


































22 RESTING PLACES
The garden cemetery movement created the country’s first public parks.
26 DEAD HEAT Halloween festival’s unique races challenge teams and delight spectators.
30 POWER TO THE PEOPLE
Murray Lincoln and the Ohio Farm Bureau played a crucial role in the birth of electric cooperatives.
For more than 80 years, electric cooperatives — and our business model — have proven to be resilient. In fact, most electric cooperatives are as vibrant and healthy today as at any point in our history. Much of this success can be attributed to the founding principles that electric cooperatives have adhered to through generations of members and cooperative leaders.
The relatively straightforward mission of electric cooperatives — at first simply to make electric service available, and now to also make it reliable and affordable — certainly has helped provide direction. Because we were founded by and for our local communities, we’ve been able to stay connected to the enduring values of the people we serve. Finally, the adoption of formal guiding principles has allowed us to adapt to changing circumstances and new challenges.
Probably the most powerful of these principles is the trust that democratic control by consumer-members will get it right. Even when a cooperative may occasionally stray off course, the democratic process has proven to be a selfcorrecting one. The fact that our service has become so essential to daily life means people will notice when the members’ needs are not being met. Electric cooperatives still serve largely rural communities, and that breeds a commonsense approach to most of the issues that we face, including a recognition that we can’t afford to squander the scarce resources we have available. It also means that we must remain politically engaged in issues that directly affect our members.
The term “resilience” seems often misused these days. It’s the ability to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions and, to me, “resilient” is what your electric cooperative was born to be. That resilience is how it continues to provide value through changing times and challenging circumstances.
Probably the most powerful of the cooperative principles is the trust that democratic control by consumermembers will get it right.
6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229
614-846-5757
www.ohiocoopliving.com
Patrick O’Loughlin President & CEO
Caryn Whitney Director of Communications
Jeff McCallister Managing Editor
Amy Howat Associate Editor
Crystal Pomeroy Graphic Designer
Contributors: Margo Bartlett, Colleen Romick
Clark, Randy Edwards, Getty Images, W.H. “Chip” Gross, Catherine Murray, Margie Wuebker, and Patty Yoder.
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. It is the official communication link between the electric cooperatives in Ohio and West Virginia and their members. Subscription cost for members ranges from $5.52 to $6.96 per year, paid from equity accruing to the member.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101. Periodicals postage paid at Berne, IN 46711, and at additional mailing offices. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved. The fact that a product is advertised in Ohio Cooperative Living should not be taken as an endorsement. If you find an advertisement misleading or a product unsatisfactory, please notify us or the Ohio Attorney General’s Office, Consumer Protection Section, 30 E. Broad St., Columbus, OH 43215. Periodicals postage paid at Columbus, OH, and at additional mailing offices.
4 POWER LINES
Teaching the co-op way: Ohio State’s Center for Cooperatives is a resource for — and proponent of — co-ops everywhere.
8 WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE
Nature’s assassin: Cute and cuddly as they may appear, mink are highly efficient predators.
10 CO-OP PEOPLE
Artist in residence: A cooperative member brings his internationally acclaimed artistry to a rural setting.
13 GOOD EATS
Reader recipe contest: Our “Spooky” recipes winner makes every holiday an occasion for themed cuisine.
17 LOCAL PAGES
News and other important information from your electric cooperative.
33 CALENDAR
National/regional advertising inquiries, contact Cheryl Solomon
American MainStreet Publications
847-749-4875 | cheryl@amp.coop
Cooperative members: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes.
Alliance for Audited Media Member
8
10
13
What’s happening: October/ November events and other things to do around Ohio.
36 MEMBER INTERACTIVE
Camping: Campfires, s’mores, and sleeping bags — members love to share the joys of camping out.
33
36
When you think about cooperative businesses, what comes to mind? For most reading this, it’s probably the local electric cooperative. But there are lots of others: Agricultural cooperatives and credit unions are prominent, and the outdoor retail store REI is a cooperative that’s also widely recognized.
Ohio is home to a multitude of cooperative businesses, from the Village Bicycle Cooperative in Bay Village near Cleveland to the United Producers livestock market in Gallipolis and the beloved worker-owned Casa Nueva restaurant in Athens. In fact, close to 1,100 cooperatives
do business in the Buckeye State, including 452 that are headquartered here. Credit unions top the list with 228 branches, but Ohio’s cooperative scene extends well beyond financial institutions to purchasing, housing, art — even rock climbing.
Cooperative businesses can be found in and around just about every community; the proof lies in a map produced by and hosted on the website of Ohio State University’s College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences. The map was a yearlong project from the college’s Center for Cooperatives and is a testament to
the center’s commitment to encourage business owners, legislators, researchers, and consumers to engage in and grow Ohio’s co-op economy.
The Center for Cooperatives opened in 2017 at OSU’s South Centers in Piketon. Faculty and staff work with businesses throughout the state with a focus on cooperative education, applied research, and support.
Program director Hannah Scott grew up in an agricultural community and says she appreciates the unique approach of how co-ops conduct business: The members own it, benefit from it, and make decisions about it.
“Our goal in this space is to help groups learn about business development and make informed decisions,” she says. “We’re a resource. We’re not here to tell them
There’s a growing interest in cooperatives among younger people, as members and employees, she says, partly due to an increasing cultural focus in locally grown food and worker-owned businesses. The center also works with retiring business owners to see if they would consider transitioning their businesses to cooperative models.
In addition to the online map, the organization provides a Co-Op Mastery Workbook and Foodpreneur School — free training for students, entrepreneurs, and anyone interested in cooperative businesses. The resources are also available on the center’s website.
Continued on page 6
In March, more than 30 high school students from Adams County participated in a co-op career fair at Ohio State’s Center for Cooperatives in Piketon with representatives from area co-ops, including Adams Rural Electric Cooperative and South Central Power Company, who shared many of the ways students can launch careers in a cooperative business.“We’re a resource. We’re not here to tell them what to do or to do the work for them.”
Continued from page 5
Although the Center for Cooperatives is relatively new, it’s based on a timeless idea with a deep history in Ohio’s agricultural economy. According to Thomas Worley, the center’s director, the program adds efficiencies that help streamline the work of existing agencies. For several years, Worley taught an undergraduate course about agricultural cooperatives, for which Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives’ own Doug Miller, VP of statewide services, was a regular guest speaker. Now, Scott teaches the course and continues inviting Miller to share the rural electric co-op story.
Although he was integral in developing the center, Worley says he does not consider himself a founder. He believes that credit goes to several faculty members who were committed to the idea of a business model that exists to serve members.
“We stand on the shoulders of several instrumental agricultural economists, starting with OSU’s Dr. Charles H. Ingraham and his passion for cooperative businesses and their impact on communities.”
Both Worley and Scott agree that one of the best things about cooperatives is that members can make suggestions that are heard and create change to improve products and services. They also believe co-op members find value in getting involved through volunteering, serving on committees, or joining the boards of directors.
For more information about Ohio State’s Center for Cooperatives, see https://cooperatives.cfaes. ohio-state.edu.
Are you tired of the large, expensive eyesore in your backyard? A WaterFurnace geothermal heat pump doesn’t have any outdoor equipment. It uses the clean, renewable energy in your backyard to save up to 70% on heating, cooling and hot water. A WaterFurnace unit is twice as efficient at cooling than the best air conditioner or heat pump and five times more efficient at heating than any ordinary furnace. If you’re ready to learn more about geothermal, contact your local WaterFurnace dealer today.
If the only thing bigger than your propane bill is your propane tank...
There is a pair of serial killers on the loose in the hinterlands of Ohio. The male, with his weasel-like face and small, black, beady eyes, looks menacing; his girlfriend, similar in appearance but only about half his size, is just as bloodthirsty.
A modern-day Bonnie and Clyde? Well, not exactly; you won’t see their pictures on a wanted poster on the wall at the post office. They’re American mink — and the Buckeye State is full of them.
Of course, humans have little to worry about from mink, as they weigh only a pound or two. But they are such fierce, aggressive carnivores that they regularly take down animals twice their size — muskrats, for example.
In general, the weasel family has a dubious reputation, particularly its scientific subfamily Mustelinae, which in Ohio includes not only mink but also ermines, least weasels, and long-tailed weasels. Adding to this foursome’s loathsomeness is the fact that they smell bad, emitting a strong, musky odor from anal scent glands, which they use for marking territory or attracting a mate.
A mink hunting along a river or stream bank is the epitome of high-energy efficiency. Using a combination of its eyes, ears, and nose, the mink intensely investigates absolutely every hole, nook, and cranny for potential prey. And once an unfortunate victim is located, the mink attacks immediately and with great speed. Biting the prey animal behind the head or back of the neck with needle-like incisors, the mink then wraps its body around the victim and tenaciously holds on with its feet and legs until the animal dies.
But what mink are most notorious for is what wildlife biologists call “surplus killing,” slaughtering more animals than they can possibly eat at any one time. It’s many a farmer who has had a mink slip into the henhouse overnight and kill every last chicken. Sally Carrighar, in her classic 1945 nature book titled One Day at Teton Marsh, describes the behavior.
“He [the mink] must constantly spend his energy … to stop other animals’ lives … find the motion of fish, mouse, frog, bird, or other creature and end it! A few he would eat; more would be cached.”
Biologists are quick to caution against anthropomorphizing — attributing human traits, characteristics, or thoughts to animals, wild or domestic. For instance, mink do not kill with malice; it’s simply what they do, how they’re genetically wired to function in the wild. No matter what we humans may think, mink and other predators have important roles to play in the natural world.
Considered a valuable furbearer, mink have been sought for centuries throughout North America for their extremely soft, luxurious, chocolate-brown pelts, and Ohio is a top producer. The annual trapping season begins early in November and lasts through late winter, when pelts are most prime.
Mink are common statewide, but are not easily spotted, as they’re mainly nocturnal and crepuscular (active at night, dawn, and dusk). Your best bet to catch a glimpse is to keep your eyes peeled while hiking near the shores of water sources: rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, swamps, marshes, etc. If you are lucky enough to catch a quick glimpse of this small, semiaquatic predator, it probably won’t be for long, as mink are secretive and seldom spend much time in any one area.
AMac Worthington piece of art is almost instantly recognizable. Worthington’s work (he’s best known for his metal sculpture) can be found in public, private, and corporate collections across the country and around the world. His unique cityscapes, flags, urban landscape paintings, and modern interior decoration have captured the attention of the art community since even before he opened his gallery in the Short North arts district of Columbus 35 years ago.
“Here’s what I think it is,” Worthington says. “Most — not all, most — guys that are doing metal sculptures and making functional art came from a welding background, from fabricating sheet metal. I was the artist first, and had to learn to weld.”
And just as he taught himself welding, he also taught himself to build frames and stretch canvases when he took up painting. “That’s what it means to be self-taught,” he says. “You learn this stuff as you need it.”
Worthington was born in Canton, the son of artists. His father, Jack, made many of the bronze busts in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. His mother, Marion, worked with enamel and silver.
Before turning to art, Worthington built washing machines, served in Vietnam, and worked for a finance company — all good experiences that proved useful when he opened his own galleries.
His current gallery is unlike most of those from his past, and certainly night-and-day different from the one he operated in the Short North for 35 years. Right before the pandemic, he decided to relocate to Ostrander in Delaware County, where he’s a member of Mount Gileadbased Consolidated Cooperative. “It wasn’t a decision; it was just luck,” he says. “But it’s worked out fine.”
His Houseman Road property is replete with trees and sculptures. He hires high school students to clean the artwork. And now, he has only to step out his front door to
give visitors a tour of his shop, his studio, his gallery, and the sculpture park that’s also his yard.
The art and the visitors’ parking lot suggest a public park, and passersby frequently pull in to take a walk. When that happens, Worthington often offers the full tour. That includes the gallery, a space packed with paintings, metal works, and other pieces of the functional art he’s been known to create, including a table and chairs.
Guests may browse, flip through the stacked canvases, and consider a T-shirt featuring Worthington’s image, which looks like some sort of mashup of Einstein and John Lennon; he resembles them both.
With the more spacious location, visitors not only can see his artwork, they can observe the process as well.
In his shop — a little shed that grew — stands a recently finished sculpture, a piece that suggests a silver musical note hanging in midair or a dancer holding a pose. Nearby, a multicolored waterfall of paint has been allowed to drip and dry on the edge of a workbench, and the contrast between the paint ribbons and the sculpture is stark.
Is the sculpture standing in his shop waiting for paint? “Oh no, it’s done,” Worthington says. How does he know when a piece is done? Worthington shrugs.
“At some point, you just have to stop,” he says.
It was during his time in the Short North that he took up painting. “Everybody there’s a painter,” he says, “so I bought some supplies and said, ‘Well, we’ll see.’” Worthington, now in his mid-70s, does more painting than sculpture these days. He paints abstracts and cityscapes,
flowers and butterflies, hearts and faces. He creates as the spirit moves him.
But, as a working artist and an interior decorator, he also knows it’s a business. “People say, ‘I like this, but …,’” he says, as in “But they want it in blue; but they want it bigger; but they want it smaller.”
“I do this for a living. It isn’t a hobby,” he says. “I have to do what people like,” he says. “This is something for you; I’m not making this for me.”
Mac Worthington’s studio-gallery-sculpture park is at 5935 Houseman Road, Ostrander, OH. For information, call 614-582-6788, email macwartist@aol.com, or visit www.macworthington.com.
Never let it be said that Rae Hruby let a holiday pass without cooking something specific to the occasion.
St. Patrick’s Day, for example, is an occasion to set up a fruit tray arranged like a rainbow; red, white, and blue themes rule the table on Independence Day. But on Halloween: Bring out the Feetloaf.
Hruby’s horror-movie-prop-turned-main-course took top honors in Ohio Cooperative Living’s annual Reader Recipe Contest; this year’s theme was “Spooky,” and Feetloaf certainly fit the bill, earning her an Ohio-made KitchenAid stand mixer.
“I’ve just always done my themed foods,” says Hruby, who lives in Grafton, where she and her husband, Paul, are members of Wellington-based Lorain-Medina Rural Electric Cooperative. “I took four years of foods classes in high school, and I’ve always enjoyed doing creative things with food.”
Part of that passion for creative cuisine has been inspired by her love of cooking with and for kids — her own and any others who happen to stop by the house. She and Paul have a grown daughter, Lauren, and a son, Dmitry, 15, so she’s been cooking for kids for quite a while now.
“We always had neighbor kids who came over to go trick-or-treating, and I always tried to make sure they had some real food before they went out,” she says.
Meatloaf, she says, was a natural because of its
versatility to feed a few or a group. And of course, she couldn’t make just a plain old loaf.
“You know, it’s basically just a slab of meat, but with the ketchup, it doesn’t take much imagination to create a body part, and a foot was just fun,” she says. “That just happened to be what I was working with at the time — it could have been spaghetti worms, or really any number of things.”
Cynthia Boles of Lithopolis, a member of Lancaster-based South Central Power Company, took runner-up honors in this year’s contest with her Batty Spinach Balls.
“It’s a recipe that’s been in the family forever,” Boles says. “It’s one of the few vegetable dishes that we never had any trouble getting the kids to eat. We serve it all the time, though we don’t dress it up for Halloween when it’s out of season.”
She says her mother, Rose, first came up with the original recipe, but she’s adapted it for a busy lifestyle by making it with boxed stuffing mix, and made it a spooky Halloween favorite with the simple addition of blue tortilla chips for bat wings. Her sons, Jacob, now 23, and Nathan, 22, and her husband, Bill, still gobble them up whenever she makes them.
The dish is plenty versatile as well. Boles serves the spinach balls as either an appetizer or a side dish, and the recipe is adaptable to account for spice preferences. “We usually make two batches: one hot and one not,” she says. “Me, I like a little kick.”
Prep: 30 minutes | Bake: 80 minutes | Servings: 12
1 small onion
3 pounds of your favorite meatloaf mix (I use lean ground beef only)
1 package of dry French onion soup mix
½ cup of ketchup; reserve additional for serving on the side
2 eggs
1 cup of oatmeal or breadcrumbs
salt and pepper to taste
Slice one round of onion for the ankle bone and a few small slivers for toenails, then finely chop the rest. Mix all ingredients except the reserved onion and ketchup together until well incorporated. Form into something resembling a foot. Spoon a bit of the extra ketchup at the top and embellish with an onion ankle bone and onion toenails.
Preheat oven to 350 F. Bake in a shallow baking dish with foil tented over, approximately 1 hour; remove foil and complete cooking for approximately 20 minutes.
Have you tried one of our recipes? Do you have a recipe to share with other Ohio co-op members? Visit the Member Interactive page on www.ohiocoopliving.com to find recipes submitted by our readers and to upload yours.
While you’re there, check out a video of a few of our recipes being prepared.
Cynthia Boles · South Central Power Company member
Prep: 20 minutes | Bake: 20 minutes | Servings: 12
1 package (9 to 10 ounces) frozen spinach
2 eggs
⅓ cup vegetable oil
½ cup Parmesan cheese
1 box Stove Top stu ng (your choice of flavor)
½ teaspoon garlic salt
1 medium onion, diced hot pepper seeds to taste
pimentos or red bell pepper chips for decorating
tortilla chips for garnish
Cook spinach according to package instructions and drain well. Cool. Add ingredients (spinach through hot pepper seeds) to large bowl and mix well. Form mixture into 1-inch balls. Place on baking sheet sprayed with nonstick coating. Bake at 350 F for 10 minutes. Turn balls over and bake for an additional 10 minutes. After spinach balls are baked, press in pimentos or red bell pepper chips for eyes. On the back of the spinach ball, press in triangular tortilla chips for wings. Serve hot.
We know you are seeking new ideas to gain an edge and ensure your business thrives. Ohio Farm Bureau is evolving and growing to meet your needs with insights and business solutions to help grow your bottom line and stay a step ahead. Feeding your need for new ideas.
When I graduated from The Ohio State University with a degree in animal science, I didn’t envision myself becoming the general manager/CEO of an electric cooperative. I grew up on cooperative lines, but never realized the vital role the cooperative played in the community until I was an adult and in the work force.
My career at the cooperative started much differently than many employed at a cooperative. In 1994, I was elected to serve the cooperative as a board member. This is when I truly learned how important it was to be served by an electric cooperative. Serving on the board of directors led me to a path in public service for many years and when the opportunity arose to manage Guernsey-Muskingum Electric, I felt that life had come full circle.
The cooperative has been, and continues to be, a great career for me and many others at Guernsey-Muskingum. What makes this job so great is the people we serve and the people I work with who strive to provide reliable electric service to you, our members.
What started for me as a director position representing you, the members, has become a career, a passion, and along the way, a second family. It’s a common story in the world of electric co-ops, a world filled with people possessing many different skills, varied educational backgrounds, and a wide range of talents. October is National Co-op Month, making this the perfect time to talk about the amazing career options cooperatives offer.
The most visible positions in the industry may be our lineworkers, whom you see working in all weather and at all hours to maintain lines and restore power, and our member services representatives, who are always ready to help you, in the office or on the phone. Behind the scenes, though, a diverse team of skilled and specially trained employees work in engineering, finance, information technology, communications, human resources, and other areas.
No matter the job title, co-op employees share a sense of purpose. They strive to serve our members and work each day knowing that what they do makes a positive difference in the communities we serve.
In the local pages of Ohio Cooperative Living, we often see retirement announcements for individuals who have worked at their co-ops for 20 or 30 years, or even more. The common thread, I believe, for people whose co-op careers stretch to years and then decades, is they embrace the cooperative difference and embody the cooperative principles. They learn that electrical cooperatives, along with our statewide organization and power generation cooperative, offer jobs that are:
• Local. Your electric cooperative provides jobs that pay well and offer great benefits, right here in your community. Many of our employees value being able to work in their chosen fields, while staying close to home.
• Fulfilling. Electric co-ops foster a sense of teamwork, with individuals working together to power the communities in which we live and work. More broadly, co-ops work together to provide support and assistance to each other, whether it’s sharing best practices or sending personnel for mutual aid in emergency situations.
• Important. Co-op members depend on us to provide the electricity they need to run their homes and businesses. The electricity we deliver keeps their food fresh and their homes cool in the summer and warm in the winter, powers electronics they rely on for work and entertainment, enables the operation of their businesses, and even runs life-saving medical equipment.
Our cooperative employs people with diverse educational and work experiences, providing opportunities for high school graduates, as well as those with associate or bachelor’s degrees and beyond. We provide training to ensure our dedicated employees have the tools they need to succeed in their positions.
My 29 years working for and serving electric cooperatives have been rewarding, providing a good living enhanced by a positive culture and deep sense of purpose. If you’re interested in joining a dynamic group of people doing good work in our communities, please watch for our employment opportunities online at https://www.gmenergy.com/careers or explore careers through our statewide organization, Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives, at www.ohioec.org/careers.
Brian Hill GENERAL MANAGER/CEOYou can eliminate drafts and reduce energy waste by properly sealing and insulating the attic access points inside your home. Attic hatches are often overlooked, even if the rest of the attic is properly insulated. (If your attic access is located in an area you don’t heat or cool, such as your home’s exterior or garage, there’s no need to insulate it.)
Interior attic hatches should be insulated close to the same R-value as the rest of the attic. (R-value is the insulation’s capacity to resist heat flow.)
Attic access types vary, but here are a few tips on how to insulate standard and ladder attic hatches:
A standard attic hatch is typically a covered rectangular hole cut into the ceiling. If your hatch is drywall, it’s smart to replace it because it’s difficult to properly insulate and seal a drywall hatch. They often crumble and crack around the edges, leading to more air leaks.
Ready-made insulated hatches are available online or at home improvement stores, but you also can insulate and seal your existing attic hatch. Either way, measure carefully to ensure you create an effective seal.
To improve your existing hatch, replace drywall attic hatches with ¾-inch plywood cut to fit. If you have loosefill insulation in your attic — as opposed to fiberglass batts — install a dam or barrier that extends 2 inches above the level of insulation to prevent it from spilling into the house when you open the hatch. Use unfaced fiberglass batt insulation or plywood to hold back the loose fill insulation.
To insulate the hatch, use rigid foam insulation cut slightly smaller than the plywood attic hatch. Use screws and fender washers to secure the first layer of rigid foam to the hatch. Add layers of rigid foam by taping the edges together, one at a time, using foil tape. Always wear gloves when
using foil tape to prevent cuts. Keep layering the rigid foam until you reach the desired R-value.
Remember to seal any gaps between the drywall and trim, using caulk for smaller gaps and foam sealant for larger ones. Finish the job by applying adhesive weatherstripping around the hatch perimeter. Install the weatherstripping on the hatch itself or on the trim supporting the hatch.
For attic hatches with drop-down ladders, you’ll follow the same instructions: Install a dam, air seal, and insulate. Be sure to account for the space of the folding ladder.
To insulate, build a box to sit in the attic around the hatch. For the sides, use wood tall enough to accommodate the folded ladder. The top of the box will be rigid foam you can remove to get into the attic. Cut the first piece of foam to fit inside the box and the next layer to fit on top of the box. Keep layering until you reach the desired R-value.
To get a good air seal, you may need to remove the existing trim to seal the gap between the drywall and hatch frame. Add weatherstripping to the hatch or the underside of the frame to form a tight seal when closed. There are several commercially available options for insulating ladder hatches. Remember to check the product’s R-value and measure carefully.
If purchasing the required materials to seal and insulate your attic hatch is not in your budget, I recommend weatherstripping the hatch perimeter. While it won’t provide the same level of insulation, it’s a simple, low-cost option for blocking air drafts.
This spooky season, we’re sharing a few energy-saving tricks so you can treat yourself to lower energy bills. Here are four simple ways to summon the spirit of energy efficiency:
Conjure instant savings with a smart thermostat. One of the easiest ways to save energy is through thermostat control, since home heating and cooling account for a large portion of monthly energy use. Smart thermostats can help you manage heating and cooling costs by learning your daily routine and adjusting the temperature settings accordingly. You can control a smart thermostat from anywhere (through your smartphone), which allows you to prevent unnecessary energy consumption while you’re away. Sorcery!
Get rid of goosebumps by eliminating ghostly drafts. The winter chill is just around the corner, so now is the time to seal air leaks around your home. Apply caulk and weatherstripping around drafty windows and doors to make your home more comfortable and lower energy use.
Illuminate your lair with energy-efficient lighting. LED bulbs use 75% less energy and last 25 times longer than incandescent light bulbs. Make the switch to reduce energy used for lighting. Remember to use LEDs when it’s time to decorate for the upcoming holiday season. LED light strings offer an average of 88% energy savings compared to traditional incandescent light strings.
Stir up savings with countertop cauldrons. Cooler weather summons our favorite soup recipes. Small countertop appliances like slow cookers use less energy than cooking meals on the stovetop. Grab your book of spells (or recipes) and start stirring up savings in the kitchen.
When we look around our homes, there are many opportunities to save energy. So this spooky season, investigate your space and unlock a different kind of magic — the kind that brings real energy savings.
ABLES FRANK
ADAMS EDWARD D
ADELPHIA COMM - 363
AERIAL COMMUNICATIONS
ALBAUGH RAYMOND E
ALLEN TINA M
ALLTEL
ALRAHMAN INVESTMENT INC
AMERITECH CELLULAR SERVIC
ANDERSON DAVID D
ANDERSON HERBERT
ANDERSON JAMES V
ANDERSON RACHEL B
ANICH MICHAEL J
ANKROM WILLIAM H
APPLEBEE RICHARD
ARMSTRONG MELODY
ARNO ROBERT A
ARROW OILFIELD SERVICES
ASHFORD MIKAL J
AYERS DENNIS
AYRES DOROTHY M
BAILES PRISCILLA R
BAKER TERRY B
BANCEQUITY PETROLEUM CORP
BARKER TRENDA L
BARKHURST JON
BARNETT WILLIAM J
BARR MICHAEL
BARRINGER MARK E
BARRONE JEFF
BARTEMES RYAN
BASILETTI JOHN
BAUER EDWARD L
BAYLY WILLIAM
BEAL CHARLES
BEARD DAVID M
BEARD ROBERT L
BEARS ROBERT M
BECKETT ERNEST J
BEDNARSKI BRIAN K
BELL JANICE
BELL LEWIS V
BELLE EVELYN M
The following is a listing of former members of Guernsey-Muskingum Electric Cooperative, Inc., who received service from the cooperative in prior years. Attempts were made to mail capital credit checks to these former members in 2019. These capital credit checks have remained unclaimed for at least four years.
The Cooperative’s Code of Regulations provides that capital credit payments that remain unclaimed for four years shall, after proper notice is given, be reallocated to the current margins of the cooperative. After such reallocation, these unclaimed payments will no longer be available for payment to the former members listed. If you have any information on any of the names published in this listing, please call the cooperative’s office at 800-521-9879. Thank you for your help in locating our former members.
BENNETT TERESA D
BEREA OIL & GAS CORP
BEREAN BAPTIST CHURCH
BERRY DORI F
BERRY M J
BIBART THOMAS E
BICE AMBER M
BIG BEND RANCH CO
BILBY JAMES
BIRKHIMER JOYCE A
BLACK JACK L
BLACKFORD EDWARD D
BLACKSTONE W G
BLAKE BETTY L
BLIND R J
BLOOMFIELD JOANN
BOLLINGER RUTH
BOLON WILLIAM JR
BONIFIELD CHAD A
BONIFIELD HEATHER
BOOKMAN CHARLES
BOOTH RALPH O
BOOTH WILLIAM O
BOWERS COLLEEN M
BOYLE DENNIS
BRADCO ENERGY
BRADFORD VERNON
BRANDON C W
BRASKIE JIM R
BRENLISH TROY S
BRITTON WANDA L
BROCK MICHELLE M
BROKAW TOD A
BROWN CHARLES W
BROWN DANA M
BROWN GRAHAM D
BROWN NOEL B
BROWN TAMMIE J
BROWN W L
BROWNINGS FORD BOW -
BUCKEY PATRICIA
BUSCH PETER L
BUTTERMORE ABBY D
BYLER CRIST
BYLER JOSEPH S
BYLER SAMUEL
CABLE NICHOLAS A
CALLANDER & KIMBREL INC
CAMBRIDGE SENIOR COMM INC
CAMPBELL MURRELL J
CAREY ALLEN D
CARLESS RESOURCES INC
CARNES IRVINE F
CARPENTER M
CARR DONNIE R
CARRELL JAMES W
CARSON MYRON
CARTER LELA
CASSADY JOHN D
CATLETT BERNICE
CATON BETTY
CAVENDISH PETRO OF OHIO
CENTRAL OHIO COAL CO
CHAMBERS DARROL
CHANNELL DON
CHARITY BAPTIST CHAPEL
CHARLES MARCELLA B
CHIEM DONG I
CHRISTA OIL CO
CHRISTA OIL CO
CHURCH RITA R
CHURCH TODD
CLARK BRITTANY J
CLARK JOAN E
CLARK LYLE W
CLARK WADE H
CLARK WARD JR
CLARKE FRANK B
CLEAR MICHAEL
COBRE TIRE CO
COHEN TESSA
COIL CHARLES M
COLANGELO GENE
COLE GLEN
COLLINS LARRY
COLUMBIA NATURL RESOURCES
COLUMBUS & SOUTHERN POWER
COLVERT JAMES
COMISFORD CAROLYN S
CONCORD SQ LTD-SEWAGE-STA
CONLON JOHN J
CONNER KENNETH WSR
CONSOL RESC OF AMERICA
CORP MICHAEL
CORTENER B J
COX CECELIA A
CRAMER HEATHER
CRAWFORD JOHN HJR
CRAWFORD SHARON
CRUM KENNETH C
CRUSE CARLA
CURTIS JEFFREY D
CURTIS ROBERT L
CURTIS STEVEN R
CUSTER PAUL JR
CUTLIP BERNARD ESR
CUTLIP JACK
CZERWIEN EDWARD A
CZIGANS ROBERT
D A WALDRON & ASSOC
DAGUE BRENT A
DANIELS ROBIN
DANNER JEFFREY II
DARLAND DEAN D
DAUGHERTY REGINIA
DAUM TOM E
DAVENPORT BILL A
DAVIS CATHERINE
DAVIS CHARLES S
DAVIS HAROLD
DAVIS JON A
DAVIS ROBERT
DAVIS RODNEY
DAVIS WILLIAM
DAWSON ALPH
DAWSON JOAN
DEAL GLEN M
DECARO THOMAS R
DECKER H E
DEJONG JOYCE A
DELLINGER SCOTT T
DELONG MERRY
DENNY ROBERT D
DEPUY JUNIOR
DERWACTER BEULAH
DETTRA LISA
DETTY LESTER E
DICKEY CYNTHIA D
DICKINSON LISA L
DICKS JOHN
DIES JAMES M
DINGEY BETTY J
DININGER KAREN
DINKINS JEFFREY S
DOBBINS BETTY J
DOBBINS TIMOTHY M
DODD JAMES C
DOLAK TAMMY L
DOLIN CLYDE K
DOMINOS PIZZA
DOTSON DAVID
DOUBLE JJ FARMS - AGRO
DOUGHERTY ROBERT D
DOUGLAS MICHAEL L
DOWNARD JAMES D
DRAKE ROLLAND L
DRUSHAL JEFFREY T
DUFFY-RISHAW SANDRA S
DUNCAN CATHY
DUNLAP HELEN V
DUNST PHILLIP J
DUPLER CASSANDRA
DURBEN DAVID D
DURBIN THOMAS L
DUTCHER MELVIN
DUVALL LEE
EASTERN STATES OIL & GAS
EBY CHERYL L
EDWARDS LAURA J
EDWARDS MARSHA
EIKENBERRY ALICE M
ELERICK SARAH
ENERGY RECOVERY
ENGLERT PAULA A
ENGSTROM BARTON J
EPPLEY MARK
ESHELMAN JOAN
EUBANKS CINDY L
EVANS CYNTHIA L
EVANS EMMETT G
FALCONBERY DONALD E
FARGUS CHRISTY L
FARM SUPPLY CENTER INC
FAULEY MAURICE A
FENNER DONALD RJR
FERGUSON DAVID L
FILIPEK JOSEPH L
FILKILL JEFFERY DSR
FINDLEY OIL CO
FINKLE JOSEPH B
FISHER MARK
FISK ARTHUR
FLOWERS GORDON A
FLOWERS JAMES
FLYNN DANIEL J
FORD MICHAEL L
FORD WILLIAM F
FORGRAVE ALLEN C
FORGRAVE ROBERT L
FORSHEY PHIL
FORTUNE GAS & OIL CO
FOSNAUGHT NANCY
FOSTER DAYLE
FOWLER THOMAS J
FRAMBES BEVERLY K
FRAME M
FRAME RAYMOND ASR
FRANCIS MAX J
FRENCH EARL M
FRICK SANDRA K
FRILEY RUTH A
FRONTIER COMMUNICATIONS
FUDGE LARRY
FURGYE KIM L
G.W.F. CORP
GALL RONALD
GALLAGHER JAMES
GANNON JEFFREY G
GARDINER CARL E
GARDNER PAUL
GARNER CAM
GARRISON TAE
GASPRO ENERGY INC
GAUSE JAMES L
GEM ENERGY CORP
GESSEL CHARLES G
GIBBONS BRIAN D
GIBSON BRANDI M
GIBSON NELDA F
GIBSON RITA
GILL ROY A
GOLDSMITH EARL W
GOSSMAN EUGENE
GRAHAM LINDA
GRAY VERNIE
GRAY-RICHTER DAWN
GREEN WILLIAM H
GREENFIELD SAMUEL K
GRESSLEY MICHAEL S
GRIMMETT SHERRY A
GROVE ROBERT
GRUBB DAVID R
GUERNSEY PETROLEUM
GUM SCOTT A
GUZZETTA DICK
HALL VICKI
HAMILTON ROBERT E
HAMILTON SHERMAN T
HAMMER GREG
HANENKRAT HEATHER D
HANKS MABEL A
HANSEN EDWIN G
HARANZO JAMES J
HARDY TIM L
HARMON DAVID B
HARMON RAYMOND E
HARNEY WILLIAM E
HARPER JAMES C
HARRIS DAVID K
HARRIS ROBERT
HARTLEY DEBBIE
HARTSOCK ROBERT D
HASSELL ESSIE K
HASSELL MIKE
HASSINGER JAMES ESR
HATFIELD HARRY
HATFIELD WILLIAM H
HAVENS DEBORA
HAVENS ROBERT
HAWTHORNE HELEN M
HAY SARAH W
HAYES CARL R
HAZELWOOD J B
HAZLETT CHERYL
HEAGREN BARRY
HEDLESTON FRANK H
HEISER DANIEL L
HELSEL VEDA M
HELTER FRANK
HENRY LORI A
HENRY REBEKAH
HENRY SANDRA M
HENRY WILLIAM J
HENSON JAMES D
HERITAGE CARL L
HESKETT MARGO
HESSON LESLIE E
HIDDEN SPRINGS FARM COM
HIGH ADAM F
HILDERBRAND LARRY
HILES RUTH E
HILL ANDREA K
HILL BARRY D
HIRSH DAVID J
HITE RICK
HOCHRADEL KYLE A
HOFFER ALBERT E
HOLDSWORTH PAMELA S
HOLETON CAROL
HOLLINGSHEAD TAMMY
HOLMAN C L
HOLSHUER SHIRLEY
HOLT RONALD
HOPKINS ANNETTE C
HOSACK PAUL
HOSKINSON DORIS
HOSSMAN KAREN S
HOUSTON L E
HOWARD MARILYN J
HOWELL JOHN D
HRINKO HELEN M
HRINKO KRISTY L
HROMETZ GEORGE
HUFF TIMOTHY BJR
HUHN JESSE
HULSE HELEN
HUNT BRIAN
HUPP LARRY
HUTCHISON HOWARD G
HUTTON DALE E
IGNATIOUS DAN J
IRBY ELDON E
JACK JOHN C
JACKSON DELMA
JACKSON ELAINE
JACKSON L
JACOBS DAN
JACOBS JERRY L
JACOBS MARK
JAMES T JOHNSON, TRUSTEE
JAMESON JAMES L
JAMISON LAWRENCE R
JARRELL DANIEL
JEB DRILLING INC
JENKINS DALE
JENKINS MILDRED E
JENKINS OHMER R
JERLES CHAD
JESS ARTHUR E
JEWELL LINDA S
JOHNSON BRENDA L
JOHNSON CAREY
JOHNSON CLINTON C
JOHNSON GARY
JOHNSON JERRY L
JOHNSTON EDDIE LSR
JONES CHARLES WJR
JONES N J
JOSEPH BRIAN E
JOSEPH WILLIAM D
JOY JOHN
JUERGENS WILLIAM R
JUNK ROBERT R
JUSTICE BEVERLY M
JUSTICE BUTLER
KAIL SYLVIA G
KALMAN ANITA M
KALOYDIS JASON
KAUFMANN MARY
KAVEH FRED
KEFFER ANTHONY W
KEIM LEROY N
KEISTER MILDRED
KELLNER DAVID
KELSO TRACI D
KENDALL MARGARET E
KESSLER RUTHANN
KETRON DALE
KEYES ROBERT J
KIGER ORVILLE B
KIMBLE E C
KINDER ROSANNE
KING CHARLES
KING DEBBIE
KING JENNIFER L
KING RALPH
KING ROGER EJR
KING LIMESTONE
KINGSTON OIL CORP
KINSEY KATHY
KIRKBRIDE LINDA M
KIRKMAN L A
KLINE CARL G
KNIGHT ELMER
KNIGHT ROBERT W
KNIGHT TIFFINI J
KNOWLTON W BJR
KNOWLTON’S INDUSTRIES
KOCSIS FRED D
KOEHLER CHAD
KOLOPAJLO WAYNE M
KOVALESKI TERRY L
KRAMER ROBERT
KRUPINSKI STACEY R
KUSS CATHERINE M
KUSTER DANIEL
LABO THOMAS E
LAFFERTY JAMES F
LAMBES AMY
LANDPROVEST INC
LANDRUM JAMES W
LANKFORD C E
LANZA BARBARA
LARCAMP CHARLES J
LARRICK ARTHUR
LASHLEY DALE A
LATTEA DOROTHY
LAUFFER PETER C
LAW E R
LAWLER WILLIAM
LEEPARD JEFFREY J
LEHMAN ROBERT
LEHOCZ DONALD
LEMIN JOHN
LEONARD DONNA J
LERMER ALEXANDER SMD
LEVACY WILLIAM R
LEWIS ALFRED
LEWIS SCOTT A
LFG SPECIALTIES INC
LICHTNER TERRI
LINDAMOOD PAULINE
LINDOWER RANDY J
LITLE DENISE
LITTLE BRIAN
LITTLE BRYAN
LOCKHART DORIS
LOGAN FRANCES
LONGABERGER CO
LOPEZ RAMIRO A
LOUDERMILK ROY
LOVELL TIM
LOWE WILLIAM EJR
LUCAS JOYCE C
LUCAS SUE A
LUDWIG LORIE L
LUTZ GEORGE J
LYALL PATSY J
LYNN ROLLAN J
M C K GROUP, LLC
M-B OPERATING CO INC
MACFARLAND ROBERT M
MACKENCO INC
MALVERN GROUP INC
MANN KRISTIE L
MAPLE MARK D
MARCINCAVAGE THOMAS
MARIETTA PETROLEUM INC
MARKLOW PENNY E
MARPLE DANIEL L
MARPLE KENNETH
MARTIN MARY J
MARTIN RICHARD M
MARTIN THOMAS R
MASSEY TRUDY
MASSIE WILLIAM
MAST LEVI
MATECHIK THOMAS J
MATERA MARK J
MATHERS ROBERT W
MATHEWS CAROLYN S
MATHIAS CHARLES E
MATTERN JULIA
MATVEY JOSEPH J
MAURER SHEILA P
MAY D
MAZZA C J
MCCAULEY STEPHEN
MCCAUSTLAND MICHAEL P
MCCLAIN RALPH L
MCCONNELL TERRY
MCCUNE DONALD
MCDOUGALL KATHY
MCELFRESH BENJAMIN B
MCFIN OIL CO
MCGAHA-SNEAREY DONNA
MCGUIRK THOMAS
MCINTEE TIMOTHY
MCINTIRE MATTHEW
MCKINNEY DONALD
MCMAHAN WILLIAM A
MCMAHON DOROTHY L
MCMAHON FLORENCE
MCNEAL JAMES
MCNUTT JOHN
MEADOWS GREGORY K
MEEHAN JOE
MEEK BARBARA
MEEK CARL
MEHAFFEY CRAIG
MEHAFFEY J A
MELL DOUGLAS L
MENDOZA LARRY
MERCER ALLISON M
MERRYMAN TRACEY
META CHEMICAL CO INC
METZGER EUGENE D
METZGER JOHN B
MEWHA ROBERT
MICHAEL SCOTT BUILDERS
MILDAZIS M D
MILESTONE COMM OF OHIO
MILHEIM RICK
MILLER EDWIN L
MILLER JASON D
MILLER JOHNNY HJR
MILLER KEVIN
MILLER MELISSA L
MILLER NORBERT V
MILLER RICHARD
MILLER ROBERT L
MILLER STEVEN L
MILLER SUSAN M
MILLER VICKIE
MILLER WENDY K
MILLIGAN WARREN
MILLS DOROTHY L
MILLS EARL
MILLY JOSEPH C
MILNER RAY G
MIRDIK JOHN R
MISSION GAS
MITCHELL IVAN
MIZER DAN SR
MOHR DAVID W
MONK WILLIAM L
MOORE CHARLES
MOORE EDWARD AJR
MOORE GARY
MOORE JACK H
MOORE JULIA J
MOORE PRISCILLA A
MOREHEAD JAMES
MORLEY DEBORAH
MORRIS ALLISON
MORRIS JONATHAN
MORRIS SUSAN M
MORRISON LAWRENCE
MORRISON TODD A
MORRISON VIOLET M
MOWRY BRIAN
MOYER JASON M
MUELLER MICHELLE J
MUFFET DONALD
MULL MARIE F
MUMMA PAUL
MURPHY DARLENE
MURPHY JOSEPH K
MURRAY EDWARD R
MURRAY PHILIP E
MUSK VALLEY FISH ASSN
NATLAND ENERGY
NEFF MARK S
NEGRON JOSE
NELSON G
NEUHART ROSLYN J
NEWTON JOHN B
NEY THOMAS J
NIEKRO LEO B
NOCE R J
NORMAN KEVIN W
NORMAN WALTER E
NORMAN P SINGLETON IRREV. TR
NORTHROP JAMES M
NORTHSIDE GARDEN CENTER
NOVAK JAMES D
NRM PETROLEUM CORP
NUTTER KEN
OHIO BELL TELEPHONE CO
OHIO PARTNERS OIL CO
OILER ROBERT J
OLEI ANDREW
OLIPHANT REBECCA R
ORAHOSKE JUDY
OSAGE OIL & GAS
OSBORN BRENDA
PADEN DAN
PAGATH S B
PALMER P
PARKER CATHY M
PARRETT DAVID B
PARSONS WILLIAM J
PATRICK CHARITY
PATTON JERRY L
PAUL MICHAEL A
PAXSON TIA M
PEABODY COAL CO
PEACH CARL W
PEDDICORD JAMES
PEEPER E J
PEMCO GAS INC
PEOPLES MICHAEL R
PETERSON DAVID K
PEYTON CHARLES E
PHILLIPS C A
PHILLIPS CURTIS A
PHILLIPS JOHN
PHILLIS RODNEY
PINE VALLEY TRUST
PITMAN GARY KJR
PITTS LARRY J
PLETCHER MARGARET
POIRIER ROBERT F
POLLOCK TOMMIE B
PORTER FRANCIS E
PORTER MICHAEL A
PORTMESS CECIL
POSEY MARBIA R
POWELL TIMOTHY
POWERS J M
PRATT JILL K
PRICE PAT
PRICE PAUL R
PRICE VICKY
PRIEBE DEAN
PRINCE MICHAEL
PRITT
S
PRO-ALARMS SYSTEMS LTD
PROUDFIT CURT
PULLEY RAYMOND
PULLIN LARRY M
PUSKAR JOHN
Q STATE OIL & REF CORP
Q STATE OIL REF CORP
R P J ENERGY FUND MGMT
RAACH KATHLEEN M
RABER JOHN
RABER RANDY
RADER SUSAN L
RANSOM JEFFREY L
RAYBACK DAN
REBECCA ROBERT FJR
REED DAVID W
REED INA M
REESE ANNE L
REEVES JAMES L
REHL ROBERT
REID JERRY
REID RUSTY
REINHART CHARLOTTE R
RENNARD JOHN B
REPASKY ALEXANDER
REYHER STEVEN L
REYNOLDS NANCY L
RHOADES ROGER L
RICHARDS NORMAN E
RICHMOND GUY
RICHMOND LANCE
RIGGLE TERRY
RINEHART GREG R
RITCHEY DAVID
RITTENHOUSE CHARLES S
ROACH JAMES L
ROAHRIG PAUL A
ROBBINS DONALD L
ROBERTS HARLAN
ROBERTS WILLIAM E
ROBINSON JEFF A
ROBINSON JOHN
ROBISON DEAN M
ROBYNHAVEN INC.
RODGERS & ROSEN
ROGER C DUPKE OIL CO INC
ROGERS JAY A
ROGERS SUSAN J
ROGOSKI JOHN
ROLL MARTHA J
ROLL WILLIAM E
ROLLI MELODY L
ROMINGER CAROLEA Y
ROMINGER GLEN
RONK DAVE A
ROSARIO ERNESTO
ROSE JANESSA J
ROSE STEWART MMD
ROSS DALE A
ROTRUCK RUBY
ROUSE CARLA
RUBLE BARBARA
RUDISH MARY E
RUSSELL ALICE
RUSSELL GEORGE W
RUSSELL ROBERT D
RUTTER LARRY
RYAN NANCY F
S H PARKS & ASSOC INC
SABOL LARRY AJR
SALSBURY MARK A
SAMPSEL RONALD L
SARRA DOUG
SAVAGE JEFF
SAVAGE MARSHA
SAYLOR FRED
SCARBERRY JESSE
SCARBERRY WILLIAM
SCARPATO THOMAS
SCHNEIDER FRED C
SCHNEIDER MIKE L
SCHNEIDER VAUGHN
SCHRADEL SHIRLEY
SCHUMACHER PETER
SCHWARZE ALFRED F
SCOTT JAMES
SCOTT JAMES E
SCOTT JESSICA A
SCOTT KARI K
SECKMAN ARIS K
SECREST EDWARD JR
SENECA MARINA
SETTLE RALPH
SETTLES DIANA L
SETTLES ROBERT EJR
SEXTON RICHARD M
SHARRER KIMBERLY A
SHAW TANYA M
SHEETS DEWEY
SHEPARD KEVIN P
SHEPHERD FRED W
SHIPLEY JANET A
SHIPLEY ROBERT R
SHIRER PHILLIP E
SHREVE DONALD
SHUEY CARL
SHUSTER SHIRLEY S
SIGLER PETRO CORP
SIGRIST FRANCIS J
SKINNER DAVID
SMITH ANNE M
SMITH CARA A
SMITH CURTIS R
SMITH DAN
SMITH GLEE L
SMITH JOHN E
SMITH KAREN D
SMITH KEVIN T
SMITH MARTHA M
SMITH MATTHEW T
SMITH RICHARD A
SMITH ROBERT P
SMITH RONALD E
SNEDDEN DON
SNYDER GEORGE
SOTHEN HARRY L
SOUDER SHARON
SOUTHALL DANIEL
SOUTHALL MELANIE S
SOWARDS RICKY
SPARKMAN BONNIE
SPARKS RICHARD
SPRAY EARL A
SPURGEON DIANE L
ST CLAIR BRUCE
ST CLAIR DAVID E
ST CLAIR MARGARET
STAIR MICHELLE A
STALNAKER JAMES
STANSBERRY BARBARA J
STARCHER ARNOLD L
STARKEY GARY
STATEN LARRY
STEIGER ROGER A
STEIN GARY A
STENNETTS OPPERMAN INN
STEPHEN FRANK L
STEPHEN THOMAS L
STEPHENS JAMES V
STEPHENS ROGER
STEVENS RAY A
STEWART RUBEN
STEWART TAM J
STEWART TAMMY S
STEWART TERRY L
STIDOM ROY A
STILLION KAREN S
STILLION NANCY C
STILTNER GREGORY
STOCKER & SITLER INC
STOCKTON TIM C
STOTTS MICHAEL D
STOVER JOHN R
STRANDBERG PATRICIA
STRAWSBURG ALLAN W
STURGILL ROBERT E
SUMMERFIELD JOHN
SUNNAFRANK JOYCE G
SUPPLEE JEAN A
SWINDERMAN KENNETH
TAINTER JERRY W
TALBERT THOMAS
TALBOT PAUL H
TANNER WILLIAM
TAYLOR APRIL R
TAYLOR GAIL E
TAYLOR MITCHELL C
TEISL TIHOMIR
TETAK JOSEPH T
TEXAS EAST TRANS CORP
THOMAS DEBRA
THOMAS GENE R
THOMAS JANET L
THOMAS RUTH I
THOMPSON CAROL
THORLA C D
THURSBY CAROL A
TIDRICK GEORGE E
TIGER OIL CO
TILTON RICHARD L
TIMES MIRROR CABLE T V
TIMMONS JOHN M
TIPPEL SUSAN A
TODD JAMES G
TODD JOHN M
TOM CONNIE
TORKOS GINA P
TOTMAN MATTHEW
TRAVIS ROBERT G
TRI-AD CORPORATION
TUBAUGH BRENDA K
TURNER CHARLES E
TYSINGER R J
URBAN LEO C
USA WASTE SERVICES
INC
VADIS FARMS
VALLADARES DENISE M
VALLELY KAREN A
VAN DYKE THEDA E
VANDYNE JAMES JR
VANKIRK RANDOLPH L
VARWIG CLAUDIA
VEST EDMOND
VINCENZO F HSR
WAGNER JERRY
WALDRON DAVID A
WALLACE RICHARD E
WALTER CARA
WALTERS LESLIE
WALTON STEVEN B
WARD ESTHER
WARD L E
WATKINS ALICE
WATSON SHEILA M
WEAKLAND NITA
WEAR ROBERT S
WEBSTER-CARROLL BONNIE
WEEKLEY KEVIN
WELCH CATHERINE
WELCH JAMES L
WELL CARE SERVICES INC
WELLS RAY
WELSH DONAVON J AY
WELSH STEPHEN D
WESTERN CO OF AMERICA
WESTERN UNION TEL CO
WHEELER KEITH D
WHITE ANGELA S
WHITE JACKIE K
WHITE WILLIAM L
WHITECO METROCOM-06
WICKEM BRENT W
WICKHAM DONNA J
WICKHAM VERNA L
WICKISER JAMES
WICZEN STEVE C
WIGGINS DAVID
WILDE WALTON W
WILHELM ROBERT J
WILKINS MARTHA J
WILLEY RICK
WILLIAMS DARRELL W
WILLIAMS DELMER L
WILLIAMS LAURA M
WILLIAMS SANDRA
WILLIAMSON BRIAN K
WILSON CYNTHIA S
WILSON DUANE
WILSON ELIZABETH
WILSON L J
WILSON MARLENE
WILSON MARSHA
WILSON ROBERT
WILSON TRISHA L
WIMER JOHN W
WINEBRENNER WILLIAM
WINGERTER JAMES B
WINLAND KATHERINE M
WINLAND STEVEN C
WISEMAN ED
WOFTER RICKEY L
WORKMAN JOHN RJR
WYCKOFF BECKY
YERIAN TERRY L
YOCUM TRISHA
ZIKELI DAVID A
In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident.
Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 7202600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339 Additionally, program information may be made available in languages other than English.
To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD-3027, found online at http:// www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html and at any USDA office or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in the letter all of the information requested in the form. To request a copy of the complaint form, call (866) 632-9992 Submit your completed form or letter to USDA by:
(1 ) mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights
1400 Independence Ave., SW Washington, D.C. 20250 -9410 ;
(2 ) fax: (202 ) 690 -7442 ; or
(3) email: program.intake@usda.gov.
This institution is an equal opportunity provider.
We have a $300 energy credit to help pay for the most efficient underground heating, cooling, and hot water system available today. To be eligible, the geothermal unit must be ENERGY STAR-rated and have a radio-controlled switch installed on the unit and on your electric water heater of at least 40-gallon capacity. More than 300 of our members are using geothermal.
If you install a new add-on electric heat pump with a fossilfuel back-up and have an electric water heater with at least 40-gallon capacity, you are eligible for a $300 energy credit. Radio-controlled switches are required to be installed on both the heat pump and water heater. Please call your cooperative for details. More than 900 members are using dual fuel.
Level 2 electric vehicle chargers may be eligible to receive a $250 energy credit. Call us for more information.
“What a deal!” If you don’t already have a radio-controlled switch for your electric water heater of at least 40-gallon capacity, please call us and we will install one, for FREE. More than 5,700 GMEC members have an RCS on their water heaters. This entitles you to a discount and free maintenance (except cleaning), including parts and labor, on your electric water heater. Some exclusions apply; call us for details.
You can enter your meter readings on SmartHub, or, as always, you can mail your readings or call us 24 hours a day with meter readings.
GMEC offers a variety of ways to pay your bill. Use autopay; pay through the SmartHub app; use Pay Now through our website, www.gmenergy.com; pay by phone by calling 844 -206 -7873 ; mail in your payment, or drop it off at our office.
Are you getting a new electric heat pump with electric resistance heat back-up? Allow your cooperative to install a radio-controlled switch and receive a $100 energy credit. More than 200 members are using Cool Returns.
Did you buy a new ENERGY STAR-rated refrigerator, freezer, or central air conditioner? We may have a $100 energy credit for you. Call member services for details.
Did you know using your dishwasher is more energy efficient than washing a load of dishes by hand? To maximize efficiency, wash full loads in the dishwasher and don’t block the arms or other parts that move while the appliance is in use.
For additional savings, turn on the “air dry” setting instead of using the “heat dry” setting and use a rinse aid to help dishes dry faster without spotting and streaking.
Source: Department of Energy
Remember
Are your name and account number here?
If they are, call the cooperative’s office and receive a FREE home changeout to LED lightbulbs (limit six bulbs). Thanks for reading the local pages of Ohio Cooperative Living magazine.
Over 6,000 kWh/yr. — 12.445¢/kWh
(Minimum annual charge — $408/yr. for service between March 1, 2023, and Feb. 28, 2024)
Commercial Service rate schedule C-1*
Service Availability Charge — $28/mo.
First 1,500 kWh/mo. — 14.169¢/kWh
Over 1,500 kWh/mo. — 12.445¢/kWh
*Rider T — Kilowatt-Hour Tax applies to all rate schedules and must be added to the rates shown.
First 2,000 kWh/ mo. — 0 465¢/kWh
Next 13,000 kWh/ mo. — 0.419¢/kWh
Over 15,000 kWh/ mo. — 0.363¢/kWh
The garden cemetery movement created the country’s first public parks — and Ohio’s are stunning.
In the early 19th century, public city parks were virtually nonexistent. That doesn’t mean, however, that there was no green space in urban areas.
In fact, cemeteries were commonly found within the city limits of even the largest of cities. Most were in churchyards, where bodies were lined up with soldier-like precision to make the most efficient use of available land.
Around that time, Europe embraced a different concept. Instead of a precise grid of graves lined up row by endless, nondescript row and sometimes even stacked upon one another, “garden cemeteries” were designed with trees, ponds, and winding paths. They became places where the living could enjoy a visit, a stroll — even a picnic if they wished.
The trend quickly made it across the pond, and parklike cemeteries began popping up in the eastern U.S. and, before long, in Ohio.
Ohio’s urban garden cemeteries are some of the country’s most distinctive memorial parks, and stunning examples can be found in nearly every population center. Here are three that are particularly outstanding and accessible.
Garden cemeteries like Cleveland’s Lake View “were made for the living,” says CEO Katharine Goss. Early on, though, only people who owned burial lots could enter Lake View, founded in 1868. A ticket booth stood at the entrance. Now anyone is welcome to visit, and anyone may be interred there.
“Lake View is an all-walks-of-life place,” Goss says. One of Lake View’s most appealing aspects, Goss says, is the “natural layout … winding roads, big tree canopies. You walk in and you immediately feel your blood pressure go down.”
Lake View’s 285 acres include a large pond, where people may choose to scatter ashes; Daffodil Hill, site of 150,000 daffodils; and walking paths and trails.
The cemetery hosts many events, including concerts, 5Ks, trolley tours, and twilight tours of “Millionaires Row,” whose occupants include Standard Oil founder John D. Rockefeller, the nation’s first billionaire. (Rockefeller’s obelisk is Lake View’s tallest memorial.) Seasonal programs, such as an October Owl Prowl and a December Winter Walk, also are offered.
Lake View memorial adviser Petronella Ragland says the cemetery is welcoming and busy. “People walk their dogs
here, they run, they walk,” Ragland says. (Bicycles, however, aren’t permitted.)
The Haserot Angel, which honors businessman and prominent Clevelander Francis Haserot, appears to be weeping black tears. Weathering is the scientific explanation for the bronze figure’s tears, but visitors nevertheless are startled and moved by the statue.
Disc jockey Alan Freed, credited with coining the term “rock and roll,” is memorialized with an intricately carved jukebox. Garret Morgan, inventor of the three-color traffic light and the gas mask, is at Lake View, as is Eliot Ness, the Prohibition officer who brought down Al Capone.
Two steps from Ness is underground comic book artist Harvey Pekar. His grave is blanketed by colorful pens and markers, each poked point-first into the soil.
The display is a spontaneous tribute by the artist’s friends and fans, Goss says. Groundskeepers try to keep leaves and other natural debris from tangling in the pens, but Goss gives Pekar’s widow primary credit for keeping the site tidy.
Raymond Chapman’s memorial also is laden with mementoes. Chapman, who played major league baseball for the then-Cleveland Indians, died when he was hit by a pitch in 1920. He remains the only major league player to be killed during a game.
Continued from page 23
Chapman’s fans leave many items on his stone. Caps, baseballs, coins, and a Beatles CD were there recently. Cemetery groundskeepers understand fans’ impulse to leave something. They also understand why others take things away.
Visitors don’t swipe mementoes out of malice, Goss says. They take them for the same reason others left them: because they cherish Chapman’s memory and want a keepsake.
Lake View Cemetery, 12316 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44106. Open 7:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m. from November through the end of March and 7:30 a.m.–7:30 p.m. from April through the end of October. 216-421-2665, www.lakeviewcemetery.com.
The Cincinnati Horticultural Club chartered Spring Grove’s 220 acres in 1845, and future U.S. Supreme Court Justice Salmon P. Chase, who’s interred at Spring Grove, helped prepare the cemetery’s charter.
For the cemetery’s first 10 years, lot owners tended their own family plots, which made for quite the cluttered look. A new superintendent came on board in 1855, however, and “changed the flavor” of Spring Grove by removing graveside
decorations, private plantings, and even fences, says Debbie Brandt, docent liaison at Spring Grove.
He also drained a swampy area, created ponds, and “opened up the vistas,” Brandt says. Visitors in the Victorian Age soon flocked to Spring Grove to see and be seen.
Two of Spring Grove’s more notable spots are a pair of chapels: the Dexter Chapel and Mausoleum, designed to resemble Paris’ La Sainte-Chapelle but never completed despite a staggering $100,000 being spent on it; and the Gothic Norman Chapel, built in 1880 and still the site of funerals, weddings, and even concerts.
Architect Samuel Hannaford, known as “the man who built Cincinnati,” is interred at Spring Grove, along with several names familiar to retail junkies, including Shillitos, McAlpins, and Kroger. Both William Procter and James Gamble are there; Procter’s grave is modest and unassuming, while Gamble’s features a towering obelisk. Brandt theorizes that Procter’s first wife died, and the family lot was created, before the company had risen to obelisk-worthy success.
Also at Spring Grove: mattress manufacturers George Stearns and Seth Foster; yeast maker, Cincinnati mayor, and Reds owner Julius Fleischmann; third baseman
Henry Knight “Heinie” Groh, who played from 1912 to 1927, mostly for the Cincinnati Reds and New York Giants; and, maybe, George Turner’s dog.
A story claims that Turner’s dog, Old Man, was buried with his master, thanks to an amiable superintendent. Brandt notes that Ohio law forbids animals from being interred in human cemeteries and no records verify the story. “So I can’t say yes or no,” she says.
Living dogs, normally also forbidden on the grounds, are welcome each Dog Day, held on the fourth Sunday in June. Other events include an annual Lantern Lighting, when participants send paper lanterns, illuminated by tea candles, afloat on a pond, and an annual car show in October. Brandt says 25 docents lead tours — on foot, by golf cart, or on trams — that focus on topics such as history and heritage, the cemetery’s circus connections, or “Movers and Shakers of Cincinnati.” One of the most popular is the Beer Barons Tour in August, featuring wellknown brewers such as Christian Moerlein.
Spring Grove Cemetery and Arboretum, 4521 Spring Grove Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45232. Open 8 a.m.–6 p.m. daily. 513-681-7526, www.springgrove.org.
When Green Lawn Cemetery opened in Columbus in 1849, occupants of older nearby graveyards were relocated there. Adrianne Reese, a Green Lawn family service adviser, says those existing urban burial grounds had been overcrowded and landlocked, so “everybody was moved over here.”
Green Lawn was chartered during a cholera outbreak. First to be interred was cholera victim Leonora Perry, 7, who was buried two days before the cemetery’s grand opening. Another cholera victim, Dr. Benjamin Gard, who contracted the disease while tending patients at the penitentiary, soon followed.
Howard Daniels designed the cemetery to complement the site’s natural beauty. It’s a registered arboretum and is an Ohio Audubon Important Bird Area.
Randy Rogers, Green Lawn Cemetery Association executive director and a tireless cemetery worker, praises Daniels and his foresight.
“We’re unique,” Rogers says. “We still preserve 200-year-old trees that had been preserved by ranchers” who owned the land before Green Lawn existed.
Green Lawn’s 360 acres are home to five Medal of Honor recipients, five governors, and 6,000 veterans.
Writer and cartoonist James Thurber’s marker is flush with the ground, as are those of his family. The only
monument in the plot honors a Thurber dog, Muggs, who was immortalized in Thurber’s story, “The Dog That Bit People.” A sculpture of Muggs, looking peevish, is above the engraving, “Nobody knew exactly what was the matter with him. Cave Canem.”
“Little Georgie” is another well-loved grave. George Blount was 5 years old in 1873 when he fell off a banister and hit his head on a stove. His memorial shows him sitting, one leg tucked under the other, a cap in his lap. Visitors once dressed the statue in scarves and hats in cold weather. Now, Green Lawn asks donors to bring such items to the office, to be donated, instead.
For years, Georgie was thought to be interred alone, Rogers says. Recently, however, his father’s military grave was found behind the child’s monument and his mother is in an unmarked grave next to him.
World War I fighter pilot Eddie Rickenbacker is at Green Lawn, as are Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes; Samuel P. Bush, grandfather of President George H. W. Bush; Peter Sells, a Sells Circus co-owner; and Gordon Battelle, founder of Battelle Memorial Institute.
Green Lawn Cemetery, 1000 Greenlawn Ave., Columbus, OH 43223. Open 7 a.m.–7 p.m. in the summer and 7 a.m.–5 p.m. in the winter.
614-444-1123, www.greenlawncemetery.org.
Think of it as the Halloween version of a good oldfashioned Soap Box Derby.
At the annual Chillicothe Halloween Festival, teams of T-rexes, various ghosts and ghouls, and even Cleopatra and her Egyptian slaves vie for bragging rights and prizes in an event that features athleticism, sportsmanship — and the occasional out-of-control coffin.
The festival’s popular coffin races take place this year at 2 p.m. on Oct. 15, along Alexandria Street in the heart of the community’s Yoctangee Park. It is just one of many offerings during the event, which runs Oct. 13 to 15.
The coffin races debuted at the festival in 2017 after a committee member saw something similar on a program showcasing how communities nationwide celebrate Halloween.
“It has certainly been a hilarious sight to see,” says festival vice president Adam Days. “Families and friends work together, and nobody knows what costumes participants will be wearing.”
Tonya Hartman, a member of Rio Grande-based Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, started racing five years ago and plans to keep coming back.
“My entire family loves Halloween,” she says. “This is something we can all do.”
The rules of the event specify wood or plastic construction (with the exception of push bars and wheels), no steering mechanism (though wheels may swivel for easier turning) — and absolutely no propulsion other than pushing by the teams. Hartman says that after a bit of a learning curve her first two years, her team has become rather skilled at creating a racing coffin that’s aerodynamic as well as fun.
The top three finishers win cash prizes. Hartman and her team came close to the top prize a couple of times, and each time poured their prize money into the following year’s entry.
Finally, their T-bone team, inspired by the movie Grease, raced to top honors last year as Tonya rode in a coffin
Halloween festival’s unique races challenge teams, delight spectators.
outfitted with cushions and a fabric-appointed interior, pushed by her husband, Andrew Hartman; brother-inlaw, Chad Hartman; and nephew, Holden Hartman. She says the prize money last year went toward Halloween decorations for their homes.
Casey Demint, head of Team Demint, depends on his wife, Miranda, relatives Tim and Lindsey Demint, and co-worker Josh Walter to do their best maneuvering the course.
“Each year is a learning experience as we scope out the competition,” Demint says. As of late August, Team Demint was still deciding on this year’s costumes. Members have previously arrived at the starting line dressed as skeletons, vampires, and zombies. Their coffin usually bears cobwebs and spiders for a spooky look.
“I haul the coffin to the festival in the back of my pickup truck,” Demint says. “You should see all the strange looks I get.”
The number of spectators has grown each year, according to Days, and since crowds begin lining up hours before the event, it’s best to get there early to stake out the best viewing spots.
For complete rules and regulations for the coffin races, as well as information about the festival’s other events, including a haunted tent, costume contest, car show with trunk-or-treat, escape rooms, pumpkin drop, music, and food, see www.chillicothehalloweenfestival.com.
Got trees? Most co-op members do. If you’re among that group, the U.S. Department of Agriculture wants you to be on the lookout for yet another invasive insect species attacking woods in the Buckeye State: the Asian longhorned beetle (ALB).
So far, more than 100,000 trees nationwide have been removed due to ALB infestation and damage, and if left unchecked, the damage will only become worse.
The ALB is a wood-boring bug that attacks a dozen types of hardwood trees in North America, including maples, elms, buckeyes, birches, and willows. Infested trees do not recover. They then weaken and become safety hazards, especially during storms, and
eventually die.
In its larval stage, the ALB feeds inside tree trunks and the branches of trees, creating tunnels as it feeds. Adults then chew their way out during the warmer months of the year, leaving telltale round exit holes about the size of a dime or slightly smaller. Once the adults exit a tree, they feed on its leaves and bark before
tree, they feed on its leaves and bark before mating and laying eggs.
USDA issues warning for another Ohio tree-attacker.
BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSSTow-Behind
• #1 in vacuum power and capacity
• NEW PRO MAX model holds up to 450 gallons
Walk-Behind
• NEW PILOT XT models ll paper leaf bags for curbside pickup
• Collects & mulches up to 50 lbs. of leaves Go Online for FREE Catalog!
702 9938
If you think you’ve found a beetle or tree damage, call the ALB hotline at 866 -702 -9938 or submit a report at www.asianlonghornedbeetle.com. Try to photograph the beetle or tree damage. If you can, capture the beetle in a durable container and freeze it, which helps preserve the insect for identification, then report it. In addition, don’t relocate ALB host materials, such as firewood.
It is possible to eradicate the Asian longhorned beetle. To date, the ALB program has eradicated beetle infestations at East Fork State Park and Stonelick and Monroe townships in Clermont County, as well as in areas of New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Illinois.
W.H. “Chip” Gross is Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor. Email him at whchipgross@gmail.com.
• A shiny black body, 1 to 1½ inches long, with white spots.
• Black and white antennae that are longer than the insect’s body.
• Six legs and feet that can appear bluish in color.
• Round exit holes in tree trunks and branches.
• Shallow, oval, or round wounds in the bark, where sap might weep.
• Sawdust-like material called “frass” found on the ground or on branches.
• Branches or limbs falling from an otherwise healthy tree.
x
Ohio Cooperative Living (publication no. 134-760; ISSN 747-0592) is owned and published monthly by Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc., 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229. Subscription cost for electric cooperative members is $6.96 per year, paid from equity accruing to the member. 12-month avg Most recent
I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete.
In the fall of 1935, in the depths of the Great Depression and the dawning of the New Deal, a young executive from the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation traveled to Washington, D.C., to meet Morris L. Cooke, director of the Rural Electrification Administration — a program crucial to the success of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s firstterm economic recovery effort.
The rural electrification cause had helped FDR win the White House, and U.S. farmers were clamoring for power. The Farm Bureau wanted to help, and the organization sent its first executive secretary, Murray D. Lincoln, on a fact-finding mission to Washington months before Congress approved the government loan program to support Roosevelt’s vision.
The initial meeting didn’t go so well, as Lincoln remembers in his autobiography, Vice President in Charge of Revolution
Shown into his office, I told him that we of the Farm Bureau wanted to avail ourselves of the benefits of this legislation and set up our own utility plants.
“What do you know about the utility business?”
Mr. Cooke asked.
“Nothing,” I admitted cheerfully. “I was trained in dairying and animal husbandry.”
The story may well have been embellished for dramatic effect, but it captures the essence of what history remembers of Murray Lincoln: brash, confident to the point of hubris, and proud of his farm roots.
Born in 1892 on a small Massachusetts farm, Lincoln became a leader of the cooperative movement in the United States. He began his career as a county agent in New England in 1914, fresh out of agricultural college, urging farmers to organize associations to produce their own fertilizer and market their own milk.
Cooperatives, Lincoln believed, represented “something that prevents the average man from being smothered between Big Business and Big Government.”
He became the first executive secretary of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation in 1920 and led the organization into a variety of cooperative enterprises, from grain elevators and farm credit to auto insurance.
As an agent of change for farmers’ lives, however, Lincoln’s most significant undertaking was probably helping to launch the electric cooperative movement in Ohio. President Roosevelt, who believed access to electricity was essential to modernizing rural America, got the ball rolling in 1935 with an executive order establishing the REA. It had been half a century since the Edison Electric Illuminating Company built the
Murray Lincoln and the Ohio Farm Bureau played a crucial role in the birth of electric cooperatives.Murray Lincoln believed that cooperatives were something that prevented “the average man from being smothered between Big Business and Big Government.”
first electric grid to light Manhattan, and by 1930 more than 90 percent of U.S. homes in cities and towns had electricity, along with a growing selection of electricpowered appliances.
The story was different in rural America. Roughly 33 million Americans lived on farms in 1935, and their lives were distinctly different from those in urban areas. The majority lacked indoor plumbing and used outhouses, and fewer than one in five farm homes were connected to the electricity grid. Farmers milked their cows by kerosene lamp in the morning darkness and did most of their chores in the daylight.
It wasn’t that farmers didn’t want electricity. The private, investor-owned utility companies of the time refused to extend service into sparsely populated farm country, saying it wasn’t cost-effective. But they weren’t excited about the New Deal program either. Morris and the rest of FDR’s team originally believed they would accomplish electrification with the help of private companies, but the utilities balked. In Ohio, they pressured the General Assembly to block enabling legislation that would have allowed the federal funds to flow to the states.
Lincoln and the Farm Bureau offered to set up rural electric cooperatives, which unleashed a battle with the private utilities that the coops eventually won, but not without political gamesmanship and wild tactics that Lincoln, who could be a bit pugilistic, seems to have relished. The private utilities managed to push legislation through the Ohio General Assembly that prevented the co-ops from crossing established
utility lines, and then deliberately strung lines — as fast as possible — over the cooperatives’ planned routes.
Sometimes, the private utilities didn’t bother to secure rights-of-way from landowners, Lincoln recalled, and many of those landowners were farmers.
“When the poles went up, the farmers got together and chopped them down. The utility people came back and put them up again and, again, the farmers chopped that down.”
Despite the drama, Lincoln and his farm partners established more than 20 cooperatives within months, moving much faster than other U.S. states. As a result, Ohio received more than $5 million of the first $5 5 million approved by the REA.
A new subsidiary, the Farm Bureau Rural Electrification Cooperative, Inc., was formed to oversee the buildout. They bought their power from municipal power plants and built the lines at less than half the cost of the private companies. By 1937, the cooperatives had more than doubled the percentage of farm homes connected to central electricity. A dozen years later, more than 90 percent of farms had power.
By then, the Farm Bureau was no longer involved, having passed the baton, in 1942, to a new, independent organization, Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. Today, 25 electric cooperatives serve more than 400,000 homes and businesses in 77 of Ohio’s 88 counties.
“I believe that the rural electric cooperatives … are among the most dramatic demonstrations of the power of the cooperative concept that this country has ever seen,” Lincoln wrote in his autobiography, “and I am proud to say that I had a share in their conception, beginnings, and early days.”
LANTERN LIGHTER RANCH LLC
Quaker City, OH | 740-260-6425
Leadership thru Horsemanship Workshops: 5 days, 6 nights living, learning and working on the ranch www.lanternlighterranch.com
butter for sale, craft show, food vendors, village garage sales, and kids’ activities. 419-889-8796 or vanburenapplebutter@yahoo.com.
OCT. 14 – Boos and Brews Festival, Downtown Revitalization District, Sidney, 8 a.m.–2 p.m. Free. Trick or treat, costume contest, fun activities, and more! 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org.
a picturesque outdoor setting. Families welcome! 419-447-7073, www.conservesenecacounty.com, or follow Seneca Conservation District on Facebook.
THROUGH OCT. 14 – The Great Sidney Farmers Market, Shelby County Court Square, 100 E. Court St., Sidney, Sat. 8 a.m.–noon. Fresh produce, baked goods, jams and jellies, crafts, plants, and flowers. 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org.
THROUGH OCT. 22 – Pumpkin Train, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation, Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, Sat./Sun. 1–5 p.m. $2–$3. Ride a quarterscale train to the pumpkin patch to find that special pumpkin, then take one more trip around the track to return to the station. Additional charge for pumpkins. Games and activities at the museum. 419-423-2995 or www.facebook.com/nworrp.
THROUGH OCT. 28 – Halloween Express, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, Fri./Sat. 6:30–9 p.m. $3; 12 and under, $2. A non-scary ride around our tracks for the whole family to see the Halloween decorations after dark. 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www.facebook.com/nworrp.
OCT. 13 – Downtown Chocolate Walk, Sidney, 6–8 p.m. $25. Tour downtown businesses while gathering up delicious chocolates and great deals. 937-6586945 or www.sidneyalive.org.
OCT. 13 – Downtown Sidewalk Sales, Sidney. Check out downtown shops, have a great lunch or dinner, and support local! 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org.
OCT. 14 – Apple Butter Fall Festival, Van Buren School, 217 S. Main St., Van Buren, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. Hosted by the Van Buren Lions Club. Homemade bean soup cooked on-site and apple
OCT. 14 – Lima Symphony Concert: “Korngold and the Hollywood Sound,” Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Center, #7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. Journey to the Golden Era of Hollywood and experience the sounds that made the classics; then, enjoy the lyrical virtuosity of Korngold’s Violin Concerto, featuring Grammy-winning violinist Charles Yang. 419-224-1552 or www.limaciviccenter.com.
OCT. 14–15 – Oak Harbor Apple Festival, downtown Oak Harbor. Parade, contests, cornhole tournament, classic car and bike show, 5K Apple Run, 1-mile kids’ fun run, beer tent, food, vendors, live entertainment. 419-898-0479 or www.oakharborapplefestival.com.
OCT. 20–21 – Harvest Happenings, Dairy Barn Emporium, and Apple Fest, Van Wert Co. Fgds., 1055 S. Washington St., Van Wert. Free. Three separate events, one great experience. Over 300 vendors. Crafts, food, and everything apples! 419238-9270 or www.vanwertcountyfair.com.
OCT. 21 – Murder Mystery Dinner, Vera Event Rentals, 330 E. Court St., Sidney, 5:30–9 p.m. $30–$40. A real-life game of Clue, complete with dinner and more! 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org.
OCT. 21, 28 – Trick or Treat Halloween Train, Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation, Inc., 12505 Co. Rd. 99, Findlay, 6:30–9 p.m. both days, 1–4 p.m. on 28th. $3; 12 and under, $2. Take a ride around our tracks and enjoy the Halloween displays as our train makes treat stops. No scary sites — just fun and treats for all! 419-423-2995, www.nworrp.org, or www.facebook.com/nworrp.
NOV. 1 – Down on the Farm Story Time, Proving Ground Farm, 5670 E. Twp. Rd. 138, Tiffin, 10 a.m. Stories and activities are geared for preschoolage children and focus on farming and nature in
NOV. 3 – Star Gazing at Schoonover Observatory, 670 N. Jefferson, Lima, 9 p.m. Free. Come see the stars with us! If you have a telescope, bring it along; members will show you how to use it and will answer any questions. Weather permitting. https://limaastro.com.
NOV. 4 – Lima Symphony Concert: “Musically Speaking,” Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Center, # 7 Town Square, Lima, 7 : 30 p.m. Learn about 19 th-century master Tchaikovsky before listening to a complete performance of his enigmatic Fifth Symphony. 419 - 224 - 1552 or www.limaciviccenter.com.
NOV. 4–5 – Bewitched Harvest Art and Craft Show, Premier Banquet Hall, 4480 Heatherdowns Blvd., Toledo, Sat. 9 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Jump-start your holiday shopping with handmade crafts, gifts, and fall decorations. Donate pet food and supplies to benefit local pet rescues. 419-842-1925 or www.toledocraftsmansguild.org.
NOV. 4–5 – Tri-State Gun Show, Allen Co. Fgds., 2750 Harding Hwy., Lima, Sat. 8:30 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 8:30 a.m.–2 p.m. $6, under 18 free. Over 400 tables of modern and antique guns, edged weapons, and sportsman’s equipment. 419-647-0067 or www.tristategunshow.org.
NOV. 4–11 – Holiday Shop Hop, Sidney and Shelby County businesses. Stop by participating local shops for your holiday shopping needs. Find great deals and compete for a chance to win a grand prize valued at over $500! 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org.
NOV. 11 - Homemade Craft Sale and Lunch, Shiloh Church, 2100 Co. Rd. 5, Delta, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Baked goods and peanut brittle, custom jewelry, wood crafts and signs, plastic canvas items, purses, holiday and Christmas décor, crocheted/knitted/sewn items, and much more! Delicious homemade lunch from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. (or till gone). Benefits Sparrow’s Nest Women’s Shelter. 419-533-2083
OCT. 19–22 – Mountain State Apple Harvest Festival, Martinsburg. Apple pie baking contest, pop-up shops and art fair, music, rodeo, apple and agricultural contests, and more. Pancake breakfast Saturday and Sunday; grand parade Saturday. www.msahf.com.
NOV. 9–JAN. 8 – Festival of Lights, Oglebay Resort, Wheeling, dusk to midnight nightly. Featuring 300 acres of twinkling lights and displays over a 6-mile drive. $30 per-car donation requested; valid for the entire festival season. https://oglebay.com/
OCT. 20–22 – Carroll County Antique Collectors Club Power Show, Carroll Co. Fgds., St. Rte. 9, Carrollton. Free. Tractor pulls, flea market, antique equipment, working demos, and food daily. Car and vintage semi-truck show on Sunday. 330-933-5130 or https://ccacc.webs.com.
OCT. 21 – Kidron Red Beet Festival, Sonnenberg Village, 13515 Hackett Rd., Kidron, 9 a.m.–2 p.m. Music, food, and tours of the village. 330-857-9111 or www.kidronhistoricalsociety.org.
OCT. 27–28 – Brigade of the American Revolution, Historic Fort Steuben, 120 S. 3rd St., Steubenville. $6; ages 6–12, $3; under 6 free. Reenactors demonstrate the maneuvers and armaments used during the early settlement and development of America. 740-2831787 or www.oldfortsteuben.com.
OCT. 29 – Model Railroad and Toy Show, 735 Lafayette Rd. (St. Rte. 42), Medina, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. $7 Get a jump on your Christmas shopping! 330-9484400 (Vikki Conrad) or www.conraddowdell.com.
THROUGH OCTOBER – Quilt Exhibit: “History in Pieces,” Bimeler Museum, Historic Zoar Village. Featuring fine quilts from the National Quilt Museum in Kentucky (including one from an Ohio quilter) and Zoar-made quilts from the 19th century. See website for museum schedule. 800-262-6195 or www. historiczoarvillage.com.
THROUGH OCT. 30 – Corn Maze, Beriswill Farms, 2200 Station Rd., Valley City, Tues.– Sun. 11 a.m.–6 p.m. $6–$8; free for seniors and ages 2 and under. 330-350-2486 or http://beriswillfarms.com.
OCT. 7–8, 14–15, 21–22 – Fall Foliage Tours, Lorain & West Virginia Railway, 46485 St. Rte. 18, Wellington, 1:30 p.m. Ride lasts about 1-1/2 hours. Tickets available at the station on days of operation. 440-647-6660 or www.lwvry.org.
OCT. 13–28 – Ghost Tours of Zoar, 198 Main St., Zoar, Fri./Sat. 6:30–8:45 p.m. $19. Costumed guides share haunted tales of Zoar on a walking tour of the village. Lantern light tours leave every 15 minutes from the Zoar Store. Reservations required. 800-262-6195 or www.historiczoarvillage.com.
OCT. 20 – Wine on Rails, Lorain & West Virginia Railway, 46485 St. Rte. 18, Wellington, 7 p.m. $38 50 ticket includes wine; $25 designated driver ticket. Must be 21 or older. Enjoy tasting a variety of wines as you travel leisurely through southern Lorain County. Ride lasts about 1-1/2 hours. For ticket information: 440-647-6660 or www.lwvry.org.
OCT. 21 – “Building a Model Railroad,” Public Library, Thompson (on Rt. 528, 5 miles south of I-90), 10 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. See model railroad displays of various sizes and watch demonstrations on scenery, electrical, kit- and scratchbuilding, DCC, and track and ballasting. www.mcr5.org.
OCT. 21 – Sweetest Day Train, Lorain & West Virginia Railway, 46485 St. Rte. 18, Wellington, 6 p.m. $38 50 ticket includes wine; $25 designated driver ticket. Must be 21 or older. Enjoy a variety of wines and receive a sampling of chocolates as you travel leisurely through southern Lorain County. Ride lasts about 1-1/2 hours. For ticket information: 440-647-6660 or www.lwvry.org.
OCT. 22 – Playhouse Square Bus Trip: The Wiz, departing from Buehler’s River Styx in Medina, 11:30 a.m., and returning at 5 p.m. $50–$130. See the groundbreaking twist on The Wizard of Oz that changed the face of Broadway — from its iconic score to its stirring tale of Dorothy’s journey to find her place in the contemporary world. On the bus, enjoy a catered box meal, beverages, homemade cookies, chocolates, a trivia quiz, and more! Seating is limited; book at www.ormaco.org or call 419-853-6016
OCT. 22 – Purses 4 Paws, American Legion Post #32, 11087 Middle Ave., Elyria, 1–5 p.m. $50; VIP tables available. Play bingo to win designer purses. Door prizes, cash bar, desserts, and other games available. Ticket sales end Oct. 6. Proceeds to benefit Partners With Paws of Lorain County, Inc., and Fido’s Companion Rescue. 440-897-8696 or lawilber@oberlin.net.
food trucks, mini golf, and more! www.homegrowngreat.com.
OCT. 20 – Bluegrass Night, Fibonacci Brewing Company, 1445 Compton Rd., Cincinnati, 7–9 p.m. Free. Enjoy lively bluegrass music by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, a wide variety of craft beers at the Beer Garden, and food truck eats. 513-832-1422 or http://fibbrew.com.
OCT. 28 – Messiah Holiday Bazaar, Messiah Lutheran Church, 1013 East Lawn Ave., Urbana, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Features juried arts and crafts, jewelry, wreaths, ceramics, woodworking, sculptures, and food. 937-631-3324.
NOV. 3–4 – Earlier Times Antiques and Folk Arts Show, Harvest Ridge, Holmes Co. Fgds., 8880 St. Rte. 39, Millersburg, Fri. 4–7 p.m., Sat. 10:30 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. The theme is “Remembering Christmas Past.” For more information, call Cheryl Williams at 614-989-5811
NOV. 3–4 – “Season’s Splendor” Arts and Crafts Show, Fisher Auditorium and Shisler Conference Ctr., Madison Ave., Wooster, Fri. 5–9 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Over 100 booths, handcrafted items only; no commercial vendors. Food available. 330-345-5962 or www.facebook.com/WCACG.
NOV. 4 – “Common Myths in American History,” Fort Laurens Theater, 11067 Fort Laurens Rd. NW, Bolivar, 11 a.m. Free. Presented by Dr. Jim Seelye from KSU. 330874-2059 or www.fortlaurensmuseum.org/events.html.
NOV. 12 – “Celtic Music: Love Songs, Lullabies, Laments, and Dances,” Wadsworth Public Library, 132 Broad St., Wadsworth, 2–3 p.m. Free, but reservations recommended. Norton-based flutist Dr. Janet Becker will present a program of Celtic music, performing on modern and traditional flutes. Register at www.ormaco.org or call 419-853-6016
NOV. 15 – ORMACO Annual Dinner, Williams on the Lake, 787 Lafayette Rd., Medina, 6 p.m. $ 50 Celebrate our 13 th anniversary by joining us for an evening of wine, sumptuous food, and music by Brazilian guitarist/vocalist Moises Borges. Seating is limited, so book early at www.ormaco.org or 419 - 853 - 6016
NOV. 9–11 – Industrial Strength Bluegrass Festival, Roberts Convention Centre, 123 Gano St., Wilmington. One of the Midwest’s premier bluegrass events. Headliners include Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder, Rhonda Vincent and the Rage, and many others. 937-372-5804 or www.somusicfest.com.
NOV. 10 – Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, Butler County Bluegrass Association, 5113 Huston Rd., Collinsville, 7–9 p.m. Free. Enjoy an evening of lively bluegrass music. Good, reasonably priced home-style food available on-site. 937-417-8488 or 513-410-3625,
THROUGH NOV. 29 – Bluegrass Wednesdays, Vinoklet Winery, 11069 Colerain Ave., Cincinnati, Wed. 6:30–8:30 p.m. Enjoy dinner, wine, and an evening of free entertainment by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Reservations recommended. 513-385-9309, vinokletwinery@fuse.net, or www.vinokletwines.com.
OCT. 14 – Harvest Days, downtown Piqua, 12 – 6 p.m. Free. Old-fashioned fall fun includes tractor show, kids’ corn pit, costumed pooch parade, pumpkin painting, craft vendors, live music,
NOV. 3–5 – Christkindlmarkt, Germania Park, 3529 West Kemper Rd., Cincinnati, Fri. 5–10 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.–10 p.m., Sun. 12–5 p.m. $5; 12 and under free; free for active or retired military with ID. The oldest and most authentic German Christmas market in the region. http://germaniasociety.com/christkindlmarkt.
NOV. 5 – The Butler Philharmonic Chorus: Open Door Pantry Concert, Hamilton Presbyterian Church, 23 S. Front St., Hamilton, 3 p.m. Free. Donations for the pantry appreciated. www. butlerphil.org or Facebook: @officialbutlerphil.
NOV. 11 – Holiday Affair, Tipp Center, 855 N. 3rd St., Tipp City, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. This arts and crafts show is a great opportunity to browse and buy quality, original handcrafted items, just in time for the holidays! www.homegrowngreat.com/event/aholiday-affair.
NOV. 11 – Holiday Horse Parade, downtown Piqua. Free. See horse-drawn carriages, hitches, and riders, all outfitted with holiday lights, making their way down Main Street. Christmas banners and decorated street trees will create an amazing backdrop for this dazzlingly fun family-friendly event. 937-773-9355 or www.mainstreetpiqua.com.
THROUGH OCT. 28 – Coshocton County Farmers Market, 22375 Co. Rd. 1A, Coshocton, Sat. 8:30 a.m.–noon. Local fresh produce, baked goods, and artisan crafts at our new location by the Walhonding River. market.manager@coshfarmmarket.org or www.facebook.com/coshoctonfarmersmarket.
THROUGH OCT. 28 – Spring Farmers Market, Adornetto’s, 2224 Maple Ave., Zanesville, Sat. 9 a.m.–noon. Locally grown produce, homemade food, locally raised/processed meat, farm eggs, Ohio cheese, and more. www.zanesvillefarmersmarket.org.
THROUGH OCT. 29 – Rock Mill Days, Stebelton Park at Rock Mill, 1429 Rockmill Place NW, Lancaster, Wed./Sat. 11 a.m.–2 p.m., Sun. 1–4 p.m. Free. Tour the restored 1824 gristmill, walk on the covered bridge, and enjoy the view of Hocking River Falls. 740-243-4436 or www.fairfieldcountyparks.org.
THROUGH OCT. 31 – Corn Maze and Pumpkin
Patch, McDonald’s Greenhouse and Corn Maze, 3220 Adamsville Rd., Zanesville. $9–$24; 2 and under free. 740-452-4858 or www.mcdonaldsgreenhouse.com.
THROUGH NOV. 4 – The Haunted Farm, 5450
Old Millersport Rd. NE, Pleasantville, Fri./Sat. 7:30 a.m.–11 p.m. Haunted barn maze, corn maze, bonfire, concessions, and entertainment on select nights.
Fright factor tailored to the group; can be family friendly. 614-230-9563 or www.haunted-farm.com.
OCT. 10, 24 – Farmers Market, Roseville Branch Library, 41 N. Main St., Roseville, 4 – 6 : 30 p.m. Sponsored by the Roseville Branch Library Friends Group. 740 - 697 - 0237 or juanita@ muskingumlibrary.org.
OCT. 12, NOV. 9 – Inventors Network Meeting, The Point at Otterbein University, 60 Collegeview Rd., Westerville, 43081, 7 p.m. Educational presentations and discussion about the invention process. Zoom meetings Oct. 19 and Nov. 16 at 7 p.m. 614-470-0144 or www.inventorscolumbus.com.
OCT. 18–21 – Circleville Pumpkin Show, downtown Circleville. Free. Ohio’s oldest and largest pumpkin celebration. Seven different parades. 740-474-7000 or www.pumpkinshow.com.
OCT. 20 – The Reagan Years: “80s Dance Party,” Woodward Opera House, 107 S. Main St., Mount Vernon, 8 p.m. $40. The band re-creates the sound of the 1980s with covers of all the mega-artists. Choose dance floor general admission with limited seating, or secure a seat in the balcony. www.mvac. org/reagan-years.
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. $5 advance, $8 at door, under 12 free. Fresh apple butter cooked over an open fire, live music, free crafts for kids, craft and food vendors, Spirit Tours, and much more. 740-622-7664 or www.roscoevillage.com.
OCT. 21–22 – Education of Yesterday Annual Farm Show, Old Captain Bryant’s Grist Mill, 3685 Cass Irish Ridge Rd., Dresden (intersections of St. Rtes. 16 and 60 ). Field demos, farm machinery, construction, trucks, train rides, food, music, and family fun for all ages. 740 - 754 - 6248 or www.facebook.com/EducationofYesterday.
OCT. 27 – Haunted Fest, Kemba Live, 405 Neil Ave., Columbus, doors open at 6 p.m. $54 99+. The highly anticipated Halloween-themed EDM festival will feature headliner deadmau5, Loud Luxury, Kaleena Zanders, and local artists from various genres. Embrace the festive spirit and dress in costume for this outdoor event! www.hauntedfest.com.
OCT. 28 – Apple Butter and Horseradish Day, Lawrence Orchards, 2634 Smeltzer Rd., Marion, 9 a.m.–6 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.
NOV. 3–4 – Heart of Ohio Quilters’ Guild Quilt Show, Bryn Du Mansion Field House, 537 Jones Rd., Granville, Fri. 10 a.m.–7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $6, Srs. $5, 12 and under free. The theme is “A Harvest of Quilts.” https://heartofohioquilters.com/events.
NOV. 4 – Annual Holiday Bazaar, The Anchor Church, 1365 Chamberlain St., Zanesville. Crafts, holiday and home décor, books, Color Street, Scentsy, gifts, soap, jewelry, quilts, and so much more! 740-586-4352 (Candace) or https://theanchor.churchcenter.com/ registrations/events/1861542.
NOV. 4 – Veterans Day Concert, Epiphany Lutheran Church, 268 Hill Rd. N., Pickerington, 4 p.m. Free. Patriotic concert honoring our veterans, presented by the Pickerington Community Chorus. Free-will offering will be taken. www.pickeringtoncommunitychorus.com.
NOV. 11 – Veterans March and Ceremony, Canal Winchester, 10 a.m. March begins at the Community Center, 22 S. Trine St., and ends at Stradley Place, 36 S. High St., for the ceremony. Free pancake breakfast for veterans and their families 8 : 30 – 10 a.m. at the Community Center. 614 - 834 - 9915 or www.canalwinchesterohio.gov.
OCT. 13–15 – Chillicothe Halloween Festival, Yoctangee Park, Enderlin Circle, Chillicothe, Fri./Sat. 10 a.m.–10 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. Food, vendors, live entertainment, contests, kids’ zone, haunted house, coffin races, ghost walk, and much more. www.chillicothehalloweenfestival.com.
OCT. 14 – “Noble County Pioneers and Early Settlers,” Ball-Caldwell House, 16 East St., Caldwell, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Event focuses on settlers of Noble County before 1851. Descendants and people interested in early Noble County history can explore their family genealogy, tour the founder’s home, and visit the Noble County museum. Alan Hall will speak at 1 p.m. For more information, call 740-732-5288
NOV. 1–JAN. 1 – Dickens Victorian Village, downtown Cambridge. Stroll the streets to view scenes depicting life in 1850s England, featuring life-sized, handmade mannequins wearing real vintage clothing. 800 - 933 - 5480 or www.dickensvictorianvillage.com.
NOV. 1–JAN. 1 – Guernsey County Courthouse Holiday Light Show, Cambridge, 5:30–9 p.m. nightly (Nov. 1–4, 6:30–10 p.m.). See the courthouse decked out with thousands of pulsating colorful lights synchronized to holiday music, three 20-foot Christmas trees, and 60 animated displays. 800-933-5480 or www.dickensvictorianvillage.com.
THROUGH OCT. 28 – The Frankenstein Experience at Haunted Mountain, Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheater, 5968 Marietta Rd., Chillicothe, Thur.–Sat. 5:30 p.m. $20–$50. The largest Halloween theater production in Ohio! Features a performance on the main stage, Dr. Frank’s haunted trail, a Mad Lab Escape Room, and more. www.hauntedmountain.org.
THROUGH DEC. 30 – Athens Art Market, Athens Community Center, 701 E. State St., Athens, Sat. 9 a.m.–noon. Members of Athens Art Guild offer handmade and juried arts including pottery, live edge furniture, fiber arts, paintings, glassware, jewelry, wood, and much more. For more information, email athensartguildevents@gmail.com.
THROUGH DEC. 30 – Athens Farmers Market, Athens Community Center, 701 E. State St., Athens, Sat. 9 a.m.–noon; through Nov. 23, Wed./Sat. 9 a.m.–noon.
Voted Ohio’s #1 favorite farmers market! 740-593-6763 or www.athensfarmersmarket.org.
OCT. 20–22 – Fall Festival of Leaves, downtown Bainbridge, Fri./Sat. 10 a.m.–10 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. Arts and crafts, entertainment, flea market, midways, parades, antique tractor show, log sawing contest, antique and classic car show, 5K run. Take the four self-guided Paint Valley Skyline Drive tours to see the fall foliage. www.fallfestivalofleaves.com.
OCT. 20–22 – Muskingum Valley Trade Days, 6602 St. Rte. 78, Reinersville. Large flea market. 740-624-7080 (Shirley) or find us on Facebook.
OCT. 22 – NMRA Buckeye Division Annual Train Show, Pritchard Laughlin Center, 7033 Glenn Hwy., Cambridge, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $5; 12 and under free. To reserve a table or for more information, call 740-607-3223, email trainshow@div6mcr-nmra.org, or visit https://div6-mcr-nmra.org/trainshow.html.
OCT. 28 – Rural Ohio Appalachia Revisited (ROAR) Day, Lake Hope State Park, McArthur, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. A celebration of Appalachian culture through food, crafts, music, and traditional skills. 740-596-4938 or https://vintoncountytravel.com/roar-day.
NOV. 3–4 – Sherlock Holmes Murder Mystery Weekend, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Center, 7033 Glenn Hwy., Cambridge. 740-432-2022 or www.visitguernseycounty.com.
NOV. 3–DEC. 16 – Cambridge Glass Museum Holiday Hours, 136 S. 9th St., Cambridge, Fri./Sat. 12–4 p.m. $6, Srs. $5, under 12 free. 740-432-4245, www.cambridgeglass.org, or www.visitguernseycounty.com.
NOV. 3–DEC. 17 – Belmont County Victorian Mansion Museum Christmas Tours, 532 N. Chestnut St., Barnesville, Fri. 5–8 p.m., Sat./Sun. 1–4 p.m. (closed Nov. 24). Join us for some Christmas cheer and see our museum decorated for the season. This year’s theme is “The 12 Days of Christmas.” www.belmontcountymuseum.com.
NOV. 4 – Miller’s Swap Meet and Car Show, Ross Co. Fgds., 344 Fairgrounds Rd., Chillicothe, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. $9; under 14 free. Cars, trucks, tools, parts, signs, race parts, rat rod, and more. 740-701-3447 (Nate), 740-701-2511 (Brian), or www.millersswapmeet.com.
Hocking County. Jacklyn Rose, South Central Power Company member
Erica Weaver, North Central Electric Cooperative member
Candace Castle, Guernsey-Muskingum Electric Cooperative member
Steven Herron, South Central Power Company member
Rochelle Clouse, Mid-Ohio Energy member
Send
us
Charis,
For January, send “Snow days” by Oct. 15. For February, send “Romantic dinner” by Nov. 15.
Some lines deliver electricity. Others deliver information. Your locally owned and operated electric cooperative uses all of its lines to deliver on a higher mission: to provide you with the dependable service you rely on every day.
Reliable. Environmentally Responsible. Affordable. Local. R.E.A.L. Value