March 24, 1928 WINNETKA TALK 71 100 FOR SALE--HSEHLD. GOODS FOR SALE -- MAH. DINING ROOM table--6 chairs and serving table. In good condition. Ph. Winnetka 396. 100LTN26-1tc ELECTRIC STOVE, 4 BURNERS, LGE. oven, like new. Cost $150, sell for best offer. Glencoe 770. 100L'TN26-1tp PORCH FURNITURE, CHIFFONIER, couch, victrola, records. 274 Mary, Glencoe 1008. 100LTN26-1tp 101 WTD. TO BUY--HSEHLD GOODS WANTED TO BUY -- SECOND-HAND furniture and other household goods. Highest prices for same. Crost Furni- ture store, 1004-6 Emerson St., Evans- ton, Ill. Ph. Univ. 189. 101LTN5-tfe FOR SALE--MISC. FINEST BLACK DIRT APPROX. 3 CU. YDS. DELIVERED $7 North Shore Garden Service Ph. Glenview 80-R or 141-J. 102LTN25-4tc 102 FOR SALE ACQUARIUM PLANTS, all kinds 10 and 15 cents. Tropical fish 85c a pr. Little mud turtles and snails 10 and 25c. 1021 Central Ave. Ph. Wil- mette 2791. 102LTN26-1tc METRONOMAL, LIB. TABLE, CHAIRS, new drapes, lds. and misses clothes; sizes 38-42 and 12-15 incl. Spring coats also men's suits and old coat. Winnetka 938. 102LTN26-1tc FOR SALE--VICTROLA AND BAL- kipe battery charger, good condition, each $5. Ph. Glencoe 1325. 102LTN26-1tc PILLOWS; LIBRARY TABLE; woman's suit, 40-42; hall runner; pic- i) = tures; jugs; crocks; electric iron. 'Winn. 1236. 102TN3-1tc FOR SALE--LAUND-DRY-ETTE IN perfect condition, little used, cost $155, will sell for less than half price. Wil- mette 1991. 102TN3-1tc BROWN MAHOG. LIV. RM. TABLE. 2 mahog. and cane rocking chairs, up- holstered velour seats. Tel. Kenil. 1215. 102L/TN26-1tc PLATINUM GREY FOX FUR. EXCEL- lent condition. $25. Phone Winn. 1296. 102L/TN26-1tc BABY BED AND MATTRESS, IVORY finish, like new. Ph. Winnetka 2480. 102LT26-1tp ELECTRIC DISH-WASHER. MANDO- lin. Guitar. Very cheap. Glencoe 1230. 102LTN26-1tp LIKE NEW, JOHNSON MOTOR AND attachment for bicycle. $90 value for $35. Phone Winn. 2519. 102LTN26-1tc REMINGTON TYPEWRITER. RECON- ditioned, very cheap. Write Wilmette Life B-643. 102L'TN26-1tp MOLA WASHING MACHINE FOR Sale, fine condition $35. Ph. Wilmette 875. 102LTN26-1tc CHILD'S LARGE SIZED CRIB AND mattress in good conditjon, reas. Call mornings. Winnetka 107. 102T3-1tc 103 WANTED TO BUY--MISC. WANTED TO BUY--TWIN STROLLER. For sale or exchange--Reed baby car- riage and stroller. Ph. Wilmette 3825. 103L/TN26-1tc 103 WANTED TO BUY--MISC. WANTED--CLEAN WHITE RAGS, 10c per 1b. 1232 Central Ave., Wilmette. 103LTN14-tfp 105 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE -- OUTBOARD MOTORS. Johnson big twin, new, never used, cost $220 for $125. Evinrude single, in good condition, $45. Ph. Winnetka 806. 105LTN26-1tp NOTICE WINNETKA PARK DISTRICT IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS. GENERAL NUMBER 470217 WINNETKA PARK DISTRICT, A Municipal Corporation, VS. JOHN O. BARBER, JOHN KIEWIK, AND ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS, by order duly entered in the above entitled proceedings, having directed that as to such de- fendants as are shown by the affidavit filed in said proceedings. to be non-resi- dents of the State of Illinois, or whose residences are shown thereby to be un- known, and the defendants designated as 'All whom it may concern," the Clerk of said Court cause publication to be made in the Winnetka Talk, a secular newspaper published in the Winnetka Park District, County of Cook and State of Illinois, containing notice of the fol- lowing matters: Notice is hereby given of the pendency of the above entitled proceedings insti- tuted by the petition of the Winnetka Park District, heretofore filed in the Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois, designated General Number 470217 in said Court, praying for the ascertainment of the just compensation to be made for the private property to be taken or dam- aged for the making of the improvement hereinafter described, and for the ascer- tainment of what property will be bene- fited by the making of said improve- ment, and the amount of such benefit. The Commissioners duly appointed by the said Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois, to investigate and report the just compensation to be made for the private property to be taken or damaged for said improvement, and also what real estate will be benefited by said improve- ment, and the amount of such benefit to each parcel of land assessed, duly made a special assessment to raise the cost of said improvement, and filed their said report and assessment roll in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of said Cook County, Illinois, on the four- teenth day of March, A. D. 1928. Thereupon a summons issued out of said Court against the defendants above named, and the defendants described as "All whom it may concern," returnable in said Court at the County Court House in the City of Chicago, County of Cook and State of Illinois, on the sixteenth day of April, A. D. 1928, as is by law re- quired, which proceeding is now pending. The total cost of said improvement, as shown by the estimate of the President of the Board of Local Improvements of the said Winnetka Park District, and the report and assessment roll of said Com- missioners, is the sum of Fourteen Thou- sand, Five Hundred Eighty-seven Dollars and no cents ($14,587.00). Now unless you, such defendants as are shown by the affidavit filed in said pro- ceedings to be non-residents of the State of Illinois, or whose residences are shown thereby to be unknown, and the de- fendants designated as "All whom it may concern," shall be and appear before the said Superior Court of Cook County, Il- linois, at the County Court House, in the City of Chicago, County of Cook and State of Illinois, on the sixteenth day of April, A. D. 1928, and plead, answer or demur to the petitioner's petition, or ob- ject to the report and assessment roll of the Commissioners aforesaid, the same and the matters and things therein charged and stated will be taken as con- fessed, and a judgment entered in ac- cordance with the said report and assess- ment roll and the prayer of said petition. The following is a description of said improvement, and includes a description of the lots, blocks, tracts and parcels of land sought to be taken for the said im- provement. That Lot Nine (2) In Barber's Sub- division of a part of Block Twenty-six (26) in John C. Garland's Addition to Winnetka, veing a subdivision of the North One Hundred Twenty (120) Acres of the Southwest Quarter of Section Twenty-one (21) in Township Forty-two (42) North, Range Thirteen (13) East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat of said Barber's Subdivision, recorded in the office of the Recorder of Cook County, Illinois, on the seventh day of September, A. D. 1927, as Document Number 9770868; Also, Lots Twelve (12), Thirteen (13), Fourteen (14) and Fifteen (15) in Kiewik Park Subdivision of part of Block Twenty-six (26) in John C. Garland's Ad- dition to Winnetka, being a subdivision of the North One Hundred Twenty (120) Acres of the Southwest Quarter of Sec- tion Twenty-one (21) in Township Forty- two (42) North, Range Thirteen (13) Fast of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat of said Kiewik Park Subdivision recorded in the office of the Recorder of Cook County, Illinois, on the thirteenth day of September, A. D. 1927, as Document Number 9776299; All of the hereinabove described lots, tracts and parcels of land, being within the Win- netka Park District, County of Cook and State of Illinois, be condemned by the said Winnetka Park District for use as a public park, and that the said lands when so condemned be improved by clear- ing, grading, plowing, harrowing, raking, rolling, planting and seeding with grass seed, planting trees and shrubs, construct- ing concrete block meter vault, water service connection, water pipes, sprinkler hydrants, and removal of all surplus ma- terials, including the cost of engineer- ing services, all labor and materials, and all other expenses necessary to construct said proposed local improvement, all with- in the Winnetka Park District, County of Cook and State of Illinois. Dated at the City of Chicago, County of Cook and State of Illinois, this fourteenth day of March, A. D. 1928. SAMUEL E. ERICKSON, Clerk of the Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois. FREDERICK DICKINSON, Attorney for Winnetka Park District. T2-4tc VILLAGE OF WINNETKA. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS. GENERAL NUMBER 471,369. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED, that the Vil- lage of Winnetka, Cook County, Illinois, having ordered that a local improvement be made, consisting of the construction of a six (6) inch internal diameter cast iron water pipe in the easterly parkway of Ridge Avenue (sometimes known as Ridge Road) from and connecting with the existing water pipe in the north park- way of Winnetka Avenue, southeasterly to and connecting with the existing water pipe in said Ridge Avenue at its inter- section with Meadow Road, including fire hydrant, water gate valves, connections to existing water pipes, fittings, trench- ing, pipe laying, backfilling, testing, re- moval of all surplus materials, all within the Village of Winnetka, County of Cook and State of Illinois, the ordinance for the same being on file in the office of the Village Clerk of said Village, and the said Village having applied to the Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois, for an assessment of the cost of said improvement according to the benefits, and a special assessment therefor having been made and returned to said Court, General Number 471,369, the final hearing thereon will be held on the second day of April, A. D. 1928, or as soon thereafter as the business of the said Court will permit. All persons desiring may file objections in said Court before said day, and may appear on the hearing and make their defense. Said ordinance provides for the collection of said assessment in eight (8) annual installments, with in- terest thereon at the rate of five per centum (5%) per annum. Dated, Winnetka, Cook County, Illinois, March 16, A. D. 1928. HARRY I. ORWIG, Person appointed by the Presi- dent of the Board of Local Improvements of the Village of Winnetka, Cook County, Illinois, (and such appointment approved and confirmed by the Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois) to make said special assessment. FREDERICK DICKINSON, Village Attorney. T2-2te VILLAGE OF WINNETKA, ILLINOIS WATERWORKS INTAKE NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed proposals, endorsed 'Proposals for Waterworks Intake" will be re- ceived by the Village Manager for the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Winnetka, Illinois, until 10:00 A. M., Monday, April 2, 1928, and will then be publicly opened and read. The work for which proposals are in- vited is the furnishing of all materials, labor, tools, equipment and plant and for building a waterworks intake and shore protection, excepting the 30-inch cast iron pipe, and steel sheet piling which will be furnished by the Village. The work is located on shore and in the lake at the site of the present water- works plant, at the foot of Tower Road, 'Winnetka. Each proposal must contain the full name of every person or company in- terested in the same and must be ac- companied by cash or a certified check in the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). This sum is a guarantee that if the proposal is accepted, a contract will be entered into and its performance prop- erly secured: Proposals must be made on blank forms which may be obtained at the of- fice of Pearse Greeley and Hanson. En- gineers, 6 No. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111 The right is reserved to reject any or all proposals and to accept any proposal which is deemed most advantageous to the Village. VILLAGE OF WINNETKA H. L. WOOLHISER, Village Manager. T3-3te Hold Annual Town Meeting Tuesday, April 3 The annual Town meeting will be held at Community House, Winnetka, Tuesday, April 3, at 2 o'clock p. m. Mrs. Gertrude M. Thurston, super- visor and treasurer of New Trier township, is preparing her books for the annual audit, which will be made on April 27. Mrs. Thurston has held this office for fourteen years, during which time she has witnessed many changes in the township, and during which time the work of the office gradually in- creased to the very peak, in volume. With the annexation of vast areas to north shore villages in recent years, the work is diminishing, but there is still plenty to do. Lucille McAllister : Heads Gas Co., Home Service Department After more than two years as head of the Home Service department of the North Shore Gas company, Mrs. Nina T. Brewer has resigned and will leave shortly for Los Angeles, Calif. where she will make her home. The work of the popular Home Service department has been taken over by Mrs. Lucille McAllister, who has had extensive experience in this type of work in the south. Mrs. Brewer during her supervision of the Home Service work has com- piled many recipes which have been given to north shore housewives both through the newspapers and by distri- bution from the five stores of the North Shore Gas company. Many North Shore housewives will attest to the value of Mrs. Brewer's suggestions and to the popularity of her "Culinary Hints," which have appeared weekly in newspapers on the north shore. 3 All of the work of the Home Service department will now be assumed by Mrs. McAllister, whose varied experi- ences in this sort of work will prove valuable to north shore housewives. From the south, Mrs. McAllister brings recipes for tasty dishes long famous there. These recipes, in addi- tion to many others, will be distributed both through weekly articles in the newspapers and through the North Shore Gas company stores. Mrs. McAllister also will make reg- ular calls in all the communities served by the North Shore Gas company to test oven heat reguators and make suggestions for use in the kitchen. Start Work on New High School Athletic Field A resolution providing for the im- mediate starting of preliminary work on the development of the New Trier athletic field located immediately east of Essex road, was adopted by the High school board at its meeting last Tuesday night. This work will in- clude the grading, leveling and lay- ing out the various fields to be located on the area. No plans are being formulated for the erection of a stadium on the area and the reports that have been cir- culating throughout the township to this effect are entirely without foun- dation, it was stated by Supt. Frederick E. Clerk in discussing plans for the development and use of the field. Resolutions of appreciation of the board to Edmund Castles for his co- operation with the school faculty in speaking on "Law as a Profession" be- fore the Juniors of the school in con- nection with vocational guidance course, and to Supt. E. L. Nygaard of the Kenilworth schools for the Art exhibit which is now on display at the High school, were also passed by the board. Harmon Fund Provides Grants for Playgrounds In order to assist real estate opera- tors to establish permanent public playgrounds in new residential devel- opments, the Harmon Foundation has set aside $40,000 for grants to develop- ers during 1928, according to an an- nouncement of the Playground and Recreation association of America. The association will administer the plan of awards. Application for a grant from this Harmon Playfield fund may be made by any developer of a residential sub- division in any city in the United States, it is explained. No limit is set definitely to the size of the grant which may be made to any one devel- oper, but is intended to divide the 1928 appropriation among not less than twenty residential developments whic qualify. :