For the second consecutive year, Dayton has received a perfect score on the Municipal Equality Index of policies and practices supporting equality on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.
Community
Luminaries of Dayton: John Glossinger and the “Oh Henry!” candy bar

Born at Xenia in 1868, John Glossinger at the age of 19 left for the big city in search of success. With just a $1 in his pocket he set off for Cincinnati. He later found himself in New York City and became a $5-a-week office boy. That opened the door to the sales field on which his heart was set. He was successful with the Waterbury Watch Co. and helped develop the Bulova timepiece business, brought the “Oh Henry!” candy bar to national notice and headed a smoking-pipe company.
He put an ad in the paper that an energetic young man was seeking employment as a salesman and he secured a position with a pipe tobacco company. His first assignment was in Boston, then later Philadelphia. After seven years, he was assigned to the Chicago office which included St. Louis in the territory.
He became so successful that the American Tobacco Company offered him a job which he accepted and in just a few years, he became president of the firm. Unfortunately the company split and he found himself without a job after 24 years in the tobacco business.
He accepted the position of sales manager for a Philadelphia chocolate and cocoa manufacturing business. Things were fine for a while, but though he was earning bonuses and good commissions, the company refused to pay him the money he earned, and so he went off to seek another position.
This time, he was in contact with the Williamson Candy Company of Chicago. He found that the company was making a candy bar, something that had not been done before. Hershey was in existence, but their products were not called candy bars. John thought that this new product called “Oh Henry!” had possibilities, but it had only been marketed locally. He wanted to make it into a nationally known product.
He decided to try to sell the bar first in Cleveland, and so hired boys to post cardboard signs wherever they could. The signs were small, a red card with white lettering reading “Oh Henry.”

He was holding the signs which the boys were tacking up when a car was standing at the curb. He slipped the card on the radiator and it fit. He put one on the next car and the next. A man driving a truck called out “Say, mister, come and put one on me, too,” which he did. Then the driver said “Give me one for my buddy.”
Soon he realized that tacking up the signs took too much time so they began to put the signs on the front of automobiles. What great advertising. All over town, cars had “Oh Henry!” showing on their radiators, and curiosity began to take over. People saw the signs, but had no idea what it meant.
The sales force was instructed to say they did not know about “Oh Henry!.” Soon they ran out of signs and so paid a local printer to publish 2,000 more cards by the next day. Soon Cleveland had thousands of red signs reading “Oh Henry”. Hundreds of people were asking what this meant.
John sent the salesmen out to get orders from the local merchants. The salesmen would carry the box of “Oh Henry” bars into the store, open the box, take out a bar and slice it so that anyone nearby could taste it. “This is a fine piece of dollar candy for a dime” was the slogan, since each bar sold for 10 cents.
The salesmen were instructed to tell the merchant that only that one box could be sold at that time, but more could be ordered.
In John’s own words “Well, Cleveland went over with a bang. We had a car-load of Oh Henry! on the railroad track worth $8,000 and before we were through, we didn’t have a bar left.”
Soon, other candy bars including Babe Ruth appeared, which sold for five cents. When John suggested lowering the price of Oh Henry to five cents, the company refused, and John quit.
At 65 he retired for a year but boredom and a reputation he had acquired for rehabilitating shaky enterprises brought him quickly back to business. As president of a surgical instrument manufacturing business he became known for inspirational messages addressed to associates. These found wider audience when compiled in a book and he wrote until he was well in his 90s.
This is one of his writings: “Let fear not weaken you, you have strength to meet any crisis that comes to you. You are equipped to meet any emergency. Have faith in yourself.”
“Colonel” Glossinger, as he was known to them, had many friends in high places, including governmental, military and show business celebrities.
Ever ready with aid for others, he once said, “When you love people, you have to help people.”
John Glossinger was born August 10, 1868 in Xenia and died July 23, 1968 in Dayton at the age of 99. He is located in Section 101 Lot 3742.
And what about that “Oh Henry!” candy bar…
“Oh Henry!” is a chocolate bar containing peanuts, caramel, and fudge coated in chocolate. It was first introduced in 1920, by the Williamson Candy Company of Chicago, Illinois. According to legend, “Oh Henry!” was originally named

after a boy who frequented the Williamson Company, flirting with the girls who made the candy. The name is also said to be a homage to American writer, O. Henry. However, there is no definitive explanation as to the exact origin of the name.
Another theory is that the candy bar was invented by a man named Tom Henry of Arkansas City, Kansas. Tom Henry ran a candy company called the Peerless Candy Factory, and in 1919 he started making the Tom Henry candy bar. He sold the candy bar to Williamson Candy Company in 1920 where they later changed the name to “Oh Henry!”.
Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum is located at 118 Woodland Avenue off of Brown Street near the UD Campus. The Woodland Office is open Monday through Friday 8 am to 5 pm and Saturday 8 am to 12 pm. The Cemetery and Arboretum are open daily from 8 am to 6 pm. The Mausoleum is open daily from 9 am to 5 pm. Fore more information call 937-228-3221 or visit the Woodland website.
More Space For Your Space
Downtown Space
There was a time when everyone wanted to leave the city center and head to the ‘burbs.
And now…we are seeing the opposite.
If you’re familiar with the downtown area, you already know that there is an abundance of new residential options. The streets are alive with the buzz of new downtown dwellers, and on most Saturdays, you’re guaranteed to see a moving truck or two. 
While the new developers have done a fantastic job of building with the closet space we have all grown accustomed to, sometimes you really want to downsize – but maybe not ditch EVERYthing.
But what about all this extra “stuff”?
Thus begins the hunt for a storage unit. Sounds the opposite of sexy and cool, doesn’t it? The literal opposite.
This new need has been seen and a solution now exists! Urban Indoor Storage has recently opened at the edge of Tech Town at 804 E. Monument Ave.
With units ranging from a 5X5 closet space (perfect for those seasonal items) to large 10X17 (yep, you can fit a small house worth of stuff in there) it’s likely there is a good spot for you to store your extra stuff. 
The owners of The 804 are proud to offer this new amenity to the downtown and surrounding communities. Urban Indoor Storage is a local, veteran owned business offering Veteran and Military discounts.
Anchored in the strength of a concrete warehouse in Tech Town, Urban Indoor Storage is creating storage solutions for those moving into downtown. Whether business or personal, we provide that extra space you need for the things you don’t need every day. Less clutter, more growth.
You can find out more by calling 937.999.1319, going to urbanindoorstorage.com, and finding them on Facebook here.

The 804 building last winter before the renovations.
Oct 16 Mystery Monday

Helping Adolescents Achieve Long-term Objectives (HAALO) is an arts program created through a partnership with the Montgomery County Juvenile Court Program. Under the leadership of Judge Nick Kuntz and Judge Anthony Capizzi, the HAALO Program in partnership with K12/TEJAS Gallery exposes Court-involved youth to different mediums of art while also teaching them life skills that will assist them in being successful members of our community.
Arts exposure can be an integral asset building tool for our young people; from critical thinking, problem solving, and communication skills to creativity, motivation, and patience, the therapeutic process of the HAALO Program has endless benefits for the young people involved. The youth artists work with a local artist and Court staff Brittini Long and Shirley Tucker, to plan and execute these amazing murals. The art that these young people produce is displayed on vacant buildings throughout the City of Dayton.
Murals have shown to be an effective way to combat blight and vandalism, as well as encourage neighbors to take responsibility for their community. It encourages at-risk teens to participate in the creation of artwork and to have a sense of pride in the rejuvenation their artwork brings to the urban landscape around them. Their murals can be found in numerous sites throughout the city. Our picture from last week was done by K12’s HAALO program.
A lot of you incorrectly guessed this was by the 2nd Street Market but about a dozen of you knew exactly where it was at 3rd and Findlay Streets. We randomly drew from the correct answers and Hannah Flemming of Dayton will be enjoying free Rapid Fired Pizza!
So here’s this weeks mystery location:
If you know the location of this photo, please do NOT comment with the answer, but instead enter it here: http://goo.gl/forms/dyU55fzc48.

We’ll let you know next Monday if you got it right! Good Luck!
A Tuskegee Airman Lands in Dayton
Anyone who has made it to the age of 92 would have a planeload of stories to share about a life filled with adventures, but Lt. Colonel Harold Brown is no ordinary nonagenarian. An accomplished educator, air pilot and one of the few remaining members of the famed Tuskegee Airmen. Lt Colonel Harold H. Brown has written a book chronicling this extraordinary life titled, “KEEP YOUR AIRSPEED UP: The Story of a Tuskegee Airman.”
Completing his flight training and graduating from the Tuskegee Institute at the age of 19 in 1944 receiving his wings and commission as a 2nd Lieutenant. Afterwards travelling overseas to join the 332nd Fighter Group, better known as the Tuskegee Airmen, stationed in Italy. After concluding a 23-year stint in the U.S. Air Force in 1965, Lt. Colonel Brown went on to serve as instructor and chairman of the electronics department for Columbus Area Technician School Now known as Columbus State Community College. Following his retirement 20 years later, Mr. Brown went on to found Brown & Associates, an educational consulting firm that he ran for 26 years until he retired at the age of 88.
At 92, Mr. Brown certainly shows no signs of slowing down, keeping active by traveling and making speeches to audiences of all ages; taking the time to share his wit and wisdom on overcoming adversity to succeed in a segregated America. As a Tuskegee Airman and American Patriot Lt. Colonel Harold Brown is a living role model and mentor for all Americans. The Lt. Colonel will be on campus at Sinclair Community College on October 25th to recount tales of death defying heroics in service of his country and his experiences as a lifelong educator. Find a way to clear your calendar and attend this once in a lifetime opportunity to be in the presence of a living legend.
Lt. Colonel Harold Brown
“KEEP YOUR AIRSPEED UP: The Story of a Tuskegee Airman.”
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
From 1:00pm to 3:00pm
At Sinclair Community College Building 12 in room 12-116 (Charity Early Room)
The event is free and open to the public
This special event is co-sponsored by Career Communities and the Diversity Office.
For additional information, contact [email protected], 937-512-4749.
Volunteer for National Day of Service with MetroParks
One day can make a difference!
“We appreciate the support and help we receive from the community, which allows Five Rivers MetroParks to more effectively protect our region’s natural heritage,” said Yvonne Dunphe, volunteer coordinator for Five Rivers MetroParks. “Participating in Make a Difference Day is a great way for everyone to help preserve our environment while experiencing the outdoors and connecting with nature.”
Five Rivers MetroParks will participate in this year’s national Make a Difference Day from 9 am to noon on Saturday, Oct. 28.
Register online by Tuesday, Oct. 24.

Community members of all ages will work at various sites throughout the Dayton area, including:
- Seed planting at Cox Arboretum MetroPark
- Maintenance, pruning and planting at Hills & Dales MetroPark
- Prepping for the upcoming ice skating season at RiverScape MetroPark
- Rebuilding pasture fences at Carriage Hill MetroPark
- Painting, mulching, and trail work at Germantown MetroPark
- Tree planting at the Medlar Conservation Area
- Seed collection and maintenance at Wesleyan MetroPark
- Invasive honeysuckle removal at Aullwood Garden MetroPark and Englewood MetroPark
“Make a Difference Day is the perfect occasion to have an experience in the park you can feel extra good about,” said Yvonne Dunphe, MetroParks volunteer coordinator. “The weather is cooler, fall color is on full display and you get to spend the day meeting new people while helping to spruce up your favorite MetroPark.”
For those looking to volunteer as a family, Dunphe suggests Possum Creek MetroPark and Adventure Central for younger children, while older children can enjoy volunteering at Germantown MetroPark.
Now in its 25th year, Make a Difference Day is one of the largest annual single days of service nationwide. With the common goal to improve the lives of others, millions of volunteers will gather across the country and commit their time to local projects. Five Rivers MetroParks has participated in Make a Difference Day in different capacities for the past few years, and hopes to register 550 volunteers in 2017.
More information is available and registration can be completed online. Participants should wear clothes that are suitable for the weather and the activity in which they are participating. Boots or thick-soled shoes also are recommended. Supplies will be provided for activities, but individuals may wish to bring their own gloves or water to drink.
ABOUT FIVE RIVERS METROPARKS
Celebrating more than 50 years of preserving green space and natural areas, Five Rivers MetroParks is a nationally renowned park system composed of natural area parks, gardens, high-quality river corridors, urban parks and a network of recreation trails. Five Rivers MetroParks protects the region’s natural heritage and provides outdoor experiences that inspire a personal connection with nature. Educational programs and recreational opportunities are offered year-round for all ages. Five Rivers MetroParks is accredited by the Commission for Accreditation of Park and Recreation Agencies. To learn more about Five Rivers MetroParks, log onto www.metroparks.org or call 937-275-PARK (7275).
After 32 Years Leading CareSource, Pam Morris To Retire

Today CareSource President and Chief Executive Officer Pamela Morris announced she will retire from her role effective May 2018.
Pamela Morris has served as the President and CEO of CareSource since its inception 28 years ago. A social entrepreneur, Morris pioneered Ohio’s first mandatory Medicaid managed care program and built Dayton Area Health Plan. Under her leadership, CareSource has grown to become one of the nation’s largest Medicaid Managed Care plans, serving more than 1.8 million members in Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Georgia and West Virginia.
As President and CEO of CareSource, Morris has been recognized for her leadership and commitment to improving the health and well-being of the members CareSource serves. She was named the 2007 National Entrepreneur of the Year, Healthcare Services by Ernst & Young. She has also won several local awards, including the 2014 Maureen Patterson Regional Leader Award from the Dayton Development Coalition. She was recently elected to the America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) Board of Directors.
“CareSource has been much more than a job for me, it has been my life’s passion. Even in those early days through today, I have never lost sight of what I set out to do when I came to Dayton and we started the Dayton Area Health Plan,” Morris said. “I’m proud that CareSource has been able to make a lasting difference in our members’ lives. Through all the changes to health care industry, we’ve never lost sight of our mission.”
“Pam is an exceptional leader and a true visionary in the health insurance industry,” said Kevin Brown, Chairperson, CSMG Board. “What she has helped build at CareSource is nothing short of extraordinary. Her passion for our employees, our members and for the communities we serve is unmatched.”
The CareSource Management Group Board of Directors will conduct a national search for her successor. Morris will be active in the search process and will ensure the next CEO has the same passion for serving CareSource members that she has had during her tenure. Morris will continue to lead CareSource until her retirement in May 2018. She will also have a role to assist with the transition.
“The sky is the limit for CareSource. The growth we have seen in the past several years has taken CareSource to a new level,” Morris added. “I’m proud of what we have accomplished—the jobs we have created, the members we have served and the lives we have changed. It is now time for the next chapter for CareSource.”
About CareSource
CareSource is a nonprofit nationally recognized as an industry leader in providing member- centric health care coverage. Founded in 1989, CareSource administers one of the nation’s largest Medicaid managed care plans. Today, CareSource offers individuals and families comprehensive health and life services including Marketplace and Medicare Advantage plans.
Headquartered in Dayton, Ohio, CareSource serves more than 1.8 million members in Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, West Virginia and Georgia. CareSource understands the challenges consumers face navigating the health system and works to put health care in reach for those it serves.
For more, visit caresource.com, follow @caresource on Twitter, or like CareSource on Facebook.
Free Computer Literacy Course For Adults
Community Action Partnership of the Greater Dayton Area provides a free course for adults new to using computers. The Computer Literacy course covers computer basics, beginning internet, email, social media tools, Windows, Microsoft Office and more. Students will acquire the technical skills critical to finding a job, getting a better one, or simply communicating with family and friends.
“Our goal is to bring the basics of computer usage to you, and remove the fear that many have of using a computer,” said LaSandra Wright, program director. “Providing individualized instruction helps students gain self-confidence as learners because lessons are tailored to their specific abilities,” she added.
Beginning November 7, 2017 from 9 am to 11 am, classes will meet Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday for three weeks at the Community Action Partnership’s computer lab located at 719 S. Main St. in Dayton.
Pre-registration is required for the program. The deadline for registration is November 3, 2017.
To see if you qualify for this free program, or to pre-register, call (937) 341-5000 ext. 125.
Community Action Partnership of the Greater Dayton Area is a 501(c)3 private, nonprofit Community Action Agency, committed to eliminating the causes and conditions of poverty and promoting self- sufficiency by providing programs and services in the Miami Valley.
Ralph Dull to be honored with Lifetime Achievement Award
Ralph Dull, local farmer and environmental advocate, will be honored with the Lifetime Achievement award tonight at 6 pm at the Partners for the Environment Annual Dinner at the Brukner Nature Center in Troy.
The Partner of the Year awards celebrate organizations and people that work to protect, preserve, and restore the environmental and agricultural resources of the Great Miami River and Little Miami River watersheds.
Dull, of Brookville, has worked tirelessly to protect farmland, promote sustainable agriculture, and use green energy in his family farming business. His family owns and manages several farms that are permanently protected with agricultural and or conservation easements. He also is known as a founder of the Dayton Peace Museum and he and his wife Christine were inducted into the Dayton Region Walk of Fame in 2011.
Dan Jackson, former staff with Montgomery Soil and Water Conservation District, also is being honored posthumously with a Lifetime Achievement Award for his work with communities to protect sensitive lands and promote conservation.
“The awards dinner is an opportunity to honor those who have done exceptional work and have provided us with inspiration and leadership,” says Sarah Hippensteel Hall, co-chair of Partners for the Environment.
A couple of other awards will be presented during the dinner.
- Stephen Mackell will be honored with the Individual of the Year award. He is the co-farm manager with Mission of Mary Cooperative.
- The Miami Valley Leave No Child Inside collaborative is being honored with the Partner of the Year award for its efforts to connect children in the Miami Valley region to nature and the outdoors by giving them opportunities to develop the skills and desire to become stewards of the environment.
The Partners for the Environment is an alliance of environmental organizations, government and civic organizations, and public and private educational institutions within an 18-county region in southwest Ohio. More than 70 organizations are connected to the alliance.
Mystery Monday Oct 9

So a lot of you guessed the bar at Jay’s Seafood, some thought it was the Century Bar and a few even suggested Pat’s Bar on Linden, Coco’s Bistro and Carvers. WRONG!
This lovely bar is located in the Amber Rose Restaurant in Old North Dayton. They specialize in homemade Eastern European Cuisine including German, Lithuanian, Polish, Hungarian, Russian and Italian cuisines. The bar is made of imported Turkish marble, perfect for having an appetizer and spirits with friends.
The building, in which The Amber Rose Restaurant is located, was originally built in 1910 by Sigmund Ksiezopolski. It ran as a general store and deli named Sig’s up until the 1980’s. The family ran the general store downstairs and resided upstairs as their family quarters. The National Guard stayed with the family during the Great Flood of 1913.

The Amber Rose Restaurant at 1400 Valley Street, near Children’s Hospital.
In 1989 Elinor Sluzas acquired the building with the intention of opening a restaurant. Before the scheduled grand opening there was a horrific fire and a portion of the building had to be rebuilt. The restaurant officially opened for business in 1990. Elinor retired in 1998 and owner Joe Castellano bought the restaurant, and still uses many of Elinor’s recipes.
Congratulations to Justin Schondelmyer of Sidney- your correct answer won you free Rapid Fired Pizza!
And now for this week’s photo- can you identify the location it was taken?
If you know the location of this photo, please do NOT comment with the answer, but instead enter it here: http://goo.gl/forms/dyU55fzc48. We’ll let you know next Monday if you got it right! Good Luck!

Luminaries of Dayton: Daniel E. McSherry
Daniel E. McSherry & Co. was located at 1126 E. Third Street in Dayton. The agricultural implement company was founded by Daniel E. McSherry and Edward Breneman in 1864 and was located on Wayne Avenue. They made the McSherry Grain Drill and devoted all their capital, time and business to improving its strength and utility. They employed 140 men eleven months of the year. Their products were found from New England to California and the number of drills annually manufactured was up to 4,000.
Daniel E. McSherry died on November 1, 1891. He is located in Section 101 Lot 1724.
Woodland Cemetery, founded in 1841, is one of the nation’s five oldest rural garden cemeteries and a unique cultural, botanical and educational resource in the heart of Dayton, Ohio as you will see as you read through this new MostMetro.com series. Visit the cemetery and arboretum and take one of the many tours Woodland offers free of charge. Most of Dayton’s aviation heroes, inventors and business barons are buried at Woodland.
Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum is located at 118 Woodland Avenue off of Brown Street near the UD Campus. The Woodland Office is open Monday through Friday 8 am to 5 pm and Saturday 8 am to 12 pm. The Cemetery and Arboretum are open daily from 8 am to 6 pm. The Mausoleum is open daily from 9 am to 5 pm. For more information, call 937-228-3221 or visit the Woodland website.
Dinner Party Download Starts Today on WYSO
You’re invited to join WYSO every Saturday, starting today at 10am for “Dinner Party Download.” Described as a fast and funny hour of culture, food and conversation: “public radio’s arts & leisure section.” In every episode you’ll learn a joke; bone up on an odd bit of history and then wash it down with a themed cocktail recipe; meet artists of note; have your burning etiquette questions answered; savor an emerging food trend; and hear your new favorite song.

Your Hosts and Party Planners

RICO GAGLIANO has worked in public radio for over a decade. His pieces have been heard on All Things Considered, Weekend America, The Savvy Traveler and other series, but he was best known as a reporter on “Marketplace,” for which he filed stories from England, Ireland, Sweden, The Netherlands, India, South Korea and across the good ol’ USA. He also penned and performed many of the show’s “Marketplace Players” comedy sketches. Prior to radio, Rico worked as a TV writer on shows for MTV, ABC, Fox Family and The Cartoon Network… and as a freelance print reporter for LA Weekly, the Village Voice, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and others. He continues to contribute pieces to The Wall Street Journal and Dwell magazine. Rico co-created, performed and wrote for the circus-like L.A. sketch comedy troupe The Ministry Of Unknown Science, which at various times required him to drop his pants on stage, stand fully clothed in frigid ocean waves for half an hour, and stand way too close to the explosion caused by detonating a sex doll filled with propane. The troupe had a top-10 video podcast on iTunes and filmed pilots for Spike TV and the SyFy Network. Rico holds an MFA from the American Film Institute. He’s been a fan of dinner parties since childhood, when it meant he got to eat in his parents’ bedroom and watch TV all night while the grownups sat around in the dining room getting wine-tipsy.

BRENDAN FRANCIS NEWNAM has been winning dinner parties since first taking a seat at the kid’s table at his family’s holiday gatherings. Granted, by then he was in his 20s and had graduated from Rutgers at the top of his class while the rest of his tablemates were toddlers, but, still, a victory is a victory, even if you make a 5-year-old cry. A long time foodie, during the height of America’s cupcake craze, Brendan sought refuge in Europe, where he wrote and edited travel guides, music reviews and celebrity profiles for various websites and magazines, including Vice and Blackbook, and delivered lectures on the ontology of the gin martini. But even la dolce vita gets old, and he returned to America to embark on a career in law. But after earning a JD and spending a summer fighting for prosecutorial reform in Bulgaria, he was seduced by public radio’s siren call. (Or maybe that was the sound of corduroy rubbing?) Before launching The Dinner Party Download, he produced and reported for national public radio shows including “Marketplace,” “Marketplace Money,” “Fresh Air,” and “Weekend America,” and, in his spare time, created and produced “Audiovant,” one of the first music interview podcasts. Though he now has a stable income and is chipping away at his law school debt, Brendan continues to freelance for various outlets, including Dwell, Modern Farmer, Saveur, and CNN.com, where, in 2011, he penned a series of travel tales called “The State I’m In.” Brendan is also a past Knight Media Fellow, and lest you think he has a face for radio, the national fashion website Racked named him a “style icon,” and that’s without even knowing about his tattoo of the word “tattoo.”
JACKSON MUSKER wears many party hats. He calligraphs and hand-delivers invitations to our Guests of Honor. He folds napkins into endangered species for our Main Courses (to raise awareness). And he serves as the test subject for every cocktail, which is an issue on Deadline Friday. Jackson landed his producer position after reporting/producing stories for L.A.’s beloved arts & culture show Off-Ramp. Prior to his radio gigs, he studied English at Duke University and double-minored in History and North Carolina-style BBQ. Jackson enjoys writing fiction, teaching kids, critiquing movies, butchering other languages, and bemoaning the Dodgers’ annual collapse. He has contributed to NPR’s Morning Edition, The California Report, the San Francisco Bay Citizen, and Cyberfrequencies.com.
MICHELLE PHILIPPE loves bite-sized dinner party food and doesn’t talk with her mouth full. Which is really important when she’s narrating our “History Lesson with Booze” segment. In addition to telling you what happened this week in history for DPD, she tells you what’s coming up tomorrow in the “Marketplace Datebook.” Michelle, herself, tries to live in the moment. She does that as an actor. And until she lands her dream job playing an evil alien space queen, she considers herself lucky to have a pretty cool job at Marketplace. Though she doesn’t have the proper wardrobe for it, Michelle is also an amateur gardener. She grows tomatoes which she loves to eat and which her husband loves to compost.
Boys Night Out with Mom benefits Ronald McDonald House
The Red Shoe Society Dayton and the Jr. Red Shoe Society invites sons and their mothers, grandmothers, and friends to share an evening of dancing and games, to support Ronald McDonald House Charities of Dayton. The Boys Night Out with Mom is a memory-making event that is both fun and teaches our young men the importance of giving back to help others.
Festivities include: Dinner & Dancing, Raffles, Sports, Games & Prizes, Sweets & Treats, and Photo Station! If you’re interested in attending, don’t delay, register today!
Proceeds benefit Ronald McDonald House Charities of Dayton and its mission to provide a “home-away-from-home” to families of critically ill or injured, hospitalized babies and children. Can’t attend but want to help? Share this event and Subscribe to their mailing list for future Red Shoe events.
Citizen Legion of Honor Award Goes To Bob Mills
The Presidents Club of Dayton has announced that Robert W. Mills, Jr. is the 67th recipient of the region’s 2017 Citizen Legion of Honor Award. The award, given every year since 1951, is the oldest, most continuous and prestigious recognition of volunteer servant leadership in the Dayton region.17 October Fundraisers You Should Know About
“We have an attitude in this community of looking out for and caring for our neighbors,” said Mike Parks, president of the Dayton Foundation. “We’ve got philanthropic institutions in this community — the United Way, the Culture Works campaign, the community foundation — that give us a strong infrastructure to help people give to their neighbors.”
Dayton area residents give a greater share of their incomes to charity than Ohioans from other metro areas, according to the Chronicle of Philanthropy. Local residents on average gave 4.6 percent of their discretionary incomes to charitable groups, compared 4.1 percent in Akron, 4 percent in Cincinnati-Middletown, 3.9 percent in Cleveland and 4.3 percent in Columbus. Discretionary income is the money remaining after residents pay taxes and costs related to housing, food and other basic necessities.
Today there are over 4000 nonprofits in the region, and to continue the legacy of taking care of our community, there are hundreds of fundraising events to support them. To see the complete list of charitable events for 2017 check our DMM calendar.
Here are MostMetro’s list of 18 events not to miss this month:
Soup for CERF: An Empty Bowls Fundraiser
Mystery Monday Oct 2
Our photo from last week was the Walk of Fame mural that was dedicated on Sept 28th in the Wright Dunbar neighborhood. Created by artist James Pate, this project was a collaboration with K12 Gallery, HAALO, and Montgomery County Juvenile Court. You can find this mural at West Third and South Williams Streets. Ashley from Miamisburg, Rapid Fired Pizza is coming your way for correctly identifying this location!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=share&v=5XLE-AvcvFA&app=desktop
And now for this week’s photo- do you recognize this place? If you know the location of this photo enter it here: http://goo.gl/forms/dyU55fzc48. We’ll let you know next Monday if you got it right! Good Luck!

















