WINNETKA TALK July 14, 1928 Classified Advertisements (Continued from Page 55) 99 ANTIQUES FOR SALE--ARTS AND ANTIQUES-- Old Pine Trestle table. Old Penn. cabinet in walnut, also pine chests, Maple beds, walnut chests of drawers and mirrors. Am selling out every- thing at cost. Ph. Northbrook 161. 99LTN42-1tp GENUINE ANTIQUES -- SOLID cherry, maple, and mahogany desks, chests, chairs, clocks and colored lamps. 2300 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Ill Apt. 2A. 99LTN42-1tp SALE OF EARLY AMERICAN AND English Antiques at The Little House of Interest. 312 South Ave. Glencoe. Tel. Glencoe 732. 90TNi9-1tp CHIPPENDALE SOFA, WALNUT HIGH- boy, dining room table, chairs, porch swings, lamps. Ph. Winnetka 58. 99T19-1tc 100 FOR SALE--HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE--ORIENTAL RUG, 19x13.2, $800, great sacrifice. Also child's bed & wardrobe; Colonial dining rm. fix- ture. Tel. Winn. 2824. 100LTN42-1tc FOR SALE--1 COUCH AND PAD, green dresser, misc. pieces of green furniture, cheap. Call Wilmette 534. 100LTN42-1te FOR SALE--NEW MILTON DESIGN Burdick bath cabinet. Call Kenilworth 3158. 100T19-1tp FOR SALE--85 LB. CAPACITY ICE box. Good condition. Ph. Wilmette 3957 100LT42-1tp LIVING, DINING & BEDRM. FURNI- ture. Piano, couches & other furn. 419 Maple Ave., Winn. 100LTN42-1tc 101 WTD. TO BUY--HOUSEHOLD GDS. WANTED TO BUY -- SECOND-HAND furniture and other household goods. Highest prices for same. Crost Furni- ture store, 1004-6 Emerson St, Ev- anston, Ill. Ph. Univ. 189. 101LTNb5-tfc 102 FOR SALE--MISC. FOR SALE--BOY"S BICYCLE IN GOOD condition, 26 inch wheel. $15. Wm. Schwall. 80 Locust Rd., Winnetka, HL. 102LTN42-1te STEEL BOAT, 18x5, WITH OUTBOARD motor, complete, $150. Will take radio or sm. roadster as part pay. Tel Winn. 2482. 102LTN42-1tc BRUNSWICK BILLIARD AND POOL table. Homeside. $50. Ph. Winnetka 872. 102TN-1te FOR SALE--LIFE MEMBERSHIP IN Breakers Beach and Golf Club. $500. Ph. Wilmette 2853. 102L.TN42-1tc 103 WANTED TO BUY--MISC. BEFORE YOU SELL MEN'S OLD CLOTHING AND LADIES' fur coats, call a reliable dealer and get well paid for it. H. Gordon University 2990 103T15-4tp WANTED--CLEAN, WHITE RAGS, 10c per lb. 1232 Central Ave. Wilmette. 103LTN14-tfp 104 EXCHANGE TRADE YOUR NORTH SHORE VACANT OR small house for either of these 2 new brick homes of 4 & 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. Price, $26,000. Ph. Winnetka 1300. 104LTN42-1tc BARGAIN EXCHANGE EXCHANGE YOUR OLD FURNITURE for new, with very liberal allowances this week only. BROWN FURNITURE CO. Ph. Univ. 6300 104L'TN42-1te Notice is hereby given that every property owner in New Trier Township is notified that Canada Thistles must be cut. Any person violating this law and allowing thistles to go to seed will be prosecuted and fined. JOHN BALMES, Thistle Commissioner. 1567 Sherman Ave. Purple Grid Squad Faces Tough Year; Many New Players Facing an unusually heavy schedule minus the services of fourteen letter- men, a number of whom were all- conference caliber, is the situation in which Coach Dick Hanley, North- western's football coach, finds himself as plans for the 1928 season get under- way. The season opens with Butler, Oc- tober 6. Instead of the usual two practice games, Ohio will be met October 13 at Dyche stadium. Then comes in succession Kentucky, Illinois, Minnesota, Purdue, Indiana and Dart- mouth. Besides this formidable outlay of opponents there is a second team schedule including Loyola varsity, Notre Dame reserves, Illinois reserves, Indiana reserves and Carroll college varsity. The 1928 Wildcat edition will be without the services of such stellar grid performers as Tiny Lewis and Vic Gustafson, backs; Waldo Fisher and George Panosh, ends; Rudy Schuler, Arnold Karstens, and Walt Rosie, tackles; Bob Schneider, guard, and Skeet Wyman and Bill Hellerman, centers. Other lettermen from last year's squad who have either gradu- ated or will not return are Al Schuler and D. W. Seymour, tackles; Bus Owen, guard, and Bill Ketchevar, end. Coupled with this somewhat for- boding outlook is the decided lack of first class material among the remain- ing candidates. This situation is espe- cially noticeable in the tackle, guard and center positions while veteran ends, with the exception of Tom Verdell, are conspicuous by their absence. The backfield prospects might be said to be promising with nearly twenty of the forty-five candidates striving for posi- tions in this department. Veterans who will return are: Capt. Holmer and Achers, fullbacks; Calder- wood, Haas, Bergherm, halfbacks: Levison, Fox and Rojan, quarterbacks; Hazen and Sinkler, tackles: Dart and Anderson, guards; Verdell, end, and Erickson, center. Reserves from last year's varsity are Carter and Clarr, halfbacks; Spadoa, Singleton and Kenty, guards, and Cool and Vanden- berg, tackles. Newcomers from thé sophomore ranks are: halfbacks, Brudor, W. Lewis, Lemming, Heinzelman, Griffen, Reil; quarterbacks, Lee Hanley; full- back, Davis; ends, Woodworth, Mas- sey, Oliphant, Egbert, Baker and Red- man ; tackles, Ford Hall, Bill Hall, and Scott; guards, Sinks, Sullivan, and Crooks; centers, Clark and Green. Several of the above sophomore candidates together with a number of others who have yet to show their ability will be used to form a second team. More candidates to fill out the varsity ranks as well as the newly inagurated second team are greatly needed for the coming fall, Coach Hanley pointed out. He has urged all available candidates in school to turn out for the squad and try for a posi- tion on one of the two teams. ANOTHER TALKING MOVIE Dolores Costello and Conrad Nagel, who made such a hit in the vitaphone production, "Glorious Betsy," now playing in Chicago, are to be co- starred in a new motion picture of the "talkie" type. The new picture is to be called "The Redeeming Sin" and will be directed by Howard Brether- ton. The scenario is by Harvey Gates. Illinois ranks first among the states in the percentage of its industries elec- trified. Illinois has 1,000,000 fowls accredit- ed as standard-bred--as many as all other states combined. Character Education The Boy Scout troops of the many communities in which they operate are organized for the purpose of char- acter education. For many years since its inception in 1910, Scouting has demonstrated that education in character is just as possible as educa- tion in arithmetic. Character is little more than a group of characteristics. Characteristics do not "just happen," they are the result of life experiences. In the Scout troop the boy learns the give and take that is necessary in a social relationship. He learns team work and unselfishness. The Boy Scout program is based upon an understanding of boy nature. It gives the boy the things that he is interested in. The program and its leaders also have a forward look to- ward boy needs. Scouting is based upon understanding boy nature and fulfilling boy needs.--Walter McPeek, Scout north shore executive. Emulate Pioneers "During the year, working under the handicap of indoor meetings, we can, at the very best, but practice Scouting," Scout Executive Walter McPeek said at a recent north shore Scout leaders' discussion. "But the summer camp gives us a chance to really live Scouting in earnest. Camp- ing is concentrated Scouting. If your boys and their parents like the taste of Scouting that they have been get- ting this year, they should do every- thing possible to go to camp Checau- gau where the opportunity is presented for them to get as much real Scouting in two weeks as the average troops get during the entire time in the city. "We must keep alive in the hearts of our youth that spirit of our pioneers that pushed back the frontier that made our nation great as it is. We must let them feel the quiver of the axe as it bites deep into the log. We take boys to camp that we may keep alive in them the romance which beckoned to those sturdy pioneers, that will bring back into their live$ those things which have passed out of the present generation." North shore troops, many of them with their Scoutmasters in charge, are leaving for a two weeks period at Camp Checaugau one of the Owas- sippe Camps, near Whitehall, Michi- gan. Any Scout is eligible to attend. Three Tributes "If every boy in the city would join the Boy Scouts, the gangs would dis- appear, the juvenile court would be a stranger to the youth, and we would rear a generation of men that would not require a police protection. 1 have never had a Boy Scout in my court, and there are 1200 of them in Kansas City."--Judge Proterfield, Kansas City Juvenile court. Illinois ranks third among the states in the production of oats. tongregational Church NI P= Sunday, July 15th 11:00 Worship-- Sermon by Mr. Goodwin "Cause and Effect in Religion"