN J D FORSYTH BARBARA E FOSTER CHRIS W FOUT ERIC T FOUT JERAMIE FOUT WINIFRED FOX ELIZABETH A FOX SHELLEY FRAHER CHARLES J FRALEY WILLIAM FRANKLIN DANIEL FRANKLIN DONNA FRANKLIN NATHAN FREEMAN ROBERT E FRESHOUR CARL E FRESHOUR STEVE FRIDLEY LARRY FRIEND SARA L FRIESNER TIMOTHY S FROST DONALD E FRUEH MICHAEL FRY SHANNA FRY SHIRLEY FULLER MAGGIE L FUNK EUGENE E FURER CHARLES FURR DEBRA FURRY THOMAS E FUSON STEPHANI GABRIEL JOE GAINES ANNETTE GALLAGHER THOMAS J GALLANT RICHARD R GANDEE ROGER GARCIA GLORIA GARCIA JAY S GARLAND ROYDEN L GARNER PAMELA M GARNOW DUSTIN R
GARVER JACK GASS WILLIAM M GATCHELL GALE GAULT DELBERT JR GAY DENISE GEBOY RICHARD GELDMACHER ROBERT GEORGE KEVIN R GEYER CHARLES GIBSON GLENN W GIBSON LEE O SR GIBSON MANDY GIBSON R KEITH GIBSON TERRY GIBSON VICKIE GIDDENS JOHN E GIERHART AMANDA GIFFORD KRISTIN GIFFORD RICHARD W GILBERT ABE GILBERT BENNY L GILLESPIE RONALD GILLFILLAN DALE GILLIAM OPAL GILLISPIE CONNIE GILLISPIE JOYCE GILMORE VERNON D GIST ELDON J GLADWELL YVONNE GLICK ROGER GOGLEY BEN GOLDSBERRY CHRISTINE GONGELAS HEIDI GONZALEZ MOSES GONZALEZ ROBYNN L GOOD BRENDA GOOD JAMES GOODRICH BARBARA GOODWIN CHARLES E GOSSARD DERWIN GOTTFRIED TERRI GRABER JACKIE L GRAHAM MAUREEN GRAHAM MONTY J GRANGER REALTY CO GRASLEY JESICA GREEN CAMP TRAILER SALES GREEN JAMES D GREEN ROBIN GREENE CHARLES S GREENE DONALD GREENE DUANE GRICE GARY GRIFFIN RONALD J GRITT MARTINI J GRUBER LARRY C GUINN GREGG GULLETT BRAD GUNDY HARDWICK GUTHERY WILLIAM S GUYTON LARRY GUYTON MARTIN R GUYTON RAYMOND E HAFFELDER GLEN S HAGERMAN BERNARD HAGY CHARLES HALE GEORGE C HALEY LORI HALL GREG HALL JAMES H III HALL JAMIE HALLORAN KEVIN P HAMILTON ADAM
HAMILTON ANTHONY HAMILTON JAMES R HAMILTON JOHN HAMILTON JONATHAN D HAMILTON RICHARD HAMM CAROLYN HAMM SHANNON HANDELL CHARLES T SR HANEY KATHY L HANLOH ANDREW J HARAC HOFFMEISTER KM HARDIN MARTHA HARMON BERNICE C HARMON THELMA HARP DAN HARP GREGORY L HARP JEFFERY L HARPER CLAIRE HARPER NANCY L HARPER THOMAS A HARRELL CHRIS L HARRIEL MARY HARRIS ANGELA O HARRIS DENNIS R HARRIS JOHN W HARRIS MARY M HARSH HOWARD HARSHFIELD JAMES E HART DAVID HART RICHARD D HARTMAN BRIAN L HARTMAN M JR HARTMAN MICHAEL HASHMAN ISABELLE P HASTINGS G R HASTINGS MERWYN HASTINGS RICK HASTINGS THOMAS L HATTERY RANDALL HAUBERT JANICE HAUSE JAMES M HAWKINS EDWARD HAWKINS MARY E HAYCOX KIMBERLY HAYNES TERESA HAZELETT MARGO HEASTON DANIEL J HECKMAN CHRIS HEILMAN TIM HELLER PEARL C HELMS LOREN G III HEMPKER DARCY HENDERSON LOWE APRIL HENDERSON RANDY B HENDRICKSON VIRGIL HENNING CATHERINE D HENSEL VERNON E HENSLEY ROBERT HENSON MARTHA J HEPBURN CAMPERS HEPNER EARLE N HERR KATHY HERRERA OTONIEL HERSHEY SHANE HICKMAN DIANA HICKMAN JAMIE HICKMAN ROBERT HICKS DAWN E HICKS ENOCH HICKS ORVILLE HIGGINS BILLIE HILBORN MERL D HILE ANGELA HILL CHRIS
HINES HARRY HINES JEFF HINES KAREN HINKLE FARM AGENCY HINTON PAUL E HIPSHER CRAIG HISER DAN HITE DAVID HITES MICHAEL R HOEFLER ERIC J HOFFMAN DALLAS HOFFMAN FRANK B HOFFMAN HOWARD W HOFFMAN KAREN R HOFFMAN KARL HOFFMAN LLOYD HOFFMAN PAULINE HOGUE JUDY HOLBROOK FOREST HOLBROOK PAUL D HOLLAND CONSTRUCTN HOLLAND MARY ANN HOLLAR VICKIE HOLLINS BARBARA HOLLON JAMES L HOLLOWAY CAROL HOLLOWAY STEWART J HOLMAN JAMES D HOLMAN VIRGIL HOLT RONALD HOLTSBERRY JENNY HONAKER MANDY HONEGGER HAL D HOOVER KEVIN M HOPKINS CRAIG HOPKINS KELLY A HOPKINS STEVE HOPKINS VALARIE HOPSON STEPHANIE HORD DANIEL HORD WALTER H HORINEK ARTHUR HORN DELSON E HORTON BRENDA HOUCHINS JEFF HOUCHINS MICHELE HOUK REX HOUSE SAMUEL A HOUSEWORTH DONALD A JR HOUSEWORTH DONALD A SR HOVIS DAVID HOWARD DEBBIE HOWARD GEORGE W HOWARD WILLIAM HOWELL DANNY HOWELL NORMAN E HUBER JACK HUDDLESTUN RICK HUDGEL REBECCA HUDKINS MARIA HUGHES A W HUGHES DANA HUGHES JAMES R HUGHES RICHARD H HULL JOHN H HULL JOHN W HUNSICKER EUGENE HUNT DALLAS HUNTER AMY HUNTER TRINA HUNTLEY EUVADA HURLEY ROBERT G
HURT LAURA L HUTCHINSON BRAD HUTCHINSON DOROTHY HUTCHISON GINA HYLTON THERESA ICKES OSCAR ICKES ROBERT ICKLER JESSIE IMBODY JIM JACKSON CASSANDRA JACKSON DEBORAH M JACKSON DIANA F JACKSON FRANK JACKSON JAMES W JACKSON KRIS JACKSON LYNETTE E JAMES AMY E JAMES LUCILLE JAMES WILLIAM JANES KEITH A JANUARY MARION D JBM RENTAL AND LEASING JEFFREY JERRY W JENKINS H W JERRY MOORE INC JEWELL JEFFREY D JOHNSON CARL E JOHNSON DREW JOHNSON GREG JOHNSON J K JOHNSON KELLY LANE JOHNSON ROBERT W JOHNSON WAYNE JOHNSON WILLIAM K JOHNSTON HAROLD JOHNSTON JODI JOHNSTON MONETTA JONES BILL JONES DOUG JONES ERNEST L JONES JEFFERY L JONES LINDA C JONES SAMUEL J JONES TERRANCE JONES TINA JONES WESLEY JONSSON RICHARD JORDAN CINDY JORDAN DOUG JORDAN WILLIAM O JOSEPH BRIAN F JOSEPH ROBERT KAHLEY RICHARD M KAHLEY TONYA J KANNIARD ANN KAUFFMAN GLEN KAYLOR KYLE KEARNS CLARA M KEARNS JOHN R KECK ALMA KEEN SHELBY R KEERAN AMY J KEETON RAYMOND E KELBEL JASON KELLER SCOTT KELLY SHANNON KEMPTON CYNTHIA L KENNARD CAROLYN L KENNEDY BILL KENNEDY DONOVAN KENNEDY KIM KENNISON RHONDA KENNY SABRINA
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SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 22C
MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES
KENTON COFFEE CUPS KEPFORD EDWINA KERN MATTHEW KESTEL MARY KEYSOR DONALD KEYSOR SUZY KIA ORA FARMS KIBLER PHILLIP E KILBURN NANCY KILE DOROTHY O KILGORE HOWARD KILGORE LISA KIMMELL ALISHA KINARK CORPORATION KINDLE JAMES M KINDLE LULA KINDLE M HELEN KING CONSTRUCTION KING JAMES E KING JOE W KING ROBERT C KINNEY PHILLIP KINTER BRIAN L KIRKPATRICK JEFFREY S KIRTLAND ROBB KISSLING ALVIN J KISSLING LARRY E KISSLING ROBERT KITCHEN WANDA KLEMAN ROBERT L KLINGEL DONALD L KLINGER ERIC KLINGLER DENNIS KLINGLER TONJA KLOTTS TONY L KNAUL THOMAS KNIGHT RYAN BICKHAM KNISLEY DEBRA L KNOTTS EVERETTE KNOTTS KENNETH KNOX KEITH KOONCE CHRISTOPHER KRAJEWSKI CAROL KROM TERRY L KRUGER EARL E LABOUNTY JACKIE LAFERTY ANN LAHUGH CHARLES C LAING MARIA F LAKE KENNETH LAKE SANITATION LAMA DONALD E LAMAN RONALD K LAMB DOUG LANDON JENNIFER LANGENKAMP JOHN B LANTHROM GARLAND E LAPRADE TRACY LARUE MARVIN D LAUBIS EMMA M LAUCHER TODD LAWRENCE BOBBY LAWRENCE STEVE LAWSON JULIA LAWSON MARY L LAWSON RYAN D LAYNE LISA LAYNE RICK LEARY MARK LEDESMA JULIE LEDFORD KEVIN N LEE INA R LEFFLER WILLIAM B LEGG MICHAEL J LEHMAN DENNIS LEIGH GREG LEITER CHAD LEMAR MICHELLE LEONARD JAMIE LEPINSKI TOM LESTER CHUCK LESTER MICHAEL LEWIS BOBBI J LINES GEORGE T LINGO MICHAEL R
LINTON SHERRI LIPINSKI TERRI LLANES ANDRES LOFTON RAY E LOGAN SHANNON LOHR REBECCA LOHRBER SUSAN E LONG BETTY A LONG BRIAN LONG MARGARET C LONG RAYMOND E LONGANBACH STEVE A LONYO MICHAEL S LOOKABAUGH BEN LOOKER RONALD LOPER GLENN A LOTH EMILY LOUBERT TERRY L LOUDERMILK MARVIN J LOVETTE RUTH J LOWE NANCY K LOWE SAMUEL LOWE TERRY LOWER DICK LUCAS DARREN LUCAS DEBBIE LUCAS KENNETH M LUCAS MICHAEL D LUCAS THERESA S LUCE BRYAN LUST RANDY LYON RICHARD LYONS JAMES LYONS MIGNON LYONS PATRICIA L MABREY DAVE MACKENZIE LAWRENCE J SR MAGNUSON RICHARD F MAGNUSSON I C MAHAFFEY DIANE MAHAFFEY THOMAS M MAIN TRAVIS MAJOROS TIBOR MANAGEMENT EXPANSION CO MANIACI SHEILA MANLEY DIANE A MANNS LISA MANSHIP MICHAEL J MARION POWER SHOVEL CO MARKS CRAIG MARKS REX W MARSH CLAUDE MARSHALL JAMES MARSHALL OPAL J MARSHALL PAULA K MARSHALL STEPHANIE MARSHALL TROY M MARTIN ANESSTA MARTIN CHARLENE MARTIN CHARLES MARTIN CHRISTINE R MARTIN KENNETH E MARTIN SCOTT A MARTINEZ JOYCE L MASON GENE MASON LAVONE MASSEY ANGIE MASSIE AUSTIN MATHERLY GLEN L MATHEWS LORETTA M MATSON BETTY F MATTESON VERNARD MATTIX PAM MAUTER GREGORY P MAY DAVID A MAY THOMAS G MAY TIM MAYNARD STACY R MCALPIN JANET MCBRIDE DONALD E MCCARLEY RHONDA MCCARTY LAURA
MCCLINTOCK GEORGE S MCCLINTOCK KENNETH E MCCLOSKEY DOUGLAS L MCCLURE EDITH ESTATE MCCOMBS EVERETT M MCCULLOUGH ALLEN MCCULLOUGH KERRY MCDANEL PAUL B MCDANIEL BEVERLY A MCDANIEL GLENN MCDONALD GLEN M MCDONALD JACK MCELHATTEN JAY MCELIECE PAULA MCELREE NEAL MCELROY BERNARD MCGLOTHLIN WILLIAM M MCGONAGILL JAMES MCGRATH SHANNON MCGUIRE SUZANNE MCKEAN KENNETH W MCKEE SCOTT MCKENZIE CANDY MCKENZIE ROBERT J MCKINNISS BENJAMIN W MCKINNISS TAMI C MCMILLION KAREN MCMILLON JENNIFER MCMONIGAL DONALD MCQUISTION TERRI MCWADE JOSHUA MEADE HOWARD C MEADE ROY MEADE THOMAS J MEADOWS LARRY A MEADOWS MARIANNE MELVIN MICHAEL MENCHHOFER DAVID MENDEL JOSEPH MATTHEW MERRITT ROBERT MERTZ WENDELL W MESSENGER DOUG MESSMER LAWRENCE D METZGER MATTHEW MEYER E ELIZABETH MEYER GREG M MEYERS RYAN MICHAELS JAMES R MID-OHIO CHEMICAL MIERZEJEWSKI KIM MILEY PAMELA J MILLER BRUCE MILLER CALVIN L MILLER CARLEEN M MILLER EVELYN G MILLER GREGORY P MILLER JAMES R MILLER JOHN P MILLER KARL MILLER KENNETH MILLER KEVIN MILLER LANCE MILLER LARRY D MILLER MONIKA MILLER PATRICIA ANN MILLER ROBERT MILLER ROBERT A MILLER RONALD L MILLER SUSAN L MILLER WILLIAM E MILLS GLENN MILLS LOIS J MILLS WILLIAM W MINICH APRIL MIRACLE JAMES K MITCHELL ANTHONY MITCHELL DEBRA MITCHELL FRANK MITCHELL LINDA M MITCHELL PAUL MITCHELL SARAH J MOATS CHRISTOPHER MOHLER DONALD MOHRE FLORENCE N
22D OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
MONFORT BOB MONTIS JONES MARY MOODESPAUGH ROBERT MOORE BRENT MOORE DIANNE M MOORE FREDA MOORE JERRY MOORE JUNIOR MOORE KELLIE A MOORE LOLA A MOORE QUINT E MOORE R JR MOORE RICHARD L MOORE ROBERT E JR MOORE TERRIE LYNN MOORE TRACY MORAN ELBERTIEN MORGAN CHRIS MORGAN MAX MORGASON BRYAN K MORINO KEN MORRIS BARBARA MORRIS DONNA MORRIS F J MORRIS JEFFREY L JR MORRIS RICKY H MORRIS ROBERT M MORRISON ORVILLE MOSELEY JEFFREY W MOSER EMERSON E MOTTER TODD MOUSER CHARLES L MOWERY MARILYN MOYER MICHEAL A MT PLEASANT CHURCH MULHOLLAND KATHY MULLENNIX GILBERT MULLINS ROY MULLINS TAYLOR S MURFIELD FRANI MURPHY CARRIE MURPHY DALE L MURPHY DOUGLAS MURPHY IONA MURRAY THOMAS G MUSHAW MASON L MUSSELMAN KARLA MUSSER JOHN MUTERSPAUGH STAN MYERS GARRETT MYERS MARY MYERS STEVEN L MYERS VIRGIL NALLS DARYL NASH DORCAS J NASH LEILA J NATIONAL CITY NAUS DONNA J NEELEY JEREMY C NEELEY SADIE M NEELY JAMES L NEER CODI NELSON HERMAN C NELSON JAMES NELSON P BOONE NELSON PATRICK NEWKIRK CHARLES NEWLAND MICHAEL R NEWLAND T J NEWLAND WILLIAM NEWMAN TODD NICHOLS EDDIE NICHOLS JAMES H NICHOLSON JACK NICKLAUS FREDERICK A NICKLES LESLIE NIEMEYER MICHAEL J NOGGLE KEVIN J NOLAN BONNIE E NORTON ROBERT A NUSS STEPHANIE NUSSER WILLARD II OBENOUR M G OBERDIER DON D OBERDIER HERBERT H
O’BRIEN MICHAEL S O’CONNELL JACQUELINE ODER KAREN S OGLESBEE KEITH OGLESBEE RICK D OLDHAM CLARICE OLIVER RANDALL L OLIVER RICHARD ORIANS ROBERT W ORNDORFF ERIC ORTIZ MARYLOU OSBORNE JOSH P OSBOURN ERNEST R OSWALD RICHARD A OVERTON DARRELL OWEN JEFFREY W OWENS RUTH OWSLEY WILLIE JR PACER ROBERT PACK ARLEN PAINTER HENRY PALMER MICHAEL E PALMER WESLEY PAN ENERGY SYSTEMS PANNING DONALD PARKER DAVID R PARR BEVERLEE PARR DONALD PARSONS BETH L PATCHETT JACK PATRICK BARBARA PATRICK FLOYD PATTERSON CHAMEINE PATTERSON DONNA E PATTON HOLLY PAUGH MICHAEL D PAUGH R KENNETH PAULUS PATRICK PEDRAZA SHANNON PENDLETON DALE PENIX CANDACE R PENNINGTON CHERI PENNINGTON MIKE PEREZ DANIEL PERKINS DALE PERKINS EDDIE PERSHING RICHARD E PERSINGER SEAN M PETERS GARY L PETERSON ARTHUR L PETRY JOHN PFEIFFER STATION GENERAL STORE PHALEN DENNIS L PHELPS LARRY PHILIP ROY C II PHILLIPS CHARLES M PHILLIPS NORMAN K PHILLIPS RONALD W PICKETT JEFFREY A PICKETT MERLE PICKETT SHANNON PIERCE DALE PIERCE FREDERICK E PIERCE KAY PIEROTTI DAVID L PILOSOFT INC PINNICK TERRY PIPER WAYNE PLACE DANNY PLAIN RUN FARM TRUST PLAUGHER RICHARD PLOUGH CHRIS A PLUNKETT EDGAR D PORTER ERVIN POST JEFF POWELL JUDD PRATER CHARLES D PRATER CRYSTAL PRATER DEBORAH PRATER MICHELLE L PRATER SHIRLEY L PRATER ZEALLIE PRATT CRYSTAL D PRESTON ROBERTA S
PRESTON WILLIAM M PRICE ANGELA PRICE BARBARA PRICE GARY PRICE JEREMY PRICE LYNDA PRICE RICHARD D PRICE ROBERT A PRICE TOMMY R PRITCHETT KATRINA PRYOR TRINA PURTEE JAMIE QUAY GARY QUAY WYATT E QUICK DIANNA S QUICKLE TERRY SR RAGER DONALD E RAGER ROBERT J RALPH MIKE RALSTON CRAIG RALSTON JAMES E RALSTON KYLE J RAMBO DAVID RAMIREZ ORLANDO RAMSDELL ROBERT E RANDALL DUSTIN RANDALL FREDA P RANDELL TED D RANDLES ROBIN C RAREY ROGER RASEY EDGAR L RASEY EDWARD L RASNICK TOYNUA REAM DAN REAMES TERRI REDD JACK M REDD KELLY S REED CHRISTOPHER REED DONNA REED KRISTY REED MELISSA REESE CHRIS REEVE BRYAN REIDY NORBERT REIGLE MONTY E RELIABLE MOBILE HOME SVC RENDALL ROBERT J REPPART ROY P REYNOLDS RYAN REYNOLDS STEVEN L RHOAD WILLIAM RHODES PAMELA RICE JUANITA R RICE MELANIE RICHARDS JEFF RICHARDS LISA RICHARDSON CARL RICHARDSON CAROLE SUE RICHMOND STEPHEN M RICKER DOUG RIEDLINGER MICHELLE RIFE RONALD A RIGDON DONALD RING MICHAEL RISNER DEB RISNER MICHAEL RISNER PENNY RISNER SCOT RITCHIE DONALD E RIZOR ROBERT J ROACHE JESSICA ROBBINS BILLY E ROBERTS JAMIE S ROBERTS KAMA ROBERTS MICHELLE ROBERTS SCOTT E ROBINSON BETTY ROBINSON ELLEN ROGERS CLARENCE F ROGERS JO ANN ROLSTON CHARLES ROOF JENNIFER E ROOF ROBERT E
ROOF TOBY ROSE A DUANE ROSE BILLIE J ROSE DUANE ROSE GENE ROSE JACK ROSE MARILYN S ROSEBROUGH JULIE ROSHON CHAD A ROSS DEBORAH L ROSTORFER TERESA ROTH JAMES ROTH JOHN ROTH TERESA J ROUSH PHYLLIS A ROWE DONALD ROWE DONALD E ROWE GEORGE ROWE LARRY ROWE SUSAN K ROWLAND BILL ROWLAND DONNA RUBINS EVERETT D RUDASILL STEPHANIE RUMER ANDREW RUMPKE SCOTT A RUPE SHERRI LYNN RUSBULDT AL RUSH ANGELA RUSSELL FREDERICK N RUSSELL THOMAS RUTH JACKIE RUTHERFORD EVAN SAAM JEREMY L SADLER RICHARD SAFT LARRY W SALLEE ADAM SAMPSON JAMES SAMPSON JIM SANCENITO JAMES J SANCHEZ PATTIE SAND MICHAEL L SANDELL DEBORAH J SANDERS BEVERLY SANDERS CHRISTOPHER SANDERS DR. JIM C SANDERS JEFF SANDERS JEFFREY L SANDERS LIONEL V SANDERS SALLY SANDERS SHAWN SANDS ROBYN SANITATION LAKE SANNER RICHARD E SARCO INC SATTERFIELD SUSANNE SATTERFIELD TREVOR SAUNDERS JOHN SAUNDERS VERNARD SAVINGS OF AMERICA SAYLOR WILLIAM SCHEIDERER BRENT SCHENKEL JEFF SCHIEFER A SCHINDEWOLF MICHAEL SCHLEENBAKER ROBERT SCHMELZER DAVID SCHMIDT TERRI SCHNEIDER JAMES P SCHRECK MARGARET A SCHRIML DAVID A SCHROEDER CLIFFORD
SCHROEDER JOHN J SCHROEDER TOM SCHULER ADAM SCHWENNING MATTHEW SCIOTO FARM INC SCOTT DALE G SCOTT DAVID SCOTT JOHN R SCOTT STEVEN W SCOTT TOM SEAMAN KENNETH R SELLERS LORI SEXTON DELLA M SEXTON PEGGY SEYMOUR DEBBIE L SHAFER LINDA L SHAFFER CATHERINE SHAMBLIN DONNA F SHAMROCK MUNITIONS SHANLEY DAVID SHARK THOMAS L SHARP CLARA SHARP GUY SHAW KAREN SHEARER JENNIFER SHEARROW CHARLES SHEETS SANDRA K SHEFFIELD ROBERT JR SHELTON MITCHELL T SHEPHERD AMANDA SHEPHERD BRANDI SHEPHERD KATHY L SHEPHERD PHILIP SHEPHERD STEVE SHERER JACK SHIELDS BRIAN C SHIRK CHRISTINE SHOAF DENNIS SHOAF MARK A SHOAF PAUL L SHOCKEY EMMA SHRADER JESSICA SHULL RITA L SHUMAKER JAMIE L SHUMAKER RONALD R SIAS MARTIN J SIAS MELVIN SIMMONS DANIEL SIMMONS JON C SIMMONS LARRY SIMONES WILLIAM A SIMPKINS ROBERT W SINK-OILER JOEY F SISLER JON SISSON BRITTANIE SKEID STEVEN R SLADE ALAN B SLEEPER JAN SLONE ELZIE SMITH BOBBIE D SMITH CHRISTINE SMITH CRIS SMITH DAVID R JR SMITH DAVID T SMITH DIANA SMITH DON SMITH ELEANOR C SMITH FELICIA SMITH JOHN M SMITH KRISTIN SMITH LISA C SMITH MELVIN
SMITH R JR SMITH ROBY L SMITH STEFFEN SNEARY JEFF SNELLENBERGER ELMER SNOW ALISON V SNOW CODY SNYDER ROBERT E SNYDER SONJA SOBAS CHRISTOPHER SOPHER DENISE L SPARKMAN WILLIAM SPARKS OAKLEY SPARKS STELLA SPATH JANICE SPAULDING DEIDRE H SPEARMAN SHARRON SPEELMAN JESSICA SPENCE JAMES L SPENCER AARON M SPENCER JOE SPENCER ROBERT SPICER ANN SPICER DONALD A SPICER DORIS A SPICER GREGORY SPRADLIN CHARMAINE SPRADLIN JAMES SPRADLIN KENNETH SPRADLIN WILLIAM T SPRANG HEATHER SPURLOCK CARL STAATS LOIS M STAATS ROBERT STAHL S L STALK JENNIFER STALLARD BILLY STALLINGS DORIS J STALLSMITH RENEE STALNAKER DENNIS W STANBRO DEMERIL H STANSBERY TIMOTHY L STEARNS LEWIS M STEELE MICHAEL STEINMAN DEBBIE STELL BAMBI STEPHENS BILL STEPHENS SOLA STEPHENSON SHEILA STEPHENSON TARA A STERRETT JEFFERY STEVENS EUGENE F STEVENS GREGORY A STEVENS THOMAS STEVENSON DREW STEWART JOHN E STIFFLER ARTHUR R STIFFLER PAMELA S STONE CHARLES A STONE ELMO STONE JAMES E STONE JERRY W STOVER TIM STOWE KRISTY STRAIGHT CYNTHIA STRAYER ROBERT D STREIB SUSAN A STRYKUL MICHAEL B STUCKMAN ROBERT P STURGEON BARBARA STURGEON ROBERT E STYLES UNLIMITED
SUAREZ JOSEPH H SUMMIT HELEN SWANSON RUTH E SWART LINDA SWAVEL CHARLES R SWEARINGEN EDWARD SWYGERT NICOLE SYCK BRIAN SYPHERD JOSHUA SYPHERD TRISTA SZIPPL ANDREW F TACKETT CAROLYN J TACKETT CHARLES TACKETT EUGENE TAMILLO BARBARA TARANTO REGINA TATE HAL D TAYLOR BRAD TAYLOR CARLOUS TEAGUE MICHAEL TEETERS ROBERT TEETS MARY K TEETS MERCIE TELLJOHANN JACKIE R TENEYCK CARL D TENEYCK THOMAS E TEPPER MICHAEL P TERRY RICHARD TERWILLIGER WALTER W THACKER DARRICK THACKER HOLLY THACKER KELLY A THEIBAUT DENNIS N THEISEN GERALD THEW DOROTHY E THIBAUT RICHARD THIEL PATTY THOMAS ANGELIQUE THOMAS CHERYL THOMAS DARLENE A THOMAS LARRY THOMAS MINDY THOMAS PAUL THOMAS ROBERT E THOMPSON ANGELA THOMPSON JAMES K THOMPSON LACINDA M THOMPSON NORMAN R THOMPSON RAETTA THOMPSON ROBERT THOMSON LOCKER THOMSON TODD THORNTON LARRY TILLEY KEVIN TIPPIE DAVID B TODD SAM TONEY PAMELA TRACEY ELIZABETH TRACY MALON A TRAUSCH MICHELE M TREMBLE CONSTANCE D TRENDEX INC TRINKO LYNN A TROUT JOHN TROXELL C LAWRENCE II TRUESDALE CASEY L TSCHUOR JAMES B TURK THOMAS TURNER KENNETH E TYREE JEFF ULRICH DAVID UNDERWOOD DWIGHT R
VACON M L VAIL MACK B VALDEZ DANITA VALENTINE AL VAN HORNE GEVIN D VANBUSKIRK GRETCHEN VANDYKE GERALD VANFOSSEN LAURA VANSCODER PATRICIA VARNER BONNIE R VAUGHN VIRGINIA L VIARS CHARLES VOLBERT R A WADDELL TRACY WADDLE DELORES J WADDLE JACK WALKER ALBERT WALKER JAN E WALLER JULIE A WALTON HERBERT WARD JAMES R WARD MARY F WARD VANESSA WARREN OTHA LEON WARREN SEWELL C WASSERBECK DAN WATKINS BRIAN H WATKINS GLENN W WATSON MICHAEL WATTS STEPHANIE WAUGH WILLIAM F WAYLAND TERRY C WEAVER ELIZABETH WEAVER WILLIAM R WEBB CARL L WEBB LINDA WEBB ROBERT L WEBB RONALD B WEBB TRISHA WEBER HELEN WEBER RONALD J WEDDINGTON STEVE WEISER TIMOTHY M WELKER BILLY A WELLS JAMES L WENDELL DAN WEST JOSEPH W WEST NEWTON ME CHURCH WESTLER JOHN M WHALEY THELMA M WHIPPLE NANCY WHISLER HOWARD E WHITAKER CLARENCE WHITE ANDREA PFC WHITE DIANA K WHITE DIANE WHITE JAMES P WHITE JENNIFER WHITE LISA R WHITE RONALD C WHITE STEVEN H WHITLEY SANDRA WIELINSKI KLAUS WILCH WALLACE JR WILCHECK MARK WILEY TODD J WILKINSON ROBERT WILLIAMS BRANDON WILLIAMS BRENT WILLIAMS DIANA S WILLIAMS DONALD E
WILLIAMS FERN WILLIAMS JACKIE WILLIAMS JASON D WILLIAMS JOHN III WILLIAMS MELISSA WILLIAMS MIKE WILLIAMS PERRY WILLIAMS RICHARD W WILLIAMS RONALD P WILLIAMS TRACY WILLIAMSON R BARRY WILSON BETH WILSON BRIAN WILSON BRIAN M WILSON BYRON B WILSON DAVID A WILSON JANE WILSON JUDY WILSON KRIS A WILSON LORENZA WILSON ROBERT E JR WILSON SHERI WILSON TERESA L WILSON TOM WILT MICHAEL W WINEBRENNER CHARLES A WINKLER GREG WINSLOW STEVEN WIREMAN DON WIREMAN LEE WIREMAN MARIE T WISCHMEYERS DANIEL L WISE JUNE A WITHROW JENNIFER M WODARSKI GARY WOLF LEMUEL J WOLF MARY J WOLFORD RICK WOOD KENNETH L WOOD THOMAS R WOOD WARREN R WOODLAWN ENTERPRISES WOODRUFF PAUL WOODS WENDEL W WOOLUM JACKIE L WORDEN DONALD WORKMAN RICHARD WOROBIEC MICHELE WORRELL DENA WRENCHEY JOE JR WRIGHT CHRISTINE WRIGHT NICKY WRIGHTSMAN KAREN WRIGHTSMAN RICK WUESCHER LAWRENCE C WYCOFF AMY YANT DONALD YOST RHONDA M YOUNG MARK YOUNG MARY K YOUNG SCOTT A YOUNG SHARON L ZACHARIAH SCOTT ZAPPA CHARLES R ZARING LAURETTE L ZARING STEPHEN B ZEIGLER DAVID ZEIGLER LEE ZIEGLER JESSICA ZUERCHER BRAD ZWIEBEL AARON
Energy Efficiency | Tip of the Month Energy used for cooling and heating your home makes up the largest portion of your monthly energy bills. By combining regular equipment maintenance and upgrades with recommended insulation, air sealing, and thermostat settings, you can save about 30% on your energy bills while helping our environment. Source: www.energy.gov
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 23
MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES COMMUNITY FUND
Community Fund grants help improve accessibility, safety Recent Community Fund grants to AMVETS Riders Chapter 1994 in Kenton and the Marion Fire Department helped fund unmet needs in our communities. Know a local group or organization that could use help in their efforts to do good in the community? Visit MidOhioEnergy.com/CommunityFund for applications. There’s still time left to apply for the next quarterly meeting. Applications are due Sept. 6, 2021.
AMVETS Riders Chapter 1994 President Harold Sexton (front) poses with members of the crew after building an access ramp for a veteran in Kenton.
Marion Fire Department Captain Josh Ross stopped by the co-op’s Marion office to display the new automatic external defibrillator (AED) to help individuals in cases of cardiac arrest.
On the ramp, veteran Lyle Curl, Matt Hamilton, Stacy Sexton, Nathan Rea, Korey Critchfield, Ron Adkins, and Dave Smith.
According to research cited by the department, early AED usage within the first three minutes of cardiac arrest can increase survival rates to over 80%.
MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE, INC.
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CONTACT
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888-363-6446 www.MidOhioEnergy.com
John Thiel
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Mon.–Fri., 7:30 a.m.– 4 p.m.
Trevor Fremont Secretary
Tony Hastings Assistant Secretary
Brice Turner Treasurer
Paul Beineke Robert Imbody Howard Lyle Gene McCluer Trustees
24 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
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John Metcalf
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Superfan Buckeyeman Larry Lokai is equally well known as a Buckeye fan and as a stalwart of Ohio agriculture. BY VICKI JOHNSON; PHOTOS COURTESY OF MICHAEL BIRT/MB IMAGES
B
etween Ohio State University football and agriculture education, Urbana resident Larry Lokai has been wholeheartedly living his passion for 23 years.
When the pandemic called an 11-month halt to his attending football games and making myriad public appearances, the 79-year-old icon — also known as Buckeyeman — says he felt like a part of him was missing. “I don’t feel complete,” he says. “I guess that’s the best way to say it.” So as restrictions eased in late spring and early summer, Lokai eased himself back into the game. He donned his trademark scarlet-and-gray wig, painted face, and strings of buckeyes and began making a few personal appearances.
26 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST SEPTEMBER 2021 2021
Now, as football season approaches, he’s ready to go allin and plans to be there once again — a favorite of both fans and television cameras at the games.
Ohio’s 88 counties as well as in several neighboring states and as far away as California. Even during the pandemic, he judged at 21 county fairs.
Along with the hair and face paint, Lokai’s Buckeyeman is best known for handing out buckeyes, the fruit of the Ohio buckeye tree. As he’s expanded the role, he says he’s handed out more than 1.8 million of them.
“I can go to any county in Ohio and know somebody,” he says.
“Every student who’s come through orientation since 2002 on the main campus has received a buckeye from me,” he says. More recently, he’s also begun giving the nuts to new students at the Mansfield and Marion branches. In addition, he’s given away 1,800 buckeye tree seedlings in the last 16 years, all of which he grew in his yard — though that portion of the Buckeyeman legacy ended last year. “I gave up trying to keep up with Johnny Appleseed,” Lokai says.
Agriculture tradition Buckeyeman is much more than a superfan at football games; his reach extends far into the community. Those trademark buckeyes are in fact more of an outgrowth of his agriculture background than a product of his fandom. After earning his bachelor’s (1967) and master’s (1973) degrees from Ohio State, Lokai taught agriculture for 30 years before he retired in 1997. He also was a 4-H advisor and taught hunter education for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Wildlife for 25 years.
In 2016, Lokai was honored by OSU’s College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences with its Distinguished Alumni Award. Through his youth work, Lokai carries over his buckeye tradition, giving away buckeyes.
Birth of Buckeyeman Huge quantities of buckeyes weren’t on Lokai’s mind when he first donned his “uniform.” Buckeyeman was born in 1998 when Lokai scored tickets to the Ohio State-Michigan game right behind the Michigan bench. He decided to go ultra-Ohio State with face paint and a wig. His alter ego got a boost in 2000 when he finished third in a Halls Cough Drops national contest to find the loudest college football fan, and by 2015, he was honored as the NCAA Fan of the Year. Buckeyeman wears four strings of 42 buckeyes each around his neck — one string for each of his children who graduated from Ohio State and 42 because he was born in 1942.
After his retirement — during the same years Buckeyeman arrived on the football scene — Lokai began a new ag career.
In the early days, Lokai said he would rise at 4 a.m. and put on his face paint and costume. “By 6 a.m., I was at Bob Evans for breakfast, and I’d be at the stadium by 6:30 or 7,” he says. “The last few years, I’ve slept in until 5.”
In 1998, he returned to Ohio State as coach of the poultry judging team for three years. In 2002, he returned to consulting with high school ag teams, and when his grandchildren started entering high school, he started working with their ag contest teams.
Another change came eight years ago when Lokai gave up boards and committees to focus on youth activities and Buckeyeman appearances — including his 10-year seat on the Urbana City Council, state and county retired teachers associations, and others.
When his son started teaching ag education in 2013, Lokai decided that instead of competing against him, he’d help with his son’s teams instead. That, in turn, led to working with teams from more high schools.
“I started counting up the meetings,” he says. “By the time I got done, I got out of seven organizations. I had 80 fewer meetings a year in 2014. In January 2014, the sun came up exactly the same.”
Today, he continues to consult with FFA contest teams, and in 2019, four of the teams he worked with took the top four places in state competition. He also judges youth projects at county fairs. To date, he has judged poultry shows in 84 of
As fans gear up for this fall’s season of Ohio State football, Lokai looks forward to returning to his place as a superfan for his 24th year.“I’d like to go to 90 at least,” he says. “I’ll do it until it stops being fun.”
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 27
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SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 29
With a name like … Celebrate 100 years of Smucker’s with a trip to the J.M. Smucker Co. store and café. STORY AND PHOTOS BY DAMAINE VONADA
W
henever merchandise manager Kate Fox welcomes tour bus groups to the J.M. Smucker Co. store and café, she asks visitors to guess Smucker’s first product. “Everyone always answers, ‘strawberry preserves,’” says Fox, “but the company actually started with apple butter.”
30 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
Located near U.S. 30, the store sits along a rural road in Wayne County just minutes away from the J.M. Smucker Company’s headquarters in Orrville. The town’s population is less than 10,000, yet it’s home to a Fortune 500 corporation with some 7,000 employees who work in offices and manufacturing facilities spread from Quebec to California. Why Orrville? In 1897, local farmer Jerome Monroe Smucker opened a cider mill there and began making apple butter from concentrated cider. It’s believed Smucker used apples that originated from trees that had been planted decades before in the area by none other than Jonathan “Johnny Appleseed” Chapman himself. Smucker priced his cider apple butter at 25 cents per half-gallon and sold it in clay crocks from a horse-drawn wagon. The crock’s paper caps were tied with string, and Smucker guaranteed his apple butter’s quality and freshness by hand-signing each cap. Of course, Smucker’s cider apple butter and other fruit spreads now come in glass jars instead of crocks, but Fox points out that in a way, the company’s founder is still vouching for his namesake products. “A replica of J.M. Smucker’s signature is embossed on every jar,” she says. While more than 1,500 jelly jars were used to create the store’s two most eye-catching features — a strawberry chandelier (strawberry jam and mint jelly) and a rainbow-colored wall of jam (blueberry, pineapple, and cherry) — customers are often surprised to find considerably more than jams and jellies on the shelves. Indeed, in the hundred years since Smucker incorporated his apple butter business in 1921, the company has grown into a behemoth of brand-name foods consumed not only by people but also by their pets. Its products, which can be found in 90% of the nation’s homes, include the top brands in fruit spreads (Smucker’s), peanut butter (Jif), dog treats (Milk Bone), and coffee (Folgers). A unique shopping experience, the store showcases products from the company’s family of brands and offers a tastefully curated selection of related culinary and lifestyle merchandise. Go to the store’s pet section, for example, and you’ll find collars, leashes, and cat-opoly games displayed among the bags of Meow Mix and Rachael Ray Nutrish morsels and treats. Head to the coffee department for coffee makers and milk frothers as well as Café Bustelo whole beans and 1850 espresso in ready-to-drink cans. Fun PB&J socks that pair images of Smucker’s Concord Grape Jelly and Jif Creamy Peanut Butter are one of the store’s best sellers, but its most popular food item is Dickinson’s Sweet ‘n’ Hot Pepper & Onion Relish. Of course, the store also carries apple butter, which is still made with the same ingredients J.M. Smucker used. Look for it below the wall of jam, among the hundreds of jars of fruit spreads with the trademark gingham-patterned lids (tip: the cider apple butter lids are brown and white). Another surprise for shoppers is that the store doubles as a museum. Two walls of exhibits chronicle the company’s enterprising journey from unknown cider mill to household name, with the Smucker family at the helm through five generations of innovations, acquisitions, and adapting product lines to changing times. With the family’s history and the company’s corporate heritage so strongly intertwined, it’s certainly fitting that Smucker’s Tomato Ketchup is the one product sold exclusively at the store and its online counterpart (https://shop.smucker.com). The ketchup is made from a Smucker family recipe, and its old-fashioned, slightly sweet flavor has garnered quite a following. “People come and buy that ketchup by the case,” The J.M. Smucker Co. store is open 9 a.m. says Fox, “and if the store runs out, they get upset.” to 5:30 p.m., Monday through Saturday. For
About the store
updates and additional store and company information, call 330-684-1500 or visit www. jmsmucker.com/smucker-cafe-store and www.jmsmucker.com.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 31
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE
Seniors born before 1956 get big boost SLEEK NEW MEDICAL ALERT DEVICE IS FLYING OUT THE DOOR
COMES WITH NO CONTRACTS, NO DEPOSITS AND NO MONTHLY BILLS
Seniors get new medical alert device that instantly connects to free unlimited nationwide help with just the push of a button
Seniors born before 1956 get new medical alert device Special Report: Demand for new Medical Alert Device soars
The phone lines are ringing off the hook. That’s because for seniors born before 1956, it’s a deal too good to pass up. Starting at precisely 8:30 am this morning the PreStore Release begins for the sleek new medical alert device that comes with the exclusive FastHelp™ One-Touch E 911 Button that instantly connects you to unlimited nationwide help everywhere cell service is available with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever. “It’s not like old style monitored help buttons that make you talk to a call center, only work when you’re at home and come with hefty bills every month. FastHelp comes with state-of-the-art cellular embedded technology. That means it works at home or anywhere, anytime cell service is avail-
Instantly connects you to free unlimited nationwide help with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever
Comes with new cellular embedded technology that works at home or anywhere you go so you are never alone
All seniors born before 1956 are getting an instant $150 rebate making this deal just too good to pass up
Nothing to hook up. You don’t need a land line or cell phone. It’s ready to use right out of the box
able whether you’re out watering the garden, driving in a car, at church or even hundreds of miles away on a tour or at a casino. You are never alone. With just a single push of the OneTouch E Button you instantly get connected to free unlimited help nationwide with no monthly bills ever,” said Jack Lawrence, Executive Director of Product Development for U.S. based Universal Physicians. “ We’ve never seen anything like it. Consumers absolutely love the sleek new modern design and most of all, the instant rebate that practically pays for it and no monthly bills ever,” Lawrence said. FastHelp is the sleek new medical alert device with the best of combinations: a quality, high-tech engineered device that’s also an extremely great value because there are no monthly bills ever. ■
Doctor urges seniors to get new medical alert device Seniors snap up new medical alert device that comes with no monthly bills People don’t always do what their doctor says, but when seasoned veteran emergency room physician, Dr. Philip B. How ren says every senior should have a medical alert device, you better listen up. “Seniors a re just one fall away from being put in a nursing home,” Dr. Howren said. “With a medical alert device, seniors are never alone. So it keeps them living independently in their own home. T h at ’s why seniors and their
family members are snapping up a sleek new medical alert device that comes with no monthly bills ever,” he said. Many seniors refuse to wear old style help buttons because they make them look old. But even worse, those medical alert systems come with monthly bills. To solve these problems Universal Physicians, a U.S. company, went to work to develop a new, modern, state-of-the-art medical alert device. It’s called “FastHelp™” and
Sleek new modern design makes you look important not old
it instantly connects you to free un limited nationw ide help everywhere cell ser vice is available with no contrac t s , no deposits and no monthly bills ever. “This slick new little device is designed to look like the pagers do c t or s wea r every day. Seniors love them, because it actually makes them look important, not old ,” D r. Howren said. Fa s t H e l p i s expected to hit store shelves later this year. But special newspaper promotional giveaways are slated for se niors in select areas that call 1-800-275-0444 Ext. HELP3228. ■ (Continued on next page)
32 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE
(Continued from previous page)
No contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever
The only device that makes you look important, not old
FastHelp is the only Medical Alert device that won’t break the bank. That’s because it comes with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever – which makes FastHelp a great choice for seniors, students and professionals because it connects to one of the largest nationwide networks everywhere cell service is available for free. And here’s the best part. All those who already have an old style monitored medical alert button can immediately eliminate those monthly bills, which is why Un iver s a l Physicians is widely advertising this announcement nationwide. So if you’ve ever felt a medical alert device was too complicated or expensive, you’ll want to get FastHelp, the
The problem with medical alert devices is, nobody wa nts to wea r them because it makes them look old. Well, that’s not the case with FastHelp. That’s because it’s the first state of the art medical alert dev ice desig ned to make you look important, not old. Old st yle mon it ored help buttons you wear around your neck, or require expensive base station equ ipment or a landline are the e q u iva lent of a horse and buggy, it’s just outdated. Millions of seniors fall every year and spend hours lying on the floor helpless and all alone with no help. But seniors who fall and get immediate help are much more likely to avoid getting sent to a nu rs ing home and get
sleek new medical alert device with no monthly bills. The medical alert device slugfest was dominated by two main combatants who both offer old style monitored help buttons that come with a hefty bill every month. But now Universal Physicia ns, the U.S. based heavyweight, just delivered a knockout blow sending the top rated contenders to the mat with the unveiling of FastHelp. It’s the sleek new cellular embedded medical alert device that cuts out the middleman by instantly con necting you directly to highly trained 911 operators all across the U.S. There’s absolutely nothing to hook-up or install. You don’t need a land line and you don’t need a cell phone. Everything is done for you. ■
HOW TO GET IT BORN BEFORE 1956:
Use the rebate coupon to the right and call this Toll-Free Hotline: 1-800-275-0444 EXT. HELP3228 BORN AFTER 1956:
You cannot use the rebate coupon to the right and must pay $299 Call: 1-800-281-0344 EXT. HELP3228
PROS: It’s the
sleek new medical alert device that BOTTOM LINE: comes with the You don’t need exclusive FastHelp to shop around. One-Touch E 911 Button that We’ve done all instantly connects the leg work, you to free unlimthis deal is too ited nationwide good to pass help everywhere up. FastHelp with the instant cell service is available with no conrebate is a real tracts or deposits. steal at just It connects you to $149 and shipthe vast available ping and there are no monthly network of cellular towers for free and bills ever. saves seniors a ton of money because there are no monthly bills ever making this deal irresistible. Plus it’s the only medical alert device that makes seniors look important, not old.
to STAY living in their ow n home independently. Yet millions of seniors are still risking their safety by not having a medical alert d e v i c e . T h a t ’s because seniors just can’t afford to pay the monthly bi l ls th at come with old style medical alert devices. T hat’s why seniors born before 1956 are rushing to cash in the whopping $150 instant rebate before the 7 day deadline ends. S o t her e’s no need to wait for Fa stHelp to h it store shelves later this year because seniors born before 1956 can get it now just by using the $150 instant rebate coupon printed in today’s newspaper before the 7- day deadline ends. If lines are busy keep trying, all calls will be answered. ■ CONS: Con-
sumers can’t get FastHelp in stores until later this year. That’s why it’s so important for seniors born before 1956 to call the National Rebate Center Hotline within the next 7 days. For those who miss that deadline, the sleek little medical alert device will set you back over $300 bucks.
Five Star Customer Reviews See what actual customers are saying about FastHelp
VERY IMPRESSED “When I pressed the alert button, I got straight through to help and they answered me immediately. I live out in the country and my cell phone doesn’t always get reception... that was not a problem with my FastHelp device.” - Walter, TN LIFESAVER “When I got my FastHelp I never thought I’d have to use it, but when I fell and broke my hip it saved my life.” - Harold, OH Very appreciative of having FastHelp “I did have an emergency. Help RESPONDED quickly and came in a few minutes.” - Irving, PA
WE LOVE THE PRODUCT “We bought it outright with no bills ever.” - Rosemary, NY Safe anywhere “This little FastHelp device is my guardian angel. I’m so glad my daughter-in-law got it for me.” - Pete, FL Everyone should have it “I’ve been telling everyone to get one. Thanks to the folks at FastHelp for taking good care of people when they need it.” - Mark, IA Love my unit and feel much safer “I am a 68 year old recent widow. Standing on a chair to put my tree topper on this Christmas I thought ‘What if I fell?’ Saw your ad and ordered my FastHelp unit.” - Megan, CA Unsolicited consumer feedback from satisfied customers as reported to Universal Physicians. Universal Physicians rated these customer reviews 5 stars
REBATE COUPON
VALID FOR USE 7 DAYS ONLY Amount of Rebate (AOR )
$150.00
2Y
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RE: HELP3228 DLV Y: ML2077R-1
1 OF 1
FASTHELP IS COVERED BY A 30-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE LESS SHIPPING AND A 1 YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY. FASTHELP IS A 4G CELLULAR DEVICE. FASTHELP WILL NOT BE ABLE TO MAKE 911 CALLS WHEN CELLULAR SERVICE IS NOT AVAILABLE SUCH AS IN REMOTE AREAS. FASTHELP USES GPS TRIANGULATIONS TO APPROXIMATE YOUR LOCATION WHEN YOUR DEVICE IS TURNED ON. DR. HOWREN IS A COMPENSATED MEDICAL P7328 OF22306R-1 ADVISOR. OH RESIDENTS ADD 6.5% SALES TAX. UNIVERSAL PHYSICIANS 7747 SUPREME AVE, NORTH CANTON, OH 44720.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 33
Memorials throughout the state recall the horror and honor the heroism of Sept. 11, 2001. BY DAMAINE VONADA
34 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
The day that changed the nation
t the Tiffin Police and Fire All Patriots Memorial, a daylong observance occurs on each anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States. The ceremonies always begin at 8:46 a.m., the time hijackers flew the first plane into the World Trade Center, but memorial committee secretary Jill Gosche always gets there well early.
A
“I always go early to help lower the flags to half-staff and shine up the memorial’s granite,” Gosche says. “I feel that the site needs to be top-notch and kept clean out of respect for those who gave so much on 9/11.” The Tiffin memorial’s centerpiece is a 17.5-foot-long steel beam recovered from the World Trade Center. It weighs more than 3 tons and rests on a pentagonshaped piece of granite that alludes to the strike on America’s military headquarters. Positioned at an angle of 9.11 degrees, the beam sits low to the ground so people can touch it. “When rust particles drop off that beam, they almost seem like tears,” observes Gosche. Someone once tucked a single red rose into the beam, and that poignant gesture inspired the cover photo of the book Gosche wrote — If the Beam Could Talk — about 9/11 and the effort Tiffin residents put into creating a memorial to both the thousands of lives lost that day and local first responders. Her intention was to ensure that future generations would forget neither the deaths nor the destruction in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville, Pennsylvania. “Every American was affected by 9/11,” Gosche says. “We all felt the attacks that day.” Sept. 11 memorials exist throughout the state. Like Tiffin’s, many of those places of remembrance display pieces of wreckage obtained by everyday Ohioans who were and are dedicated to preserving them as historic artifacts and evidence of the attacks. Each one, however, pays tribute to the heartbreak and heroism of that dreadful day. With 9/11’s 20th anniversary occurring this month, here is a selection of some of Ohio’s memorials.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 35
Clockwise from top left: The city of Alliance’s 9/11 memorial features panels of the buildings’ aluminum “skin” salvaged from the World Trade Center debris (photo courtesy of W. John Gross); A mangled piece of steel punctuates Beavercreek’s display, which also lists the names of those who died that day (photo courtesy of city of Beavercreek); Volunteers will place one flag at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus (shown from above on the opposite page, photo courtesy of Ohio Statehouse) for every person killed on 9/11 (Ira Graham III Photography); Austintown’s memorial includes relics from all three 9/11 sites, including two twisted beams from the World Trade Center (photo courtesy of Mahoning County Convention and Visitors Bureau). Previous page: Part of the steel skeleton of World Trade Center Tower South at Ground Zero in the days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack that collapsed the 110-story twin towers in New York City (Terraexplorer via Getty Images); inset: a close-up view of Tiffin’s memorial (photo courtesy of Jill Gosche).
36 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
9/11 Memorial Alliance’s former safety-service director, W. John Gross, spearheaded one of the nation’s most unusual memorials, which was inspired by an American flag planted on mutilated pieces of the twin towers’ aluminum “skin.” Instead of structural steel, it showcases aluminum panels that were salvaged from the debris and installed in a park in the same north-andsouth orientation as the twin towers. www.cityofalliance.com/381/ 911-Memorial
Austintown
9/11 Memorial Park Visitors follow paths to two twisted beams from the World Trade Center, stone from the Pentagon’s rubble, and an urn containing earth from Shanksville’s crash site. Inscribed with the words “Let’s Roll,” the urn’s pedestal recalls the famous words of Todd Beamer, one of the passengers who confronted United Flight 93’s hijackers. www.youngstownlive.com/ attraction/9-11-memorial-park
Beavercreek 9/11 Memorial
A mangled piece of steel once located between the north tower’s 101st and 105th floors now punctuates the memorial at Beavercreek Station bike trail hub. The 25-foot-tall relic is surrounded by panels that display a 9/11 timeline and the names of all who died. www.beavercreekohio.gov/709/ 911-Memorial
Columbus
Ohio Statehouse Flag Display For 9/11’s 20th anniversary, volunteers will place 2,977 American flags — one for every person killed — on the Ohio Statehouse’s west lawn in a pattern that signifies a pentagon-shaped open space surrounded by the twin towers. Between the stylized towers, a strip of grass represents Flight 93’s crash in Shanksville. www.ohiostatehouse.org
OHIO REMEMBERS
Alliance
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 37
Top: Some of the 500 flags that are part of the 9/11 memorial in Eastlake; below: Gibsonburg’s display includes one of the largest remnants — a 36-foot-long section of the north tower’s antenna.
Eastlake
America Remembers 9/11 Memorial Adjacent to city hall, Eastlake’s memorial includes a lamppost and beam from the World Trade Center, grass from the Shanksville crash site, and granite from the Pentagon. It’s part of Eastlake’s Boulevard of 500 Flags, a stunning red, white, and blue salute to veterans. www.500flags.org/memorial
Gibsonburg
Public Safety Service Memorial One of the World Trade Center’s largest remnants — a 36-footlong, 7,000-pound section of the north tower’s antenna — provides a dramatic focal point for Gibsonburg’s combination 9/11 and first responders memorial. Fittingly enough, a model of New York’s new One World Trade Center (which also was the north tower’s name) supports the hulking antenna. www.sanduskycounty.org/pssm
38 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
Groveport
9/11 Collection at the Motts Military Museum “When they see the fire truck, I’ve had people cry or step back because it’s such a powerful statement about 9/11,” says Warren Motts, founding director of the Motts Military Museum. Crushed during the north tower’s collapse, the truck is the crumpled remains of the New York Fire Department’s Ladder 18 and the crown jewel of the museum’s considerable collection of 9/11 artifacts. Pending construction of a new wing, the fire engine is housed in a storage building that Motts opens to visitors on Thursdays at 10 a.m. www.mottsmilitarymuseum.org
Hilliard
First Responders Park At a handsome park in the heart of Hilliard, tons of contorted steel from the World Trade Center contrast with sleek, black granite walls engraved with the names of those who perished on 9/11. Also on-site are a reflecting pool and a unique sculpture with metal figures representing victims and first responders. www.hilliardohio.gov/parks/first-responders-park
Swanton
Northwest Ohio 9/11 Memorial, Ohio Air National Guard Base The Ohio Air National Guard’s 180th Fighter Wing was activated on Sept. 11, 2001, and today. its base near Toledo is the site of a 9/11 memorial with an ingenious sundial that chronicles the times of each attack. Individual glass stars made by a local artist pay homage to those killed that day (available by appointment only). www.180fw.ang.af.mil
Tiffin
Tiffin Police and Fire All Patriots Memorial The only tree that withstood Ground Zero is a Callery pear that New York’s parks department rescued and revitalized. Thus, a Callery pear tree now graces the grounds of Tiffin’s memorial, and like the “survivor tree,” it’s a living symbol of rebirth and renewal. www.allpatriots.wordpress.com Top: Motts Military Museum’s 9/11 collection includes the crumpled remains of FDNY’s Ladder 18 (photo by Damaine Vonada); middle: First Responders Park in Hilliard features chunks of mangled steel from Ground Zero and granite walls engraved with the names of those killed in the attacks (photo courtesy of city of Hilliard); bottom: the memorial at the 180th Fighter Wing base in Swanton forms a unique sundial that marks the times of the attacks (photo courtesy of Ohio Air National Guard).
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40 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
ALSO INSIDE Stacking the generating deck Surf Ohio Iconic Airstreams
2021 CALENDAR
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER
COMPILED BY COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK
rides, bounce houses, miniature horse cart rides, pumpkin chuckin’, and corn cannons. 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www.facebook.com/nworrp. SEP. 25 – Bluffton Fall Festival, various locations in downtown Bluffton, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Kids’ activities, food, horse-drawn wagon rides, antique tractor show, quilt show, farmers market, and much more. www. blufftonfallfestival.com. SEP. 25 – Elida Mennonite School Benefit Breakfast, Lunch, and Auction, 3666 N. Grubb Rd., Delphos, breakfast starting at 7:30 a.m., auction at 9:30 a.m. Enjoy a country breakfast featuring local wholeTHROUGH OCT. 9 – The Great Sidney Farmers hog sausage; Elida’s famous pork chops for lunch; Market, Courthouse Square, 109 S. Ohio Ave., every homemade doughnuts, baked goods, kettle corn, Saturday, 8 a.m.–noon. Produce, baked goods, and ice cream, and soft pretzels. See our Facebook page crafts. Follow “Sidney Alive” on Facebook or call for photos of auction items. 567-204-4181 or www. 937-658-6945. facebook.com/emsauction. THROUGH OCT. 30 – Bluffton Farmers Market, SEP. 25–26 – Ghost Town Spring Crafts and Antiques Citizens National Bank parking lot, 102 S. Main St., Festival, 10630 Co. Rd. 40, Findlay, Sat. 9 a.m.–5 p.m., downtown Bluffton, Sat. 8:30 a.m.–noon. Storytime Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. 419-673-7783 or www.facebook. with the Bluffton Public Library and live music on select com/Ghost-Town-Findlay-Ohio-1525098627787387. Saturdays. www.explorebluffton.com/farmers-market. SEP. 25–OCT. 24 – Pumpkin Train, Northwest Ohio SEP. 17–18 – Rebel Run, Allen Co. Fgds., 2750 Harding Railroad Preservation Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, Hwy., Lima, Fri. 8 a.m.–8 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.–6 p.m. $5; Sat./Sun. 1–5 p.m. $3; ages 12 and under, $2. Take free for 12 and under. Classic car, truck, and motorcycle a ride on a quarter-scale train to the pumpkin patch event. Entertainment, People’s Choice awards, food to find that special pumpkin, then take one more trip vendors, and more. Vintage racing cars Fri. 5 p.m. and around the track to return to the station. Additional Sat. 1 p.m. Camp sites available. www.rebelrunlima.com. charge for pumpkins, but purchase of pumpkin not required. 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www. SEP. 17–18 – Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, facebook.com/nworrp. Van Wert Co. Fgds., 1055 S. Washington St., Van Wert. Come see us perform at the Van Wert Bluegrass Festival, SEP. 26 – ABATE Motorcycle Toy Run, Allen Co. Fgds., a weekend filled with jamming, stage shows, vendors, 2750 Harding Hwy., Lima. $15/person, or $10 with a food, and camaraderie. Vernon’s vending booth will be toy donation. Gates open at 10 a.m., bikes leave at 12 open throughout the festival. For information, contact p.m. with sheriff escort, returning to fairgrounds around Steve Scott at 419-594-2816. 3 p.m. The event is to raise money and collect toys to benefit needy children for the holidays. www.abate.com. SEP. 17–19 – Delphos Canal Days and Parade, downtown Delphos, Fri. 4 p.m.–midnight, Sat. 10 a.m.– SEP. 26 – Author Mary Stockwell: “Interrupted midnight, Sun. 10 a.m.–6 p.m. Free. Kids’ activities, live Odyssey: Ulysses S. Grant and the American music, fair food, car show, and other entertainment. 5K Indians,” Fort Recovery State Museum, 1 Fort Site St., run/walk Sunday at 9 a.m.; parade Sunday at 2 p.m. Fort Recovery, 3 p.m. Free. Stockwell will show how along Second Street. www.delphoscanaldays.com. Grant developed an Indian policy with the help of his close friend Ely Parker, a Seneca Indian, to protect the SEP. 18 – Positively Perrysburg Fest, downtown tribes and welcome them into the nation as citizens. Her Perrysburg, 9:30 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. Arts and crafts, books will be available for purchase/signing. 419-375marketplace area for businesses/organizations, 4384 or www.fortrecoverymuseum.com. food trucks, family-friendly activities, entertainment, and more. Parade at 10 a.m. 419-874-9147 or www. OCT. 1–2 – Tracks to the Past Antique Machinery perrysburgchamber.com. Show, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, gates open at 9 a.m. $4; SEP. 18–19 – Pumpkin Fest, Northwest Ohio Railroad age 12 and under, $3; admission includes 1 train ticket. Preservation Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, Sat./Sun. 12–5 p.m. $10 per person, all-day access. Family-friendly Machinery show only: $2; free for age 12 and under. Antique machinery of all kinds, including steam engines, games, activities, and events, including Pumpkin Train
NORTHWEST
WEST VIRGINIA
SEP. 30–OCT. 3 – Preston County Buckwheat Festival, 115 Brown Ave., Kingwood. Buckwheat cakes and sausage breakfasts served all day. Car show, livestock shows and competitions, carnival rides, art and crafts, and a buckwheat cake eating contest. info@buckwheatfest.com or www. buckwheatfest.com.
gas engines, tractors, doodle bugs, operating sawmill, shingle mill, baker fan, and much more. Ride the Pumpkin Train during the day or the Halloween Express after dark. 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www. facebook.com/nworrp. OCT. 1–8 – Virtual Gala Fundraiser, Wood County Museum, online event. Bid on fabulous experiences and baskets in this virtual silent auction. All proceeds benefit the Wood County Historical Society and go toward educational programs and exhibits. Auction link: 32Auctions.com/WCMGala2021. For more information: 419-352-0967 or www.woodcountyhistory.org. OCT. 1–30 – Halloween Express, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, Fri./Sat. 6:30–9 p.m. $3; age 12 and under, $2. A non-scary Halloween train ride for the whole family around our tracks to see the Halloween decorations after dark. 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www. facebook.com/nworrp. OCT. 2–3 – “Christmas in October” Craft Show, Hancock Co. Fgds., 1017 E. Sandusky St., Findlay, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. $6; under 12 free. Over 300 exhibitors. $1-off coupon at www.cloudshows.biz/ event-calendar. 419-436-1457 or find us on Facebook. OCT. 6 – German-American Day, Wood County Museum, 13660 County Home Rd., Bowling Green, 7 p.m. $5 members/$10 non-members. Explore your German-related ancestry. Reservations limited to 15 people; RSVP required. 419-352-0967 or www. woodcountyhistory.org. OCT. 7 – Annual Chocolate Walk, downtown Sidney. Tour downtown businesses and enjoy delicious chocolates. Tickets required. www.sidneyalive.org. OCT. 9 – Boos and Brews Fall Fest, downtown Sidney. Coffee, costumes, trick-or-treat, and the last day of the Great Sidney Farmers Market. Stay tuned for more info! www.sidneyalive.org. OCT. 9 – Van Buren Fall Festival and Lions’ Club Apple Butter Fest, Van Buren School, 217 S. Main St., Van Buren, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Apple butter, bean soup cooked over open fire on-site, food vendors, craft show, village garage sales, and kids’ area. Something for the whole family! 419-299-3628 or vanburenapplebutter@ yahoo.com. OCT. 9 – Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, Ohio State Eagles Rec Park, 5118 U.S. 68, Bellefontaine, 8 p.m.–midnight. $5 at gate. Enjoy lively bluegrass music with lightning-fast instrumentals, close harmonies, and entertaining novelty songs. Tent/camper sites or cabin rentals available. For information, call 937-593-1565 or visit the park’s Facebook page.
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.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 41
2021 CALENDAR
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER
NORTHEAST
THROUGH OCT. 30 – “Live Birds of Prey,” Mohican State Park Lodge and Conference Cr., 4700 Goon Rd., Perrysville, every Saturday at 7 p.m. An up-close experience with a variety of Ohio bird species. 419-9385411 or www.discovermohican.com/event. SEP. 5–18 – “Celebrate the Constitution,” Historic Fort Steuben, 120 S. 3rd St., Steubenville, Mon.–Sat 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. 740-283-1787 or www. oldfortsteuben.com. SEP. 17 – Civil War School Day, Historic Zoar Village, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. 330-874-3011 or www.historiczoarvillage.com. SEP. 17–18 – Ohio State African Violet Society Show, Kingwood Center Gardens, 50 Trimble Rd., Mansfield. 937654-7014, melsgrice@gmail.com, or www.osavs.org. SEP. 17–19 – Great Mohican Indian Pow-Wow, 23270 Wally Rd., Loudonville, Fri./Sun. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–7 p.m. $8, C. (6–12) $4, under 6 free. Weekend passes available. Native American live music, dancing, drum competitions, storytelling, tomahawk throwing, and fire starting demos. 800-766-2267 or www. mohicanpowwow.com. SEP. 18–19 – Zoar Civil War Reenactment, Historic Zoar Village, 3 miles east of I-77 on St. Rte. 212. $10 ticket good for both days; free for ages 12 and under. Reenacted battles on both days, artillery night fire, Saturday night ball, Civil War–era shops and tavern. Ticket includes museum tours. 330-874-3011 or www.historiczoarvillage.com; for complete schedule, visit www.zoarcivilwar.com.
SOUTHEAST
THROUGH OCTOBER – Rise and Shine Farmers Market, 2245 Southgate Pkwy., Cambridge, every Friday, 8 a.m.–noon. 740-680-1866 or find us on Facebook. THROUGH DECEMBER – Athens Farmers Market, 1000 E. State St., Athens, every Wednesday, 9 a.m.–1 p.m.; every Saturday, 9 a.m.–noon. 740-593-6763 or www. athensfarmersmarket.org. SEP. 18 – Guernsey Gospel Jubilee Fall Gospel Sing, Cambridge City Park Pavilion, 1203 N. 8th St., Cambridge. Free admission; love offering only. Free parking. 740-7041487 or www.gospeljubilee.org.
SEP. 19 – Wellington Harvest of the Arts, 101 Willard Memorial Square, Wellington, 11 a.m.–4 p.m., rain or shine. Free admission and parking. Fundraiser for Herrick Memorial Library community programming. About 80 fine and folk art juried vendors, a handmade quilt raffle, and more. 440-647-2120 or www.wellingtonfriends.org. SEP. 25 – Fundraiser at the Painesville Railroad Museum, Painesville (NYC) Depot, 475 Railroad St., Painesville, 3–8 p.m. Tickets $20 pre-sale, $25 at the door: all-you-can-eat buffet dinner and soft drink. Basket raffle and 50/50 raffle. 216-470-5780 or www. painesvillerailroadmuseum.org. SEP. 25 – Oktoberfest, Wolf Creek/Pine Run Grist Mill, St. Rte. 3 S., Loudonville, noon–11 p.m. Ages 21 and over, $5; ages 10–20, $1; under 10 free. Enjoy nearly 100 foreign and domestic beers and wine, live music, and food vendors. www.wolfcreekmill.org. SEP. 29–OCT. 2 – Wooster AAUW and Kiwanis Used Book Sale, Wayne Co. Fgds., 199 Vanover St., Wooster, Wed.–Fri. 9 a.m.–8 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Free. Over 45,000 books, bargain priced, cleaned, and sorted. Friday is half-price day; on Saturday, fill a bag for $5. 330-4392093 or www.woosterkiwanis.org/booksale. OCT. 1–2 – Woosterfest, downtown Wooster, Fri. noon–11 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.–11 p.m. Traditional Oktoberfest celebration, with food, music, contests and games, kids’ activities, cruise-in (Sat. 11 a.m.–9 p.m.), and biergarten/ weingarten. 330-262-5735 or www.woosterfest.com. OCT. 2 – Wayne County Stitchers Sewing Fest, Church of the Cross United Methodist Church, 5100 Cleveland Rd., Wooster. Registration 8:30 a.m., classes 9 a.m.–2 p.m. $10. Pack a lunch or buy there, barb814@sssnet.com. OCT. 2–3 – The Great Berea Train Show, Cuyahoga Co. Fgds., 19201 E. Bagley Rd., Middleburg Heights, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $8; under 16 free with adult; $10 for 2-day pass. 700 dealer tables with model trains and supplies for all scales; many operating layouts. info@thegreatbereatrainshow.org or www.thegreatbereatrainshow.org. OCT. 3 – Cleveland Comic Book and Nostalgia Convention, Doubletree by Hilton Cleveland-Westlake,
1100 Crocker Rd., Westlake (I-90 exit 156), 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5, under 7 free. 330-353-0439, jeff@harpercomics.com, or www.harpercomics.com. OCT. 3–17 – “Riverboats on the Ohio,” Historic Fort Steuben, 120 S. 3rd St., Steubenville, Mon.–Sat. 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Exhibit and programs on the history and folklore of the steamboats that traveled the Ohio River. 740-283-1787 or www.oldfortsteuben.com. OCT. 7–10 – Ohio Mart, Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens, 714 N. Portage Path, Akron, Thur.–Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Juried invitational show of fine arts and crafts by talented artisans. See the Stitchery Showcase and “Inspiration in Bloom” floral display in the Manor House. 330-836-5533 or www.stanhywet.org. OCT. 8–10 – Algonquin Mill Fall Festival, Algonquin Mill, 234 Autumn Rd. SW, 4 miles south of Carrollton on St. Rte. 332, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. $8 per vehicle. 50th anniversary. Features an operating steam-powered flour mill and sawmill in a pioneer village setting. Demonstrations, kids’ activities, food, and more. www. carrollcountyhistoricalsociety.com. OCT. 9 – Benefit Cruise-In, Waynedale High School, 9048 Dover Rd., Apple Creek, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Fundraiser for the Gideon Guenther Memorial Scholarship and to purchase new band uniforms. Featuring Thunder Buggy, the jet-powered Amish buggy, 10 a.m.–1 p.m. only. Food and music; raffles. Email suzyqorrconstruc@gmail.com. OCT. 9 – Model Trains Flea Market, Painesville Railroad Museum, 475 Railroad St., Painesville, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. 216470-5780 (Tom) or www.painesvillerailroadmuseum.org. OCT. 9–10 – Holmes County Antique Festival, downtown Millersburg. Antique markets and auctions, parades, arts and crafts, demonstrations, car show, 5K/Fun Walk. Grand Parade Sunday at 2 p.m. http:// holmescountyantiquefestival.org. OCT. 9–10 – Wayne County Farm Tour, various locations, Sat. 11 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 12:30–6 p.m. Take a free, drive-ityourself tour of various farms and agricultural businesses in southeastern Wayne County. 330-263-7456 or www. ofbf.org/counties/wayne.
SEP. 18–19 – Bean Ride 2021, 34546 Atherton Rd., Macksburg. Raising money for four local veterans organizations. Horse trail rides and ATV/UTV rides on Saturday; horse/wagon rides on Sunday. Live auction, country store, live music. 740-525-6220 or www. facebook.com/Bean-Ride-2019-joins-with-kickincancerto ur-1013849982338970. SEP. 23–26 – Barnesville Pumpkin Festival, 117 Cherry St., Barnesville. Fun contests and activities, live music, car show, giant pumpkin parade, pumpkin-based foods, the Great Pumpkin Weigh-Off, and much more! 740-425-2593 or www.barnesvillepumpkinfestival.com. SEP. 25 – Ghost Walk, downtown Chillicothe, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. $10. Tour four locations in downtown Chillicothe and discover their haunted history. www. chillicothehalloweenfestival.com/ghost-walk. SEP. 25 – Main Street Fall Festival, downtown Cambridge, 11 a.m.–7 p.m. Live entertainment, food trucks, vendors, art, kids’ activities, and more. Beer and wine garden will also be available. 740-439-2238 or http://downtowncambridge.com. SEP. 25 – Woodland Cemetery Historic Walk, Lawrence County Museum, 506 South 6th St., Ironton. Don’t miss this historic walk where visitors encounter Underground Railroad conductors, iron masters, ballerinas, Civil War veterans, and others interred in this beautiful cemetery.
The walk is for all ages and is not scary. Refreshments provided during and after at the museum. www. lawcomuseum.org. SEP. 25–26 – Lucasville Trade Days, Scioto Co. Fgds., 1193 Fairground Rd., Lucasville, Sat. 7 a.m.–7 p.m., Sun. 7 a.m.–4 p.m. $5; age 12 and under free. 937-728-6643 or www.lucasvilletradedays.com. OCT. 1–3 – Paul Bunyan Show, Guernsey Co. Fgds., 335 Old National Rd., Lore City (Cambridge), Fri./Sat. 8 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 8 a.m.–3 p.m. $10; Srs./C. (7–12) $5; under 7 free. The original American forestry show, featuring lumberjack competitions, demonstrations and clinics, wood crafts, and much more. 888-388-7337 or www. ohioforest.org. OCT. 7–10, 14–17 – Clue, Chillicothe Civic Theatre, S. Walnut St., Chillicothe. http://cctchillicothe.com. OCT. 8–10 – Chillicothe Halloween Festival, Yoctangee Park, Chillicothe, 10 a.m.–10 p.m., Vendors, food, inflatables, games, exhibits, costume contest, and the annual Coffin Races. www. chillicothehalloweenfestival.com. OCT. 8–10 – Chillicothe Trade Days, Ross Co. Fgds., 344 Fairgrounds Rd., Chillicothe, 10 a.m.–7 p.m. $5. An oldworld-style flea market. www.chillicothetradedays.com.
42 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
CENTRAL
St., Columbus, every Thursday and Friday, 6–9 p.m. (Wed. and Sun. dates available in October). $70. Get hands-on experience blowing glass. All experience levels welcome. 614-715-8000 or www.fpconservatory.org. THROUGH OCT. 31 – Rock Mill Days, Stebelton Park at Rock Mill, 1429 Rockmill Place NW, Lancaster, Wed. and Sat. 11 a.m.–2 p.m., Sun. 1–4 p.m. Free. Tour the restored 1824 gristmill and enjoy Hocking River Falls. 740-6817249 or www.fairfieldcountyparks.org. SEP. 15 – “What About Me? The Patient Perspective in Evidence-Based Practice and Shared Decision Making,” online event, 8 a.m.–noon and 1–5 p.m. $25 half-day session; $40 full day. Part of the Fuld Institute for THROUGH SEP. 25 – Canal Winchester Farmers Evidence-Based Practice National Summit. Sessions will Market, 100 N. High St., Canal Winchester, every help you make better decisions about health care for you Saturday, 9 a.m.–noon. 614-270-5053 or go to www. and your loved ones. Learn more and register at go.osu. thecwfm.com. edu/fuldsummit or 614-688-1175. THROUGH SEP. 30 – Pickerington Farmers Market, SEP. 17–19 – Backwoods Fest, 8572 High Point Rd., 89 N. Center St., Pickerington, every Thursday, 4–7 p.m. Thornville, Fri./Sat. 8 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 8 a.m.–5 p.m. www.pickeringtonvillage.com/events. Over 300 vendors, more than 30 different kinds of food, and 3 days of bluegrass music. 740-246-4709 or www. THROUGH OCT. 16 – Lorena Sternwheeler Public thornvillebackwoodsfest.com. Cruises, Zanesville, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. See website for times. $12, Srs. $10, C. (2–12) SEP. 18 – Duck Derby Fundraiser and Student Horse $8. Enjoy a relaxing cruise down the Muskingum River. Show, 2795 N. Moose Eye Rd., Norwich, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. 740-455-8282, www.facebook.com/LorenaSternwheeler, $5. Kids’ farm experience, raffles, silent auctions, food, or www.visitzanesville.com/Lorena. Duck Derby races (youth and adult) at noon, followed by horse show. Benefits Breaking Free Therapeutic Riding THROUGH OCT. 17 – Monticello III Canal Boat Rides, Center. 740-607-8425 or www.breakingfreeriding.org. Sat./Sun. 1–4 p.m. $8, Srs. $7, Stds. (6–18) $6, under 6 free. Huge draft horse teams pull the canal boat along SEP. 24 – Jefferson Starship, Marion Palace Theatre, an original section of the Ohio and Erie Canal as the boat 276 W. Center St., Marion, 7:30 p.m. $34–$52. Classic captain entertains you with tall tales and history of 1800s rock concert. 740-383-2101 or www.marionpalace.org. life on the canal. www.visitcoshocton.com/events-list.php. SEP. 24–25 – Country Shop Hop, in the Amanda, THROUGH OCT. 30 – Delaware Farmers Market, 20 Stoutsville, and Tarlton area. Enjoy a ride in the country E. Winter St., Delaware, Sat. 9–12 p.m. 740-362-6050 or visiting 19 area businesses. Special offers at each www.mainstreetdelaware.com/event/farmers-market. business; door prizes. Times both days are 8 a.m.–5 p.m. but may vary for individual businesses. 740-503-2125 or THROUGH OCT. 30 – Zanesville Farmers Market, Adornetto’s, 2224 Maple Ave., Zanesville, every Saturday, www.countryshophop.com. 9 a.m.–noon. www.zanesvillefarmersmarket.org. SEP. 24–25 – Sims Fall Festival, 11300 ChillicotheLancaster Rd., Amanda, Fri. noon–7 p.m., Sat. 10 THROUGH OCT. 31 – Hot Shop Studio Class: a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Bean cook Friday night. Antique farm Pumpkins, Franklin Park Conservatory, 1777 E. Broad
equipment, arts and crafts, antiques, mums, pumpkins, and fall items. Special Civil War encampment. Gen. Sherman’s cannon will be fired Fri. 6 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Kids’ games and activities on Saturday. Country Shop Hop participant. 740-969-2225 or www. simsfallfestival.com. SEP. 25 – Oktoberfest, 80 W. Church St., Pickerington, noon–10 p.m. Free. Traditional German celebration. Local brews and wine, food vendors, live music on outdoor stage all day. Fun for all ages! 614-321-8221 or www. pickeringtonvillage.com. SEP. 25–26 – Hocking Hills Artists and Craftsmen Fall Show, Hocking Hills Elementary School, 19197 St. Rte. 664 S., Logan. www.hockinghillsartistsandcraftsmen.com. OCT. 1–3 – Ohio Gourd Show and Festival, Delaware Co. Fgds., 236 Pennsylvania Ave., Delaware, Fri. noon–5 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5 per day, $7 for weekend, under 13 free. Gourd artists and vendors, demos and workshop classes, juried art and horticultural competitions, silent auction, and raffle. Free make-and-take Saturday and Sunday; new Family Day on Sunday. www.ohiogourdsociety.com or on Facebook @ OhioGourdShow. OCT. 8–9 – Fall Bang, downtown Larue. Annual community celebration featuring live music, car show, food and drink, tractor pulls, and more! www. laruecommunityalliance.org. OCT. 8–10 – Columbus Italian Festival, St. John the Baptist Italian Catholic Church, 720 Hamlet St., Columbus, Fri. 5–11 p.m., Sat. noon–11 p.m., Sun. noon–7 p.m. $5, under 12 free. Free parking and shuttle at Columbus State. Food, cooking demos, bocce ball competition, musical performances, and much more! 614294-8259 or www.columbusitalianfestival.com. OCT. 8–17 – 12 Angry Jurors, Wigwam Theater, 10190 Blacklick-Eastern Rd. NW, Pickerington. Presented by Pickerington Community Theatre. Tensions rise as 12 very different personalities interact to obstruct their intentions of reaching a unanimous decision on a murder trial. 614508-0036 or www.pctshows.com.
SEP. 18–19 – Preble County Pork Festival, Preble Co. Fgds., 722 S. Franklin St., Eaton. Free admission/parking. The best pork chops, pulled pork, ham sandwiches, and sausage in the region. Kiddie tractor pull, parade, entertainment, demonstrations, pig races, and more. www.porkfestival.org. SEP. 24 – Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, Vinoklet Winery, 11069 Colerain Ave., Cincinnati, 7 p.m. Free. Enjoy an evening of lively bluegrass. Craft beers and food truck available. 513-832-1422 or http:// fibbrew.com. SEP. 24–26 – Tipp City Mum Festival, Community Park, Tipp City. Free. Parade, rides, entertainment, concessions, cruise-in on Friday, “Run for the Mums” 5K run on Saturday, and much more. 937-667-8631 or www. tippcitymumfestival.org. SEP. 24–OCT. 24 – Art at the Mill, 6450 ArcanumBear’s Mill Rd., Greenville. Monthly art program curated to promote local art/artists and create a gathering place for the public. This month we showcase Tim Freeman and his photography on rice paper. Reception for the artist on Sep. 24, 6–8 p.m. 937-548-5112 or www. bearsmill.org. OCT. 1 – Bacchanal Steel Drum Band, First United Methodist Church, 120 S. Broad St., Middletown, noon–1 p.m. Popular band takes the audience on an island adventure with fun classic tunes sure to lift your spirits. Concert is free and open to the public. Handicapped accessible. Brown bag your lunch and enjoy! 513-4234629 or www.myfumc.net. OCT. 2 – Celebrate Fall at the Johnston Farm, 9845 N. Hardin Rd., Piqua, 12–5 p.m. Tour the Johnston home, visit the Historic Indian and Canal Museum, and
take a ride on the General Harrison of Piqua, a replica of a 19th-century canal boat. 800-752-2619 or www. johnstonfarmohio.com. OCT. 2 – Fall Fest, Trenton Community Park and Amphitheater, 440 Dell Dr., Trenton, 2–11 p.m. Live music, fireworks, car show, kids’ zone, video game truck, vendors, plus food and beverages! 513-988-6304 or www.ci.trenton.oh.us. OCT. 2–3 – Apple Butter Festival, Doty Pioneer Farm, Hueston Woods State Park, 6924 Brown Rd., Oxford, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $4. Demos of apple butter making, spinning, weaving, and blacksmithing; food vendors. Entertainment both days by DJ John, 10 a.m.–noon; Hueston Woods naturalist at 12:15 p.m.; 2nd Time Around bluegrass, 2–4 p.m. www.oxfordmuseumassociation. com/apple-butter-festival-hueston-woods. OCT. 9–10 – Fall Farm Fest, Lost Creek Reserve and Knoop Agricultural Learning Ctr., 2385 E. St. Rte. 41, Troy, Sat. noon–7 p.m., Sun. noon–5 p.m. Free, but charges for some activities. Corn maze, pumpkin patch, scarecrow contest, wagon rides, pony rides, kids’ activities, and more. 937-335-6273 or https://www. miamicountyparks.com/fall-farm-fest. OCT. 9–10 – Ohio Sauerkraut Festival, Waynesville, Sat. 9 a.m.–8 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–6 p.m. Sample homemade sauerkraut and many kraut-containing foods. Non-kraut foods also available. 513-897-8855 or https:// sauerkrautfestival.waynesvilleohio.com. OCT. 12–16 – Bradford Pumpkin Show, downtown Bradford. Free. Parades, concessions, rides, and contests. Baking contest Wednesday. Car show and smash-a pumpkin Saturday. www.bradfordpumpkinshow.org.
SOUTHWEST
T HROUGH OCT. 27 – Bluegrass Wednesdays, Vinoklet Winery, 11069 Colerain Ave., Cincinnati, Wed. 6:30–8:30 p.m. Dinner, wine, and an evening of bluegrass by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Reservations strongly recommended. 513-385-9309 or vinokletwinery@fuse.net. SEP. 11 – Troy Porchfest, downtown Troy. Over 40 bands in a variety of styles and genres on 40 porches and patios and in yards throughout the Southwest Historic District. Food trucks and artisan tents. www.troyhayner.org. SEP. 17–19 – WACO Celebration and Fly-In, WACO Historic Airfield and Learning Ctr., 1865 S. Co. Rd. 25A, Troy. WACO owners fly their aircraft back to Troy, the site of their manufacture. Come see these beautiful aircraft close-up, tour the museum, and take a ride in an open cockpit biplane! www.wacoairmuseum.org. SEP. 18 – Taste of Piqua Festival, downtown Piqua, 11 a.m.–9 p.m. Fine art, crafts, live music, plein air competition, entertainment, kids’ zone, food, and Ohio craft beers. www.piquaartscouncil.org.
SEPTEMBER 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 43
MEMBER INTERACTIVE 1
2
1. We visited the Flight 93 National Memorial in Pennsylvania, which commemorates the crash of United Airlines Flight 93. Tonya Bess South Central Power Company member 2. St. Paul Chapel stood across the street from Ground Zero. Untouched, it became a resting and recuperating spot for all the volunteers. This fireman’s uniform was left by an unknown fireman, who never returned to claim it. It has since remained in this chapel’s small museum dedicated to 9/11. John Hunter Butler Rural Electric Cooperative member 3. “The Sphere,” now standing in Liberty Park, New York City, is a 25-foot bronze sculpture that stood in the World Trade Center Plaza prior to 9/11. John Hunter Butler Rural Electric Cooperative member
REMEMBERING 9/11
4. This is a small section of the FDNY Memorial Wall. FDNY 10 House is across the street from the World Trade Center site. They were the first to respond and lost six members that day. Angela Raver South Central Power Company member
3
Below: Old Glory flying over Lake Erie on a cool, crisp fall morning. Lorie Wilber Lorain-Medina Rural Electric Cooperative member
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Send us your picture! For December, send “Christmas morning” by Sept. 15; for January, send “Sledding” by Oct. 15. Upload your photos at www.ohiocoopliving.com/memberinteractive. Your photo may be featured in our magazine or on our website.
44 OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • SEPTEMBER 2021
ENTER TO WIN A $100 ELECTRIC BILL CREDIT!* Bring your completed entry form to
Name:
the Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives education center on Wheat Street at
Electric co-op name:
the 2021 Farm Science Review.
Email address:
*Must be an Ohio electric cooperative member to enter and win. Must be original entry form — no photocopies.
FARM SCIENCE REVIEW September 21–23, 2021
STOP BY OUR BUILDING Learn ways to save energy (and money) in your home and on the farm. Cool off and enjoy samples from a local food blogger! And, of course, stop by for complimentary popcorn!
This major agricultural show sponsored by The Ohio State University draws more than 130,000 people every year. It’s a fun, educational event for everyone.
ohioec.org/energy
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