Search Results for "Corn"
News Results 906 of 1000 pages
See you at the fairs with the language of friends
Most of my friends and coworkers clearly understand that I possess more of a creative mind than an intellectual one. I function on energy and ideas. Some of you may be shaking your heads in agreement, as you have witnessed me trying to decipher technology and something mechanical. However, these lack luster moments do not
Spring turkey season will happen… no matter what
Sitting here with another deep freeze kind of day tapping on a frosted window, it’s hard to picture that in one month Ohio’s spring wild turkey season will open. But the calendar doesn’t lie and April 22 will happen, ready or not. Emerging trees and grass. Spring turkey hunting coincides with the emerging season, a
Repair or replace? Soybean board examines options for aging U.S. locks and dams
ST. LOUIS — The U.S. shipping industry received a reminder of how much a lock closure can cost when Lock 27 on the Mississippi River closed for five days this fall due to emergency repairs. Costly The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers estimates that an unscheduled closure at this lock can cost up to $2.8
Wanderings of eagles online, thanks to GPS transmitters
FRANKFORT, Ky. — Researchers and wildlife enthusiasts can now go online to track the movements of two bald eagles hatched in Kentucky earlier this year. Last May, biologists fitted a male and a female eagle with satellite transmitters while both birds were still in their nests at Ballard Wildlife Management Area. We wanted to find
Lee E. Fetters
Lee E. Fetters, 84, a lifetime resident of New Lyme, Ohio, died Sept. 28, 2010, at Jefferson Healthcare Center. He was born Jan. 24, 1926, in New Lyme, a son of the late Wilma M. (Bebout) and Roy A. Fetters. Mr. Fetters served in the U.S. Army during World War II in the Philippines and
Reader sees glimpses of Lincoln in Obama
Editor: On Jan. 20, Inauguration Day will go down as a milestone in history. We will put into office our 44th President, Barack Obama, as our first elected African-American in the 2008 electoral landslide. Can you imagine the elation Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King would have expressed had they been here to witness this
Stamp honors Ohio writer, Chesnutt
CLEVELAND — Charles Waddell Chesnutt will be immortalized on a stamp in the popular Black Heritage commemorative stamp series issued by the U.S. Postal Service. He is considered the first black writer to receive major acclaim. He made an important breakthrough when his short story, The Goophered Grapevine, appeared in the August 1887, issue of
Read it Again: Week of Feb. 20, 2003
Each week Farm and Dairy takes a look at what was making news in years gone by.
Boshblobberbosh’ Words from Westerville
Farm and Family Living columnist Laurie Marlatt Steeb writes of an author’s visit to Columbiana.
Construction company buys all grand champs at Coshocton Co. Fair auction
Nicole Hosfelt’s 112-pound grand champion market wether goat was sold for a winning bid of $1,000.






