Get ready for some mischief! The Guernsey Elf is baaaaaaack! Ten businesses will each have the Elf in
their shop for three days, beginning November 12, and running through December 15. The Elf hides in the craziest places! Shoppers can hunt for him and when they find him, enter to win $100 in Chamber Bucks! And Chamber Bucks may be redeemed at over 50 stores in our community! We’ll advertise in the paper and on social media so people know the stores where that Elf is hiding during the holiday shopping season. People can enter to win at all ten stores! We’ll draw from the entries on December 17th and announce the winner of $100 in Chamber Bucks.
SIDLO AWARDIn December of each year the Chamber of Commerce presents the
Sidlo Award to a deserving person in our community. John Sidlo was the chamber president in 1940 and realized great success growing the chamber organization following the great depression. The Sidlo award honors his excellence for Vision, Leadership, and Legacy.
The Chamber is currently accepting nominations for the Sidlo Award. A candidate for consideration should have a proven history and record over an extended period of time of Vision, Leadership, and Legacy as defined:
VISION – Act or power of anticipating that which will or may come to be for the betterment of the community.
LEADERSHIP – Act of effectively leading or directing a group of people toward common goals.
LEGACY – Gift of anything handed down from the past to benefit the community.
In 2017 we honored Jeff East for his Vision, Leadership, and Legacy when we celebrated the holidays at Century National Bank. This year we will honor the 2018 Sidlo recipient at the December 18 Business After Hours at Carol Goff & Associates Real Estate in downtown Cambridge.
The deadline for submitting nominations for the Sidlo award is November 23. The nomination form is on the Chamber’s website – cambridgeohiochamber.com
Jo Sexton President & CEO
Jessica NicholsonOffice Manager & Event Coordinator
Carol HillMembership and Finance Coordinator
Stephanie LosegoLeadership Guernsey Administrator
Marianna WilliamsonSpecial Projects
Lynn Boylan An Enchanted Garden Florist
Anthony Adornetto Zane State College
Deb BrownCedar Ridge Behavioral Health Solutions
Matt Dolan Peoples Bank
Dennis Doutt The Community Bank
Chris Gibson-Turner Century 21 – Gibson-Turner & Assoc.
Aimee JohnsonBattery Depot
Kelly Leslie Rea & Associates
Joel Losego AVC Communications
Mandy McGlumphy SE Ohio Counseling Center
Jeremy Morrow Century National Bank
Jan RamerThe WIlds
Eric Schlosser, 2018 Board Chair Downtown Arena, Central Station Steak & Ale, Home Town Health & Fitness
Andy WarholaAttorney
Melissa Wilson Guernsey County Children’s Services
Norm Blanchard Community Improvement Corp.Stephanie Laube United Way of Guernsey & Noble Co.Debbie Robinson Cambridge/Guernsey Co. VCBMary Beth Sills Cambridge Main Street
IN THIS ISSUE:Election ........................................2Business After Hours ....................3Leadership Guernsey ....................4BREW Awards ..............................5Dwiggans & Holiday Coupon .......6Safety Council ..............................7
CHAMBER STAFF
EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS
2018 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2018
607 Wheeling Ave. Cambridge740.439.6688
“Creating opportunities for business success, and enhancing a vibrant community.”
GRAND RE-OPENINGS / RIBBON CUTTINGS!
Join us on November 8 from 4 - 6 pm at Cambridge Care and Rehab to celebrate the addition of their new dementia and alzheimer units.
Cardinal Place has remodeled and invites chamber members to attend their unveiling on November 13 at 6pm.
– 2– www.cambridgeohiochamber.com • 740.439.6688
Welcome New Members in October 2018
ELECTION RESULTSCongratulations to the following people who were
recently selected to be board members for the next three year term beginning January, 2019:
Anthony Adornetto – Zane State College
Allison Boylan – An Enchanted Garden Florist and Gift Shoppe
Steven Brooks – SEORMC
Shawn Buchtel – AMG Vanadium
Eric Schlosser – Downtown Arena, Central Station Steak & Ale, and Home Town Health & Fitness
Chris Gibson-Turner – Century 21 Gibson-Turner & Associates
Jared Sheppard – Muskingum Valley Health Center
Joel Losego is the incoming chairman
CHAMBER OFFICE HOLIDAY SCHEDULEThe Chamber office
will be closed for Veterans Day, November 12.
We will be closed Friday, November 22 for the Thanksgiving holiday.
In observance of the Christmas holiday, the chamber office will be closed from noon December 24, 2018 through January 1, 2019.
740.439.4437
Cardinal Place
Don’t forget to set your clocks back one hour - November 4
First United Methodist Church
OOPS – Bear’s Den missed winning the $200 Pot O Gold at the
September Business After Hours and Mark Shambaugh missed winning the second chance drawing for half the pot. The Cambridge Band missed winning the Pot O Gold at the October Business After Hours and Kaufmann Realty missed winning the second chance drawing for half the pot! You can’t win if you don’t attend!
www.cambridgeohiochamber.com • 740.439.6688 – 3–
BUSINESS AFTER HOURS2018 Business After Hours are from 5:00 - 6:30 on these dates:
November 20 ......Speedy PrintDecember 18 ......Carol Goff in Downtown Cambridge...........................(Sidlo Award)
Call to reserve a month for 2019 Business After HoursJanuary ...............Full Metal Jacket Indoor RangeFebruary .............AltercareMarch .................Fairfield InnApril ...................OpenMay ...................OpenJune ....................Bainbridge FirmJuly .....................Performing Arts CenterAugust ................OpenSeptember ..........OpenOctober ..............OpenNovember ...........OpenDecember ...........Open
RECENT BUSINESS AFTER HOURS
Zane State College is celebrating their 50th year in 2018. They hosted a huge Business After Hours in September with tours of the campus, delicious food and great door prizes! Thank you, Zane State College!
Congratulations Snazzy Award Winners for making improvements to your facilities!
Perry & Associates brought the spooky season into their theme at the October Business After Hours! What a perfect evening of treats and networking!
Top Ten Reasons to Shop Local10. Local stores are more likely to carry locally produced
foods which supports local agriculture.9. Local business owners contribute to more local fundraising
and 501(c)3’s.8. Local businesses provide a majority of jobs.7. Local businesses support other local businesses.6. The business community becomes reflective of this
community’s unique culture.
5. Competition and diversity result in fair prices and more choices.
4. The sales taxes I pay support this community and county: fixing my roads, maintaining my recreational facilities, . . .
3. Shopping local reduces my carbon footprint.2. Local business owners invest in the community and have
a vested interest in the future of this community.1. My hometown is more important than a cheap pair
of underwear!
– 4– www.cambridgeohiochamber.com • 740.439.6688
The public is invited to attend an evening with Bruce Kennett, author of W.A. Dwiggins – A Life In Design. The Chamber is sponsoring an illustrated talk by biographer Bruce Kennett about Cambridge’s own W.A. Dwiggins. This is a return visit from Mr. Kennett whose first presentation in Cambridge was in June, 2011. The November 5th presentation is at 6:00 pm at Theo’s (upstairs) and is free and open to the public. Meet the author, enjoy some pie and coffee, and sit back to enjoy the Dwiggins presentation beginning at 7:00. “William Addison Dwiggins (1880-1956) was America’s Master Graphic Designer, Artist, and Wit. He spent his childhood years in Cambridge, married here, and later became one of the Twentieth Century’s greatest designers of books and printing types. Although he is best-known as a designer of books and typefaces, Dwiggins was a man of many talents – he was an innovative illustrator; a talented calligrapher; an insightful writer on graphic design and advertising; a humorist, essayist and playwright; a marionette-maker, theatrical set designer and costume designer still known in the world of puppetry; and an expert kite-maker. He applied his unique blend of curiosity, humor and graphic skills to clients as wide-ranging as General Motors, LIFE Magazine, Alfred A. Knopf, the Linotype Co., and the U.S. Postal Service.”
Bruce Kennett, a New England book designer and photographer, has completed an illustrated biography of Dwiggins after over ten years of research. He’s coming to Cambridge and would like to give the citizens of Cambridge and surrounding towns a generous taste of this inspiring man’s life and work. Mr. Kennett has lectured widely on printing and design since the 1980s, for institutions such as Bookbuilders of Boston, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, and The Society of Typographic Arts. He currently teaches book design at Maine Media Workshops; his previous teaching positions include the Art Institute of Boston, The Center for Creative Imaging, Northeastern University, Rochester Institute of Technology, and then University of Maine.
The Wit and Wisdom of W. A. Dwiggins
Upstairs at Theo’sMonday, November 5
Theo’s Restaurant, 632 Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge6:00 p.m.— Meet the author, with dessert and coffee 7:00 p.m. — Presentation, book signing
SponSored by the Cambridge area Chamber of CommerCe
Cambridge’s own William Addison Dwiggins (1880–1956) designed books and typefaces, was an accomplished calligrapher and illustrator, built furniture and kites, and remains famous in the puppet world for his marionettes, set designs, and plays. On top of all this, Dwiggins used humor and satire to advocate for change, or simply to have fun. Bruce Kennett’s comprehensive illustrated biography
of the artist was published this spring and sent to buyers in 43 countries around the world; now Bruce returns to Theo’s to give us a generous sampling of Dwiggins’s whimsy and sharp wit.
The Wit and Wisdom of W. A. Dwiggins
Upstairs at Theo’sMonday, November 5
Theo’s Restaurant, 632 Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge6:00 p.m.— Meet the author, with dessert and coffee 7:00 p.m. — Presentation, book signing
SponSored by the Cambridge area Chamber of CommerCe
Cambridge’s own William Addison Dwiggins (1880–1956) designed books and typefaces, was an accomplished calligrapher and illustrator, built furniture and kites, and remains famous in the puppet world for his marionettes, set designs, and plays. On top of all this, Dwiggins used humor and satire to advocate for change, or simply to have fun. Bruce Kennett’s comprehensive illustrated biography
of the artist was published this spring and sent to buyers in 43 countries around the world; now Bruce returns to Theo’s to give us a generous sampling of Dwiggins’s whimsy and sharp wit.
The Wit and Wisdom of W. A. Dwiggins
Upstairs at Theo’sMonday, November 5
Theo’s Restaurant, 632 Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge6:00 p.m.— Meet the author, with dessert and coffee 7:00 p.m. — Presentation, book signing
SponSored by the Cambridge area Chamber of CommerCe
Cambridge’s own William Addison Dwiggins (1880–1956) designed books and typefaces, was an accomplished calligrapher and illustrator, built furniture and kites, and remains famous in the puppet world for his marionettes, set designs, and plays. On top of all this, Dwiggins used humor and satire to advocate for change, or simply to have fun. Bruce Kennett’s comprehensive illustrated biography
of the artist was published this spring and sent to buyers in 43 countries around the world; now Bruce returns to Theo’s to give us a generous sampling of Dwiggins’s whimsy and sharp wit.
www.cambridgeohiochamber.com • 740.439.6688 –5–
The 2nd annual Witches Brew drew a crowd of over 100 to Theo’s for a wicked good celebration.
Kelly Lynch, Ashley Karlen and Colleen Heacock were honored with BREW Awards – Boldly Recognizing Exceptional Women
Exceptional Guernsey County women, Kelly Lynch, Ashley Karlen, Colleen Heacock
– 6– www.cambridgeohiochamber.com • 740.439.6688
CAMBRIDGE AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ANNUAL DINNER –
Return To The WildFEBRUARY 21, 2019 • 5:30
PRITCHARD LAUGHLIN CIVIC CENTER
We will welcome the Columbus Zoo back for their third visit. Also, a cocktail hour with special entertainment is scheduled! Watch for invitations going out in January!
2019 Chamber Member Coupon
• Email Blast• Newsletter Insert
This coupon is good for $25 savings on one of the following Chamber Programs:
Member must be in good standing. Coupon may not be used towards membership dues.Other restrictions may apply. Expires December 31, 2019
• Newsletter advertising (6 issues - yearly contract)• Booth rental at the March 2019 Home Garden & Business Expo
Please accept this coupon – to be used in 2019 – our gift for you to show our appreciation for your Chamber support!
www.bricker.com
MARIETTA | BARNESVILLE
740.885.4422
Sue A. Roudebush Workers’ compensation attorney defending employers throughout the state of Ohio
2019 HOME, GARDEN, AND BUSINESS EXPOMARCH 8, 9, 10
PRITCHARD LAUGHLIN CIVIC CENTERContracts will be sent by email by early December
and are now available on the chamber’s website – cambridgeohiochamber.com
“Being in control of your life and having realistic expectations about your day-to-day challenges are the keys to stress management, which is perhaps the most important ingredient to living a happy, healthy and rewarding life.” Marilu Henner
www.cambridgeohiochamber.com • 740.439.6688 –7–
GUERNSEY-NOBLE SAFETY COUNCIL
BWC Premium Savings 2–4%
*Company rep attend 10 meetings
*CEO Attend 1 meeting
*Report Safety Results in January and July
Programs YOU can use !!
*monthly programs / speakers on relevant
topics
*Roundtables share ideas with others
*Up-to-date info / reminders from BWC
*Save by learning how to prevent costly injuries
TO JOIN:Call the Chamber to enroll: 740-439-6688
You do NOT need to be a member just to attend our monthly
programs and activities.
Bring your safety team members
to the meetings!!
EVEN THOUGH COLD MONTHS ARE AHEAD, FIRE SAFETY IS STILL RELEVANT
One of the most common types of emergency is a fire. Preparing for this emergency requires hours of planning and training. Obviously, the most important thing during this situation is to get everyone out of the building in a safe manner, to do so steps need taken.
BRAINSTORMINGMeet with as many employees and departments as possible. Different
people will have differing experiences and perspectives on how the safest way to handle the situation.
PLANNINGThis is where you put down on paper what you intend to do in the event
of a fire. Things like emergency contacts, how the employees are to be notified, meeting point and attendance taking should be addressed.
EXECUTIONDrills should be performed on a regular basis. These drills should be
as realistic as possible without causing extra panic. There are differing opinions as to whether employees should be warned ahead of time but both have their place. Consider having somebody block a high traffic exit so employees are forced to try other paths, as an exit could be inaccessible due to the fire. These drills need to be documented and timed. Another test would be for one employee to be “left behind” and see how long it would take the attendance taker to distinguish somebody is missing.
BRAINSTORMINGOnce again, we want to meet in groups and discuss what worked
and what did not. Tap into the knowledge your employees have. Ask questions like “Was everyone able to hear the alarm easily?” or “Did anyone experience any obstacles in their paths out of the building?”. These are good questions and will help you get to a place where you are comfortable in your Emergency Evacuation Plan.
As you noticed the process started and ended with Brainstorming. This evacuation plan like others are a living document. It should always be under constant scrutiny and changed upon for changes of environment, employees with new responsibilities, and to refresh new faces. Fire Safety needs to be the first discussion an employer has with a new hire. Emergencies do not present themselves in advance and it is just as likely to happen on an employee’s first day as it is any other.
Safety Council meetings are held in the Paul R. Brown Epic Center of Zane State on Brick Church Road. They begin at 8am and end at 9am. Coffee, water, donuts and other snacks are provided.
UPCOMING MEETINGS November 14th – DOT Safety on the RoadwaysDecember 12th – We end our year with a fun game relating back to the
things we have learned in the past year. A hot breakfast will be provided.
633 Upland Road, Cambridge, OH 43725(740) 432-7802 www.coltaylorinnbb.com
The Colonel Taylor InnBED AND BREAKFAST
607 Wheeling Ave.Cambridge, OH 43725
Address Service Requested
PRSRT STDU.S. POSTAGE
PAIDCAMBRIDGE OHPERMIT NO. 65
PROMO APPAREL
LOGO
1224 Southgate PkwyCambridge
740.435.0200 • allegraseo.com
LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED SINCE 1991235 Dewey Ave. • Cambridge740-432-2088 • 800-296-1741
Zanesville • Cambridge
Welcome to America’s Diner!
“We Print Anything Your Name Goes On!”
Cambridge • (740) 439-1111 New Concord • (740) 826-7557
Zanesville • (740) 454-6777 S.Zanesville • (740)454-6778Coshocton • (740) 622-7653
Newark • (740) 366-2121St. Clairsville • (740) 695-5559
Hebron • (740) 527-2710 Marietta • (740) 373-3020 Caldwell • (740) 305-5294
New Lexington • (740) 342-5511
Proud to be a Positive Part of the Community
1341 Clark St. Cambridge, OH 43725 740.439.8000 seormc.org
facebook.com/seormc
Andrew J. WarholaLawyer
110 N. 7th St. • Cambridge
740.439.7711www.warholalaw.com Creating Partnerships for l i fe
www.qualitycarepartners.com
740-439-2186 740-453-6015
Brent A. Markley941 Steubenville Ave.
(740) 435-4847
Guernsey Elf
Hiding in Stores
Nov. 12 - Dec. 15