Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative
Official publication | www.midohioenergy.com
OCTOBER 2017
Jail of Terror!
Preserving haunted — and human — history in Newark
ALSO INSIDE Humbled by hurricanes R. L. Stein’s Goosebumps The Cooperative Difference Ohio’s unique college mascots
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NATIONAL
COOPERATIVE MONTH
Every October, Ohio electric co-ops celebrate you— their member-owners. Your co-ops are local, not-forprofit, and democratically controlled by members like you. That’s the cooperative difference. Thank you for being a part of your co-op!
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INSIDE
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
HIGHLIGHT
24 BEYOND BUCKEYES
Ohio boasts a bumper crop of nutty mascots roaming the college sports sidelines.
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In this issue:
Attica (p. 4) Ashtabula (p. 6) Bexley (p. 8) Newark (p. 10) Bluffton (p. 16) Cincinnati (p. 24) Tiffin (p. 26) Wilmington (p. 25) Delaware (p. 25) Akron (p. 25)
10 FEATURES 4 COOPERATIVE DIFFERENCE Electric co-ops show commitment to their communities through the Be E3 Smart program. 8 GIGGLES AND GOOSEBUMPS Ohio native R.L. Stine balances horror and humor to draw in young readers.
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10 JAILHOUSE HOME For decades, the Licking County Jail served as a residence for those who oversaw the inmates. 15 OKTOBER-FEAST! From sausage to sauerkraut, schnitzel to streusel, Ohio Cooperative Living readers buried us in Bavarian fare for our latest recipe contest. 30 LUSTRON HOMES For a short time after World War II, a Columbus company played a pivotal role in housing all the returning veterans who needed a place to live. Cover photo of the Old Licking County Historic Jail, in most editions, by JRD Photography.
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OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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UP FRONT
C HUMBLED BY
H URRICANES
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helter, food, clean water, electricity — these are the essentials of life in today’s world. For all the technology and innovation available in our modern society, these essentials can still be stripped away in minutes by the power of nature. Across much of Texas, Florida, and nearby states, recovery efforts are underway as of this writing from hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Hopefully by the time you read this, these essentials will have been restored to everyone impacted by these storms. When lives are turned upside down by events beyond anyone’s control, it’s the kindness of strangers — people willing to help those in need — that starts the process of putting things back together. I’m particularly touched by how quickly and completely our sometimesbitter differences fade away.
Pat O’Loughlin
Back here in Ohio, most of us have not even been inconvenienced by these storms. But here’s what I know: Hundreds of Ohioans have packed up and headed into the hardest-hit areas to help people restore the essentials, to help clean up, or even to help start over — and it’s not because of who needs help, it’s just because they need help.
of the Cooperative
Seventy-two of Ohio’s electric cooperative linemen left the day after Irma crashed through to assist electric co-ops in Georgia in restoring power to the tens of thousands of people who were left without. Behind the scenes, we’ve been preparing for months and years to be able to quickly and safely mobilize help whenever and wherever needed. It’s work, but it’s more than a business trip. It really is another part of the Cooperative Difference. Neighbors helping neighbors, near or far, because for all our differences, there is still much more that binds us together than pushes us apart.
President & CEO Ohio's Electric Cooperatives
It really is another part Difference. Neighbors helping neighbors, near or far, because for all our differences, there is still much more that binds us together than pushes us apart.
God bless and protect all those affected by these storms and the neighbors who have come to their aid!
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OHIO OHIO COOPERATIVE COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER LIVING • SEPTEMBER 20172017
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October 2017 • Volume 60, No. 2
OHIO
COOPERATIVE LIVING
Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives 6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757 memberinteract@ohioec.org www.ohioec.org Patrick O’Loughlin Patrick Higgins Jeff McCallister Samantha Rhodes Anita Cook
President & CEO Director of Communications Managing Editor Associate Editor Graphic Designer
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ohioec.org
Official publication of your electric cooperative www.ohioec.org
Check out the mobilefriendly website and digital edition of Ohio Cooperative Living, as well as other timely information from Ohio’s electric cooperatives.
OCTOBER 2017
Jail of Terror!
Preserving haunted — and human — history in Newark
n
Official publication of your electric cooperative www.ohioec.org
OCTOBER 2017
ALSO INSIDE Humbled by hurricanes R. L. Stein’s Goosebumps The Cooperative Difference Ohio’s unique college mascots
Jail of Terror!
Preserving haunted — and human — history in Newark
FOLLOW US ON :
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ALSO INSIDE Humbled by hurricanes R. L. Stein’s Goosebumps The Cooperative Difference Ohio’s unique college mascots
Contributors: Brian Albright, Paul Batterson, Colleen Romick Clark, Maura Gallagher, W.H. “Chip” Gross, Magen Howard, Pat Keegan, Isaac Miller, Catherine Murray, Kelsey Rollins, Craig Springer, Damaine Vonada, and Margie Wuebker. OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. With a paid circulation of 294,359, it is the official communication link between the electric cooperatives in Ohio and West Virginia and their members. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved.
For all advertising inquiries, contact GLM COMMUNICATIONS 212-929-1300 sales@glmcommunications.com
What’s the wackiest holiday traditi on you’ve ever heard of? We’ve all seen “that” family who goes above and beyond for the holidays — or maybe your family is that family! Either way, we’re looking for interesting, obscure, or downright one-of-a-kind holiday traditions. Who do you know that partakes in an unusual holiday pastime? Take to our Facebook or Twitter pages to share your responses with our staff. Find us by searching for Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives or your local electric co-op.
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 Office, Consumer Protection Section, 30 E. Broad St., Columbus, OH 43215, or call 1-800-282-0515. Periodicals postage paid at Columbus, OH, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101
Cooperative members: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes. Alliance for Audited Media Member
DID YOU KNOW? Ohio native R.L. Stine’s Goosebumps books have sold around 400 million copies worldwide in 32 different languages. But it wasn’t always an easy road for the children’s horror author; between 1990 and 1999, his books were some of the most controversial, even reaching number 15 on the Top 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books list. The books’ common theme that children always triumph over evil won out, and the series is now the second best-selling children’s book series next to Harry Potter. To learn more about Goosebumps’ Ohio roots, see Page 8.
Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives is an equal opportunity provider and employer. OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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POWER LINES
BY MAGEN HOWARD
ENERGY, EFFICIENCY, EDUCATION Be E3 Smart program helps connect co-ops with classrooms The Be E3 Smart program provides teachers with resources — such as the energy bike and Snap Circuits (opposite page) — to help them reach their students in new and different ways. Students can even get an up-close look at the Cardinal Station generating facility in Brilliant, Ohio.
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ake a dash of youthful curiosity, combine it with inspired teachers, and add a free curriculum, and that’s a winning formula for the Be E3 Smart program. The E’s stand for energy, efficiency, and education, and the program’s goal is to help middle school teachers help their students understand the power of energy. It comes with the teacher’s curriculum from the Ohio Energy Project, a nonprofit based in Worthington, as well as energy efficiency items for students to use at home thanks to sponsorship support from 23 electric cooperatives serving Ohio. “I can’t say enough about the program and how much it’s helped us to teach, and with materials that are provided — it just makes it so much easier,” says Ellen Lynch, who teaches seventhgrade science and eighth-grade health at Seneca East Local Schools. “What is so wonderful is they provide so many hands-on materials. With each lesson, there’s at least one experiment.”
Hands-on learning Lynch, whose Be E3 Smart materials are sponsored by North Central Electric Cooperative in Attica, has 4
put a grand experiment at the center of her energy curriculum: Students are charged with creating Rube Goldberg machines, named after the man whose thousands of cartoons depicted purposefully difficult and elaborate ways of completing simple tasks. “They have to create devices or a machine, following the scientific method, and it has to have at least five energy transformations,” Lynch says — think getting a marble into a basket, or powering up a computer to play a video. “Using anything from air in a balloon to dominoes falling, they’ve been very, very creative. They’re not allowed to buy anything. They’ve really done a great job with the machines, and they’re really fun to watch.” So fun that Lynch started recording the students’ machines in action. The videos go on Seneca East’s website each year for everyone to get in on the fun.
Students become the teachers About 20 minutes farther south in North Central’s service area is Buckeye Central Middle School in New Washington, where Marianne Williamson teaches seventh- and eighth-grade science. A few years ago, six of her Be E3 Smart students became the teachers
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at the Ohio eTech conference in Columbus. “We had a booth where students showed the teachers how to teach lessons from the curriculum,” says Williamson, whose Be E3 Smart classroom is also sponsored by North Central Electric. “Our students interacted with professionals, explaining how the Be E3 Smart curriculum worked and demonstrating different experiments.” And that’s where Be E3 Smart is unique. It shows students the real-world effects of energy production and encourages them and their families to be more conscious of those effects in everyday life. “There’s the big idea, something we talk about — reducing the amount of energy we use — but we like our conveniences, computers, lights, phones,” Lynch says. “So how can we make very small changes to conserve energy and still live the way we want?”
“I can’t say enough about the program and how much it’s helped us to teach, and with materials that are provided — it just makes it so much easier.” — Ellen Lynch Teacher, Seneca East Local Schools
with critical-thinking opportunities for our future generations by way of energy education and efficiency,” Williamson says. “Students have become engaged in energy efficiency and conservation by installing useful materials in their own homes — gifts from the cooperatives who genuinely care about their members and the world in which we live.” For North Central Electric, caring is embedded in its business model — locally owned, locally operated, with a commitment to serving its communities.
Williamson says it also gives her students the opportunity to gain social and professional skills.
“One of the cooperative’s key strategies is to look for opportunities to connect the children of our members to education and other programs that will benefit them,” says Terry Mazzone, North Central’s director of member and community relations. “The Be E3 Smart program does that for us. These dynamic and innovative teachers have even invited our energy services advisors into their classroom to talk about how they can help their families use energy wisely.”
“The Ohio Energy Project and our rural electric cooperatives are providing local school districts
To learn more about the Be E3 Smart program and the Ohio Energy Project, visit www.ohioenergy.org.
Learning more than just science
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OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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OHIO ICON
STORY AND PHOTOS BY DAMAINE VONADA
BRANT’S
APPLE ORCHARD Ashtabula Location: Northern Ashtabula County between Lake Erie and Interstate 90. Provenance: Roy and Debbie Brant established the orchard in the early 1980s, and built a barn that houses an on-site bakery and farm market. In 2014, they sold the 79-acre property to current owners Brian and Jenn Diehl, who operate Brant’s Apple Orchard with help from their two teenage sons as well as orchard manager Brian Morris and farm market/bakery manager Shelly Damon. Significance: With a picturesque pond surrounded by trees displaying a kaleidoscope of colors, and pot-bellied stoves that make the barn feel warm and cheery, Brant’s Apple Orchard is one of northeast Ohio’s favorite fall destinations. Going there for just-picked apples, jugs of sweet cider, or Brant’s ever-popular cider donuts is a local tradition, and on the day before Thanksgiving, the barn bustles with people buying homemade pumpkin and apple pies. Because Ashtabula County is famous for its covered bridges, autumn visitors also like to make Brant’s part of their itinerary.
Currently: Brant’s grows three kinds of Asian pears, six types of table grapes, and 23 varieties of apples, including its best-selling Honeycrisp (for eating) and Cortland (for baking). After acquiring the orchard, the Diehls significantly enlarged the barn, yielding a bigger bakery, a farm market, and an eating area, where customers enjoy soups and sandwiches made on oven-fresh breads. “Our chicken salad is made from scratch with our own apples and grapes,” Jenn Diehl says, “and it’s served on our cranberry bread.” Besides local maple syrup and honey, the farm market features Brant’s apple butter, bourbon apple butter barbecue sauce, and refreshing cider slushies. Brant’s cider is made on an 1895 cider press from a blend of several varieties of ripened apples. “We usually press cider on Tuesdays and Fridays,” notes Diehl, “and customers can watch.” It’s a little-known fact that: The orchard’s grounds boast 2,700 apple trees, wooded walking trails, and a play area with slides topped by a miniature covered bridge. Brant’s also shows movies on Saturday nights; offers weekend hayrides; gives educational orchard tours; and hosts a Fall Festival and Halloween Costume Party every October.
© 0
Brant’s Apple Orchard, 4749 Dibble Rd., Ashtabula, OH 44004. Open mid-August until the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. Tours by appointment. For information, call 440-224-0639 or visit www. brantsappleorchard.com. 6
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
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OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
B_I_V = Live Area: 7 x 10, 7x10 Magazine Master, 1 Page, Installment, Vertical updated 11/2013
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PROFILES BY BRIAN ALBRIGHT
AND Ohio native R.L. Stine balances horror and humor for young readers
S
caring children may seem like an odd way to make a living, but Goosebumps author R.L. Stine has a knack for it. “You just sort of feel it,” says Stine, an Ohio native who grew up in Bexley. “In the beginning of writing a book, you have to decide how scary to go. If it’s not scary enough, the book is boring. If it’s too scary, it gets silly or ludicrous. It’s a fine line when you’re dealing with 7- to 11-year-olds.”
Stine is something of an expert at walking that line. Long before the children’s and young adult book markets were overrun by wizards and vampires, Stine launched a horror series for teens (Fear Street) in 1989, followed by Goosebumps in 1992 — and soon came to a realization that helped him strike that balance. “They like to be scared,” he says of his young audience. “I didn’t understand that when I first started doing these things. But people just like to have a scary adventure when they know they are really okay, and kids do know that. That’s the thing about Goosebumps — they know what to expect. There will be twists and turns, and it will all end up okay.”
Powerhouse franchise Stine’s spooky empire has since grown to massive proportions. An insanely prolific writer, he has published more than 300 books and sold somewhere in the ballpark of 400 million copies — making him one of the all-time best-selling authors of children’s books, right up there with
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GIGGLES
Dr. Seuss and J.K. Rowling. The Goosebumps series has spawned comic books, audiobooks, a TV series, numerous spin-off series, a musical, a theme park, board games, video games, and a 2015 full-length feature film.
There are also three films based on his Fear Street series (set in Shadyside, Ohio) in the works, and he’s published two picture books, The Little Shop of Monsters (2015) and Mary McScary (2017), illustrated by Arthur creator Marc Brown. Stine also scripted a new Man-Thing series for Marvel Comics.
Hometown influence Although he’s known for being scary, Stine has always been just as interested in making people laugh, which is evident in some of his more absurd Goosebumps titles like The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena and Planet of the Lawn Gnomes. His writing is also heavily informed by his upbringing in Ohio, and the majority of his books take place in suburban Midwestern neighborhoods. “I often think back to Bexley when I create those neighborhoods, and I use the places of my childhood to set the stories in,” Stine says. Stine and his brother went to Saturday matinees at the Esquire theater on Broad Street and the Drexel on Main, where they laughed at the low-budget horror movies that later would greatly influence Stine’s books. He also spent much of his free time as a kid writing and drawing his own comic books.
Jovial Bob from Bexley While Bexley is known as one of the wealthier communities in Columbus, Stine describes his upbringing as poor. “We lived in a brick house on
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the edge of Bexley, and on the next block were these huge mansions. The governor’s mansion was two blocks from us. As a child I always felt like an outsider because we didn’t have money. That sort of turned me into an observer. That’s one of the reasons I’m a writer.” He launched his writing career editing the humor magazine (The Sundial) at Ohio State before moving to New York in the late 1960s. He landed a job at Scholastic, where he wrote joke books for children under the name “Jovial Bob” Stine and eventually launched Bananas, a humor magazine for kids that was published in the 1970s and 1980s. He also occasionally contributed to Dynamite magazine, another Scholastic publication that was edited by his wife, Jane (who also co-founded Parachute Press, the company that originally launched both the Fear Street and Goosebumps series).
And he’s still able to snack on his favorite pizza from Rubino’s (something of a Bexley institution), which he has frozen and shipped to his Manhattan apartment. “That’s the one thing I miss about Ohio,” Stine says. “I’ve been a New Yorker for a long time now, but Columbus has the best pizza. Even my wife, who is a real New Yorker, admits that Columbus has better pizza.” Brian Albright is a freelance writer from Cleveland Heights.
Giving back, getting back Although he doesn’t get back to Ohio often, Stine does maintain ties to Columbus. He provided an endowment for the Bexley Education Foundation’s R.L. Stine Creative Writing Workshops. Earlier this year, he made a personal appearance at the Drexel Theater, and afterward spent part of his evening palling around with old friend Fred “Fritz the Nite Owl” Peerenboom, whom he has known since his college days.
OCTOBER 2017 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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CO-OP PEOPLE
BY MAURA GALLAGHER
JAILHOUSE HOME
The Energy Cooperative’s Nelson Smith grew up in the ‘Jail of Terror’
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magine being 13 years old and going home every day for the next six years — to jail.
Nelson Smith, chairman of the board of The Energy Cooperative in Newark, called the Licking County Jail home for nearly the entire span of his teenage years, but not because he had committed any crimes. Smith moved into the Licking County Jail when his mother was hired in the early 1960s to be the head cook and jail matron, the person in charge of the female prisoners.
“One of my favorite things about being a part of the LCGPS is having the opportunity to give some amazing tours and relay the history of the jail and a few of my many stories from living here,” Smith says. The jail has quite a history, in fact — one that’s left it with a reputation for being haunted.
Haunting origins When it was built in the late 1880s, the Licking County Jail was considered 10
BACKGROUND PHOTO BY JRD PHOTOGRAPHY
Now Smith has found his way back to the jail, as a trustee for the Licking County Governmental Preservation Society (LCGPS), where he chairs the activities committee. Smith coordinates fundraisers and tours of the jail — which has since been renamed The Old Licking County Historic Jail — to help with its preservation, restoration, and use.
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A copy of a special edition of the Newark Advocate from 1910, documenting one of several notorious events in the old jail’s history, hangs from the jailhouse wall.
to be the finest jail in Ohio, according to LCGPS’s biography of the institution. Designed by architect Joseph Warren “J.W.” Yost, the original budget was $68,685, though the final cost was nearly double that by the time it opened. PHOTOS BY MIKE ELTRINGHAM
The jail was set up in a way that is unheard of today. The three floors in the front were residential. There were offices, a foyer, a living room, a dining room, and a family kitchen on the first floor and bedrooms for the sheriff’s family on the second floor; the third floor was designated for the matron, so that was where Smith lived with his family. But four sheriffs, including three consecutive, had fatal heart attacks in the same bedroom, ending the building’s days as a residence in 1971. All the residence rooms were converted into staff offices.
Then, of course, there was Carl Etherington.
The back four floors of the jail housed inmates. One floor held women, and the other three floors were for men, with a “drunk tank” in the basement. The jail had 34 cells, with two bunks per cell, allowing for 68 inmates. The walls of these cells saw some dangerous and famous prisoners — some of whom contribute to the ghostly tales told during jail tours to this day.
Etherington, a detective with the Anti-Saloon League of Ohio, came to Newark to raid saloons for serving illegal alcohol in 1910. Etherington shot a local saloon owner, in self-defense, and was taken to the Licking County Jail. A mob stormed the jail, forcibly removed Etherington, and hanged him from a telephone pole in the Newark town square.
The Lewingdon brothers, better known as the “.22-caliber killers,” murdered 10 people across three counties in central Ohio and were inmates before being sent to state prison.
The future of the historic jail The Licking County Jail operated for 99 years, until it became overcrowded and closed its doors in 1987, and a new jail was built a couple of blocks away. Continued on Page 12 Nelson Smith (opposite page) and the Licking County Governmental Preservation Society are working to restore the residence portion of the Old Licking County Historic Jail to its once-splendorous state.
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Continued from Page 11
The Old Licking County Historic Jail has also been featured on the Travel Channel’s Ghost Adventures, and it frequently has paranormal investigators performing ghost hunts to track down the spirits that are said to haunt the jail to this day.
Four sheriffs, including three consecutive, had fatal heart attacks in the same bedroom, ending the building’s days as a residence in 1971.
LCGPS hosts fundraisers throughout the year, including flashlight tours, ghost hunts, and the “Jail of Terror,” a haunted house during the Halloween season (see sidebar). LCGPS also raises money through a 5K road race, the Oktoberfest-style Jailhouse Rock Beer Fest, and an annual Carl Etherington memorial fundraiser. To learn more, visit www.lcjail.org.
Ghosts have long been said to roam the halls of the former Licking County Jail in downtown Newark. Now, thanks to the Licking County Governmental Preservation Society (LCGPS), those spirits are brought back to life every Friday and Saturday from the last Friday of September through the end of October as the old building transforms into the “Jail of Terror.” The LCGPS, which has overseen the old jail building since it closed its doors in 1987 and is tasked with its restoration and historical promotion, came up with the idea in 2015 to convert the jail into a haunted house during the Halloween season.
Working with haunted house entertainment company Factory of Terror, out of Canton, the society spends two months setting up to create one of the scariest settings around. Actors portraying prisoners, gh ouls, and ghosts from the jail’s creepy past create a gory experience that people of all ages can enjoy (though parental discretion is advised for younger folks).
The haunt begins in the sheriff’s living quarters, continues down to the cellblock levels — which are full of rioting inmates — then finishes with one last scare in the jail yard.
PHOTOS BY MIKE ELTRINGHAM
Doors open at 7 p.m., and tours last through midnight. Regular tickets cost $17, though fast pass tickets that allow patrons to jump to the head of the line are available for $25. The walk through the jail lasts about 20 minutes, and lines form that can create about a twohour wait, so patrons are advised to arrive early. Proceeds from the haunt are set aside to restore areas such as the foyer and the sheriff’s office to their original state. For more details, visit www.jailofterror.com. The Old Licking County Historic Jail (above) as it stands today, and the marker that only scratches the surface of the building’s history.
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Annual haunting SPINE/BIND EDGE/GUTTER
Though the historic jail may be dark and scary — and possibly haunted — its future is bright. The restoration and preservation of the jail is on the upswing, as LCGPS works to restore the building to the condition Smith experienced during his time there.
— Isaac Miller
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017 10½ 10¾
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
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GOOD EATS
STORIES BY MARGIE WUEBKER
Oktober-feast! This month means Oktoberfest in communities across Ohio, and when we asked you, our readers, to roll out your recipes for all foods German, you did not disappoint! After we sampled delicacies ranging from sausages to sauerkraut, strudel to schnitzel, these three emerged as our favorites.
PHOTO BY CATHERINE MURRAY
OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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GOOD EATS
With no old family recipes to rely upon, our contest winner re-creates restaurant and festival fare. Pam Hoffman knew her Pork Schnitzel was a winner long before she entered the recipe in Ohio Cooperative Living’s Oktoberfest recipe contest. “My stepfather was born in Romania and lived in Germany for several years,” she says. “He says the schnitzel is the best he’s ever eaten.”
KELSEY ROLLINS PHOTOGRAPHY
Judges awarded Hoffman, a member of Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative and first-time contest entrant, a KitchenAid mixer as top prize in the contest. Logan County Electric Cooperative member Tracy McPherson, who entered her recipe for Oktoberfest Beer Cheese Soup, and North Central Electric Cooperative member Ruth Pifher, who entered her recipe for Hot German Potato Salad, each took runner-up honors. (Continued, top of next page)
WINNING RECIPE Pork Schnitzel 4 boneless pork cutlets (1 lb. total), ½ inch thick ¼ cup all-purpose flour 1 tsp. seasoned salt ¼ tsp. freshly ground black pepper 1 egg, beaten 2 Tbsp. milk 1 cup panko bread crumbs 1 tsp. paprika 3 to 4 Tbsp. olive oil Sauce: ¾ cup chicken broth, divided 1 Tbsp. all-purpose flour ½ cup sour cream ½ tsp. fresh dill ½ tsp. salt Lemon slices (optional)
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Use a meat hammer to pound the pork cutlets to ¼ to 1⁄8 inch thickness. Cut small slits around the edges of each cutlet to prevent curling. Set out three shallow bowls — one with a mixture of flour, seasoned salt, and pepper; the second with the egg and milk whisked together; and the third with a mixture of bread crumbs and paprika. Heat olive oil in a large skillet on medium-high heat. Dredge cutlets in seasoned flour, then in the egg mixture, and finally in the bread crumb mixture. Let stand 5 minutes. Working in batches, sauté cutlets for 3 to 4 minutes on each side. Remove cutlets from the skillet, and place on a cooling rack over a sheet pan to keep warm in a 200-degree oven. For sauce: Stir ¼ cup broth into skillet, scraping up browned bits. In a bowl, combine flour and remaining broth, whisking until smooth. Stir into skillet and bring to a boil, cooking and stirring for 1 to 2 minutes or until thickened. Reduce heat and stir in sour cream, dill, and salt. Heat through, but do not let mixture boil. Serve cutlets with sauce and lemon slices, if desired. Serves 4.
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Although many schnitzel recipes call for veal, Hoffman substitutes pork loin, which is cheaper and more readily available near her Bluffton-area home. She especially likes using panko bread crumbs for the extra crispiness they impart. The dillinfused sauce serves as the crowning touch. She frequently takes advantage of pork loin sales to prep schnitzels and place the uncooked treats in the freezer for later use.
“I have ancestors who came from Germany in the 1800s, but their native recipes did not get passed down through the generations,” she said. “My husband (Mike) and I enjoy going to German restaurants and festivals, so I research recipes and tweak them until they suit our tastes. I am compiling my own German cookbook to preserve my food heritage to enjoy now and to pass on to future generations.”
CATHERINE MURRAY
RUNNERS-UP
Tracy McPherson, also a first-time contest entrant,
created the Oktoberfest soup years ago while operating a small family restaurant in Bellefontaine — one that employed special needs adults and those on public assistance to teach job skills. “Guinness was a featured beer in our pub, so we incorporated it into a cheese soup during our Oktoberfest celebrations,” she says. “Dark beer brings out the cheese flavor and imparts a smoky touch.” McPherson, who is currently studying clinical mental health counseling, has shared the recipe many times. Her son even took along a copy when he moved to California some years ago.
Oktoberfest Beer Cheese Soup ½ cup butter 1½ medium carrots, finely chopped (3/4 cup) 1 medium stalk celery, finely chopped (1/2 cup) 1 small onion, finely chopped (1/4 cup) 3 cups chicken broth ½ pound butter and 2 cups flour for roux
1/8 tsp. pepper 1/8 tsp. cayenne pepper 1 cup milk 4 cups shredded sharp cheddar cheese ½ cup beer (dark preferred) Sour cream or sprig of thyme for garnish
In a 4-quart Dutch oven, melt ½ cup butter over medium heat. Add carrots, celery, and onion; cook 10 minutes, stirring occasionally until crisp-tender. In a large bowl, mix broth, roux ingredients, pepper, and cayenne pepper until smooth. Gradually stir into vegetable mixture. Heat to boiling over medium heat, stirring occasionally. Boil and stir 1 minute. Stir in milk and cheese. Heat until cheese is melted. Stir in beer. Serve immediately with a dollop of sour cream or a sprig of thyme. Serves 4 to 5. Note: Soup may be reheated on low until heated through.
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Ruth Pifher had no problem deciding which recipe to
enter in the magazine contest. She pegged all her hopes on her mother’s tried-and-true Hot German Potato Salad. “My mother (Lillian Schock) made this often because it is a family favorite,” she says. “For the last 20 years she has made it as a side dish at the church Oktoberfest celebration in Attica.” The experimentation began when the church cookbook committee requested the recipe for an upcoming publication. They wanted a smaller version of the popular treat. Pifher always cuts the potatoes into small cubes instead of thin slices to absorb the tangy sauce. She also recommends using the cheapest bacon available to make sure there are plenty of drippings for the sauce. Celery seed adds extra flavor. “It is a good fall food that our family enjoys all year long and not just at Oktoberfest time,” she says.
Hot German Potato Salad 5 to 6 medium potatoes 1 lb. bacon 2 Tbsp. flour ¼ cup sugar 11/2 tsp. salt
½ tsp. celery seed 1/8 tsp. black pepper 1 cup water ½ cup vinegar
Wash unpeeled potatoes and boil until soft. Cool slightly, peel, and cut into small chunks (about 4 cups). Cut bacon into small pieces and fry until crisp. Remove bacon with a slotted spoon and set aside. Stir flour, sugar, salt, celery seed, and pepper into bacon grease until smooth. Cook until bubbly, stirring as needed. Add water and vinegar to flour mixture. Cook until it boils and thickens. Remove from heat and add potatoes and bacon. Stir gently so potatoes hold their shape. Serves 4 to 6. Note: Salad can be transferred to a slow cooker to keep warm until ready to serve.
OCTOBER OCTOBER2017 • OHIO 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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BY PAT KEEGAN
THE ENERGY EXPERT
DUCTLESS
HEAT PUMPS PHOTO CREDIT (COMPRESSOR) SCOTT GIBSON.
PHOTO CREDIT (BLOWER): NW ENERGY EFFICIENCY ALLIANCE.
Heat and cool your home without blowing your budget
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f baseboard heaters and window AC units are driving up household electric bills, mini-split ductless heat pumps might be a good answer. The pumps can heat efficiently even when winter temperatures drop below freezing, and they are an economical and energy-efficient way to beat the summer heat. Ductless heat pumps are often installed as the primary heating source, paired with a backup system that kicks in when outside temperatures are extremely cold. In regions and in the proper type of home, those who switch to this kind of system should see considerable reductions in heating costs. Peter Niagu, an energy services advisor with Paulding Putnam Electric Cooperative in Paulding, Ohio, says members there have found that ductless systems with a backup heating system can work effectively even when the temperature is below zero. Ductless heat pump systems could be an ideal solution in homes that don’t have a duct system, or when replacing or repairing existing ductwork would be prohibitive. Niagu also says the system is much more suited for homes with a few larger, open spaces than for those with many rooms to heat and cool. A ductless heat pump has two main components: the outdoor compressor and the indoor air handler. Coolant and electrical lines run through a conduit from the compressor outside the home through the wall to the inside air handler(s). The pumps can be configured in different ways. A common approach is to provide heating and cooling to one large zone in the home by using a single compressor and a single air handler, but one compressor could power as many as five inside air handlers in different rooms, each with its own thermostat. A home could even have more than one outside compressor, though as more are added, obviously the price increases, and homeowners would need to evaluate the cost compared to other systems.
Pat Keegan writes for Collaborative Efficiency, an energy communications company.
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With ductless heat pumps, an exterior compressor can be either set on a foundation on the ground, or mounted to a wall (right). A blower, sized appropriately for the room, is then installed inside the house (left).
Questions to consider
Ductless heat pumps are often a great solution, but it’s wise to consider these questions: • What are the other investments you could make to reduce your energy costs or improve comfort? Is the ductless heat pump the best option? A thorough energy audit of your home will help answer these questions. • Are rebates offered by your electric co-op? • What is the best size and efficiency level for a ductless heat pump in your situation? • Are there contractors in your area with experience installing ductless heat pumps? Contact your local electric co-op for a list of recommended contractors, and visit www. energystar.gov for tips on hiring contractors.
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
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MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES
IN THE COMMUNITY
Kenton office celebrates a year of
SERVING THE COMMUNITY As Mid-Ohio Energy’s Kenton headquarters completes its first year of operation, the one-of-a-kind facility is serving both cooperative and community.
⚡ Hardin Leadership group meetings
Throughout its first year, the co-op’s new quarters has held a variety of cooperative events that wouldn’t have been possible at previous locations. From welcoming more than 1,000 guests at the office dedication event to hosting our own annual meeting for the first time since the 1940s, the office gives members a site to connect with their cooperative.
These are just a few examples highlighting the flexibility of the facilities. Distinct characteristics of the site also provide unique training grounds for first responder groups:
More importantly, the facilities have filled the need for a versatile meeting place in the community. The office’s Community Room is open to nonprofit groups that benefit the community. Since its opening the room has been used more than 80 times by outside groups, bringing thousands of new individuals through the co-op’s doors. These groups have used the facilities for a variety of purposes: ⚡ OSU Extension’s “Master Gardener” educational programs, simulcast to locations across the state ⚡ Hardin Memorial Hospital staff training sessions ⚡ Community Action for tax preparation and consultation
⚡ Kenton high school for teacher training meetings and Wildcat Community Connectors events
⚡ The Kenton fire department’s dive/rescue team performed training exercises in the co-op’s pond, which was created to provide fill dirt and house the loops for the co-op’s geothermal system. ⚡ The warehouse and dock area (built to accommodate our bucket trucks, trailers, and other line equipment) have provided a sheltered gathering space for large, agricultural education demos such as tractor safety and grain bin entrapment prevention/rescue. Providing electricity is just one part of being your electric cooperative. Our commitment to community, finding new ways to meet local needs, and being a trusted resource in the areas we serve is what makes us more than an electric company. For info about scheduling the Community Room for your group, give us a call at 1-888-363-6446.
OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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TRUSTEE ELECTION TIMELINE
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OCTOBER the August board meeting. This committee consists of one representative from each of the co-op’s nine districts. Their task is to select two representatives to be placed on the ballot for each district that is up for election. This year’s districts are 1, 2 and 3. “Trustee Interest Cards” will be mailed in October to all members residing in these districts. Members who are interested in running for the board are instructed to complete and return the interest cards. Each interested member who returns a card is mailed a “Trustee Nomination Information Sheet” to be sent back by mid-December. In January, an interview session will be held for all potential candidates. After that meeting, the Nominating Committee will select two nominees for each district up for election. In March, members will be asked to submit ballots by mail or online to elect trustees.
“Trustee Interest Cards” mailed to members in each district up for election in 2018.
MID-DECEMBER “Trustee Nomination Information Sheet” to be mailed back to co-op’s attorney.
JANUARY Interview session for all potential candidates.
MARCH The nominating committee selects two candidates from each district to be voted upon by the membership via mail and online balloting.
APRIL Election results are announced at the Annual Meeting of Members.
STRICT 4 MARION
DISTRICT 8
CRAWFORD
District 1: 567 members MORROW
Current Trustee: Richard Kritzler Townships: Blanchard, Cessna, Goshen, Jackson, Pleasant, and Washington
District 2: 505 members DISTRICT 3
DISTRICT 6
Current Trustee: Karl Marshall Townships: Clay, Goshen, Union, and Wayne
District 3: 690 members
Current Trustee: Don Bumgarner Townships: Big Island, Green Camp, Montgomery, Pleasant, and Prospect
OCTOBER MARCH 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES
CAPITAL CREDITS
CASH FOR ADDRESSES
You could win a cash prize for helping Mid-Ohio Energy locate former cooperative members from the list below. Former members are owed capital patronage checks for their share of margins earned by the co-op during the time they lived on the system. Vouchers were sent to the last known addresses of these members but returned as undeliverable. We are asking for your help locating people from the list so we can deliver their checks.
For each name you help us locate from the list, you will receive one entry into our “Cash for Addresses” contest. All submissions are entered into a drawing to determine the winners. Remember, the more names you help us find, the greater your chances of winning! First prize wins $35, second wins $25, and third wins $15. The results will be announced in the January issue of Ohio Cooperative Living. Prizes can be awarded as cash or an energy credit. Send names and addresses to: Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative, Inc., 1210 W. Lima St., Kenton, OH 43326. You may also take the information to the Kenton or Marion office of the cooperative. Several thousand dollars are refunded annually through help received from this contest. Thank you for your help! ABRAMS ANGELA K ABRAMS PAMELA L ACHOR DANNIEL D ACKERMAN MATHEW O ACKERMAN ROSENA ADA AIRPORT ADAM JUDY ADAMS BRANDY ADAMS BRUCE ADAMS DARLENE D ADAMS DONALD ADAMS DONALD R ADAMS DONALD R ADAMS DOUGLAS S ADAMS GERTRUDE E ADAMS JAMES W ADAMS JOANNE ADAMS JOHN ADAMS LEILA M ADAMS MARY K ADAMS PEGGY ADAMS RICK ADAMS RONALD P ADAMS SUSAN ADCOCK JAMES A ADDIS LYNN ADKINS RAY ADKINS TERESA ADRIAN JACK D AETNA INSURANCE AGNER LAURA AGRIESTI ANTHONY J AHMED MD MAHTAB AIDT MICHAEL D AIKEN ROBERT W AIRPORT INN AKERS KATHY ALBANESE JOSEPH J ALBERT ANDREW ALBERT HAROLD ALBERT JOE ALBERT PHILIP C ALBERT TODD ALBINACK JOE ALBRIGHT BETSY ALBRIGHT CAROL S ALDRIDGE LARRY W ALDRIDGE MICHAEL A ALDRIDGE SANDRA I ALEXANDER DENNIS ALEXANDER JEFF ALEXANDER MICHELLE ALEXANDER RAYMOND ALLARD SHARON ALLEN C H ALLEN CHARLES L ALLEN DAN ALLEN ETHAN H ALLEN JOHN H ALLEN KELLY A ALLEN LESLIE
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ALLEN LOUISA A ALLEN MARJORIE ALLEN REX ALLEN RICHARD O ALLEN STACY ALLEN STEVE ALLEN TAMMY ALLEN WILLIAM J ALLER ERIN M ALLSUP JOSEPH J ALM VINCENT ALSPACH SHANNON ALT GERALD R ALTHOUSE JERRY AMERICAN AGRI CHEM AMES JIM A AMES SHARI L AMMONS ELOISE AMOCO OIL CO AMRINE ROBERT AMWEG JUANITA ANDEL JOHN ANDERSON CLARENCE L ANDERSON JEFF ANDERSON JEFFREY E ANDERSON JEFFREY S ANDERSON JILL S ANDERSON KEITH ANDERSON MICHAEL J ANDERSON MICHELLE L ANDERSON PAULA L ANDERSON SHERRY ANDREWS JOE ANGLES CHRISTIE ANSLEY KENNETH ANSON BRENDA ANTHONY LES APPLEMAN APRIL ARBOGAST SCOTTY ARCHABLE ROSCOE ARCHER L JEAN ARCHER SCOTT E ARMBRUSTER GERALD ARMSTRONG CHARLES W ARMSTRONG DOUG ARMSTRONG PATRICIA ARMSTRONG SAMUEL ARNETT ANNA ARNETT BETTY ARNETT CHARLES R ARNOLD ARTHUR ARNOLD DOUGLAS D ARNOLD T M ARNOLD WILLIAM ARREOLA JUAN ARTHUR GERALD ARTHUR JESSE ASCHERMAN HERBERT ASHBA VERNA A ASHLAND EXPLORN INC ASKINS CLIFFORD E
ATHA MIKE AUGENSTEIN JAY AUGENSTEIN MARTIN J AULT CAROLYN AULT CARYL AULT IRENE M AULT RONALD AULT SCARLETT AURHOMES AUSTIN CLARENCE AUSTIN ROBERT L AUTEN DAVID K III AWBREY G R BACKUS ELIZABETH A BACOME JAMES BADEN JEANNE BADER SARA L BAER ISRAEL BAER JOHN BAHNER GEORGE BAILEY ANN BAILEY BRIAN BAILEY BUDDY BAILEY DAVE BAILEY DEAN BAILEY FRANKLIN D BAILEY GAIL BAILEY HOWARD F BAILEY LORI BAILEY MICHAEL BAILEY MISTEE BAILS C E BAIRD FRED W BAISDEN RALPH H BAKER BRUCE H BAKER CHRISTOPHER BAKER DONALD L BAKER DONALD W JR BAKER HERBERT JR BAKER JUDITH BAKER KATHLEEN R BAKER KENNETH E BAKER L W BAKER LELETHEA BAKER LISA BAKER LOWELL R BAKER MARCUS BAKER MISTY BAKER TRINA BAKER WILLIAM D BALDAUF CONST CO INC BALDAUF DALE BALDRIDGE JAMES BALDRIDGE MICHAEL BALDWIN DANIEL BALDWIN DAVID BALDWIN GARY BALDWIN JAMES S BALDWIN MICHAEL J BALDWIN RAY BALDWIN RONALD L
BALDWIN SARA BALER JATROCOA BALLARD JANE BALLARD SR C BALLENGER CHERYL A BALLENGER JUDY BALLINGER DOUGLAS J BALLINGER LORI BALLINGER MARY ETTA BANC ONE OF KENTON BANK ONE BANKS CURTIS L BANKS DAVID L BANKS WILLIAM BARE CHARLES R BARKER JESS BARKLEY KEITH BARLOW CHERYL L BARLOW SCOTT BARNES FARMS INC B E BARNES SCOTT BARNETT LEONARD D BAROT JODY BARREIRO CARMEN BARRY BENJAMIN R BARRY KEVEN BARRY STEVE BARTELS WILLIAM BARTH MARGARET BARTH RUSSELL BARTLETT JAMES BARTLEY HOWARD R BARTLEY JR J BARTON WANDA L BARTZ HOWARD H BARTZ KENNETH BASEL FARMS BASEL LARRY BASFORD BRUCE BASH JEFF BATEMAN SONDRA J BATES JR L BAUER DENNIS BAUER LARRY R BAUER TERRIE C BAUTISTA MARIA BAXTER JOAN M BAYES BRYAN BAYLES JAMIE BAYLESS CAROLYN BAYS JERRY BEACH DAN BEACHUM CARDELL BEAL ROBERT BEARD HOBERT BEARD MARY E BEARDSLEY JIM BEASLEY WILLIAM A BEATTY BETTY JO BEATTY DAVID L BEATTY RICK L
BECHTOL TERRENCE BECKLEY CAROL BEENEY D J BEERY LARRY WM BEERY MARK S BEGG DENNIS BEISECKER RONALD BELARDO ANGELITO BELK DENNIS R BELL JEFFREY P BELL LEWIS S BELL LUELLA BELL MATTHEW E BELL PHILIP A BELL ROGER BELL VANESSA L BELLAMY BEN W BELLFY THOMAS BELMER MICHAEL BELSHE CONNIE BELT CHAD BELT VIVIAN BELTZ ROBERT C BEMILLER JOSEPH BENDING DAN BENJAMIN GARY H BENJAMIN JOHN BENJAMIN SCOTT BENNETT & SIEG AUTO BENNETT CAROLYN BENNETT DANA BENSON CHRISTIE BENSON DENNIS R BENSON K E BENSON ROBERT BENTLEY DONALD E BENTLEY DOUGLAS E BERG TIM BERGER JO A BERKSAN YURDANUR BERRY BRIAN BERRY JAMES BERRY JR K BERRY PAMELA BERTKE ALBINE BERVAS MIKAEL BETTY FRY ESTATE BIALECKI JOHN P BIBLE WSLYN MTHDST CH BIBLER THEODORE E BIDWELL GARY E BIGELOW KIMBERLY K BIGGERSTAFF H W BILGER CATHY BILL LINA M BILLINGS BRIAN BILLINGS DENNIS BILLINGS DOUG E BILTZ ROBERT BINAU FRANCES BINGHAM BOBBY
BINKLEY ROBERT BIRCH PAUL M BIRD HAROLD J BIRT JAMES T BISH DOUGLAS S BISHOFF CHARLES G BISHOP CARLENE A BISHOP HARRY L BISHOP JOHN BISHOP JOHN B BISHOP REBA BISHOP RICHARD A BISHOP THOMAS E BLACK EARL C BLACK JASON BLACK PAUL J BLACK ROBERT E BLACK WILLIAM BLACKLEDGE BRIAN BLAIR DAVID BLAIR DONNA BLAIR DUSTIN BLAIR HAROLD T BLAIR RANDALL D BLANCHARD DANIEL BLANK BERDIE BLANKENSHIP RICKIE A BLANKENSHIP ROGER BLANKENSHIP WAYNE BLANTON APRIL K BLANTON BILL BLANTON CHRISTINE BLASER DAVID H BLEVINS EDDIE R BLEVINS LAURA BLEVINS SAMUEL BLEVINS WILLIAM BLINN JACK E BLOOMFIELD BETH BLOOMFIELD DANNY BLOOMFIELD RUSSELL BLUE DOROTHY BLUE J R BLUE J T BLUMBERG ISAAC BLUMENSCHEIN AMANDA BLUMENSCHEIN SHERRY P BO MAR FARMS BOBLENZ RICHARD BOEDICKER BETTY J BOEKER ROY BOES ROBERT E BOGART PHILLIP BOGGS JOSH BOGGS JOYCE E BOGGS KEN L BOGGS LEROY BOGGS SHERRY BOGGS VIRGINIA BOGGS WAYNE BOLANDER LARRY
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BOLDMAN VERNITA BOLIN MATTHEW G BOLLER MIKE BOLLINGER DONNA S BOLLINGER VERNON BOND ALLAN D BOND CURTIS BOND DAVID BOND JULIA BONER DAVID BONSEL STACY BONSKY MARGARET BOOHER JOHN E BORDEN GARY BORDERS CHERYL BORGER EDNA M BORN JACK R BORN KENDRA BORROR JAMES D BOSLEY JR G BOSLEY ROBERT P BOSONAC JOE BOSSERMAN RICHARD K BOTCHLETT JAMES BOURQUE J B BOUTWELL DAVID BOUTWELL JR M J BOUTWELL RONDA BOWDLE STEVE BOWEN JIM BOWER DENNIS BOWER ERIC M BOWERS DAWN BOWLBY ALLAN BOWLING DON BOWLING JACK A BOWLING PHILLIP BOWLING PHILLIP BOWLING ROBERT D BOWMAN BONNIE BOWMAN EUGENE BOWMAN HEATHER BOWMAN RUSSELL W BOWMAN STACEY BOWMAN WAYNE D BOYD DANNY L BOYD EUGENE BOYD GREGORY S BOYD JOHN A BOYD RICHARD O BOYER JOE BOYER LEONARD L BOYER ROBERT L BOYER SHANNON BRACKETT IRA BRADISH LINDA BRADLEY CHARLES N BRADLEY JONATHON BRADLEY PATRICK O BRADY CARL BRADY DONALD BRAGG GEORGE JR BRANFORD LAVONNA S BRANHAM DAVID L BRANNAN LARRY BRANTINGHAM STEVE BRASHEAR J E BRAY JOHN A BREECE VICKI BREEDLOVE GENE BREITENSTEIN DON BREITIGAN P E BRENEK JUDY BRENZO STEVEN BREWER GOLDIE BREWER LAURA BREWER MARTHA L BREWER RICK BREWSTER AMY S BRICKER B M BRICKER ROSE MARIE BRIDGES FLOYD A BRIEN LESTER A BRIGGS WANDA BRISTOW STEVE BROADWATER DAVID A BROCKLESBY LOUIS W BRODERICK GARY L BROOKS ARCH G BROOKS KIMBERLY K
BROOKS LINDA BROOKS MARGARET A BROOKS NICOLLE BROOKS TED BROOKS WILLIAM T BROUGHTON DONALD E BROWN BERNARD B BROWN BYRON BROWN CLARENCE BROWN CLARENCE C BROWN DAVID P BROWN DEBORAH S BROWN DONALD BROWN DONALD S BROWN EDNA P BROWN FLOYD BROWN GARY E BROWN HEIDI E BROWN JAY BROWN JOHN E BROWN JOHN V BROWN JOSH A BROWN JR R BROWN JUDY BROWN L R V BROWN LINA BROWN LORETTA BROWN MARILYN D BROWN MARY L BROWN MILLIE TRUST BROWN MRS DIANE BROWN PATRICIA L BROWN RANDY BROWN RICHARD ARTHUR BROWN ROBERT BROWN ROBERT J BROWN RONALD BROWN RONALD O BROWN SAM BROWN TIMOTHY BROWN TRINA S BROWNING ARTHUR BROWNING JOHN K BROWNING PEGGY L BROWNING PETER BRUCE BRITTANY BRUMAGE STACEY BRUMFIELD BRIAN BRUNER R C BRUNS ANN BRYAN BLAKE BRYAN MICHELLE BRYAN STEVEN D BRYAN WARREN BRYANT FLOYD BRYANT MICHAEL E BRYANT RUSSELL BUCKINGHAM KENT BUCKLAND JR D BUCKLEY JOE BUCKLEY ROBERT V BUCKNER DONALD BUCKNER GILBERT BUENTELLO ABRAHAM BUHLER BRYAN BUHLER HAROLD J BUIKEMA PAMELA BUNNELL WILLIAM G BUNTING TOM BURBA ALLEN BURCH CHARLES R BURCH KEITH BURCHETT IRENE BURDEN GARY A BURDICK R J BURDICK REBEKAH S BURGAN JAMES M BURGBACHER ROBERT A BURGE RORY BURKE CALVIN E BURKE TONY BURKEY MABEL M BURKS JODI BURLEY MARIE M BURLEY RICHARD J BURNETT KIMBERLY L BURNETT KINDRA BURNS ANGIE BURNS CARLOTTA BURNS CHARLES
BURNS CINDY BURNS COLEN A BURNS IDA BURNS MATT BURNSIDE EVERETT A BURNWORTH WADE BURREY SR T BURREY TOM BURRIS & SHUC KBLDRS BURRIS CLIFFORD BURTON ANGELA BURTON CAROL A BURTON ERIC J BURTON LARRY BURTSFIELD DIMMIE BUSBEY MARCIA BUSCH PROPERT YINC BUSHONG RONALD BUTLER DON BUTLER ERNA BUTLER JOHN C BUTLER LOWELL BUTLER TAMMY BUTLER TRACY BUTLER WANDA BUTTERMAN CYNTHIA K BUTZ JERRY D BYERS MICHAEL J BYERS NICOLE BYLER JACOB D BYRD NORA BYRNE GEORGE BYRNS WILLIAM D CABELL WILBUR W CADE SAM CAGLE THOMAS K CAIN RICHARD J CAINES JAMES CALDERA GONZALO CALDWEL MIKE CALDWELL ARNOLD CALDWELL CATHY J CALDWELL JAMES C CALDWELL JOHN CALDWELL JOHN S CALDWELL JOSEPH L CALDWELL JOSEPH M CALDWELL JULIA CALDWELL MARK CALDWELL STEVE CALDWELL WILLIAM M CALEDONIA GUN CLUB CALL JERRY CALLAHAN AMANDA S CALLAHAN RICHARD CALLENTINE DANNY E CALLICOTTE VERONICA CALVARY TABERNACLE CAMBURN ROBERT M CAMPBELL DOREEN CAMPBELL ELWYN W CAMPBELL JACQUELIN A CAMPBELL JENNY CAMPBELL MICHAEL T CAMPBELL ORVILLE CAMPBELL RITA CAMPBELL ROBERT CAMPBELL ROSCOE CAMPBELL SR VIRGIL W CAMPBELL THURMAN CAMPBELL VIRGIL E CAMPERS HEPBURN CANDEL GREG CANNODE GEORGE CANNODE KATHLEEN CANNON WELLES CANTER BETTY L CANTER GARY CANTER JAMES D CANTRELL HERB CANTRELL LORI CAPLIN GARY L CARDWELL CRAIG CAREY CHAD M CAREY DANIEL R CARLISLE LORETTA CARNAHAN MARL J CARNEY TAMARA CARPENTER ANGELA CARPENTER DONALD
CARPENTER EDWIN CARPENTER JACK CARPENTER LAURA CARR DANIEL R CARR DAVID CARR DOUG CARR HELEN M CARRICO JR R CARRINGER RALPH CARROLL CHERIE M CARRUTHERS CHRIS CARTER DON CARTER EDWARD L CARTER KENNETH CARTER MICHAEL L CARTER ROBERT E CARTER SYLVIA A CARTWRIGHT ROBERT J CARTY DARRELL R CARVER MARILYN CARY JR C CASE CHRIS CASE MIRIAM CASE PAT CASE VIVIAN CASH TINA M CASKEY ALEX CASKEY RODNEY CASPERSON APRIL CASPERSON MIKE CASPERSON TERRY L CASSELL DONALD D CASSIDY TIMOTHY CASTEELE RICHARD CASTLE CARL CASTLE CURTIS L CASTLE ELIZABETH CASTLE LORETTA CASTLE TERRI CASTLE THOMAS CASTLE WENDY L CATELLA MICHAEL B CAUDILL BETH S CAUDILL LORA A CAVE MELISSA CAVINEE KATHLEEN M CELESTINO ANTONIO CELESTINO JOSE CELLAR CHRISTOPHER CELLAR HARRY CENTEL CABLE CHAFFIN STEVE CHAKEY KAREN M CHAKEY RICHARD B CHALK KEVIN CHAMBERLAIN BRIAN CHAMBERLIN MARY CHAMBERS THOMAS J CHAMP JAMES W CHAMPER DOUGLAS CHANCE GEORGE A CHANEY LONNIE CHAPMAN ANNA M CHAPMAN CHRIS CHAPMAN DAN CHAPMAN DORIS CHAPMAN ERNEST CHAPMAN KRYSTAL CHAPMAN PAM CHAPMAN ROBERT D CHARD RICHARD L CHARLES THOMAS CHARLES THOMAS S CHASE LARRY CHENEY THOMAS CHESSER KEVIN A CHEVALIER DOUGLAS W CHEVALIER MAURICE CHEW SANDRA CHILES DAVID D CHIPMAN CHARLES M CHRIST MISSIO NARYBAPT I CHRISTIAN DAMON CHRISTIAN DENVER L CHRISTIAN JACK L CHRISTIAN WILLIAM C CHRISTNER TODD CHURAN THOMAS J CHURCH AUSTIN CHRCH CHRIST FULL GSPL
CIRCLE H FARMS CIRKO VIRGINIA L CITI MORTGAGE CIVILS LINWOOD CLARD BIRT CLARK BONNIE CLARK CARROLL CLARK CHERYL L CLARK CHRISTOPH CLARK DAVID CLARK DONALD P CLARK EZRA C JR CLARK GREGORY M CLARK HAROLD E CLARK HELEN CLARK JACK A CLARK JOSEPH H CLARK LISA CLARK PHYLLIS CLARK ROBERT CLARK ROBERT A CLARK ROLLYSON F CLARK SADIS CLARK SHAWNA CLARK STEVEN A CLARK WILLIS F CLAY DARRELL CLAY GARRY CLEGG DAN CLEMENS LISA CLEMENTS EARL CLENDENEN DANE CLEVELAND DAVID A CLEVENGER SARAH R CLEVER WILMA J CLICK CHARLES CLICK RHONDA CLIFTON BENJAMIN T CLIMER MICHAEL CLINGAN JAMES CLINGER MATTHEW C CLINGER SHARON CLINGER STAN CLINGER WILMA J CLINGMAN JACK CLOSE EARL M CLOSE KIM CLUFF HAZEL CLUFF JEFF CLUFF MARY K CLUFF MICHAEL L CLUTTER IVAN CLUTTER LARRY CLYDE CLIFFORD COATS JACK COBLENTZ MERLE COCHERL DAN COCHERL LARRY J COCHRAN DIRK COCHRAN PAUL COCHRAN WADE COE CHRYSTAL COEN J H COFFEE BARRY COFFEE MATTHEW COFFMAN ENCARCION G COFFMAN LINDSAY COGAN CARROLL COKER DAVID A COLBY DEAN COLBY MELVIN L COLDWELL E E COLDWELL PEARL COLE FRANK COLE JESSE COLE LARNEY F COLE LYNETTE S COLE MARLYN COLE N C COLE TIFFANY COLEMAN KATHRYN COLEMAN LARRY M COLEMAN LEXFORD COLLIER ROBERT COLLINS ALLIE COLLINS BARBARA COLLINS CALVIN COLLINS GARY COLLINS HAZEL COLLINS KENNETH F
COLLINS VERNON C COLLINS WILLIAM COLUMBER GORDON R COLWELL KENNETH COMBS DENVER COMBS HENRY COMBS ROBERT A COMBS ROBIN COMPSTON MARGARET COMPTON JAMES COMWAVZ CONANR ELTON CONANT LAURA CONLEY ERNEST CONLEY JERRY CONLEY JR M CONLEY JR R CONLEY PRESTON CONLEY ROBERT CONLEY ROSE ANN CONNER DAVID CONNER DUSTIN CONNER RETHA L CONRAD RONALD E CONTE SR PAUL A COOK BRIAN R COOK FLOYD COOK JANET COOLEY ROBERT COOLEY THEODORE COOLIDGE DENNIS COON DOROTHY COON JR GEORGE L COOPER BENJAMIN H COOPER DAVID A COOPER GEORGE A COOPER JERRY L COOPER JR M COOPER KACY J COOPER MIKE COOPER RANDY COOPER WARREN COOPER WILLIAM COPE ROBERT COPELAND GARY M COPELAND JON A COPPLER GEORGE CORBET ARNOLD L CORBIN ALAN L CORBIN BRIAN CORBIN SUSAN A CORBIN TAMMY CORBITT JAMES W COREY DAIRY LLC CORIELL MARY A CORNELIUS LINDA CORNISH MIKE W CORNPROBST RAY CORSO DANIEL A COTTRILL GLORIA COUCH THOMAS COULSON BECKY COULTER JOHN A COUNTY CO. THE COURTAD JAMES COWAN FRED COWAN NANCY COWELL ROBERT P COWGILL VERNON R COX COMMUNICATIONS COX EMMA COX LARRY W COY DAVID COY JEFF COY JOHN C COYKENDALL DONALD H COYKENDALL RICHARD CRABTREE DAVID CRABTREE MARTHA M CRABTREE MYRON CRAFT DANE CRAFT ELENA CRAFT TERRY D CRAGER RHONDA CRAIG DEAN CRAIG ERIC CRAIG JAMES D CRAIG LOUISE CRAIG RUSSELL J CRAMER AMY J
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DAVIDSON DUEL DAVIS ANDREW DAVIS BETTY R DAVIS CHARLENE DAVIS CHARLOTTE DAVIS DAN R DAVIS DEAN DAVIS EARL DAVIS GARY DAVIS JAMES A DAVIS JOE DAVIS JR J DAVIS JULIE DAVIS L L DAVIS LINDY DAVIS LLOYD DAVIS MARVIN DAVISSON CHARLES DAWSON HOPE DAWSON JEFFREY W DAWSON MISTY DAWSON SR JAMES D DE LONG MARTIN DEAN DANIEL L DEAN FRANCES J DEAN THOMAS W DEAN VINCENT R DEARTH GREGORY L DECK EDITH DECKER ANGELA G DECKER BRYAN DECKER ELIZABETH DECKER JACK STEVEN DECKER LAURA DECKER MELISSA DEGLER JASON DEHAVEN ANGELA DEJULIO ALLEN A DELAWDER BRIAN DELONG EARL DELONG JACKIE A DELONG JUDY DELONG ROBERT DELONG TERI L DELONG TINA DELRAY OIL IN C DEMETROFF RICK R DENHART JAMES R DENMAN DANIEL L DENMAN DAVID P DENMAN JOEL E DENMAN VICTOR DENNEY RAY P DENNEY RICHARD P DENNIS GARY DENNIS HAROLD DENNIS IRVIN S DENNIS PHILLIP G DENNISON THOMAS D DEN-OUDEN KO0S DENTON & DENT ON DERR DEBRA S DERR FLOYD DETTY LORETTA DETWEILER MARY DETZLER LEON C DEVORE SUSAN DEWALT PATRICIA A DEWAR DR WILLIAM DEWOLFE DEBORAH DIBLE JEFFREY DIBLE ROBERT D DICK IVAN DICK JAMES DICKERSON GLENN DICKERSON JEANETTE DICKERSON TERRY L DICKEY EVA DIEHL LEA DIERKES JOHN D DIERKES SONYA DILLINGER JERRY D DILLINGER JOHN DILLON WILLIAM A DILSAVER DEBBIE DILTS JAMES W DIMENSION CBL SVCS DIRMEYER RICHARD DITTER ROGER DIXON CATHY J
DIXON JR R DIXON ROBERT A DODDS DEBRA S DOERING STEVE DOERMAN GEORGE H DOERNER DONALD DOLES REALTY DOLICK JEFF DONATHAN EDWI N DONNER STANLEY DOOLEY JOHN E DOOLITTLE IRENE DOONAN RICHARD M DORFE APRIL S DORFE HAROLD R DORN JOHN W DOSS DONALD DOSS JR DAVID DOTSON DALE DOTSON DELBERT DOTSON GARY K DOTSON IRA DOTSON SHANNON DOUCE E J DOUCE TAMMY DOWDY MIKE DOWNEY BRUCE E DOWNEY JIM DOWNEY KRISTY DOWNEY MARCIA L DOWNING BETH A DOWNING JERRY DRAKE CLIFFORD C DRAKE JAMES P DRAKE JEFFERY L DRAKE JOSEPH P DRAKE LEROY DRAKE PERRY DRANE RUSSELL DRAPER MARCUS DRIVE IN HI RD DRURY JAMES HOWARD DRURY KENNETH DUBOIS JEFF DUDGEON DOROTHY DUDGEON PHILLIP L DUFFY BRIAN DUGAN BRADLEY S DUNAWAY JOYCE DUNCAN BASIL DUNE RICHARD DUNN JACK R DUNN TANYA DUPREY HOWARD D DURIAN TERRI L DUTT THOMAS R DUTTON ALICE M DUTTON RANDY DUTTON RICHARD D DUTTON SCOTT DUTTON WILLIAM R DWIRE KAREN DYE PAM DYER ANGELA DYER CHARLOTTE DYER CORY DYER ROBERT DYER TIMOTHY R II DYKE LARRY EADS DUELL EAGER LISA D EARHART GERALD EARL H R EARLYWINE CHRIS EASTMAN J B EASTMAN RONALD EASTON ABIGAIL EASTON D SCOTT EATON DALE E EATON FRANCES M EBERT DALE E EBERT SALLY EBLIN JANET ECCARD CONNIE ECHELBERRY LYLE ECKARD EVELYN J ECKARD STEVE ECKINGER JIM EDGINGTON RACHEL EDGINGTON RAYMOND
EDINGTON TONY EDLEN SUSAN EDLER JAMES A EDLER LINDA K EDLER R C EDLER RICHARD EDLER RICHARD EDMONSTONE GREG J EDWARDS CHRISTOPHER EDWARDS JASON EDWARDS MICHAEL R EFA RICHARD EHLEN B ELEANOR EHRET DAVID EHRLICH JR R EHRMAN ADA EIBLING RON EIBLING RONALD D EKMARK DAVID ELASS ARTHUR L ELDRED CHARLES M ELDRIDGE ANTHONY ELDRIDGE ARNOLD ELDRIDGE PENNY ELEY CHESTER ELEY KIMBERLY SUE ELEY MICHAEL A ELKINS JAMES D ELLEFSON DANA A ELLIOTT ARTHUR L ELLIOTT DANIEL E ELLIOTT JOHN W ELLIOTT PORTER ELLIS STEPHANIE A ELSASSER JANE ELSASSER LILLIAN E ELWOOD CAROLINE EMBERLING RAY B EMERICK GATHYL B EMERY ROBERT N EMMONS CARLA ENDSLEY KAREN ENDSLEY THOMAS ENGLAND CHERYL ENGLAND WM. ENGLER STUART EPLEY NANCY A EQUITABLE RELOCATN MA EQUITY HOMES REALTY ERVIN FREDERICK C ERVIN LARRY E ERWIN KARI ERWIN LOIS J ESPINOZA VIRGINIA EUBANKS ROBERT EVANS ANDREW J EVANS DAN EVANS F E EVANS GARY L EVANS JAMES EVANS JOANNA EVANS RAYMOND C EVANS TINA EVERLY MICHAEL EVERLY WILLIAM EVERLY WILLIAM L EWING JEFF EWING MELVIN K EWING RICHARD FAILOR LLOYD E FAIRCHILD MARQUITA FAIRCHILD ROBERT A FANNIN CATHENA FARLEY JASON E FARMER PATRICIA FARRELL GINETTE J FARRINGTON WILLIAM FARRIS R H FASSLER JR W FAULDER DANNY FAULKNER CHARLES FAUROT KIYOKO FAUST J J FAY JOE FEIGHNER DONALD FELLABUM CLETIS J FELT JACK D FELTY ANDREW L FENTON DENVER FERGERSON BERLIN
FERGUSON ALLEN F FERGUSON CARL FERGUSON CHRISTIN FERGUSON RICK FERGUSON RONALD C FERGUSON WILLIAM D FEURER WALTER FEWELL TONI A FIELD DAVID FIELD RICHARD FIELDS D E FIELDS LESTER FIELDS MIKE FIELDS TED FIELDS TERESA FIFER JUANITA FILLINGER JOHN FINCH CARLTON FINCHER ROBERT S FINCHUM VALERIE FINITZER DAVID FINK GARY P FINLEY JERRY FINNEY DENNIS SR FIRESTONE TIMOTHY FIRIS PAMELA FIRST PAUL FISH STEVEN D FISHER BARRY FISHER CYNTHIA FISHER DAN K FISHER GLORIA FISHER JOHN K FISHER LOYD T FISHER MATTHEW FISHER NICK FISHER NORMAN FISHER ROBERT FISHER ROBERT FITCH DAVID S FITZGERALD DALE H FITZPATRICK CASSIE FITZPATRICK J D FLACK DAN H FLEIHMAN CLIFFORD FLEMING GERALD C FLEMING JOHN L FLEMING MICHAEL E FLETCHER CARL FLINN FLORENCE A FLOIT RANDY FLOOD LEE FLORY RON FLOURNOY TACOMA J FLOWER JOHN R FLOWERS MERRITT FLOYD WILLIAM FOCHT FRED F FOGGIN MRS C FOGGIN NELLIE M FOGLE JAMES E FOGLE P MICHAEL FOLK EARL N FOLTZ TERRI FOOR JOANN FOOR RICHARD J FOOS BARBARA FOOS JEREMY FOOS SR JERRY FORD JOHN FORD SUSAN J FOREMAN CURT FOREMAN D N FOREMAN DONNA FORMAN J D FORMAN JR EARL FORSYTH BARBARA E FOSNAUGH DOUG FOSTER CHRIS W FOSTER JAMES FOSTER JOY E JR FOSTER NANCY J FOULKE BETTY FOUT ERIC T FOUT WINIFRED FOWLER TOM FOWN KATHY FOWN TIMOTHY D FOX CALISTA FOX LINDA LEE
FOX ROBERT J FOX SHELLEY FOY JULIE FRAGMIN JOHN FRAHER CHARLES J FRAHER LISA E FRALEY WILLIAM FRANK CYNTHIA FRANKLIN DANIEL FRANKLIN KENNETH FRANKLIN MARGUERITE FRANKLIN NATHAN FRANZ NAOMI C FRAZIER ALLEN FREDERICK ANNA FREDERICK FRANCES FREDRICK MARK FREEMAN GEORGE FREEMAN ROBERT E FREMONT ROCK FRESHOUR CARL E FREVERT DANIEL FRIDLEY LARRY FRIDLEY MISTY FRIEND SARA L FRIEND VIRGINIA A FRIESNER TIMOTHY S FRONTIERVISION OPER FROST DONALD E FROST EARNEST FRUCHEY ROBERTA FRUEH MICHAEL FRY TENANT SHIRLEY FRY DANNY FRY DANNY FRY JAMES R FRY PERRY LANE FRY RALPH E FRY SHANNA FRY SHIRLEY FRYE ARNOLD FRYMAN DONALD M FRYSINGER SCOTT FUCHS PAUL J FULLER MAGGIE L FULMER JAY FULTON RICHARD FULTZ IONA FUNK EUGENE E FURER CHARLES FURR DEBRA FURRY THOMAS E FUSON STEPHANI FYFFE ROBERT GABRIEL JOE GADD JAMES D GAINES ANNETTE GALLAGHER THOMAS J GALLANT RICHARD R GALLEGOS CLAUDIO GALVIN BILL E GAMBLE DANA I GANDEE ROGER GARCIA GLORIA GARCIA JAY S GARLAND ROYDEN L GARMON ROGER J GARNER KAREN S GARNER PAMELA M GARNOW DUSTIN R GARRETT GRACE E GARVERICK NORBERT GASS WILLIAM M GAST STEVE GATCHELL GALE GATTIE EDWARD L GAY DENISE GEBOY RICHARD GEIGER CARLA GEIGER ROBERT P GELDMACHER ROBERT GEORGE BRIAN GEORGE KEVIN R GERRIAN TRACY GERWIG CYNTHIA GEYER CHARLES GEYER KEITH GEYER SUSAN GHOSE PROVAKAR GIBSON ALBERT H
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GIBSON CHRISTINE GIBSON GLENN W GIBSON JACK SR GIBSON JEFFREY H GIBSON JR L GIBSON JR E GIBSON KEITH GIBSON KENNETH GIBSON KENNETH GIBSON LEE O GIBSON MANDY GIBSON RALEIGH GIBSON RICHARD J GIBSON RON GIBSON RUTH GIBSON TERRY GIBSON VICKIE GIDDENS JOHN E GIERHART AMANDA GIERHART MARY C GIFFORD KRISTIN GIFFORD RICHARD W GILBERT ABE GILBERT CATHY J GILBERT RICHARD E GILBERT STEVEN GILL RONALD GILLESPIE RONALD GILLFILLAN DALE GILLFILLAN JAY GILLIAM CHARLES GILLIAM OPAL GILLISPIE CONNIE GILLISPIE JOYCE GILLOGLY SHERYL GILMORE VERNON D GILROY ROBERT D GINGERICH JAY GINN ROBERT GINTER JANIE GIST ELDON J GLADWELL YVONNE GLASS ANGELA GLASS CHERYL GLASS MELVIN GLASSMEYER HARRY P GLATHART FOREST GLEASON LEWIS L GLEESPEN CAROL A GLEN WALTER GLICK ROGER GODDARD RONNIE D GOFF RICHARD E GOINS RANDY GOLDEN JOHN GOLDEN MICHAEL W GOLDSBERRY CHRISTINE E GONGELAS HEIDI GONZALEZ MOSES GONZALEZ ROBYNN L GOOD BRENDA GOOD JAMES GOODING THOMAS L GOODRICH BARBARA GOODWIN CHARLES E GOSCHE FIRMIN A GOSSARD GLADYS GOSSARD JOSEPH D GOSSARD MARGARET GOSSARD MAURICE GOTTFRIED JENNA M GOTTFRIED TERRI GOUDY ANTHONY GOULD RICHARD L GRABER FRANKLIN GRABER JACKIE L GRAHAM FRED GRAHAM MARY GRAHAM MAUREEN GRAHAM MOLLIE R GRAHAM ROBERT E GRANGER CARL W GRANGER REALT Y GRANLEE ANGELA M GRANT FAY GRASLEY JESICA GRASLEY WANDA GRAY KEITH B GRAY MARY J GRAYSON AARON
GREEN JAMES D GREEN JAMES L GREEN JERRY D GREEN ROBIN GREENE CHARLES S GREENE DARRELL GREENE DONALD GREENE DUANE GREENE POLLY GREENE RICHARD E GREENHILL JAMES R GREENWOOD R W GREGORY LUCILLE A GRICE GARY GRIFFIN RONALD J GRIFFITH C RICHARD GRIFFITH JAMES W GRIFFITH WILLIAM GRIMES LARRY GRISMORE FRED L JR GRITT MARTINI J GROOMS JENNIFER GROSS JIM L GROSS JOHN GROSSMAN MICHAEL C GROSSO CHARLES R GRUBER CHRISTEN GRUBER LARRY C GRUMBLING ROBERT D GRUVER KENNETH GUERRANT JEREMY GUFFEY GARY GUINN GREGG GULASA LINDA GULLETT BRAD GULLETT LOUESA GUNDY HARDWICK GUNTER JAMES GUTHERY THOMAS F GUTHERY WILLIAM S GUYTON LARRY GUYTON RAYMOND E HAAS ROBBINS FREDR HABERMAN WILLIAM J HAFFELDER GLEN S HAGERMAN BERNARD HAGGARD CARLYLE HAGY FARMS HAILE JAMES HAILE SHERYL HAINES D W HAINES RODNEY HAINES WILLIAM HALE GEORGE C HALEY LORI HALL III JAMES H HALL CYNTHIA HALL DOUGLAS HALL JAMIE HALL JERRY L HALL JO HALL LORIE E HALL PETER C HALL ROBERT C HALL SUSAN HALL TIMOTHY HALL VIRGIL HALL WOODROW HALLORAN KEVIN P HAMBLIN MICHAEL HAMILTON ADAM HAMILTON ANTHONY HAMILTON BONN HAMILTON JACKIE HAMILTON JAMES R HAMILTON JOHN HAMILTON JONATHAN D HAMILTON JUSTIN HAMILTON PAULA HAMILTON RICHARD HAMM CAROLYN HAMM SHANNON HAMM TROY E HAMMAN JANE HAMMER JERALD HAMMOND LARRY HAMMOND RUSSELL HAMON JIMMY R HAMPTON ELMER HANCOCK ANDREW
HANDELL AMY J HANDELL CHARLES T SR HANEY KATHY L HANLEY THOMAS R HANLIN GORDON A HANLOH ANDREW J HANSHAW DONALD HANSON R SCOTT HARBOR LOUIE HARBULA D LEE HARDACRE CAROL HARDESTY ELSIE HARDIN HMES MFG CO HARDIN IRIS J HARDIN MARTHA HARGIS TROY HARLEY GARRY L HARMAN DAVID HARMAN TERESA J HARMON THELMA HARP CHARLES R HARP DAN HARP GREGORY L HARP JERRY HARP MICHELLE L HARPEL BARB HARPER CLAIRE HARPER EDWARD HARPER KURT HARPER NANCY L HARPER THOMAS A HARRAH WILLIE C HARRELL BOBBY H HARRELL CHRIS L HARRIS DENNIS R HARRIS GENE HARRIS GERALDINE HARRIS JOHN W HARRIS MARY HARRIS MARY M HARRIS PATRICIA A HARRIS PHILIP L HARRIS STANLEY C HARRISON BRUCE HARRISON ROBIN R HARRISON SR D HARROD KARL HARROD RUSSELL HARSH HOWARD HARSHFIELD ANTHONY HART CLENAN HART DAVID HART JENNIFER HART RICHARD D HARTLE DAVID HARTMAN BRIAN L HARTMAN JR M HARTMAN MICHAEL HARTY DONALD A HASHMAN ISABELLE P HASKELL ROY D HASSMAN JOE HASTINGS G.R. HASTINGS KATHY HASTINGS PEG HASTINGS PHIL HASTINGS RICK HASTINGS THOMAS HASTINGS THOMAS L HATCH MICHAEL HATCHER PATRICIA HATCHER RONALD HATFIELD BILL HATTERY JERRY HATTERY RANDALL HAUBERT JANICE HAUBERT NICK HAUDENSCHIELD WILLIAM HAUENSTEIN ELIZABETH HAUSE SUSAN HAWK PEGGY M HAWKE DAN HAWKE ROBERT L HAWKINS EDWARD HAWKINS MARY E HAWLEY RICHARD HAY WILLIAM B HAYES LEWIS G HAYES SANDRA L HAYES WILLIAM L
HAYNES TERESA HAYWORTH CLYDE HAZELETT MARGO HEART OF OH INVESTMNT HEASTON DANIEL J HEATH RODNEY HEAVENLY ACRES RABBIT HECKMAN CHRIS HEFNER STEVE HEILMAN TIM HEISE PERRY HELLER GARY HELLER PEARL C HELMS III LOREN G HELTON EVA HELTON VIRGINIA HEMPKER DARCY HEMPKER DENNIS HENDERSON LOWE APRIL HENDERSON RANDY B HENDRICKS NANCY L HENDRICKSON VIRGIL HENNING CATHERINE D HENRICKSEN GARY H HENRY MICHAEL J HENSEL LAUREN HENSEL RUTH HENSEL VERNON E HENSLEY DEBRA L HENSLEY ELAINE HENSLEY JOHN M HENSLEY ROBERT HENSON MARTHA J HEPNER EARLE N HER KINNEY PROPRTY HERNANDEZ JOETTE HERR BRUCE J HERR TY L HERRERA OTONIEL HERRING RONNIE LEE HERSHEY SHANE HESSON KIM R HETRICK MARTHA HETTINGER JAMES R HI ROAD DRIVE IN HICKERSON GERALD S HICKMAN AMANDA HICKMAN DIANA HICKMAN JAMIE HICKMAN JOHN J HICKMAN ROBERT HICKMAN TARA HICKS DAWN E HICKS ENOCH HICKS PEARL HIGGINBOTHAM L M HIGGINBOTHAM S W HIGGINS AMY HIGGINS BEN F HIGGINS BILLIE HIGH MICHAEL E HIGHLAND NANCY J HIGHLY G H HIGHSMITH JOSEPH HILBORN MERL D HILDRETH RONALD HILE ANGELA HILL CHRIS HILL DAVID A HILL DENNIS HILL JAMES HILL PATRICIA L HILL ROBERT L HILL SCOTT HINDS MARVIN HINES HARRY HINES JEFF HINES KAREN HINES SR G HINKLE FARM AGENCY HINKLIN ROY A HINTON JAMES M HINTON PAUL E HINZE KELLEY R HIPSHER CRAIG HIRNEISE KATHY L HI-ROAD DRIVE IN HIRSCH WILLIAM HISER DAN HITE DAVID
HLADKY DONALD HOBACK LISA A HOCH K MICHAEL HOEFLER ERIC J HOESHEL CHRIS HOFFMAN DALLAS HOFFMAN DANIELLE HOFFMAN FRANK B HOFFMAN HOWARD W HOFFMAN KAREN R HOFFMAN KARL HOFFMAN LLOYD HOFFMAN PAULINE HOFFMAN SHARON L HOFFMAN STEPHANIE HOFFMAN TERRY D HOFFMAN WAYNE R HOGAN DALE R HOGAN THERESA J HOGG DONALD L HOGUE JUDY HOLBROOK A M HOLBROOK FOREST HOLBROOK JACKIE HOLBROOK PAUL D HOLBROOK ROBERT HOLCOMB RICK D HOLDCROFT KATHI HOLDERBY GEORGE HOLLAND CONSTRUCTION HOLLAND J H HOLLAND MARY ANN HOLLANSHEAD LINDA HOLLAR VICKIE HOLLARS JESSE L HOLLINS BARBARA HOLLON JAMES L HOLLOWAY CAROL HOLLOWAY STEWART J HOLMAN JAMES D HOLMAN VIRGIL HOLSINGER AMY HOLT RONALD HOLTSBERRY DENNIS W HOLTSBERRY JENNY HOLTZBERGER JOSEPH C HOLYCROSS KEITH B HOLZWART HARLEY HOMAN BRIAN HOME CENTRAL HOME EQUITY HOMMEL MITCH HOMMEL REX T HONAKER MANDY HONEGGER HAL D HOOPER NEILAN HOOPS EDWARD D HOOVER KENNETH HOOVER KEVIN M HOOVLER M WILLIAM HOPKINS BETTY L HOPKINS CRAIG HOPKINS KELLY A HOPKINS STEVE HOPKINS VALARIE HOPKINS WILLIS HOPPER LINDA S HOPSON STEPHANIE HORD DANIEL HORD KENNETH HORD WALTER H HORD WINN HORINEK ARTHUR HORLOCKER EDWARD HORN ANGELA HORN DELSON E HORNBECK SONYA K HORNE PEGGY HORNUNG CHARLES D HORST LARRY HORTON BRENDA HOSIER LISA L CZARNECKI HOSKINS LINDA R HOSKINS MORGAN C HOST FRED J HOUCHINS BONITA HOUCHINS JEFF HOUCHINS MICHELE HOUGH JIM HOUK REX
HOUSE SAMUEL A HOUSEWORTH JR DON HOUSEWORTH GERALD H HOUSEWORTH LINDA HOUSEWORTH STEVE HOVIS DAVID HOWARD BEVERLY HOWARD EDNA L HOWARD GEORGE W HOWARD MARGARET HOWELL DANNY HOWELL NORMAN E HOWLETT JOHN HUBBELL STEVE HUCKABA ANGELA HUDAK DAVID E HUDDLESTUN RICK HUDGEL REBECCA HUDKIN JOSEPH HUDKINS MARIA HUDSON LARRY J HUDSON SHIRLEY A HUFFINE RANDALL HUFFMAN WALKER HUGGINS CARL HUGHES JAMES A HUGHES JAMES R HUGHES MARK L HUGHES RICHARD H HULL CLINTON A HULL JOHN H HULL JOHN W HULSMEYER RANDALL L HUNSICKER EUGENE HUNSICKER TRAVIS HUNT DALLAS HUNT KYLIE HUNTER FRANK W III HUNTER GARY HUNTER ROGER HUNTER TRINA HUNTLEY EUVADA HUPP TERRY HURLEY ROBERT G HURT JOHN HUSS STANLEY HUSTON JR DON R HUTCHINSON BRAD HUTCHINSON DOROTHY HUTCHINSON TIMOTHY R HUTCHISON GINA HYLTON THERESA ICKES OSCAR ICKES ROBERT ICKLER JESSIE ILLINOIS CEREAL MILLS IMBODEN CONNIE S IMBODY JIM INGLEDUE CHARLES R INGLES WILMA INGRAM ANDREA IRELAND DONALD E IREY RICHARD C IRONS RYAN M ISLES GARY L ISON MALEA IVY DARRELL J G CLARK JACKMAN JOHNADAM JACKSON CASSANDRA JACKSON CHARLES JACKSON DIANA F JACKSON FRANK JACKSON JACK JACKSON JAMES F JACKSON JAMES W JACKSON JANET L JACKSON LYNETTE E JACKSON LYNNE M JACKSON MARIA JACKSON ROBERT JACKSON SAM JACKSON THOMAS A JACOBS CHARLES M JAHN JAMES R JAMES BARBARA J JAMES JR E JAMES LUCILLE JAMES RONDA L JAMES WILLIAM
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JORDAN WILLIAM O JORDAN WILLIAM O JORDON RONALD JORDON TERRY JOSEPH BRIAN F JOSEPH RANDALL A JOSEPH ROBERT JOSEPHSON JAY E JUSTICE DELBERT JUSTICE ESTELLA KACSALA PATRICIA A KAELBER MAURICE KAFFER HARRY KAHLEY RICHARD M KAISER DAVID L KALB MELANIE KANABLE DAVID P KANNIARD ANN KARCHER RICHARD KAROTKO DAVID A KASS JOHN J KAUBLE JANE KAUBLE KATHY D KAUBLE THERESA KAUFFMAN GLEN KEANE THOMAS KEARNS CLARA M KEARNS JOHN R KECK ALMA KECKLER SANDY L KECKLER TIM KEEHN DENISE A KEEL SHANE KEEN SHELBY R KEENER ERMA KEENEY HARRY E KEERAN AMY J KEERAN HEATHER KEERAN JENNIFER KEETON RAYMOND E KEHREWECKER CHARLES KELBEL JASON KELLER JULIE A KELLER SCOTT KELLEY JAMES KELLEY JEFF KELLOGG GERALD L KELLOGG LEONARD E KELLY BARRY KELLY DOROTHY M KELLY SHANNON KELLY WALTER KEMMER STANLEY KEMPTON CYNTHIA L KENDALL MARY KENDALL RUSS KENDRICK JOHN W KENNARD CAROLYN L KENNEDY BILL KENNEDY CECILIA KENNEDY DONNA M KENNEDY KIM KENNISON RHONDA KENNY SABRINA KENSHAW GEORGE W JR KENT LONNIE R KENTON COFFEE CUPS KEPFORD EDWINA KEPLER RICHARD R KERN MATTHEW KERNS ELIZABETH KERNS JILL KERSHNER ROBERT W KESTEL MARY KEY IDA KEYSOR DONALD KEYSOR SUZY KIA ORA FARMS KIBLER PHILLIP E KIDD CLAIR E KILBURN NANCY KILE DOROTHY O KILGORE HOWARD KILGORE LISA KILLEN CAROLYN K KILLEN RUSSELL KIMBLE HEATHER KIMBROUGH PATRICIA A KIMMELL ALISHA KINWELL OPER ATING CO
KINARK CORPOR ATION KINDLE FRIEDA N KINDLE GARY M KINDLE M HELEN KING ALLENA KING CHERYL S KING CHRISOPHE KING CONSTRUCTION KING DIANE KING DON KING DONALD R KING JAMES E KING JOE W KING KEVIN KING MICHAEL KING ROBERT C KINKLE KEVIN KINNEAR JASON KINNEAR JR D KINNEY PHILLIP KINSEY RICHARD KINSLER EVELYN KINTER BRIAN L KIRBY KAREN E KIRKPATRICK JANE A KIRKPATRICK JEFFREY S KIRKPATRICK L IBERTY KIRTLAND ROBB KISNER SHARI KISSLING DEBBIE KISSLING LARRY E KISSLING S O KISSLING WILLIAM KITCHEN WANDA KITCHIN KEVIN KLAIBER RUSSELL KLAPP ANNA KLAUSING LEONARD R KLEMAN ROBERT L KLETT DANA KLINGEL DONALD L KLINGER ERIC KLINGLER DENNIS KLINGLER TONJA KLOTTS TONY L KNAPP EDWARD KNAPP RAY KNAUL CONNIE KNEPPER BRUCE KNICKEL W JOHN KNIGHT BONNIE KNIGHT RYAN BICKHAM KNISLEY DEBRA L KNOTTS EVERETTE KNOTTS KENNETH KNOX GERALD L KNOX KEITH KNUTSON JOHN K KOEHLER JEFF KOEHLER THOMAS KOKAS TRISTA KONVAS JOHN KOONCE CHRISTOPHER KORN THOMAS KOTSON CHARLES E KRAJEWSKI CAROL KRAM DENNIS W KRAMER TED KRANER CECIL KRAUS DAMON KRETZ BETH KRITZLER KRITZLER & KRITZLER LINDA KROM TERRY L KROTINE SHELLY KRUG KENNETH J KRUGER EARL E KRUMMERY ERNEST G KUBA AMANDA KUBE DAVID M KUENZLI PAUL L KUHLEN DAVID KUHN AMY KUNKLE THEODORE KUNTZ JOHN E KURZ BARBARA KYVIG JAMES B LACKEY PRISCILLA SUE LAFERTY ANN LAHUGH CHARLES C
LAING MARIA F LAIRD ANDREW LAIRD GEORGE D LAKE KENNETH LAKE SANITATION LAMA DONALD E LAMAN RONALD K LAMB DOUG LAMB JOSEPH LAMB MATTHEW LAMMERS VICKIE LANDAU ROSS LANDON BROTHE RS LANDON JENNIFER LANE ALVIN LANGENKAMP JOHN LANGENKAMP JOHN B LANTHROM GARLAND E LAPRADE TRACY LARSON KENNETH LARUE MARVIN D LASCH KEITH LATIMER HUGH M LATTA JEFFREY LAU WILLIAM R LAUBIS EMMA M LAUCHER TODD LAUGHORN KENNETH E LAUGHREY F E LAUSE HUBERT LAWHUN BRANDON LAWHUN EARL LAWRENCE BOBBY LAWRENCE CAROL LAWRENCE D MESSMER LAWRENCE JERRY LAWRENCE ROBERT D LAWRENCE STEVE LAWSON JULIA LAWSON KATHLEEN LAWSON MARY L LAWSON RANDY M LAWSON RYAN D LAY LEONARD LAY ROBERT LAYNE KEITH LAYNE LISA LAYNE RICK LEACH ROY A LEADBETTER STEPHANIE LEADBETTER TODD G LEARY MARK LEASE THOMAS G LEBAY ELLEN LEBLANC GLORIA LEDESMA JULIE LEDFORD KEVIN N LEE INA R LEE IV J LEE ROBERT E LEFFLER WILLIAM B LEGG MICHAEL J LEGGE CAROL LEGGE CHRISTINA LEHMAN DENNIS LEIGH GREG LEINENBERGER W L LEISKE MARTIN LEITER CHAD LEITER SARAH LEMAR MICHELLE LEMAR PAMELA KAY LEMASTER LUNDY LEMASTERS WALTER LEMKE CHARLES W LEONARD JAMIE LEONARD MARY LEPINSKI TOM LEPINSKI TOM J LESIEUR WILLIAM LESTER CHUCK LESTER MARJORIE LESTER MICHAEL LESTER RICHARD LEVERING FLOYD LEVERING THOMAS L LEWIS BOBBI J LEWIS CALVIN LEWIS ED LEWIS KATHERINE E
LEWIS RAYMOND LEWIS THOMAS LIBBEE DR GORDON S LICKWAR REBECCA A LIGHTNER DAVID LIGHTNER DEBORAH J LIGHTNER GARY LIGHTNER KAREN LIKINS CLAUDE M LILES RODNEY LIMING G C LINCOLN LIFE INS LIND ROSEMARY LINES GEORGE T LINGO MICHAEL R LINN WALLACEM LINSTEDT BRIAN LINSTEDT LARRY LINTON SHERRI LIPINSKI TERRI LITTERAL DUSTIN LITTERAL HAROLD LITTLE DAVID LITTLE LOLA L LITTLER JOHN G LITZENBERG BRUCE LIVENGOOD MIKE J LLANES ANDRES LOCAL #241 UNITD RBBR LOCK JACK L LOCKRIDGE JOHN W LODGE WAYNE F LOFTON RAY E LOGAN SHANNON LOGAN STEVE LOHR REBECCA LOHRBER SUSAN E LONES BRAD LONG BERRY LONG BETTY A LONG DANIEL L LONG DANNY L LONG DWIGHT LONG NORMAN LONG RAYMOND LONGACRE MICHAEL D LONGANBACH STEVE A LONYO MICHAEL S LOOKABAUGH BEN LOOKER RONALD LOPER GLENN A LOTH EMILY LOUBERT TERRY L LOUDERMILK MARVIN J LOUGH APRIL LOUGH HERMAN LOUNSBURY T B LOVETTE RUTH J LOWE DWIGHT D LOWE JOSHUA LOWE NANCY K LOWE SAMUEL LOWER DICK LOWREY ROBERT LUCAS DARREN LUCAS JOHN LUCAS JON P LUCAS KENNETH M LUCAS MICHAEL D LUCAS THERESA S LUCE BRYAN LUDLUM HOUSTON LUIKART LEONARD R LUMBATIS PAUL LUMBERSON CURT LUND PENNY L LUTZ TIMOTHY A LYKINS JR K LYNCH TIM LYNNE DEBRA LYON FRANK LYONS JAMES LYONS LINDA LYONS MIGNON LYONS PATRICIA L M & S INC MAAG JEFFREY MAAG STEPHAN A MABREY DAVE MABREY ELZIE
MACHWART JAMES D MACK DAVID A MACKENZIE LAWRNCE SR MACKY KENNETH MADDEN MICHELE R MAGGERT RACHEL MAGNUSON RICHARD F MAGNUSSON I C MAHAFFEY THOMAS M MAHALIK MICHAEL P MAIN TRAVIS MAJOROS TIBOR MALONE TERRI MALONE WALTER R MGMNT EXPANSN CO MANGIN TODD MANLEY DIANE A MANNASMITH RANDY L MANNS BRAD G MANNS CRIT MANNS EARNEST MANNS J B MANNS JEAN E MANNS RODNEY MANSFIELD EUGENE MANSHIP MICHAEL J MARANATHA BIBLE CAMP MARCUM ARVILL MARION CONTRACTNG CO MARION DIV IN SASSO MARION H A N D MARION POWER SHOVEL MARKLEY ERIC MARKS CRAIG MARKS REX W MARKS ROBERT L MARLER CHARLES MARLER PAUL MARMANN WILLARD Y MARSH CLAUDE MARSHALL JAMES MARSHALL JOHN MARSHALL OPAL J MARSHALL STEPHANIE MARSHALL TROY M MARTIN CHARLENE MARTIN CHARLES MARTIN CHRISTINE R MARTIN DAVE MARTIN DELBERT H MARTIN JJ PEPPER MARTIN JOSEPH P MARTIN KENNETH E MARTIN LONNIE W MARTIN MICHELLE MARTIN NEIL MARTIN ROBERT K MARTIN SCOTT A MARTIN STEPHEN R MARTIN TRACIE MARTIN WILLIAM F MARTINEZ JOYCE L MARVIN DONALD MASON GENE MASON LAVONE MASON LESTER MASON ROY MASSEY ANGIE MASSLOW LINDA L MASTRONARDI VINCENT MATHERLY GLEN L MATHEWS LORETTA M MATHEWS TIMOTHY A MATHIS ROGER L MATLAK WILLIAM M MATTESON DAVID MATTESON VERNARD MATTIX KENNETH MATTIX PAM MAUTER GREGORY P MAW GORDON MAWER JOE MAXSON RAYMOND E MAY DAVID A MAY THOMAS G MAY TIM MAYNARD STACY R MAYSE WILLIAM H MAZE BECKY MC CURDY NICHOLE
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MC WADE JOSHUA MCALPIN JANET MCBRIDE DONALD E MCCALLISTER JOHN A MCCARDLE PAUL MCCARLEY RHONDA MCCARTY BRAN CH MCCARTY LAURA MCCARTY PENNEY MCCHESNEY PAUL MCCLAIN WILLIAM R MCCLINTOCK GEORGE S MCCLINTOCK KENNETH E MCCLINTOCK WILLARD MCCLOSKEY DOUGLAS L MCCLOSKY JAMES MCCLOUD JEFF MCCLUSKY THOMAS E MCCOMBS EVERETT M MCCONNELL GUY MCCONNELL SHERRY MCCONNELL TONI R MCCOY DENBO MCCOY KELLY MCCOY PHYLLIS MCCOY WILLIAM J MCCULLOUGH ALLEN MCCULLOUGH JANET MCCULLOUGH KERRY MCCULLOUGH LAURIE MCDANEL PAUL B MCDANIEL BEVERLY A MCDANIEL GLENN MCDANIEL IRVIN MCDONALD ALBERTA MCDONALD GLEN M MCDONALD JACK MCDONALD W H MCDOUGAL A MCDOWELL DICK MCDOWELL JAMES MCELDOWNEY JOHN MCELHATTEN JAY MCELREE NEAL MCELROY BERNARD MCENTEE RICHARD C MCGHEE ANGIE MCGINNIS MICHAEL MCGINNISS NATHANIEL MCGLONE DAVID O MCGLOTHLIN WILLIAM M MCGONAGILL JAMES MCGRATH RONALD E MCGUE JERRY MCGUIRE ANGELA N MCHUGH TERRY MCINTOSH TENZLEY MCKEAN CRYSTAL MCKEAN KENNETH W MCKEE LONEY D MCKEE SCOTT MCKENSEY BILL MCKENZIE CANDY MCKENZIE ROBERT J MCKENZIE TRACI L MCKINLEY BRENDA G MCKINLEY LINDA L MCKINLEY ROBERT C MCKINNISS BENJAMIN W MCKINNISS TAMI C MCKINNISS TERESA MCKINSTRY JAMES W MCLAUGHLIN HARRY MCLAURIN EARL MCMAHAM EUGENE MCMAHON PAUL MCMILLION KAREN MCMONIGAL DONALD MCMULLAN NANCY I MCNAMARA CHRISTIAN MCNULTY RICHARD MCQUISTION JENNIFER MCQUISTION R A MCQUISTION TERRI MCQUOWN HEIDI MEACHEM ALBERT MEAD BILLY J MEAD C E MEAD JO ANNA MEADE ANGELA
MEADE FRANKLIN D MEADE HAZEL MEADE HOWARD C MEADE KENNETH MEADE THOMAS J MEADOWS KENNETH MEADOWS LARRY A MEEKS DAVID JR MEEKS RAYMOND G MEENACH MICHELLE MEISTER LINDA MEKUSH HENRY MENCHHOFER DAVID MENDENHALL CYNTHIA MENTZER JR KENNETH E MENTZER LARRY MENUEZ INC V O &SON MERCER BILLY MERCER HAROLD MERCER LISA MERCER LUTHER MERCHANT JIM MERCILE BETHANY L MERRIMAN ROBERT MERRITT ROBERT MERTZ THAD E MERTZ WENDELL W MESSENGER DOUG MESSENGER JOYCE MESSENGER RICHARD H MESSENGER THOMAS METZ RICHARD METZGER JUDITH L METZGER MATTHEW MEYER E ELIZABETH MEYER GREG M MEYER STEVEN M MEYERS RYAN MICHAELS JAMES R MICHEL WILLIAM H MICKLE DAN MID OHIO CHEMICAL MIERZEJEWSKI KIM MILEY FREIDA F MILEY JAMES MILEY MICHAEL T MILEY PAMELA J MILLER CARRIE MILLER DAN S MILLER DARREN MILLER DELORES L MILLER EDWARD J MILLER EVELYN G MILLER GREGORY P MILLER HENRY L MILLER JAMES R MILLER JAY G MILLER JEFFREY W MILLER JOHN MILLER JOHN J MILLER JOHN P MILLER JON A MILLER KARL MILLER KENNETH MILLER KEVIN MILLER KIMBERLY S MILLER LANCE MILLER LARRY D MILLER LOVELL MILLER LOWELL E MILLER PATRICIA ANN MILLER ROBERT MILLER ROBERT A MILLER RONALD MILLER SAMUEL A MILLER STEVE E MILLER SUE E MILLER SUSAN L MILLER THOMAS MILLER VICTOR MILLER WILLIAM E MILLER WILLIAM F MILLER WINIFRED L MILLIGAN FREDERICK MILLIGAN STEVE E MILLINGTON JOSH D MILLS CHARLES MILLS GLENN MILLS IVA MILLS LOIS J
MILLS RICHARD W MILLS WILLIAM O MILLS WILLIAM W MILTON DOROTHY MINER DONALD E MINER MIKE F MINICH APRIL MIRACLE DONALD S MIRACLE JAMES K MITCHELL ANTHONY MITCHELL B J MITCHELL DEBRA MITCHELL FRANK MITCHELL LINDA M MITCHELL MARCELLA MITCHELL PAUL MITCHELL SARAH J MITCHEM R D MIU BARBARA MOFFITT BRAD MOHLER DONALD MOHRE FLORENCE N MOLLE DAVID MONFORT BOB MONTEE JAMIE MONTGOMERY HEATH MONTGOMERY MABEL MONTGOMERY MIKE MONTIS ANNETTE MOODESPAUGH ROBERT MOON L E MOONEY DORIS MOONEY DOUG MOORE ALLEN MOORE ANN MOORE DAYERS ESTATE MOORE DOROTHY I MOORE FREDA MOORE JAMES MOORE JERROLD MOORE JERRY MOORE JR R MOORE JR ROBERT E MOORE KELLIE A MOORE LOLA A MOORE MICHAEL MOORE MIKE MOORE QUINT E MOORE RAYMOND L MOORE RICHARD A MOORE RICHARD L MOORE ROBERT L MOORE TERRIE LYNN MOORE TRACY MOOSE MICHAEL G MOOTS AMY MORGAN FRANK MORGAN MAX MORGASON BRYAN K MORIN GEORGE E MORINO KEN MOROS VICTOR MORRIS BARBARA MORRIS DAVID T MORRIS DONNA MORRIS F J MORRIS JR JEFFREY L MORRIS MATTHEW E MORRIS RICKY H MORRIS ROBERT M MORRIS TED MORRISON ORVILLE MORRISON TIM MORROW LARRY MOSBACKER GARY MOSELEY JEFFREY W MOSER EMERSON E MOSER INEZ MOSES BASIL E MOSES PATRICIA A MOSHER JAMES MOSURE JOSH E MOTTER TODD MOUNT VERN MOUNTS RICHARD MOURY DAROLD J MOUSER CHARLES L MOWERY MARILYN MT LOOK OUT MT PLEASANT CHRCH
MT PLEASANT CHRCH PARS MU CHUNG H MULLINS JEFFREY L MULLINS ROY MULLINS TAYLOR S MUNDY ROBERT MURFIELD FRANI MURPHY DOUGLAS MURPHY IONA MURPHY MICHAEL W MURPHY OSCAR MURRAY JOHN P MURRAY MELVIN J MURRAY RICHARD A MURRAY THOMAS G MURRELL GENE MUSIC CORA MUSSELMAN KARLA MUSSER JOHN MUTERSPAUGH STAN MYERS CHARLENE MYERS GARRETT MYERS GEORGE T MYERS HARRY S MYERS MARY MYERS STEVEN L MYERS VIRGIL MYLES TRAVIS NALLS DARYL NAPPER PATRICIA NAPPER TIMOTHY NASH DORCAS J NATIONAL CITY NAUS DONNA J NAUS PHIL NEAL DANIEL F NEELD JENNIFER A NEELEY CHARLENE K NEELEY DAN NEELEY DAN NEELEY DONNA NEELEY JEREMY C NEELEY SADIE M NEELY JAMES L NEELY THOMAS J NEFF DAVID NEIDHART AMY L NELSON JAMES NELSON JOHN NELSON LARRY NELSON P BOONE NELSON PATRICK NELSON ROBERT SHAWN NELSON TERESA NELTON WILLIAM NEMETH JOHN R NEPTUNE TERRY W NEVILLE DAVID NEWBOUND GARRETT NEWELL JR C NEWELL KEVIN NEWELL LEROY NEWELL TIM L NEWKAM EDWARD NEWKIRK CHARLES NEWLAND JERRY NEWLAND LAVERNE L NEWLAND MICHAEL R NEWLAND T J NEWLAND WILLIAM NEWMAN PAUL NEWMAN RAY NEWMAN THOMAS NEWMAN TODD NEWSOME BRANDON NEWTON EDWARD NIBERT BOBBIE NICHOLS DALE R NICHOLS DEANNA NICHOLS HARVEY A NICHOLS JAMES H NICHOLS JON NICHOLS LEON NICHOLSON JACK NICKELL MARTHA NICKERSON JEFF NICKLAUS FREDERICK A NICKLES DARRELL NICKLES LESLIE NICOLOSI DEBRA
NIEMEYER MICHAEL J NIGH PAMELA S NILES DONALD E NILES RICHARD NOBLE NANCY NOBLE KAY NOBLET CHESTER NOGGLE CARL NOGGLE DAN NOGGLE KEVIN J NOLAN BONNIE E NOLTING JENNIFER J NORDEN RACHEL L NORMAN JEFF A NORRIS FRED W NORTON JR J NORTON ROBERT A NORTON STEPHEN A NORVELL CHARLES NORVIEL DONALD NOVOTNY DAN NUSS STEPHANIE NUSSER II WILLARD NUTT SR. ROBERT O DONNELL JAKE OBENOUR BRIAN OBENOUR M G OBERDIER DON D OBERDIER HERBERT H OBRIAN DONALD H O’BRIEN DONNA J O’BRIEN MICHAEL S O’CONNELL JACQUELINE S O’DELL JAMES ODEN AMBER N OEHLERS PAMELA OF PRAYER HOUSE OGLESBEE KEITH O’GUINN TIMOTHY E OHIO OUTDOOR ADVERT OHIO POWER CO OHL DAVID A OILER BILLYIE OLDHAM C & L OLDHAM ERIC OLDS SCOTT OLIVER FRANKLIN OLIVER MICHAEL C OLIVER RANDALL L OLIVER RICHARD OLSON ROBERT A ONIFER CINDY OPPERMAN RODNEY O’REILLY DENNIS ORIANS DOUGLAS H ORIANS PHIL ORIANS ROBERT W ORNDORFF ERIC ORR PAULA OSBORNE EMMITT OSBORNE J M OSBORNE JOSH P OSBOURN ERNEST R OSKINS LAWRENCE E OSTROM BRENT A OSWALD RICHARD A OTTAVIANO JOHN OTTEN CORT F OTTER CREEK EXP INC OUSLEY PAULINE OVERS AUDREY OVERS DOUG OVERS JEANETTE OVERS JOHNNIE R OVERS JOSEPH OVERS ROGER N OWEN II KENNETH R OWEN JEFFREY W OWENS CHRISTOPHER OWENS NOAH R OWENS PRICE OWENS RUTH OWENS TOBY OWINGS SHERMAN OWSLEY JR WILLIE PACER ROBERT PACK ARLEN PACK PAUL PAHL ROGER PAINTER HENRY
PALMER III H PALMER MICHAEL E PALMER ROBERT PALMER WESLEY PAN ENERGY SYSTEMS PANNING DONALD PARKER PATRICIA PARKINS JACK PARKS WILBERT PARMER RANDALL V PARR BEVERLEE PARR DONALD PARR STEPHEN L PARROTT EDWIN R PARSELL DEBRA PARSONS BETH L PARSONS ED PATCHET JOHN D PATCHETT JACK PATRICK BARBARA PATRICK BARBARA A PATRICK FLOYD PATTERSON CHAMEINE PATTERSON DONNA E PATTERSON JOHN PATTON DELMAR R PATTON JACK PAUGH MICHAEL D PAUGH R KENNETH PAULMAN SANDRA M PAULUS PATRICK PEAK ARLES C PEASE KEITH N PECK JENNIFER M PEERY EDWARD L PEGG JOHN PELFREY CLARENCE PELFREY JAMES PELLOT DENNIS PENDLETON DALE PENDLETON NELLIE PENDLETON PERD E PENIX CANDACE R PENNER KEVIN PENNINGTON BOYD PENNINGTON CHERI PENNINGTON MIKE PENNINGTON WANDA PENNY CECIL O PENWELL JR J PEREZ DANIEL PERKINS DALE PERKINS DALE PERKINS EDDIE PERRY HOLLIS N PERRY TOM PERSINGER JAMES E PETAK ROSEMARIE PETERS GARY L PETERS GARY L PETERS SR D PETERSON ARTHUR L PETERSON RON PETRY JOHN PETTIT DON PETTITT BENTLEY PFEIFFER JERRY PFEIFFER STATN STOR PFEIL SIEGFRIED PFIEFFER LENORE PFLEIDER CHARLENE PFLEIDER ROBERT PHALEN DENNIS L PHELPS LARRY PHILIP ROY C II PHILLIANS RANDY A PHILLIPS AMY PHILLIPS CHARLES M PHILLIPS JACK W PHILLIPS LAVERNE A PHILLIPS NORMAN K PHILLIPS RONALD W PHIPPS GARY L PIAR RAYMOND A PIATT WILLIAM K PICKETT DOUGLAS J PICKETT JEFFREY A PICKETT MERLE PICKETT SHANNON PICKETT SHELLY L
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RAGER ROBERT J RAIES MICHAEL W RAINES MICHAEL S RAINES MICHAEL S RAKES HENRY E RALL CLYDE RALL DAN RALPH DAN RALPH GENEVIEVE RALPH MIKE RALSTON CRAIG RALSTON JAMES RALSTON JAMES E RALSTON KYLE J RAMBO DAVID RAMGE JOHN A RAMGE MELANEY RAMIREZ ORLANDO RAMSDELL AARON RAMSEY KENNETH E RANDALL FREDA P RANDELL TED D RANDOLPH JAMES RANK CALVIN RANSBOTTOM LINDA RANSOME JACKIE B RAREY ROGER RASEY BARBARA J RASEY C F RASEY EDDIE L RASEY EDGAR L RASEY EDWARD L RASEY SHERWOOD RASNICK EDGAR RASNICK JAMES RASNICK JANIE RASNICK TOYNUA RATHBURN BRAD RAUCH HARRY A RAUSCH AL RAY MARVIN RAY MILDRED A RAYBURN SCOTT RAYL GEORGE L REAM DAN REAMES TERRI REAMES WILLIAM REASONER BETTY REASONER MICHAEL REDD DAVID REDD F E REDD JACK M REDD KELLY S REDMON JOHN A REDMOND JOANNE J REECE FRANK C REECE LESTER L REECE RONALD W REED CHRISTOPH REED KRISTY REED LISA REED LISA A REED MELISSA REEDER FRANCIS REESE CHARLES N REESE CHRIS REEVE BRYAN REHN LEWIS REICHARDT RUSSELL REICHERT MICHELLE REID ROBERT REIDY NORBERT REIFF CARL REIFF FREDERICK REIGLE MONTY E REINWALD KEITH RELIABL MBLE HOME SVC RENDALL ROBERT J RENGERT DANIEL RENTSCHLER BEN RENZ NORMAN K REPPART ROY P RESIDENTIAL H OMEASSO RETTERER BERNICE E REYNOLDS RYAN REYNOLDS STEVEN L RHINEHART WILFORD RHOAD MARY J RHOAD WILLIAM RHOADES C D
RHOADES EULA RHOADS CHRIS TINEL RICE HAROLD E RICE JASON A RICE JUANITA R RICE MELANIE RICE W A RICHARDS JEFF RICHARDS LISA RICHARDS RICHARD J RICHARDSON CARL RICHARDSON JAMES W RICHARDSON RALPH E RICHARDSON RUSSELL RICHIE JEROME R RICHMOND RAYMOND A RICHMOND STEPHEN M RICKER DOUG RIEDLINGER LULA RIEDLINGER MICHELLE RIES BOB RIFE RONALD A RIFE SCOTT M RIFE TINA C RIFF DONNA J RIFF JAMES B RIFFE BRIAN RIFFLE RICK D RIGDON DONALD RIGEL ROBERT ALLEN RIGGS LINDA L RIGNEY JAMES E RIGSBY JAMES W RILEY HAROLD RILEY ROBERT W RILEY ROBERT W RINBOLT TRICIA RINDERLE JOSEPH RINDERLE LORETTA RINEHART WILLIAM D RING MICHAEL RINGLER WILLIAM R RIOS MARIA M VARGOS RISCH ANDY M RISCH STEPHEN RISNER DEB RISNER DOROTHY RISNER DOUGLAS RISNER DOUGLAS R RISNER MAX RISNER MICHAEL RISNER PENNY RISNER SCOT RISNER SUSIE RISSER JAY L RISTER GARY L RISTER TERRY RITCHEY HORACE RITCHIE DONALD E RITCHIE MARTIN RITCHIE RANDY RITCHIE RICK RITCHISON RICHARD RITTENBERRY GERTIS R RIVER VALLEY LIONS CLU B RIVERS RUSSELL RIZER KAREN RIZOR ROBERT J ROACHE JESSICA ROARICK HERMAN ROBAR GENERAL FUND CO ROBBINS BILLY E ROBERTS ANDREW L ROBERTS CAROLYN ROBERTS DEBBIE K ROBERTS DORSEY ROBERTS JAMIE S ROBERTS KEITH L ROBERTS KNUTE ROBERTS SARAH ROBERTS SCOTT E ROBERTS TERRY ROBILLARD JOSEPH ROBINETT ELMER ROBINETTE ERNESTINE ROBINETTE ROBIN G ROBINSON BETTY ROBINSON ELLEN ROBINSON KEITH ROBINSON RUTH
ROBINSON SHAWN ROBINSON TERRIE ROCKFORD HIDE & FUR CO ROCKHILL RONALD E ROCKHOLD MARGARET A ROCKHOLD ROCKHOLD & ROCKWELL JACK W RODMAN CRYSTAL RODMAN SR J ROGERS CLARENCE F ROGERS DANA ROGERS EDWARD ROGERS GARY ROGERS GRACE ROGERS JO ANN ROGERS PAUL ROJAS LORI K ROLLISON PAULETTE S ROLLISON RICHARD ROLSTON CHARLES ROMERO MELISSA J RONE B CRAIG ROOF ROBERT E ROOF TOBY ROOF VICKIE ROOP DONALD L ROOPER DANIA ROSE A DUANE ROSE BENNIE ROSE BILLIE J ROSE DUANE ROSE GENE ROSE JACK ROSE JR JOE ROSE MARILYN S ROSEBERRY JAMIE ROSEBERRY PHYLLIS ROSEBROUGH HAROLD ROSEBROUGH JULIE ROSHON CHAD A ROSHON MIKE D ROSS ANTHONY C ROSS DEBORAH L ROSS ELIZABETH ROSS JERRY ROSS TERRY L ROSSWURM MARK ROSTORFER KEVIN L ROSTORFER TERESA ROSZMAN JACK ROSZMAN JOHN D ROSZMAN MARY E ROTH ALLEN ROTH JAMES ROTH JOHN ROTH TERESA J ROUSH DENNIS ROUSH PHYLLIS A ROVIRA JAMES J ROW TERESA J ROWE DAVID E ROWE DONALD ROWE DONALD E ROWE DOROTHY ROWE GEORGE ROWE LARRY ROWE LUCAS ROWE PAUL D ROWE RANDALL ROWE RON ROWE SUSAN K ROWLAND BILL ROWLAND DONNA ROWLINSON WES ROYER JOHN S RUBINS EVERETT D RUBY RICHARD E RUBY WILLIAM C RUDD MARVIN RUDOLPH EDWARD RUEHRMUND MERLE RUFFING MICHAEL RUHL ROBERT RUHLEN DAVID C RUMER ANDREW RUMER DANA RUMPKE SCOTT A RUPE SHERRI LYNN RUSBULDT AL RUSH BRUCE
RUSH CAROL A RUSH KENNETH RUSH WILLIAM RUSMISEL RAY RUSSELL FRANKLIN RUSSELL FREDERICK N RUSSELL THOMAS RUTAN GARY H RUTH GENE E RUTH GEORGE RUTH JACKIE RUTH JAMES W RUTH JENNIFER D RUTH LYN RUTH ROBERT RUTHERFORD EVAN RUTLEDGE JERRY L RYAN ANGELA RYAN KEVIN P SAAD EDWARD SAAM JEREMY L SADDLER JACK E SADLER RICHARD SAFT LARRY W SALAMANCA ENERGY LLC SALEM CHURCH PARS SALYER LLOYD E SALYER VIRGIL SAMONS LEISA SAMPLEY ROBERT SAMPSON JIM SAMSON LEE D SANCENITO JAMES J SANCHEZ SHEENA SAND MICHAEL L SANDELL DEBORAH J SANDERS BEVERLY SANDERS CHERIE SANDERS CHRISTOPHER B SANDERS JEFF SANDERS JEFF SANDERS JEFFREY L SANDERS MD DR JIM C SANDERS SALLY SANDERS SHAWN SANDERS TRAVIS A SANDERSON EVERETT SANDERSON R L SANDOE CHRISTY SANDRIDGE FRED SANDRIDGE MYRON H SANDS GMOZELLE SANDS MARK R SANDS ROBYN SANDY RHONDA K SANITATION LAKE SANNER RICHARD E SANSOTTA REAL TYCO SARCO INC SARGENT SANDY M SARGENT TRACY SATTERFIELD SUSANNE SATTERFIELD TREVOR SAUNDERS JOHN SAUNDERS VERNARD SAVINGS OF AMERICA SAWYER CHERYL SAXTON LESTER SAYLOR WILLIAM SAYRE FRANK C SAYRE JOE W SAYRE NORMA M SCAGGS CHARLES SCARBRO JIMMY W SCHAFFET KENNETH SCHALK BROTHERS SCHARF STANLEY SCHEFF ROBERT A SCHEIDERER BRENT SCHEITLER DAN A SCHEITLER KARL SCHEITLER ROY S SCHENKEL JEFF SCHERTZER ALVA J SCHERTZER BRACK SCHERTZLER BARCK SCHIEFER A SCHINDLER H E SCHLEENBAKER PHIL SCHLEENBAKER ROBERT E
SCHMELZER DAVID SCHMIDT EDNA SCHMITZ GARY SCHMUCK DOUGLAS SCHNEIDER JAMES P SCHNEIDER JOHN SCHNEPP ROGER SCHNITZLER GREGORY SCHOENBERGER CATHY SCHOFIELD TRACY SCHRADER JEFFREY B SCHRECK MARGARET A SCHRIML DAVID A SCHROEDER CLIFFORD SCHROEDER GORDON SCHROEDER JANELLE SCHROEDER TOM SCHROLL ROBERT SCHUBEL MARK SCHUBIN JAMES G SCHULER DANIEL SCHULLER NADINE SCHULTZ TROY A SCHWAB KENNY SCHWADERER GLEN M SCHWADERER LUCILE SCHWALLER J E SCHWARTZ CALEB SCHWARTZKOPF JIM SCHWARZ JUNE SCHWENNING MATTHEW P SCHWERIN JEFF SCIOTO FARM I NC SCOTT DALE G SCOTT DAREL JR SCOTT JOHN R SCOTT JOSEPH B SCOTT KATHLEEN SCOTT RUTH A SCOTT STEVEN W SCOTT TIMOTHY SCOTT TOM SCOTT TYLER SCOTT WALLACE T SCOTT WILLIAM JR SCOTT ZELMA M SEABERT THERESA SEABURN ROBERT N SEALSCOTT BRIAN SEAMAN KENNETH R SEATON EDWARD E SECKEL JAMES G SECKEL RON SEDGWICK CONNIE SEDLOCK JERRY SEIF JAMES A SEIGEL ASHLEY SEIGEL JESSE SEIGFRIED JOHN J SEITER MILDRED SELLERS LORI SESSLER SHARON SESSLER VICKI L SEXTON DELLA M SEXTON PEGGY SEXTON WILLARD SEYMOUR DEBBIE L SHAFFER ASHLEY SHAFFER CATHERINE SHAFFER NEIL E SHAFFER PAUL D SHAMBLIN DONNA F SHAMROCK MUNITIONS SHANLEY DAVID SHAPPARD ROBERT C SHARK THOMAS L SHARP CARL J SHARP CLARA SHARP GLAYDEN D SHARP GUY SHARP JAMES SHARP SIDNEY A SHAVER SHERRI SHAW CAROLE SHAW DARRELL SHAW LAWRENCE D SHAW RANDY E SHEARROW CHARLES SHEETS BILL SHEETS SANDRA K
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MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES
TRUSTEE ELECTIONS
PARTICIPATE IN YOUR CO-OP’S
DEMOCRATIC MEMBER CONTROL Members in districts 1, 2, and 3 will receive trustee interest cards in October.
T
he principle of “democratic member control” means you have a voice in the operation of your cooperative. Members receive capital credit dividends, vote on trustees and other important issues, and can play a larger role by serving as a co-op trustee. Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative is governed by a nine-member board of trustees. The board meets monthly to decide policies, review cooperative business and activities, and make decisions affecting the entire cooperative. It also approves contracts, reviews operations, and approves all payments of patronage capital. The cooperative’s territory covers portions of 10 counties and is divided into nine districts. Each of the nine districts is represented by a board member.
Each year, three board members are elected by and from the membership to serve a three-year term. There is no limit to the number of terms a trustee can be elected to serve. All trustees are members of the cooperative and must live in the district which they represent. Trustees must not in any way be employed or financially interested in a competing enterprise or business selling electric energy or supplies to the cooperative, or business primarily engaged in selling electrical appliances, fixtures, or supplies to cooperative members. For more than 80 years, board members have been democratically elected by the cooperative’s membership. The election process begins when the board appoints a Nominating Committee at
HANCOCK
DISTRICT 7
DISTRICT 1
DISTRICT 4 WYANDOT
MARI ALLEN AUGLAIZE DISTRICT 2
DISTRICT 5 HARDIN
DISTRICT 9
LOGAN UNION
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SHEFFIELD ROBERT JR SHELDON JAMES L SHELTON IVAN SHELTON MITCHELL T SHELTON ROBERT D SHEPARD CHARLES SHEPHERD JEFF SHEPHERD KATHY L SHEPHERD PHILIP SHEPHERD STEVE SHEPHERD STEVE SHERER JACK SHERMAN CLYDE SHEWMAKER DAVID SHIELDS BRIAN C SHIELDS BRUCE SHIELDS DONALD E SHIELDS JERRY B SHIELDS TRISHA SHILLING GEORGE SHILLING JANICE D SHINDLEDCKR RONNIE L SHINKLE ALBERT L SHIRK CAROLYN S SHIRK CHRISTINE SHIRK PAUL F SHIRK ROBERT SHIRK SCOTT D SHIVERS RAYMOND SHOAF DENNIS SHOAF MARK A SHOAF PAUL L SHOCKEY EMMA SHOCKLEY FRANCIS SHOEMAKER BEVERLY I SHOENBERGER CONNIE L SHOPE CARL SHORT BEVERLY K SHRADER JESSICA SHRADER MAX SHRIVER DAVID W SHULAW MRS E SHULL HAROLD E SHULL RITA L SHUMAKER HELEN SHUMAKER JACK SHUMAKER JAMIE L SHUMAKER RONALD A SHUMAKER RONALD R SHUSTER LINDA S SHUSTER SUNDEE L SIAS GARY L SIAS MARTIN J SIAS MELVIN SIAS NORMAN SIEGENTHALER THOMAS SIELING BRUCE SIGLER JAMES R SIMMONS DANIEL SIMMONS JON C SIMMONS LARRY SIMON ALBERT D SIMON MARK SIMONES WILLIAM A SIMONIS TERRY SIMPKINS ROBERT W SIMPKINS SHERIDAN SINDEN DIANA M SINK KEITH A SINK OILER JOEY F SISE PETER L SISIA CHARLES SISLER JON SISSON JOHN C SISSON ROBERT L SKAGGS KEITH A SKIDMORE FRANKLIN SKINNER LARRY SKY BANK SLADE ALAN B SLATER CLYDE SLAUGHTER ALFRED SLAVEY ROBERT J SLEEPER JAN SLIVINSKI ALRED F SLOAN DAVID L SLOAN JOHN SLOAN SHARON K SLOAT RALPH SLONE BEN
SLUSHER HAZEL SLUSHER JOHN M SLUSHR-SCHROEDR CHA SMALLEY JENNIFER SMELSER FELICIA SMELTZER MAE SMITH AMBER N SMITH ANGELA M SMITH ARLENE E SMITH BOBBIE D SMITH CHRISTINE SMITH CONNIE L SMITH CRIS SMITH DAN SMITH DARRELL SMITH DAVID E SMITH DAVID R JR SMITH DAVID T SMITH DEBBIE SMITH DIANA SMITH DON SMITH DONALD SMITH DWAYNE SMITH ELLWOOD SMITH EMILY SMITH FLOYD E SMITH GLENN W SMITH GREG G SMITH H CURTIS SMITH ILENE SMITH IRENE SMITH JAMES D SMITH JERRY L SMITH JOHN M SMITH JR E SMITH JR R SMITH JUDY SMITH KAREN L SMITH KIMBERLY SMITH KRISTIN SMITH LELAND J SMITH LINDA S SMITH LISA C SMITH LORA L SMITH MARY P SMITH MELVIN SMITH MICHAEL L SMITH PAUL H SMITH RHONDA SMITH ROBERT D SMITH ROBIN SR SMITH RONALD SMITH RUTH SMITH STEFFEN SMITH VICTOR E SMITH VICTORIA D SMITH WAYNE N SMITH WILMA SNEARY JEFF SNELLENBERGER ELMER SNELLING DARRELL SNIDER RETHA SNOPIK ROBIN L SNOW ALISON V SNYDER ALAN P SNYDER CALVIN SNYDER GARY L SNYDER RANDY SNYDER ROBERT E SNYDER SONJA SNYDER THOMAS G SOLIDAY CHERYL A SOLZE DOUGLAS F SONNTAG DIANA SOPHER DENISE L SORGEN DOUG SORGEN PATRICIA D SORRELL KEITH L SOUDER ROBERT SOUTHERLAND GARY SOUTHWARD JAMES C SR SOWERS DONALD L SPACKEY LEE H SPARKMAN WILLIAM SPARKS CRATE D SPARKS RONALD SPARKS STELLA SPARLING ERIC SPARLING STEVEN G SPARLING WILLIAM P
SPATH JANICE SPAULDING DEIDRE H SPEAKMAN ROBERT SPEARMAN DEAN SPEARMAN SHARRON SPEARS ROBBIE SPEARS WILLIAM SPEELMAN JESSICA SPENCER AARON M SPENCER BLANCHE SPENCER JOE SPENCER MARCIA SPENCER ROBERT SPEROS J W SPICER ANN SPICER DONALD A SPICER DORIS A SPICER GREGORY SPRADLIN JAMES SPRADLIN JERRY SPRADLIN KENNETH SPRADLIN RICHARD SPRADLIN ROSEMARY SPRAGUE MIKE SPRANG HEATHER SPRINGER CARL SPRINGER DORIS M SPRINKLE MATTHEW D SPROULL STEVE E SPURLOCK CARL ST JOHN MARY L STAATS JOHN STAATS LOIS M STAATS ROBERT STACHLER JAMES STACY CALLEN STAHL S L STAHLER SANDRA K STAKEY LISA STAKEY WILLIAM H STALEY JERRY STALL STEVEN STALLARD BILLY STALLINGS BILL STALLINGS DORIS J STALLINGS PAUL E STALLSMITH RENEE STALNAKER DENNIS W STALNAKER DENNIS W STALNAKER HAROLD R STALTER HAROLD STANBRO DEMERIL H STANLEY GARY L STANLEY JANICE R STANLEY KAREN STANLEY KENNETH STAPLETON FRANKLIN W STARK BRIAN K STARK WILLIAM D STARLING JUDITH A STATE SAVINGS STAUP KAYLA STAYNER CAROLD STEARNS LEWIS M STEEL ROBERT STEELE EDDIE STEELE LISA STEELE MICHAEL STEEN MICHAEL STEEN THOMAS MRS EST STEFANKA JON STEINMAN DEBBIE STELL BAMBI STELL BEL D STEPHENS BERLIN STEPHENS BILL STEPHENS THOMAS G STEPHENSON SHEILA STEPHENSON TARA A STEPP PAUL STERRETT JEFFERY STETTLER JAY STEVENS DOUGLAS A STEVENS EUGENE F STEVENS GEORGE W STEVENS GREGORY A STEVENS GREGORY D STEVENS JOHN D STEVENS LAURINE G STEVENS RICHARD
STEVENS THOMAS STEVENS TOM STEVENSON DREW STEWART CONNIE S STEWART GENEVA L STEWART JOHN E STEWART RICHARD STEWART TRAVIS STEWART WILLIAM T STIFFLER ARTHUR R STILES DONNA M STILES STEVE A STILLINGS EVERETT STINE JOHN W STINE TIM STINEHELFER MICHAEL L STINEMAN MICHAEL STITAK BRIAN STITH FRANKIE STONE CHARLES A STONE ELMO STONE JAMES E STONE MARLIN STOSE A M STOTELMYRE KATHERINE STOUT W ADAM STOVER BRIAN STOVER GARRY C STOVER KYLE M STOVER TIM STOWE KRISTY STOWE THELMA STOWELL HARVEY A JR STRAHM HELEN STRAIGHT CYNTHIA STRAIGHT HUGH STRAUSER KYLE STRAYER ROBERT D STREET JAMES D STREETS MATTHEW B STREIB SUSAN A STRYKUL MICHAEL B STRZELECKI JOSEPH C STUCKMAN JAY STUCKMAN ROBERT P STUMP JOHN A STURGEON BARBARA STURGEON HAROLD L STURGEON ROBERT E STURGILL CHRISTOPHER STURN WINIFRED STUTZMAN JEAN STUTZMAN MICHAEL J STYER DONALD STYLES UNLIMITED SULLIVAN DONALD SUMMA JAMES SUMMIT HELEN SWAFFORD PAULA SWANEY ROBERT SWANSON RUTH E SWART LINDA SWART ROBERT L SWARTZ C A SWARTZ JIM SWAVEL CHARLES R SWEARINGEN DARRELL SWEARINGEN DELMAR SWEARINGEN EDWARD SWIGER T L SWIHART CHARLES SWINDELL JOSH SWINEHART TOM SWISHER BROOKE SWISHER FLOYD SWISSHELM JAMES SWYGERT NICOLE SYCK BRIAN SYLVESTER EUNICE SZEWCZYK NORMAN SZIPPL ANDREW F TACKETT BILL TACKETT CAROLYN J TACKETT CHARLES TACKETT ESTILLE TACKETT EUGENE TACKETT EUGENE JR TACKETT LORETTA TAGGI JOHN TALBOT RICHARD
TALBOTT PAULA TANNER LAURIE TANNER RICHARD E TANNYHILL ROBERT TARANTO REGINA TATE HAL D TATE LARRY TAVIANO JOHN TAYLOR CARLOUS TAYLOR CHARLES TAYLOR JAMES T TAYLOR PATRICK A TAYLOR RICHARD TAYLOR RYAN TAYLOR WARREN TAYNOR KEVIN TEAGUE JAMES TEAGUE MICHAEL TECUMSEH LOC 750UAW TEEPLE JOHN TEETS GREGORY TEETS JR ROBERTS C TEETS MARY K TEETS MERCIE TELPH & TELGRA AMRCN TELLJOHANN JACKIE R TEM COLE INC TEMPLE E T TEMPLE FREDERICK TEMPLE MARY TENEYCK CARL D TENEYCK THOMAS E TENNAR DAWN TEPPER MICHAEL P TERRA NOVA IV TERRELL RON TERRY RICHARD TERWILLIGER WALTER W TETERS WARD THACKER DARRICK THACKER HOLLY THACKER JR M THACKER KELLY A THACKERY DOLPH E THE NEW WHITE SWAN THEIBAUT DENNIS N THEISEN GERALD THEW DOROTHY E THIBAUT RICHARD THIBODEAU BARBARA THIEL GERTRUDE C THIEL JAMES A THIEL KENNETH A THIEL MICHAEL A THIEL PATRICIA A THIEL PATTY THIEL RUSSELL THIEL STEVEN THOMAS CHARLES THOMAS CHERYL THOMAS DARLENE A THOMAS DONALD M THOMAS JOHNATHAN THOMAS LARRY THOMAS MARK THOMAS MINDY THOMAS PAMELA R THOMAS PAUL THOMAS ROBERT E THOMAS WM B THOMPSON ROBERT THOMPSON BRET E THOMPSON BRYAN K THOMPSON FAYE THOMPSON GEORGE J THOMPSON HAROLD THOMPSON JAMES K THOMPSON JAMES L THOMPSON JOHN THOMPSON JOHN E THOMPSON KENNETH THOMPSON LACINDA M THOMPSON LORAIN A THOMPSON NORMAN R THOMPSON PAUL THOMPSON R H THOMPSON RAETTA THOMPSON RUBY THOMPSON TOMMY A THOMPSON WILLIAM
THOMSON HELEN THOMSON JAMES F THOMSON TODD THORNTON JOHN W THORNTON LARRY THORNTON MARGUERIT THORNTON SR W THRUSH DENIS L TICE DONALD TILL RONALD TILLEY KEVIN TILTON ELAINE TIMMONS CLARENCE TIMMONS LARRY TIMNEY THOMAS J TIPPIE DAVID TODD CHRISTOPHER TODD SAM TOLAND TRUMAN TOLBERT JOSEPH A TOLLEY ROY L TOMPKINS MICHAEL A TONEY PAMELA TOOMBS BRAD TOOMBS ROBERT JR TORNIK SAM G TOY ALBERT M TOZZER C TRACEY ELIZABETH TRACY MALON A TRAFFORD GRACE R TRAMONTANA CONRAD TRAPP WILFRED W TRAUSCH MICHELE M TRAVIS CLARENCE TREEN MICHELLE TREES SHIRLEY TREMBLE CONSTANCE D TRENDEX INC TRENT WADE TRIMBUR GEORGE R TRIMMER EDWARD A TRIMMER JOHN H TRINKO LYNN A TRIPLETT NORMA TROIANO MICHAEL TROXELL C LAWRENCE II TROXELL SHERRY TROYER RICHARD TROYER ROBERT D TRUESDALE CASEY L TRUEX LARRY II TRUMAN ROBERT CHARLE TRUSTY ALVIN TSCHUOR JAMES B TUCKER JENNIFER TUMBLESON DENNIS TUMEY BILLY TURK DAVID J TURK THOMAS TURNER CANDY TURNER KENNETH TURNER MANDY TURNER MILDRED I TURNER TERRENCE TURNER TRUMAN D TUTTLE DAVE TYRA DAVID TYREE JEFF U S RESORT C ORP ULBRIGHT JIM ULERY GEORGE R ULERY NICOLE A ULLMER JOHN E ULRICH DAVID ULRICH DONALD F ULRICH FRANKLIN ULRICH JACK UMBLEBY SUSAN L UNCAHPHER GEORGE UNDERWOOD KEN UNDERWOOD PATRICK UNDERWOOD ROBERT UNGERER GLENN USSERY BERNICE VACON M L VAIL MACK B VALDEZ ERIKA VALENTINE AL VALENTINE LINDA
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MID-OHIO ENERGY COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES VALLADARES JAVIER VAN DYNE CHARLES VAN HORNE GEVIN D VAN HOUTEN HARRY VAN VICKI VANATTA JAMES VANATTA PAUL VANBIBBER THOMAS R VANBUSKIRK GRETCHEN VANBUSKIRK TONYA VANCE E A VANCE GLORIA VANCE JOHN VANDERPOOL JOHN L VANDYKE GERALD VANHOOSE LOGAN VANIMAN R S VANSCODER PATRICIA VANSKY LORI VANVLERAH LINDA S VANWILPE JAMES VARGAS ESPERANZA VARGAS FRANCISCO VARNER ROBERT W VASQUEZ REYNALDO A VAUGHN ANNETTE VAUGHN VIRGINIA L VEHRS KATHLEEN VELAZCO MARILYN VERMILLION JAMES VERMILLION KIM VERNON C E VERNON JOHN VEST FREDERICK H VEST LIA K VIAN ARCHIE B VIARS CHARLES VINCE DEBRA M VINCE H PRESTON IV VITTUR ARTHUR D VOGEL LONNIE D VOLBERT R A VON KAENEL EUGENE WACK MICHAEL A WADDELL DONALD L WADDELL KENNY WADDELL TRACY WADDLE JACK WAGGY MARY JANE WAGLER JENAE WAGNER CHARLES WAGNER ROBERT WALKER ALBERT WALKER CHERYL J WALKER LOIS M WALKER THOMAS WALKER VINCENT WALKINS GENE WALL LORI K WALL MICHAEL J WALLACE ALONZO L WALLACE BOBBY K WALLACE JAMES WALLACE MARK
WALLER JULIE A WALTER ROBERT WALTERS GERALD D WALTERS GREG WALTERS JODI WALTERS TEDD WALTON HERBERT WALTON WILLIAM WALTZ MAY WAMPACH JEFF WANAMAKER MIKE WARD DARLENE K WARD JAMES R WARD MARY F WARD RANDY WARD VANESSA WARREN BART D WARREN JAMES M WARWICK ROBERT WARWICK TERRY WASSERBECK DAN WATERN SARA WATKINS BRIAN H WATKINS DICK WATKINS GLENN W WATSON EDWARD WATSON MICHAEL WATTERS JENNIFER WATTS BARBARA WATTS BRADLEY WATTS STEPHANIE WAUGH VIRGIL WAUGH WILLIAM F WAY GARY L WAYLAND TERRY C WEAVER DAVID E WEAVER EARL WEAVER ELIZABETH WEAVER PAUL WEAVER WILLIAM R WEBB CARL L WEBB EDITH WEBB LINDA WEBB ROBERT L WEBB RONALD B WEBB STEVE WEBB TRISHA WEBER HELEN WEBER ROBERT WEBER RONALD J WEBSTER DONALD R JR WEDDINGTON STEVE WEDERTZ LOYD WEESE KIM WEIDNER DUSTIN WEIR CECIL WEIR LOIS M WEIRICK NEIL WEIRICK RICHARD E WEITHMAN BROT HERSINC WELCH CAIRL WELCH THOMAS B WELKER BILLY A WELLBAUM JAMES
WELLING JAMES H WELLS EDDIE WELSH RICHARD WEMYSS MICHAEL WENDELL DAN WENIG ELIZABETH A WENSINGER J A WENTLING ROGER A WENTZ TRUTH WERLING DALE WERLING MELISSA SUE WEST BOBI WEST JOSEPH W WEST MARK E WEST NEWTN ME CHRCH WESTHAVER DEBORAH J WESTLER JOHN M WESTON DONALD WESTON ERIC L WESTON SUSAN WHACKER GARY WHALEY II WESLEY L WHALEY THELMA M WHATMAN DONITA WHEELER DAVID WHEELER LARRY WHETSAL BRUCE WHIPPLE NANCY WHISLER HOWARD WHITACRE VIRGIL WHITAKER CLARENCE WHITAKER RICHARD E WHITAKER TINA M WHITCUM GARY WHITE ANDREA PFC WHITE BEVERLY ANN WHITE C J WHITE CLYDE E WHITE CORY WHITE DIANE WHITE DOROTHY WHITE ELAINE C WHITE FRANK WHITE JAMES D SR WHITE JENNIFER WHITE JOSEPH C WHITE LISA R WHITE PAUL WHITE PAUL J WHITE RICHARD A WHITE RONALD C WHITE STEVEN H WHITE SWAN WHITE WILMER WHITESELL DAVID WHITLEY RICK G WHITLEY SANDRA WHITMORE KEITH WHITTAKER HELEN WHITTINGTON CLOVIS L WIBRIGHT JAMES H WICKER WILL WIDMARK KEITH A WILAND JOSEPH S
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WILBURN ALFRED WILCH JR WALLACE WILCHECK MARK WILKERSON WILLIAM R WILKINSON CAROL WILKINSON ROBERT WILLEY GERALD WILLIAMS ADRIAN S WILLIAMS ANN WILLIAMS CARL E WILLIAMS CHARLES W WILLIAMS CLAUDE D WILLIAMS DAVID WILLIAMS DONALD E WILLIAMS ESTILL L WILLIAMS FERN WILLIAMS GLADYS WILLIAMS HAROLD WILLIAMS HOLLY WILLIAMS JACKIE WILLIAMS MELISSA WILLIAMS MIKE WILLIAMS PERRY WILLIAMS RANDY D WILLIAMS REGINALD WILLIAMS RHONDA WILLIAMS RICHARD WILLIAMS RICHARD E WILLIAMS RONALD P WILLIAMS RUSSEL WILLIAMS RUTH WILLIAMS TONY N WILLIAMS TRACY WILLIAMS WALTER WILLIAMS WAYNE WILLIAMS WILLIAM H WILLIAMSON R BARRY WILLMETH PAULINE WILSON ALICE J WILSON BETH WILSON BRIAN WILSON BRIAN M WILSON BYRON B WILSON DAVID A WILSON FREDERICK WILSON GERALD W WILSON JAMES A WILSON JUDY WILSON KATHLEEN WILSON KRIS A WILSON LINDA L WILSON LORENZA WILSON PAM WILSON PATRICK WILSON ROBERT E WILSON ROBERT E JR WILSON RYAN WILSON SHERI WILSON TOM WILSON WILLIAM J WILT MICHAEL W WINDLE KARL H WINEBRENNER CHARLES WINEGARDNER HARRY
Secretary
Dan Harris Treasurer
Don Bumgarner Richard Kritzler Eugene Royer Max Strine John Thiel Trustees
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CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO HIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO P OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO HIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO P OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP CO OP OHIO CO-OP NEWS & NOTES FROM AROUND THE STATE O-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO HIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO CO-OP OHIO
PPEC sponsors rodeo to fight cancer Paulding Putnam Electric Cooperative (PPEC) was a proud sponsor of Rodeo Night, a fundraiser at the Paulding County Fair in June that raised more than $5,000 for Conquer Childhood Cancer Now (CCCN), a nonprofit awareness group made up of volunteers working to give hope and assistance to local families of children diagnosed with cancer. A total of 29 bull riders and 24 barrel racers from across the U.S. came to support CCCN. The rodeo will be back in 2018 with an even bigger crowd — and a bigger fundraising goal.
Coshocton-based Frontier Power Company took part in the Coshocton Public Library’s annual summer reading program through the Frontier Power Community Connection Fund. This year’s program was themed “Build a Better World,” and Frontier Power provided a digger truck display and passed out hard hats to the 228 children in attendance.
HWEC hosts Amish Health and Safety Day Over 1,450 guests attended the 18th annual Amish Health and Safety Day in August, sponsored by both the Holmes County Health District and Holmes-Wayne Electric Cooperative (HWEC), located in Millersburg. The event, held in Millersburg, focused on lifestyle topics for the local Amish community. More than 45 exhibits provided interactive displays, including a bicycle skills course, a live line electrical safety demonstration by HWEC, programs on safe reflective markings and emergency vehicles, and health screenings.
North Central Electric’s Touch-A-Truck hits big with kids North Central Electric Cooperative, based in Attica, participated in Mohawk Community Library’s Touch-ATruck event in June, which also coincided with “No One Fights Alone,” a nonprofit organization’s fundraiser for local community members battling cancer.
CO-OP OHIO
Frontier Power engages local children during reading program
During the event, children had an up-close and inside view of many large trucks, tractors, and a North Central Electric bucket truck. OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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BY PAUL BATTERSON
BEYOND BUCKEYES THE
Along with the obvious one, Ohio has a bumper crop of nutty college mascots
A
esculus is hardly a word that would strike fear into anyone’s heart. Yet Ohioans take pride in their Buckeyes — the traditional nickname for the sports teams at The Ohio State University that was formally adopted in 1950, but informally used before even the turn of the 20th century. The nickname was derived from the innocuous-looking native tree nuts that can be poisonous to Gophers, Badgers, Wolverines, and many other more fierce-sounding mascots across the country. As unusual a mascot as it might be, however, Brutus Buckeye has lots of out-ofthe-ordinary company, even within the state of Ohio. With football season in high gear, here are our choices for the most unusual mascots around the Buckeye State — Brutus not included.
5. The Big Blue Blob Xavier University’s teams have been known as the Musketeers since 1925, honoring the Cincinnati-based institution’s French origins and culture. Its primary mascot, D’Artagnan, projects a powerful presence when he roams the sidelines at basketball and soccer games (XU does not field a football team). But the university made a notparticularly-startling discovery in 1985: Characters from 18th-century novels by Alexandre Dumas don’t always appeal to children the way, say, big, hairy blobs of blue fur might. Hence, the creation of The Big Blue Blob. “Blobby,” as he/she/it is affectionately called, is wellknown for both his friendly demeanor and his 22-inch tongue, which he uses to gobble up tickets, crackers, or whatever props might be handy — including, during an iconic “This Is SportsCenter” commercial on ESPN, the Hall of Fame jacket of former Buffalo Bills quarterback Jim Kelly, after Blobby defeated him in a game of “Rock, Paper, Scissors.”
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4 and 3. Fightin’ Quakers and Battling Bishops Wilmington chose its “Fightin’ Quakers” nickname and mascot to pay homage to the school’s roots, having been founded in 1870 by members of the Religious Society of Friends, known as Quakers. Of course, Quakers hold pacifism as one of the basic tenets of their belief system, so “Fightin’ Quakers” makes for quite the unlikely moniker. Ohio Wesleyan’s “Battling Bishops” is almost as much of a contradiction. The Delaware school has long been affiliated with the United Methodist Church, so the bishop part makes sense, though Methodist theologians are not normally known for their pugilism. Interestingly, the mascot underwent a facelift in 2010 to become less friendly looking.
2. Zippy the Zip There are not many modern-day college marketing departments that would even consider an overshoe as a mascot. That was the choice, however, in a 1927 contest to pick a mascot at the University of Akron. The winning entrant had suggested the “Zippers,” in reference to a popular rubber overshoe that was then manufactured in Akron by the B.F. Goodrich Company. The name was trimmed to the “Zips” in 1950. The idea of a large rubber overshoe prowling the sidelines, however, seemed neither inspiring to U of A teams nor intimidating to foes, so in came Zippy the Zip, a red kangaroo — one of the fastest mammals on the planet. Zippy captured the Capital One Mascot of the Year Challenge in 2007. Continued on Page 26
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STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP
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MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION Date of Filing: Sept. 1, 2017. Ohio Cooperative Living (ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly at 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229, with headquarters and or business offices at 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229. Name and Address of Publisher: Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc., 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH43229. Managing editor: Jeff McCallister, 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229. Owner of Publication: Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc., 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229. There are no bondholders, mortgagees, or security holders. Total number of copies printed (average for preceding 12 months): 300,634; Copies through dealers: none; Mail subscriptions: 299,563; Free distribution: 1,071; Total distribution: 301,978; Office use, etc.: 622; Returns from news agents: none; Total: 302,599; Percent paid or requested circulation: 99.20 percent. Actual number of copies printed (single issue nearest to filing date): 301,089; Sales through dealers: none; Mail subscriptions: 300,026; Total paid circulation: 300,026; Free distribution: 1,063; Total distribution: 302,404; Office use, etc.: 714; Returns from news agents: none; Total: 303,118; Percent paid r requested circulation: 98.98 percent.
1. Student Princes Heidelberg University in Tiffin took the rare path melding college athletics and musical theater to produce its nickname, the “Student Princes.” As legend goes, the school’s publicity agent was strolling around Tiffin one evening in 1926 when he came across a marquee promoting The Student Prince of Heidelberg, based on Sigmund Romberg’s operetta. Butcher liked the name so much that he began using it to promote the school’s football team. It spread to all of the university’s athletic teams, and eventually replaced the former nickname, the “Cardinals,” as the school’s official moniker. Siggy, the orange-plumed, armor-clad mascot with arched eyebrows and a selfsatisfied smirk, fought off an attempt to change mascots again in the 1990s, when officials pondered “The ’Bergs of Heidelberg,” as a nod to the school’s oft-used colloquial nickname, but popular demand kept Siggy on his throne. One other fact to note: Women’s teams at Heidelberg are called, interestingly, the Student Princes.
I certify that the statements made by me above are true and complete. JEFF McCALLISTER, managing editor Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation (All Periodicals Publications Except Requester Publications)
1. Publication Title
2. Publication Number
2 7 7 2
Ohio Cooperative Living 4. Issue Frequency
_
3. Filing Date
Sept. 1, 2017
0 4 9 X
5. Number of Issues Published Annually
Monthly 12
Monthly 12
7. Complete Mailing Address of Known Office of Publication (Not printer) (Street, city, county, state, and ZIP+4 ®)
6. Annual Subscription Price
$5.40-$6.72 Contact Person
6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, Franklin Co., OH 43229-1101
6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, Franklin Co., OH 43229-1101
9. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Managing Editor (Do not leave blank) Publisher (Name and complete mailing address)
Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc.
6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, Franklin Co., OH 43229-1101
Editor (Name and complete mailing address)
Jeff McCallister, Managing Editor
6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, Franklin Co., OH 43229-1101
Managing Editor (Name and complete mailing address)
Samantha Rhodes, Associate Editor
6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, Franklin Co., OH 43229-1101
10. Owner (Do not leave blank. If the publication is owned by a corporation, give the name and address of the corporation immediately followed by the names and addresses of all stockholders owning or holding 1 percent or more of the total amount of stock. If not owned by a corporation, give the names and addresses of the individual owners. If owned by a partnership or other unincorporated firm, give its name and address as well as those of each individual owner. If the publication is published by a nonprofit organization, give its name and address.) Full Name Complete Mailing Address
Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc.
6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, Franklin Co., OH 43229-1101
11. Known Bondholders, Mortgagees, and Other Security Holders Owning or Holding 1 Percent or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Mortgages, or None Other Securities. If none, check box Full Name
Complete Mailing Address
13. Publication Title
14. Issue Date for Circulation Data Below
Ohio Cooperative Living
September 2017
15. Extent and Nature of Circulation
Average No. Copies No. Copies of Single Each Issue During Issue Published 12. Tax Status (For completion by nonprofit organizations authorized to mail at nonprofit rates) (Check one) Preceding 12 Months Nearest to Filing Date The purpose, function, and nonprofit status of this organization and the exempt status for federal income tax purposes:
300,634
Has Not Changed During Preceding 12 Months a. Total Number of Copies (Net press run) Has Changed During Preceding 12 Months (Publisher must submit explanation of change with this statement)
301,089
299,563 300,026
PS Form 3526, July 2014Mailed [PageOutside-County 1 of 4 (see instructions page 4)] PSN: 7530-01-000-9931 PRIVACY Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 (Include paid NOTICE: See our privacy policy on www.usps.com. (1) distribution above nominal rate, advertiser’s proof copies, and exchange copies)
b. Paid Circulation (By Mail and Outside the Mail)
(2)
Mailed In-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 (Include paid distribution above nominal rate, advertiser’s proof copies, and exchange copies)
(3)
Paid Distribution Outside the Mails Including Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid Distribution Outside USPS®
(4)
Paid Distribution by Other Classes of Mail Through the USPS (e.g., First-Class Mail®)
none none
none
299,563
c. Total Paid Distribution [Sum of 15b (1), (2), (3), and (4)]
1,071
d. Free or (1) Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies included on PS Form 3541 Nominal Rate Distribution (2) Free or Nominal Rate In-County Copies Included on PS Form 3541 (By Mail and Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed at Other Classes Through the USPS Outside (3) (e.g., First-Class Mail) the Mail) (4)
none
e. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (Sum of 15d (1), (2), (3) and (4))
none none
none
300,026 1,063 none
none
none
2415
2378
622
714
99.20
98.98
1,344
Free or Nominal Rate Distribution Outside the Mail (Carriers or other means)
1315
301,978 302,404
f. Total Distribution (Sum of 15c and 15e)
g. Copies not Distributed (See Instructions to Publishers #4 (page #3))
302,599 303,118
h. Total (Sum of 15f and g) i. Percent Paid (15c divided by 15f times 100)
* If you are claiming electronic copies, go to line 16 on page 3. If you are not claiming electronic copies, skip to line 17 on page 3.
Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation (All Periodicals Publications Except Requester Publications) 16. Electronic Copy Circulation
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12 Months
0
a. Paid Electronic Copies b. Total Paid Print Copies (Line 15c) + Paid Electronic Copies (Line 16a)
d. Percent Paid (Both Print & Electronic Copies) (16b divided by 16c Í 100) PS Form 3526, July 2014 (Page 2 of 4)
No. Copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Date
0
299,563
300,026
99.20
98.98
301,978
c. Total Print Distribution (Line 15f) + Paid Electronic Copies (Line 16a)
302,404
I certify that 50% of all my distributed copies (electronic and print) are paid above a nominal price. 17. Publication of Statement of Ownership If the publication is a general publication, publication of this statement is required. Will be printed
Publication not required.
October 2017 in the ________________________ issue of this publication. 18. Signature and Title of Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner
Date
9/4/2017
I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnishes false or misleading information on this form or who omits material or information requested on the form may be subject to criminal sanctions (including fines and imprisonment) and/or civil sanctions (including civil penalties).
26
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
October_OCL_full issue.indd 26 PS Form 3526, July 2014 (Page 3 of 4)
Here are a few other interesting Ohio college mascots and nicknames:
Nila Moyers
Telephone (Include area code)
614-846-5757
8. Complete Mailing Address of Headquarters or General Business Office of Publisher (Not printer)
Best of the rest
Dayton Flyers: One of only a handful of colleges in the country with this nickname, UD pays homage to Dayton native sons Wilbur and Orville Wright, who created and flew the first powered airplane, and to nearby WrightPatterson Air Force Base. Kent State Golden Flashes: Winner of a 1926 contest to replace the former nickname, the “Silver Foxes.” There is apparently no significance to the name other than the fact that it won the contest. Youngstown State Penguins: The nickname came as the result of fans describing the players on the school’s basketball team before a January game in 1933, when the players stomped their feet and swung their arms to warm up. John Carroll Blue Streaks: The college’s original name was St. Ignatius, and its teams were referred to as the “Saints,” which was no longer appropriate after the name changed in 1923. A dying alumnus watching football practice described the team as a “Blue Streak” in 1925, and the name stuck (it remained singular until the mid-1930s).
101⁄2 103⁄4 1013⁄16 107⁄8 9/18/17 12:52 PM
PRIVACY NOTICE: See our privacy policy on www.usps.com.
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October_OCL_full issue.indd 27
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
October_OCL_full issue.indd 28
9/18/17 12:52 PM
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October_OCL_full issue.indd 29 MW3KJD5_OhioCountryLiving.indd 1
OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
29
9/18/17 12:52 PM 8/14/17 9:11 AM
OHIO HISTORY
BY CRAIG SPRINGER PHOTOS COURTESY OHIO HISTORY CONNECTION
MIDCENTURY MODERN Lustron made atomic homes for the nuclear family
T
he headlines in late 1950 looked grim for our boys on the front lines in the Korean War — and for the Ohio-based Lustron Corporation.
Literally, side by side, you could read newspaper columns across the country about Marines and soldiers facing the coldest winter imaginable as they sought to liberate South Korea from the Communist aggressors, and about the Lustron Corporation facing ruin as it was pushed out of the burgeoning post-World War II housing market. Both made national news. The Lustron story is one of innovation, entrepreneurship, and political chicanery. Let’s rewind another four years. World War II had just ended, and some 12 million U.S. veterans were coming home, only to face a housing shortage. Lustron Corporation tried to fill that need with modern homes that were prefabricated in Columbus, then sent to points both nearby and far away. Prefabricated, or “kit,” homes weren’t necessarily a new thing in the late 1940s. Sears and Roebuck had been selling mail-order bungalows for decades.
30
But Lustron stood apart. Conceived in the wellspring of the mind of industrialist Carl Sandlund, Lustron was to build a better home to house young, postwar families both efficiently and quickly. Sandlund had experience, as he had built prefabs in the commercial market for use as White Castle restaurants and Standard Oil gas stations. Anyone over 50 years of age may remember some of those buildings for the uncommon materials with which they were built: ceramic and steel. And so were Lustron homes. Sandlund envisioned his company producing, en masse, modular homes made of glass-coated steel panels. They would be on the small side for young, small families — starter homes, available in gray, blue, yellow, or tan, with white trim. Sandlund secured $37.5 million in funding through the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, a federal agency designed to kick-start industry where central planners thought it was needed most. Housing was one such market in need. Sandlund found the perfect spot to manufacture the kits: the
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
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Columbus-based Lustron Homes filled a need for housing when veterans began returning at the end of World War II. The company built more than 2,600 homes that were shipped across the country and around the hemisphere.
recently abandoned Curtiss-Wright Aviation factory near Port Columbus airport that had supplied the military with aircraft during World War II. Sandlund outfitted the vast space with steel presses and ceramic coating apparatus and as much automation as he could use to create an assembly line akin to how cars were made in Detroit. Much like how cars were sold then and today, the metal houses were put up for sale through local dealers. Sandlund built model homes in 100 cities east of the Rockies and offered dealers market exclusivity to their geographic area. At its apex in productivity, several hundred people worked at the Lustron plant in Columbus. More folks were
employed shipping the homes to their concrete pads in Suburbia, USA, in specially crafted semi trucks. An entire 900-square-foot all-metal house, in some 3,000 pre-wired and pre-plumbed parts, could be cobbled together in a matter of days, certainly less than three weeks. The first houses went up in 1947, many around Ohio, but many more in points beyond and some as far away as Alaska, New Mexico, Florida, and Venezuela. Despite the novelty and innovation, the endeavor was to be short-lived. Meddling by staffers in the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and other factions who wanted a cut of the pie, proved deadly Continued on Page 32
Lustron homes were prefabricated in Columbus, complete with wiring and plumbing; then the 3,000 or so individual components were loaded aboard trucks and constructed on the new owner’s lot.
OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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Lustron executives pose outside the company’s factory near Port Columbus (left); promotional materials that showed the homes boasted both comfort and plenty of amenities of modern life. Continued from Page 31
for Sandlund’s glass-coated Lustron homes. The last houses came off the assembly line in late 1950. Instead of continuing to oversee the manufacture of homes, Sandlund and others were called before Congress in a series of hearings to determine how the government loan was spent. The hearings were the harbinger of the end. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation called in Lustron’s loans, and the plant shuttered. In the end, only 2,680 metal houses rolled off the assembly line and onto the delivery trucks.
But Lustron lives. The midcentury moderns persist in places such as Xenia, Findlay, Columbus, and Whitehall. The Ohio History Center, near the state fairgrounds in Columbus, has a Lustron on display, as a demonstration of American life in the 1950s. Another Lustron, a blue one, is on display at Whitehall Community Park, preserved by the Whitehall Historical Society. These glass-coated houses stand as monuments to another time — a precinct in Ohio history.
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Ohio Cooperative Living October_OCL_full issue.indd Magazine_Oct_CAC_AFN44167_0113_7.875x10.875.indd 33 1
OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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STORY AND PHOTOS BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSS
WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE
HAVE A FUNNY
WILDLIFE STORY
TO TELL?
A
s Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor, I hear some pretty humorous tales about wildlife in the Buckeye State. For instance, take a look at the photo above. At first glance it looks like a typical possum-atthe-birdfeeder shot. But Steve Seitz assures me there’s more to the story.
“This possum got stuck on my bird feeder while eating suet,” wrote Seitz, a member of North Central Electric Cooperative. “I wondered why it was there during daylight. I thought it was just overly hungry, because it wouldn’t leave. That’s when I saw the animal’s tail was pinched between the two metal bars on the feeder pole. “It was a challenge getting the possum free, as I had to pry the bars apart and at the same time pull its tail loose,” Seitz said. “Needless to say, the possum was not a happy camper, but I was able to release it unharmed —probably just in time for another night of raiding my bird feeders.” Seitz also has a second wildlife story to tell, this one from a few years ago, and it’s more unusual yet. “A wild turkey hen flew through our bedroom window early one spring — shattering the glass — and again, I was able to release the bird unharmed. While the hen was thrashing around in our bedroom, though, two eggs came out of her. One was fully formed with a shell, but the other was not. Anyway, after cleaning up the mess, I took the good egg and made a delicious wild-turkey-egg omelet. I’ll bet not many people can say they ate a wild turkey egg and didn’t get arrested!” Don’t worry, Steve; I won’t tell a soul. Your little secret is just between you and me. My wife, Jan, has an even more bizarre tale to tell of wildlife woes. Years ago, early in our now 44-year marriage, she went through a spell where she racked up roadkills like her car was an animal magnet. Over a two-year period, she hit the following: a deer, a dog, several cats, various raccoons, groundhogs, possums, a few birds, and even two turtles. The good news is that she hasn’t hit anything recently. She didn’t try to hit any of those critters and felt terrible when she did, nearly in tears each time 34
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
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But my wife’s ultimate roadkill achievement, if you can call it that — and I don’t know anyone else who has done this — was hitting a live fish! We were living along the shores of Lake Erie at the time, near Marblehead, and one day were driving across the Sandusky Bay Bridge, my wife at the wheel. We saw a gull fly over carrying something large in its mouth, and when the bird got directly in front of our car, it dropped its cargo. We didn’t recognize it as a fish until it hit the pavement and started flopping. As you may have already guessed, it was too late for my wife to swerve out of the way. That did it — when we arrived home I got a can of paint out of the garage. Anyone want to buy a “gently used” car with some small animal pictures painted on the door? If you have a funny or unusual wildliferelated story you’d like to share with Ohio Cooperative Living readers, e-mail it to me at whchipgross@gmail.com. I can’t promise we’ll mention them all, but I’ll choose some of the best for a future column.
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OCTOBER 2017 CALENDAR NORTHWEST
SEPT. 29–OCT. 31 — Lake Eerie Fearfest, Ghostly Manor Thrill Ctr., 3319 Milan Rd., Sandusky. $25. Experience five haunted houses! 419-626-4467 or www.lakeeeriefearfest.com. SEPT. 30–OCT. 1 — Fiber Arts Fest, Sauder Village, 22611 St. Rte. 2, Archbold, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Demonstrations of spinning, weaving, knitting, crocheting, tatting, and dyeing, and hands-on activities. 800-590-9755 or www.saudervillage.org. OCT. 1 — Farm Toy Show, Van Wert Co. Fgds., 1055 S. Washington St. (U.S. 127), Van Wert, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. $2. Contact Lowell Morningstar at 937-826-4201.
NORTHEAST
OCT. 7–8 — Harvest Happenings, Osborn MetroPark, 3910 Perkins Ave., Huron, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. Antique tractor and engine display, pony rides, farmers market, food trucks, and more. Fun for the whole family! 419-625-7783 or http:// eriemetroparks.org/program. OCT. 7–8, 14–15, 21–22, 28–29 — Mums and Pumpkin Festival, Lincoln Ridge Farms, 6588 Pollock Rd., Convoy. Fall fun at the farm for the entire family. $10, under 3 free. 419-749-4224. OCT. 14 — Apple Butter Fest Craft and Quilt Show, Van Buren High School, 217 S. Main St., Van Buren, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free admission and parking. Hosted by Van Buren Lions Club. Crafts and quilts, train rides, live music, free eye screening for children. Homemade apple butter and bean soup for sale. 419-299-3628 or e-mail vanburenapplebutter@yahoo.com.
OCT. 21–22 — Oak Ridge Festival, 15498 E. Twp. Rd. 104, Attica, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $6, Srs. $5, C. (8-12) $4, under 8 free. Antique farm equipment; living history displays featuring military vehicles and weaponry; handmade crafts; food and entertainment; and kids’ activities. 419-426-0611 or www. oakridgefestival.com.
OCT. 14 — Folklore and Funfest, Wood Co. Historical Ctr. and Museum, 13660 County Home Rd., Bowling Green, 6–9 p.m. Free. Horse-drawn wagon rides, kid-friendly activities in Boo-ville, apple cider press, plus tricks and treats for all ages. 419-352-0967 or www.woodcountyhistory.org.
OCT. 27 — Friday Night Folklore Trick, Treat & Tour, Wood Co. Historical Ctr. and Museum, 13660 County Home Rd., Bowling Green, 7–10 p.m. $15. 419-352-0967 or www. woodcountyhistory.org.
OCT. 14–15 — Oak Harbor Apple Festival, downtown Oak Harbor. $5. Contests, parade, kiddie tractor pull, car show on Sunday, 5K Apple Run, and other fun activities. Baking contest held on Friday, Oct. 13. 419-898-0479 or www.oakharborohio.net. OCT. 20–21 — Van Wert County Apple Festival, Van Wert Co. Fgds., 1055 S. Washington St. (Rte. 127), Van Wert, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. A festival featuring all things apple, including cider, displays. New and old trains to buy, sell, or trade. 440-7859907, e-mail showmanager@thegreatbereatrainshow.org, or www.thegreatbereatrainshow.org.
OCT. 13–14, 20–21, 27–28 — Halloween Fair, Carlisle Visitor Ctr., 12882 Diagonal Rd., LaGrange. $2, under 4 free. 440-4585121 or http://metroparks.cc/halloween.php.
THROUGH OCT. 31 — Corn Maze, Beriswill Farms, 2200 Station Rd., Valley City, Tues.–Fri. & Sun. 11 a.m.–6 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.–10 p.m. Thur. Oct. 5 and 19, open till 9 p.m. Test your sense of direction in this 5-acre maze. 330-350-2486 or http:// beriswillfarms.com. OCT. 1–31 — Spooky Ranch, Rockin’-R-Ranch, 19066 E. River Rd. (St. Rte. 252), Columbia Station. From $12. Five unique haunted attractions. 440-236-5454 or www.spookyranch.com. OCT. 5–8 — Founders Week: Historic Zoar Village, 198 Main St., Zoar. Free. Educational activities celebrating the legacy and history of the Separatist Society of Zoar, one of the most successful communal groups in American history. Speakers, German music, photo collection, and stage play. 800-262-6195 or www.historiczoarvillage.com. OCT. 7–8 — The Great Berea Train Show, Cuyahoga Co. Fgds., 164 Eastland Rd. (use Bagley Rd. entrance), Berea, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $8, under 16 free. Two-day pass $10. All-gauge model train show with over 300 tables and many operating
CENTRAL
OCT. 14 — Fort Laurens Archaeology Day, 11067 Fort Laurens Rd. NW, Bolivar, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $7, C. (under 13) $5. Celebrating Ohio Archaeology Month with presentations from professional and hobbyist archaeologists. Tool stations and mock archaeology dig. 330-874-2059 or www.fortlaurens.org. OCT. 14–15 — Olde Stark Antique Faire, Stark Co. Fgds., Exhibition Bldg., 305 Wertz Ave., Canton, Sat. 9 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5, under 13 free. Early-bird admission Sat. 7 a.m., $7. A large indoor exhibition of quality antiques and collectibles from over 100 dealers and collectors. 330-7949100 or e-mail oldestark@neo.rr.com. OCT. 14–15 — Wayne County Farm Tour, various locations, Sat. 11 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 1–6 p.m. Take a self-drive tour of area farms and agricultural businesses while enjoying the fall colors in northeast Ohio. 330-263-7456 or www.wccvb.com. OCT. 20–21 — Fort Laurens Trick-or-Treaty, 11067 Fort Laurens Rd. NW, Bolivar, 7:30–8:30 p.m. $10, C. (5–12) $5, under 5 free. Combo tickets with Ghost Tours of Zoar available. Lantern tour includes tales of American and British soldiers who may haunt the grounds. Tours depart every 15 minutes. Reservations required. 330-874-2059 or e-mail fortlaurens@gmail.com. OCT. 20–21 — Ghost Tours, Dennison Railroad Depot Museum, 400 Center St., Dennison. Tours leave at 8, 8:30, and 9 p.m. $10 non-members, $5 children and members. Reservations required. 740-922-6776 or http://dennisondepot.org.
THROUGH OCT. 31 — Fall Fun Days, Circle S Farms, 9015 London Groveport Rd., Grove City, 9 a.m.–7 p.m. daily. $8.50, under 2 free. Hayrides, barn with slides, bale cave, petting zoo, and corn and sunflower mazes. 614-878-7980 or www. circlesfarm.com/fallfundays.html. OCT. 2 — A Taste of the Harvest, OSU Marion, Guthery Community Room, Maynard Hall, 1465 Mt. Vernon Ave., Marion, 6:30–8:30 p.m. $40. Advance purchase only. Sample wines from around the world and enjoy specialty hors d’oeuvres. 740-725-6340 or www.osumarion.osu.edu/initiatives/ cultural-arts.html.
THROUGH OCT. — Rock Mill Weekends, Rock Mill Park, 1429 Rockmill Place NW, Lancaster, Sat. and Sun., 1–3 p.m. Free. Visit the 1824 grist mill, recently restored to working order, and see demos of grinding methods. Also visit Rock Mill Covered Bridge. www.historicalparks.org/rock-mill-park or www.facebook.com/FairfieldCountyParks.
38
dumplings, fritters, and more. Also wagon rides, a flea market, crafts, and entertainment for all ages. www.visitvanwert.org/ family-adventures.php. OCT. 20, 21, 27, 28 — Haunting History Walking Tours and Mystery Dinner, Wauseon Depot and Fulton County Museum, 225 Depot St. and 229 Monroe St., Wauseon, 6:30–8:30 p.m. Tours: $10 non-members, $8 members. Dinner: $15. Tours every 15 minutes. Reservations required. www.fultoncountyhs.org.
OCT. 7–8 — Holmes Co. Antique Festival, downtown Millersburg. Markets and auctions, parades, arts and crafts, lumber jack show, and much more. http://holmescountyantiquefestival.org.
THROUGH OCT. 28 – Pumpkins and Ponies, Spring Mist Farms, 691 Pearl Rd., Brunswick Hills, every Fri. 6–8 p.m. and Sat. 4–8 p.m. $3, C. (1–12) $5. Pony and horse rides, hayrides, feed barrel train. Various animals available for viewing and feeding. 330-225-3565 or www.springmistfarms.com/pumpkins.htm.
COMPILED BY COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK
OCT. 3–29 — All American Quarter Horse Congress, Ohio Expo Ctr., 717 E. 17th Ave., Columbus. The largest singlebreed-horse show in the world. 740-943-2346 or www. quarterhorsecongress.com. OCT. 6–8 — Ohio Gourd Show, 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. Performances and presentations will highlight the wiz-
OCT. 28–29 — Woodcarver’s Show and Sale, Sauder Village, 22611 St. Rte. 2, Archbold, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. 800-590-9755 or www.saudervillage.org. OCT. 29 – Coin Show, 122 N. Main St., Mendon, 9:30 a.m.–3:30 p.m. Free admission, free appraisals (no obligation). For table reservations, contact Warren Kramer at wrkchevy@hotmail.com or 419-733-0055.
OCT. 20–21, 27–28 — Ghost Tours of Zoar, 198 Main St., Zoar, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $15, C. $10. Combo tickets with Fort Laurens Trick-or-Treaty available. Zoar Village lantern light tours begin every 15 minutes between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. each night. Reservations required. 800-262-6195 or www. historiczoarvillage.com. OCT. 21 — Antique Toys and Diecast Show, Lakeland Community College, AFC Auxiliary Gym, 7700 Clocktower Dr., Kirtland, 9 a.m.–2 p.m. $6, C. (6–12) $2, under 6 free. New and antique toys, diecast models, plastic models, and dolls to buy, sell, or trade. 216-470-5780, e-mail cleveshows@att.net, or www.neocollectibletoys.com. OCT. 21–22 — Colonial Trade Faire, Schoenbrunn Village, 1984 E. High Ave., New Philadelphia, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Experience what life was like in Ohio’s first village in 1772. 330-339-3636 or www.schoenbrunnvillage.org. OCT. 21–22 — Country Crossroads Education of Yesterday Farm Show, 3685 Cass Irish Ridge Rd. (intersection of St. Rtes. 16 and 60), Dresden. Free. Working and static antique construction and mining equipment, farm machinery, trucks, cars, and more. 740-754-6248, e-mail educationofyesterday@gmail. com, or www.facebook.com/EducationofYesterday. OCT. 26 — “The Underground Railroad,” lecture by Craig Whitmore, Richland County Chapter, Ohio Genealogical Society Meeting, OGS Library, 611 St. Rte. 97 W., Bellville, 7 p.m. Free and open to the public. 419-566-4560, e-mail sunda1960@ yahoo.com, or www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ohrichgs/. OCT. 27–28 — The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Schoenbrunn Village, 1984 E. High Ave., New Philadelphia. Join Ichabod Crane and the Headless Horseman for an outdoor production of the classic tale. Reservations required. 740-922-6776 or www. schoenbrunnvillage.org. OCT. 28–29 — By My Lantern’s Light, Amherst Sandstone Village, 763 Milan Ave., Amherst. Step back in time for tales of spooky history. 440-988-7255 or www.amhersthistoricalsociety.org.
arding world of gourds, gourd art, and gourd music. Fri. and Sat. workshops. www.americangourdsociety.org/ohiochapter. OCT. 6–8 — Willy Wonka Jr., Palace Theatre, 276 W. Center St., Marion, Fri./Sat. 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $12–$18. This captivating adaptation of Roald Dahl’s fantastical tale features enchanting and memorable songs, dancing Oompa Loompas, and a talented cast of local youth. 740-383-2101 or www. marionpalace.org. OCT. 6, 13, 20, 27 — Firelight Fridays, Geneva Hills, 1380 Blue Valley Rd. SE, Lancaster, 6–9 p.m. $3. Hayrides, night hikes, campfires and s’mores, field games, and more. 740746-8439 or www.genevahills.com. OCT. 8 — Annual Scout Pilgrimage, Harding Memorial, corner of Delaware Ave. (St. Rte. 423) and Vernon Heights Blvd.., Marion, parade at 3 p.m., ceremony at 3:30 p.m. Free. Over 500 Scouts gather each year to pay homage to the late President and First Lady for their support of Scouting. 740387-9630 or www.hardinghome.org.
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
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OCT. 12 — The Kite Runner, Palace Theatre, 276 W. Center St., Marion, 7:30 p.m. $16, Stds. $10. In a stunning solo performance, the bestselling novel and international classic is brought to life on stage. 740-383-2101 or www.marionpalace.org. OCT. 13–14 — Historic Ghost Tour, Frances Steube Community Ctr., 22 S. Trine St., Canal Winchester, 7 p.m. Last tour leaves at 7:30 p.m. $10, C. (6–18) $5, under 6 free. Hear people from our historic past tell tales like you’ve never heard before! 614-833-1846. OCT. 14 — Behind Closed Doors: Historical Marion Tour, four locations, Marion, 1–5 p.m. $8 in advance, $10 day of event. Go behind doors of sites normally closed to the public. 740387-4255 or www.marionhistory.com. OCT. 14 — Central Ohio Symphony Season Debut, Gray Chapel, 61 S. Sandusky St., Delaware, 7:30 p.m. 740-3621799 or www.centralohiosymphony.org. OCT. 14 — Grandma Gatewood’s Fall Colors Hike, Hocking Hills State Park, 19852 St. Rte. 664 S., Logan, 9 a.m. A
SOUTHEAST
strenuous hike that spans 6 miles. 740-385-6841 or www. thehockinghills.org/Events.htm. OCT. 14 — Lorena Sternwheeler Dinner Cruise, Zanesville, 5–7 p.m. $35. Includes prime rib dinner. Reservations required at least 48 hours in advance. Children’s menu also available. 800-743-2303 or www.facebook.com/LorenaSternwheeler. OCT. 18–19 — Marion County Historical Society’s “Lunch with the Presidents,” Moose Lodge Ballroom, 374 N. Main St., Marion, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. 740-387-4255. Step back in time to meet and dine with different presidents from U.S. history. www.marionhistory.com. OCT. 18–21 — Circleville Pumpkin Show, downtown Circleville. Free admission. Ohio’s oldest and largest pumpkin celebration. Seven different parades. 740-474-7000 or www. pumpkinshow.com. OCT. 20–22 — Apple Butter Stirrin’ Festival, Historic Roscoe Village, 600 N. Whitewoman St., Coshocton, Fri./Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Sample fresh apple butter cooked
OCT. 5–6, 12–13, 19–20, 26 — Weekday Fall Foliage Trains, Hocking Valley Scenic Railway, Nelsonville Depot, 33 West Canal St., Nelsonville, 1 p.m. $17, Srs. $15, C.(3–12) $12, under 3 free. Take a 2-hour train ride through the historic Hocking River Valley to view the beautiful colors of autumn. 740-249-1452 or www.hvsry.org. OCT. 6–8 — Paul Bunyan Show, Guernsey Co. Fgds., 335 Old National Rd., Old Washington, Fri./Sat. 8 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–3 p.m. $8, Srs./C. (7–12) $4, under 7 free. Competitions, demos and clinics, wood crafts, and much more. 614-497-9580, 888-388-7337, or www.ohioforest.org.
THROUGH OCT. 28 — National Imperial Glass Museum Tours, 3200 Belmont. St., Bellaire, Thur.–Sat. 11 a.m.–3 p.m. $3. Learn about and view extensive displays of Imperial glassware. 740-671-3971. THROUGH OCT. 31— Dally Memorial Library Escape Room, 37252 Mound St., Sardis. $15 per person. A fun, exciting, mentally challenging fundraiser for the library. www.facebook.com/ Dally-Memorial-Library-Escape-Room-465587900487570/. OCT. 1 — Friendship VII Chorus Annual Show, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., 7033 Glenn Highway, Cambridge, 3 p.m. 740-984-2190 or www.pritchardlaughlin.com.
SOUTHWEST
OCT. 7, 14, 21 — Petrified Forest, Deerassic Park Education Ctr., 14250 Cadiz Rd., Cambridge. This outdoor haunted trail is geared toward those 13 and over. All others must be accompanied by an adult. 740-435-3335 or http://deerassic.com.
over an open fire. Enjoy a delicious assortment of unique foods, music, and attractions, including living history tours, lantern tours (Fri./Sat. only), canal boat rides, and a children’s activity area. 740-622-7664 or www.roscoevillage.com. OCT. 21 — Marion County Historical Society’s “Dinner with the Presidents,” Harding High School, 1500 Harding Hwy. E., Marion, 5:30–8:30 p.m. $26 single, $47 couple. Step back in time to meet and dine with different presidents from U.S. history. 740-387-4255 or www.marionhistory.com. OCT. 28 — Applebutter Stir and Horseradish Day, Lawrence Orchards, 2634 Smeltzer Rd., Marion, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. Apple butter is cooked in a copper kettle over a wood fire, while the horseradish crop is ground fresh. 740-389-3019 or www.lawrenceorchards.com. OCT. 30 — Haunted Village, Olde Pickerington Village, St. Rte. 256 (Columbus St. at Center St.), Pickerington, 6–8 p.m. Free ghost tours, hayrides, trick-or-treating, haunted museum, and more. 614-833-2211 or www.pickeringtonvillage.com/events.html. rides, coffin races, costume contests, and plenty of food. www. chillicothehalloweenfestival.com. OCT. 20–22 — Muskingum Valley Trade Days, 6602 St. Rte. 78, Reinersville. Large flea market. 740-558-2740. OCT. 20 — 50th annual Fall Festival of Leaves, downtown Bainbridge (Ross Co.). Celebrate the beauty of the season and region with arts and crafts, entertainment, parades, contests, and much more. www.fallfestivalofleaves.com. OCT. 21— Pumpkin Fest, Dairy Barn Arts Ctr., 8000 Dairy Ln., Athens. A family-friendly fall celebration including free pumpkin carving, art activities, and games. 740-592-4981 or www.dairybarn.org. OCT. 22 — Farm Toy and Craft Show, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., 7033 Glenn Highway, Cambridge, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Free admission. Food, craft, and toy vendors. 740-439-7009 or www. pritchardlaughlin.com.
OCT. 13–15 — Bob Evans Farm Festival, Bob Evans Farm and Homestead Museum, 10854 St. Rte. 588, Rio Grande, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. $6, C. (6–18) $4, under 6 free. Featuring down-home OCT. 28 — Trail of Treats, Deerassic Park Education Ctr., 2–3 entertainment, great food, homestead living displays, and more p.m. Geared toward those under 14. Free. Local businesses pass than 100 demonstrators and crafters. 740-245-5305 or www. out goodies on our kid-friendly trail. 740-435-3335 or http:// bobevans.com/aboutus/the-farm. deerassic.com. OCT. 13–15 — Chillicothe Halloween Festival, Yoctangee Park, OCT. 28 — Un-haunted Forest, Shawnee State Park, 4404 St. Chillicothe, Fri. 11 a.m.–10 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–10 p.m., Sun. Rte. 125, Portsmouth, 6–9 p.m. A guided, lantern-lit walk to 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Halloween- and paranormal-themed exhibits, learn more about creatures of the night on an easy half-mile loop merchandise, and guest speakers, plus local/regional bands, trail. 740-858-6652 or http://parks.ohiodnr.gov/Shawnee. and contests. Sat. car show and craft show. Pumpkin pie and bread baking contest on Wed. 937-448-0630 or www. bradfordpumpkinshow.org.
WEST VIRGINIA
OCT. 11, 18, 25 — Weekly Wednesday Bluegrass Night, Pit to Plate BBQ, 8021 Hamilton Ave., Mt. Healthy, 7–9 p.m. Hosted by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Bring your instrument and join the band to pick a good bluegrass number. 513-931-9100. OCT. 13 — Mainstreet Piqua Chocolate Walk, downtown Piqua, 5:30–8 p.m. $15. Make your way to the over 20 downtown businesses participating in the walk. Some treats can be enjoyed on the spot and others will be placed in your bag to enjoy later. 937-773-9355 or www.mainstreetpiqua.com. THROUGH OCT. 29 — Fall Farm Days, Bonnybrook Farm, 3779 St. Rte. 132, Clarksville, every Sat. and Sun., noon–6 p.m. Free. Pumpkin picking, wagon rides, corn maze, petting zoo, games, and food. 937-289-2500 or http://bonnybrookfarms.com. THROUGH OCT. 29 — Ohio Renaissance Festival, Renaissance Park, Harveysburg, on St. Rte. 73 just off I-71 or I-75, every Sat. and Sun., 10:30 a.m.–6 p.m. $22.50, Srs. $20.50, C. (5–12) $9.50. Step back in time to this 30-acre re-created 16th-century English village and enjoy Renaissance-themed shows, unique arts and crafts shops, hearty food and drink, games of skill, and human-powered rides. 513-897-7000 or www.renfestival.com. OCT. 7 — Celebrate Fall at the Johnston Farm, 9845 N. Hardin Rd., Piqua. 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. 7, 14, 21, 28 — Lantern Light Wagon Rides and Corn Maze, Bonnybrook Farm, 3779 St. Rte. 132, Clarksville, 7:30–10:30 p.m. $8–$21, under 6 free. 937-289-2500 or http://bonnybrookfarms.com. OCT. 10–14 — Bradford Pumpkin Show, downtown Bradford. Free admission. Daily parades, concessions, rides,
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OCT. 13–15 — Operation Pumpkin, downtown Hamilton, Fri./Sat. 11 a.m.–10 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free admission. The fun-filled weekend includes a giant pumpkin weigh-off, pumpkin sculpting, pet parade, live entertainment, fall brews, wine, delicious food, art vendors, and much more. 513-844-8080 or www.operation-pumpkin.org. OCT. 14 — Iam Homestead Pioneer Harvest Fest, 349 S. Broadway, Trotwood, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free admission. Enjoy chili cooked over an open fire, roasted hot dogs, and freshly harvested corn. Activities include corn husking contest, corn binding, hayrides, corn husker shredder demonstration, and much more. 937-837-5387 or http://t-mhs.blogspot.com. OCT. 14–15 — Fall Farm Fest, Lost Creek Reserve and Knoop Agricultural Learning Center, 2385 E. St. Rte. 41, Troy, Sat. 12–7 p.m., Sun. 12–5 p.m. Free admission. Corn maze, pumpkin patch, scarecrow contest, wagon rides, kids’ activities, and more. 937-335-6273 or www.miamicountyparks.com. OCT. 14–15 — Ohio Sauerkraut Festival, 10B N. Wayne St., Waynesville, Sat. 9 a.m.–8 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–6 p.m. Try sauerkraut pizza, fudge, doughnuts, cookies, and pies. 513897-8855 or www.sauerkrautfestival.com.
OCT. 8 — West Virginia Chestnut Festival, Rowlesburg, 10:30 a.m.–7:30 p.m. Roasted chestnuts for sampling or purchase, chestnut saplings for planting, chestnut crafts and wares, and guest speakers/researchers. www.wvchestnutfestival.com. OCT. 27–28 — West Virginia Book Festival, Civic Ctr., 200 Lee St. E., Charleston. Free. http://wvbookfestival.org.
PLEASE NOTE: Ohio Cooperative Living strives for accuracy but strongly urges readers to confirm dates and times before traveling long distances to events. Submit listings AT LEAST 90 DAYS prior to the event by writing 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 of where the event takes place or a number/website for more information.
OCTOBER 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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MEMBER INTERACTIVE
FUN FALL FESTIVITIES Loving o n th
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My gran dson, Cooper, at the Mennon ite Hom e Fall Fest ival in Bluffton , Ohio. Beth Sc hey Tricou Rural Ele nty ctr Coopera ic tive member
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Send us your pictures!
Upload your photos at www.ohioec.org/memberinteractive. For January 2018, send your photos of “Staying warm” by Oct. 15; for February, send “Lovebirds of all kinds” by Nov. 15. Make sure to give us your name, mailing address, phone number or e-mail, the name of your electric co-op, and an explanation of the photo, including the names of people shown.
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My granddaughter, Lexi Long, represen ting Logan Elm Hig School in the big Mi h ss Pumpkin Show co ntest. James Collins r Company memb er
South Central Powe
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • OCTOBER 2017
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