The Coshocton County Beacon February 26, 2020 | Page 13
February 26, 2020
The Beacon • 13
Coshocton City income
tax returns due April 15
Coshocton City income r e t u r n p r e p a r a t i o n i s through Thursday.
tax returns are due April 15. offered in the office from
Preprepared returns can
C o s h o c t o n C i t y t a x 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday be dropped off during nor-
mal office hours from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Monday through
Thursday and from 8 a.m. to
noon on Friday.
Fo r m s a r e o n l i n e a t
www.cityofcoshocton.com/
incometax or can be picked
up at the Coshocton Public
Library or the Coshocton
Post Office.
For questions call 740-
622-9515 or email jackie.
File cushman@cityofcoshocton.
Coshocton City income tax returns are due April 15.
com.
Tickets available for
NWTF banquet in March
7 at Coshocton Lake Park Scheetz at 740-622-9063.
The 2019 banquet was
Pavilion. Doors will open at
4:30 p.m. For tickets or more another success with an
information, call Dwaine attendance of 300. Because
of the support, the chapter
was able to award a Jakes
Scholarship to Caleb Mad-
dox. It suppor ted youth
exhibiting and selling tur-
keys at the Coshocton Coun-
ty Fair through the Junior
Fair Auction and continued
with Jakes Day programs.
Monetary donations were
made to The New Life Min-
istry and Hunters Feeding the
Hungry to help provide for
those in the area who are less
fortunate. The chapter also
File assisted in obtaining NWTF
Bob Buxton, right, Jakes scholarship committee chair, is pictured SuperFund money for the
with Caleb Maddox, who graduated from the Coshocton County River View FFA trap team,
Career Center in 2019, and Tim Kilpatrick, natural resources teacher
at the career center. Maddox was presented with a $250 scholarship River View archery team and
River View sixth-grade camp.
at the 2019 NWTF Hunting Heritage Banquet.
The 31st annual banquet
for the Muskingum Val-
ley Chapter N WTF will
be held Saturday, March
Submitted
Mackenzie Watts made this piece of art for the “A Playground of Color” exhibit at the Johnson-
Humrickhouse Museum.
‘A Playground of Color’ set
for Johnson-Humrickhouse
The Johnson-Humrick-
house Museum will have
its annual “A Playground
of Color” exhibition March
1-29. It also will be dis-
played concurrently at the
Coshocton and West Lafay-
ette libraries.
This favorite commu-
nity exhibition will fea-
ture more than 200 works
from elementar y school
students from Coshocton
County.
Ar twork for “A Play-
ground of Color” is pro-
d u c e d by s t u d e nt s k- 6
who attend elementary in
Coshocton’s city and coun-
ty schools, as well as from
Sacred Hear t and home
school. Works are chosen
by the students’ art teach-
ers for creativity and excel-
lence in mediums such as
acrylic, collage, yarn work,
watercolor, mosaic, mixed
media, pastels, crayons and
sculpture.
From all kinds of ani-
mals to fantasy creatures,
self-por t raits and land-
scapes, the viewer will
enjoy how children inter-
pret t he world t h roug h
the eyes of innocence and
whimsy.
The public is invited to
the artists’ reception on
Sunday, March 1 from 1-3
p.m. Admission is f ree.
Enjoy t he a r t work a nd
ref resh ment s a nd meet
some budding artists. Dur-
ing the opening reception
students and visitors also
may explore the permanent
exhibit galleries.
“A Playground of Color”
is sponsored by Dixie and
Wilson Graham. The Ohio
Arts Council also helped
fund this event with state
tax dollars to encourage
economic growth, educa-
tional excellence and cul-
tural enrichment for all
Ohioans.
T he museu m is open
Tuesday through Sunday
from noon to 4 p.m. and
located at 300 N. White-
woman St.