Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 115, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1926 — Page 6
PAGE 6
gOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
Thirty members of the Indianapolis chapter, No. 20, o£ the Women's Organization, National Association of Detail Druggists, attended a theater party at English’s Wednesday afternoon. Following the performance, the members were tendered a little reception back stage, where they were the guests of the Berkell players. Mrs. C. B. Stoltz, chairman, was in charge and was assisted by Mrs. Edward Ferger, Mrs. William C. Freund, Mrs. Harry J. Borst, Mp. James C. Mead, Mrs. Mueller, Mrs. John G. Pantzer and Mrs. Lloyd Weiss. t ** * In honor of Mrs. Frank J. Streightoff, president of the Indiana League of Women Voters, Mrs. Frank D. Hatfield entertained with a luncheon at her home, 3828 N. New Jersey St., Wednesday. Guests were the officers, directors and committee chairman of the local league. Mrs. Hatfield, president of the Indianapolis league, announced that all the meetings,of the organization this winter will be held in the auditorium at the American Legion headquarters, the first meeting to be held Oct. 21. It was decided to ask the election commissioners to, place a voting machine in each ward, previous to the coming election in order that persons may become more familiar with its use. The hostess was assisted by hec mother, Mrs. L. T. Marsh of Star City, Ind. Guests included Misses Alma Sickler, Adele Pantzer, Florence Kirlin, Amelia Henderson, Florence Howell, Sara lauter, Mary Louise Shipp and Mesdames S. E. Perkins, Christian Olsen, Kurt Pantzer, pavid M. Lurvey and Edna M. Christian. * * * A pretty church wedding was that of Miss Delia Dugan, daughter of Mrs. Delia Dugan and William Joseph Schantz, Jr., at the St. Philip Neri Church, Wednesday morning. The Rev. Charles Duffey performed the ceremony before an altar banked with summer flowers and lighted with cathedral candles. The bridesmaid. Miss Winifred Kavanaugh, was gowned in pink georgette crepe and wore a black satin picture hat with a touch of rose trimming. She carried an arm bouquet of pink roses and delphinium. Edwin Schantz was best man. The bride was lovely in a gown of white taffeta, made with tight bodice and very full skirt. Her long tullo veil was arranged cap fashion and caught with orange blossoms. Following the ceremony, a wedding breakfast was served at the Lincoln. Mr. and Mrs. Schantz left immediately on a wedding trip and will be at home after Sept. 1, at 901 N. Riley Ave. * * * The marriage of Miss Ruth Minniek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Minnlck of New Ross, to Edward de Crow of Indianapolis is announced. The wedding took place Aug. 17 at the home of the Rev. Warren Grafton. Following the ceremony, a reception was held at tyie home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry IJynch, 3463 Winthrop Ave. Mr. and Mrs. De Crow have gone on a wedding trip to Chicago and the lakes, and after Sept. 20 will be at home at 2241 College Ave. • * • Miss Helen Wallers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. "Wallers, 651 N. Hamilton Ave., and Leonard Meisberger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Meisberger, were married Wednesday morning at the St. Philip Church, with the Rev. Francis Deiehoff officiating. Miss Alma Meisberger and Joseph Meisberger. Jr., were the only attendants. Miss Meisberger was gowned in apricot georgette, fashioned with full petalshaped scalloped skirt. She wore a picture hat to harmonize and carried butterfly roses. The bride was lovely in a fleshcolored crepe gown, made bouffant. She wore a drooping rose-colored picture hat and carried a shotyer
Wavy—Curly Glossy Hair By Edna Wallace Hopper The thousands who see me daily on the stage know how my hair waves and glows. It seems doubly abundant because of the curl. Nearly every girl and woman who sees it would like to have hair like mine. But I never go to a hair dresser. I have never had a Marcel wave. I simply apply a hair dress which experts made for me. Neither you nor I will probably ever see anything else to compare. It makes the. hair curly, keeps it in place and gives it a lovely sheen. > This hair dress is now known as Edna Wallace Hopper’s Wave and Sheen. All toilet counters supply it at 75c per bottle. It will bring you added loveliness more quickly than anything else I.know. My guarantee is enclosed with every bottle, so it costs you nothing if it doesn’t please. Go try it at my expense. STOP ITCHING SKIN Zemo the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief There is one safe, dependable treatment„tbut relieves Itching torture and that cleanses and soothes the skin. Soon after the first application of Zemo you will find that irritations, Pimples, Blackheads, Eczema, Blotches, Itiugworin and similar skin troubles will disappear. Zenio is all that is needed, for it banishes most skin eruptions, makes the skin (soft, smooth and healthy. It is a non-greasy, disappearing ilniiiil that may be applied during the day. Ask your druggist for a small size one or large bottle SI.OO, —Advertisement. _
9x12 Rug S C.6S ECONOMY RUG CO. J’.tfr.'l—ltordCJ If., o== 213 E. Wash. St. . >
Lead Study Club Group
E’-'-f ; --' .. .
—Photos by Voorhls. . Left to right; Mrs. George Sin ith, Mrs. Russell L. Wilson,
The Elizabethan chapter of the International Study Club, which was organized last week, has for its president Mrs. Russell Wilson,
bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the valley. Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the Columbia Club. Mr. and Mrs. Meisberger left on a motor trip to New York. From there they will visit Philadelphia, Washington and Cleveland. After Oct. 1 they will be temporarily at home at the Feldeille Apts. * * * Members of the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority of -De Pauw University will be house guests this week-end of Miss Katherine Schmidt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Schmidt. 4205 N. Illinois St., at the Schmidt summer home at Lake Wawasee. The guests will include, Misses Ljuise and Mildred Humphrey, Linton, Ind.; Lorene Golden, Columbus, Ind.; Mable Hurst, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Dorothy Hayes, Pendleton, Ind.; Louise King, Chicago, 111.; Miriam Oilar, Greencastle, Ind., and Kathryn Davis, New Albany. * * * The fourteenth annual reunion of the Pritchard family will be held at the Franklin (Ind.) school gymnasium Sunday. Special talks will be given by the Rev. Robert Batton of Marion, Ind., and Dr. H. O. Pritchard of Irvington. William S. Pritchard of Indianapolis is president and Mabel Sellers Park of Franklin is secretary-treasurer of the association. * * * A card party for the benefit of the Home for the Aged Pocahontas will be given by the Meta council of the Order of Pocahontas, at Las Velle Gossett Hall, W. Tenth St. and King Ave., Friday evening. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Yocum, 2943 Park Ave., and Ms. and Mrs. Frank Cramer, 3968 Park Ave., will leave Friday to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Winchell and daughter Jean, and Mrs. E. F. Larrison of Lake Manitou. * * * Mrs. Charles Wilson and Miss Myrtle Morris of Columbus, Ohio, are the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Wilhelm, 1510 Samoa St. * • * Miss Mary Elizabeth Wenzel, 210 Hamilton Ave., is visiting friends at North Vernon and Madison, Ind. Shg will be gone about two weeks. * • • Mrs. B. F. Switzer, 1304 E. FortySixth St., gave a luncheon today at her home in honor of Miss Mary Helen Winchell, who will be married to Glenn S. Miller of Bellefontaine, Ohio, Sept. 18.
A WOMAN'S Abroad By Allene Sumner ROME, Italy.—A great cataclysmic tragedy has occurred unto the author, gentle reader, hero in the city where slumber the togaed gents of old! All because I am not mistress of many tongues. The tale runneth thus: Pansy Herring Pretzel and I, having gazed upon the Collosseum, and seen the prisons where the martyred Christians lay, having wept at the graves of Keats and Shelley, and grown clammy In the grewsome, bone-strewn labyrinths of the catacombs, decided that the time had come when the life cultural should be refreshed by that one and only spree known to womankind as a shampoo, cut and curl! Our dark-orbed pension porter got our meaning (or seemed to) and offered to write for us in his native tongue a message to a certain “coiffeurer pour dames,” which, he guaranteed, would result in our coming forth “multo fcello.” He wrote. We went. We gave the note to a beaming, genuflecting hairdresser. All unwitting of the fate about to befall me, I was prepared foi the shearer, with much tissue paper and scalloped toweling tucked under my chin. The snip-snip of the shears began and continued right merrily whilst I hvas engrossed in my two weeks’ old home newspaper. What beheld my gentle gaze when I suddenly gazed Into the mirror? None less than what was once me, but now was but half of me. The other half was a bare and naked ostrich egg; in other words, my own .scalp as bare of any hirsute adornment as a toadstool is bare of , lace ruffles, I howled, I wailed. I moaned and shrieked. It seems that the gracious porter had ordered that I be clipped, and clipped I was. When Caesar gazed upon the Rubicon he couici either go on or go back. ; So now, I could either remain half-s Haven or whole-shaven. I chose the latter. I had been taught In my childhood “when a task Is once begun, never leave it till it’s done." I decided that the spectacle of one neat bald ostrich egg would shock the populace less than a hy-
1145 W. Thirty-Third St. Mrs. George Smith, 1138 W. ThirtyThird St., was the organizer of tjne chapter.
brid object half-egg and half-nanny-goat. ■— • i I purchased, to the accompaniment of my sobs, two clusters of 'red-gold curls, having always yearned for red hair, but never hitherto owning a shaven pate on which to hang it. The skillful hair dresser created some effective little hooks of courtplaster which he attached neatly to my ear tops, to which the curls were pinned, whence they coyly wave in the breeze. I wear my hat indoors and out. I' explain that I am* afraid I will be stricken by the sun's hot rays if I taka it off. • They say tha my tresses will soon grow out. But have doubts. If the artists will draw a picture of a nice purple egg plant, you will see exactly how I look. The purple represents sunburn, and the untrimmed egg plant is the rest of mp. What culture a girl does get with travel! • * • This is just a shining example of yie value of speaking many tongues. Seriously, however, if you knoyv not one word of anything but your native speech, do not be afraid to stray from the home garden. A trip into many lands emphasizes above all other things the comparative needlessness of language. One talks with harfds everywhere. One enters a shop, points at the object desired, and the clerk writes down the price. Thank goodness for the near-universal use of the arable numeral. Some few mishaps will happen. One, for instance, may get w’ieners w'hen pointing to that on the menu card which Koks like chicken. But then a hot dog by any other name will taste as good! • Do not scorn the little books on salt at most any book store which tell you hOw to get it in any language! And don’t take the pronunciation marks too seriously! All Europe knows these little books as a mother knows her erring child! The little Rollo abroad merely points to that line in French or Italian or Esperanto or Yiddish which says “from what end, plense, does the train go?” and the same-in-every-tongue beckoning hand answers! And the words one picks up In a week! We laugh, now, at those rank amateurs who must use the books, and we asst prices and pay our bills in native tongue like old birds!
Local Youth Victim of Water Cramps Funeral services for Cal Parsons, 14, drowning victim, son of Mr. and
Airs. Ernest Parsons, 1210 S. Traub Ave., will be held Friday afternoon at Galveston, Ind. Burial will be there. The youth was and r o w ned while swimming Wednesday pn the farm of W. D. Armstrong, near Logan sport, Ind., where he w’as spending his summer vacation. The parents drove to Logansport Sunday to visit the boy,
Parsons
but he was not at home. Two sisters also survive.
LIVES ON FARM IN OKLAHOMA Happy Woman Praises Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound In a sunny pasture in Oklahoma, a herd of sleek cows was grazing. " They made a t woman in the blue checked apron sighed as she looked at then/. She was tired of her tedious work in the dairy. ‘ She was tired of cooking x % for a houseful of boarders, besides caring for her own family. The burdens of life seemed too heavy for her failing health. She had lost confidence in herself. One day she began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and her general health began to Improve. She took it faithfully. Now she can do her work without any trouble, sleeps well and is no longer blue and tired. ’ This woman, Mrs. Cora Short, R. R. 9, Box 396, Oklahoma City, Okla., writes: “Everybody now says: ‘Mrs. Short, what are you doing to yourself?’ I weigh 135 and my weight before I took it was 115. I have taken seven bottles of the Vegetable Compound." Are you on the Sunlit Road to Better Health? , —Advertisement.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service
PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. 9 & 1 H Inclosed find 15 cents from which send pattern No O X Size Name Address ..j City
DAINTY LOVELINESS Today's design is 2810. Graceful, fluttering' lines that speak of summer is expressed by Design No. 2810. Note the deep Vneckline, with its long scarf tie; its low placed side and front and back panels, to keep its line slender. Filmy chiffon, georgette crepe, crepe de chine, voile or flat silk crepe, is appropriate for its development. See small illustrations! A child could make it! Side and shoulder seams to stitch; gathered sides stitched at perforations and collar attached. Complete instructions with pattern, price 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Pattern can be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure, and requires 3Vi yards of 40-inch material, with 3 of 4Vi-inch ribon for collar and tie and 2Vi yards of 2-inch ribbon for band on skirt, for the 36-inch bust measure. Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of New York City and are guaranteed to fit perfectly.
I Sister Mary’s Kitchen
BREAKFAST —Orange juice, \Vhole wheat, cereal, thin cream, French omelet, todsted muffins, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Peas pudding, endive salad, k/ran bread, baked peaches, butterscotch cookies, milk tea. DINNER—Lamb chops, new turnips in cream, baked stuffed pepers, raspberry bavarian cream, plain cake, graham bread, milk, coffee. If the peppers are stuffed with a macaroni or rice mixture they become a sort of “two in one" dish and make the serving of potatoes unnecessary. Gelatine desserts are tempting and easy to make. During hot weather a longer period of time must be allowed for them to stiffen than is calculated in cold weather. Full eight hours in the refrigerator or even longer must be given to a gelatine dessert or salad to insure the desirable firmness. Raspberry Bavarian Cream Two cups raspberries, one cup currants, one and one-quarter cups powdered sugar, one cu. whipping cream, one and one-half tablespoons granulated gelatine, one-haif cup cold water, few grains salt. Scald berries and currents and rub through a sieve. Soften gelatine in cold water. Uiheat fruit juice and stir in gelatine. Remove from the fire and stir until gelatine is perfectly dissolved. Let stand until cool and beginning to jelly. Then fold in cream whipped until stiff with a few grains of salt. Turn into a mold lightly brushed with olive oil and let stand until thoroughly chilled and firm Remove from mold and serve garnished with fine berries. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service.) FLOWERS EFFECTIVE There is a decided effort to revive the use of flowers on hats and Paris is sending over many attractive models in black felt with one brilliant flotver on the brim. COAT NOVELTIES Rippling jabots give a novel effect to the winter fur coats. Collars are often upstanding in the back, and follow A jabot line to tho waistline. YELLOW FOR GOWN A stunning evening gown is of yellow chiffon trimmed with ostrich feathers shading from a deep yellow to a delicate purple.
53 YEARS OF FAITHFUL Ts SERVICE TO THE . jets A I INDIANAPOLIS PUBLIC t Final Clearance Summer Dresses FRIDAY and SATURDAY In This Group Are In This Group Are Dresses That Sold Dresses That Sold Up to $8 Up to sls Now for the Final Now for the Final Clearance at Clearance at S |JZ S Q-°° Many weeks of hot weather still to come! These Dresses were made to keep you delightfully cool. Choose from either of these much underpriced groups. Dresses in Tub Silks, Rayons. Dotted Silks, Flat. Crepes and Georgettes. Come Early Please! The quantities are small—but great Ts enough to insure good choice of colors, styles, materials 2nd Floor. Dept. and sizes.
Every day The Times will print on this page pictures showing the latest up-to-date fashions. , This is a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. You n;ay obtain this pattern by filling out the accompanying coupon, enclosing 15 cents, coin preferred, and mailing it to the pattern department of The Times. Delivery is made in about one week. Be sure to write plainly and to include pattern number and size.
agio II /
Recipes By Readers
NOTE —The Times will give a recipe filing cabinet for recipe submitted by a reader and printed in this column. One recipe is printed daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Cabinets will be mailed to winners. Write only one recipe, name, address and date on each sheet. APPLE AND TOMATO MARMALADE Six cups apple pulp, six cups cooked strained tomatoes, five cups sugar, four sticks of cinnamon, tw’o teaspoons whole cloves, one-cup vinegar. Use apple pulp left after juice has drained off, for apple jelly. Press pulp through coarse strainer, add tomatoes and sugar. Tie spices in a cheesecloth sack and boil one-half hour with pulp. Add vinegar and boil ten minutes more. Ilemovo spices, pack and seal. 1 Mrs. Harry .Martin, 218 W. (South St., Shelhyville, Ind.
7 Oum^ A STORY OF A GIRL, of TOD/\Y SLEEr, BLESSED SLEEP “Come on, Judy,” said Jerry, as Joan came away from the* phone. “You two girls, both of you, must get a good night’s rest, for it looks to me.as though you are going to have a long, hard day tomorrow.” Sometimes I .think it is most fortunate that we poor mortals can not see ahead of us twenty-four hours. Although Jerry wanted to talk with me after he had stopped the car, at the curb in front of Mamie’s house for a little while, I told him that I was too tired to be decent to anyone, which was the truth. After I left Joan and I knew the day was over I was so tired I didn't want to open my mouth or cnK>k a finger. Fortunately, both Mamie and hfcr mother out as I dragged myself up the stairs, and pulling off my clothes dropped into bed. Mamie tapped on my door when she came and as I did not answ’er I knew that she thought I was asleep. But I lay awake for a long time wondering what my next adventure would be. v v. The moonlight made a great patch of silver across the floor, just in front of my bed. It seemed to make a path out of the window clear up to the sky. Was it a good omen. I wonder? Should I go with Joan to Europe, I asked myself. Or should I remain at home and marry Jerry? I was trying to answer those questions when I evidently fell asleep from pure fatigue. For the first thing I knew was a feeling of surprise that where the moonlight had made a silver path there was now a flood of golden sunshine. I lay quite still. T could not gather my thoughts together. My consciousness seemed to waver, but at last came a knocking on my door, or at least I became more fully awake, for I also distinguished a bell ringing in the hall and Mamie’s voice calling: “Wake up, Judy. I know that telephone Is for you. Someone has been calling for you for the last hour.” I grumbled a little ns I slipped my feet into my house slippers and threw a kimono over my shoulders. When I got near enough to shut off tho insistent clamor of the telephone bell I heard Joan’s voice through the receiver saying: “Will you please get Miss Dean to come to the phone?” , “This ts Judy, Joan,” I answered, “but lam only half awake. I didn’t go to sleep for a long while after I went to bed.’’ “Well, listen, dear,” she answered, “I am sure what I have to say will wake you up. You know those letters I had gotten from Bud and had not opened. Well, the special delivery one said that he was going to town, and he will be here this morning. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Sendee, Inc.) NEXT—Judy Gets a Thrill. HUSBAND MISSING WEEK Wife Tells Police She Thinks He Returned to This City. Mrs. James Clendenning, 75 S. Sheridan Ave., has asked police to ♦search for her husband, who has been missing a week. He was working in Lewiston, 111., but left there a week ago. She believes ho returned to this city.
FRECKLES Get Rid of These Ugly Spots Safely and Surely and Have el Beautiful Complexion With OTHINE (DOUBLE STRENGTH) MONEY HACK IE IT KAILS. SOLD BY DRUG- AND DEPARTMENT STORES EVERYWHERE
CAN WE WRONG OTHERS AND COME SCOTFREE?
Convenient it might be, if we didn’t have to take the other fellow into consideration —could just consider our own interests in matters at hand, but the whole world’s history proves that it wouldn’t be good for us.
Self interest will sometimes tell us that we can be happy even when our actions will bring anguish to others, but in our hearts, if we'll listen at all, we know that it isn’t true. What is this thing, we call conscience that keeps batting at us when we’ve wronged another? Just the touch of the other fellow’s pain, perhaps. “Am I my brother’s keeper?” the miscreant asks indignantly and something in his heart answers him whether he’ll listen or not. Regrets Hasty Step Dear Martha Dee: I am a young- srirl. mother has always held me in strict discipline. If I went to a dance I was bound for hell. The slightest mister' and I was the worst sinner in town. Maybe Oiat is the cause, but anyway. I've done something I don't know what possessed me to do. On the .'lrd of of July. I married a young man I do not love. I told him I did. He worships me. but married life with lum is already unbearable to me. Inr thinking of leaving him. If I do I know he’ll go to the dogs. Mv happiness or my husband's. Whieh shall it be? A FOOLISH MINDED GIRL. Dear little girl, do you really think you could be happy if you sent your young husband “to the dogs,” as you say.? Even if he didn’t take it as hard as' you feel he might, loving you so dearly, he would certainly suffer. Would that he treating him even way fairly? He married you i-n good faith. You told him you loved him, so the fault of the marriage is not' his. Be merciful, wait awhile at least. Try working our your problem, rather than jumping out. There’s a possibility you may grow fond of him. Anyway, in mercy to, this Poor young bridegroom, give yourself more time. Unpopular Dear Martha Lee: I live ni a one-horse town that I don’t like. The girls here are all stuck up and out for all the money and machine rides they can get. I am a fairly good looking boy. and look neat In my clothes, but when there's a party on, I'm not invited. I play the piano very\good, and am not stingy with my machine, so I can't solve why I can't get dates. Could It be that I am too fat?—weighing 170 pounds, being 5 feet. 6 inches? A READER. Look to your first two sentences, dear boy. There’s part of the answer. If you don’t like your town and you have such an ungracious opinion of the girls, you’re carrying around a heavy handicap to popularity. People like to be in contact with happy minds and girls adore being admired. Very evidently, you can't be the pleasantest company in the world, and the girls no doubt feel your thought that they’re “stuck up and out for the money, etc." Right about face, now. Resolutely put the critical, superior thoughts out of your mind. Forget they are girls and think of them as simply human beings. See some good qualities, appreciate them and by all means tell them so. Your avoirdupois should be in your favor in this case as it adds to an illusion
laftium Week End PIANO and PHONOGRAPHS SPECIALS Here you will find Pianos and Victrolas of quality at a genuine bargain. Instruments carefully reconditioned and in the very best playing condition. FINE MAHOGANY STUYVESANT $ *1 il C PIANOLA /. Oaf PLAYER < tbaded - ij o ■ Buys a Real ’255 Sfi iPf (TRADED-IN) . I / ® Fine Geo. Steck Player (Used) , r ..... $295 $950 Ellington Manualo (Traded In) ...... ...$395 While They Last—Several Good Used C*7Q Upright Pian05.....,. <PI J Up Phonographs and Radiolas If You Want a High-Grade Instrument of This Kind , Be Sure to See These Specials SIOO Upright..... .$25 g if $225 Brunswick ISJ**!) Radiola $179 I ' i | $285 Windsor Console.s49 t jjjij $250 Star Console. .$69 A <j;iQo C01umbia.,,.(.539 Q | SIOO Columbia . K _ mr . $35 ' il,r " - $350 Victrola .. . .sllß s* $250 Victrola..... .S9B S3OO Fine Columbia $220 Brunswick Console Electric $135 Radiola $174 SIOO Columbia ... .$29 $175 Mahy. Console S3O Convenient Terms Arranged iafiiuih ON MONUMENT CIRCLE
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AUG. 19, 1926
Martha Lee Says
of good nature. Try the appreciation route and tell me later if it doesn't work like a charm.
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Apparel on tIie}AMERICAN BUDGET; TOENTYI^MTMENT|PLAN M* extra charf*~ \ f AMpuwT or r*T rub n ytaiiia accoukt went E*#r jWp vrchiM w -rr-gr- * 50.00 $2.50 * 75.00 .t3.7S SIOO.OO $5.00 THE WHY STORE U East Ohio H
