16 WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925 =] OPEN BIG RADIO SHOW NEXT WEEK North Shore Fans Urged to Attend Chicago Exhibit A place of attraction for north shore fans during the week of September 28 to October 3, will be the National Ex- position and the Allied Radio Con- gress combined, at the National Expo- sition Palace, 666 Lake Shore drive, Chicago. Virtually all the manufactur- ers of radio sets and equipment in the country and a majority of the dealers of the Central West will be repre- sented at the show with attractive booths and displays. The early holding of the show in advance of the active radio season is to give the public a peep at the newest things and to acquaint them with the latest developments in radio. Most of the exhibits will be shipped direct from the two radio shows now in pro- gress in New York. The Chicago show is looked on as being an amalgama- tion of the Eastern ones. At the National Radio Exposition amateur set builders will be allowed to display their ingenious works, and prizes will be awarded to those judged to have entered the best set- This con- test is open to all. High school youths especially are invited to enter. Radio fans attending the show will find plenty of diverting entertainment every afternoon and evening it is promised. Chicago broadcasting sta- tions will pass in review before their admirers and will "do their stuff" just as it is done at the home station. Fans at the show will be called on to vote in a popularity contest for their favorite entertainers and to decide for the benefit of local stations, the type of musical program, jazz, classical, operatic or old-time music they prefer. A strike vote against stations broad- casting on Mondays or Silent Nights will also be recorded, to find whether fans favor their continuance. The entertainment at the show and the balloting will be conducted by the Broadcast Listeners Association of America, which will have a booth and acomprehensive exhibit. Mrs. A. Pedersen, 893 Willow road, will entertain the Dorcas society, Tues- day evening, September 29, at 8 o'clock. WA serviceof 'dignified elegance We will furnish a service of dignified elegance and simply charge you for the actual values received. We are well acquainted with the undertaking business, and can assure you that none can serve you better. Our prices are right. WARD & BUCHHOLZ Funeral Directors Lady Assistant Private Ambulance 912 Chicago Ave. Ph. Univ. 600 GRANGE GETS BIG TEST IN CORNHUSKERS GAME Capt. Red Grange will lead the Uni- versity of Illinois football team against the strong University of Nebraska eleven in the first game of the season in the Illinois Memorial Stadium Satur- day, October 3. Although this is the first game, it is far different from the usual "practice" contest. Nebraska is usually the champion of the Missouri valley and the Cornhuskers in 1922 and 1923 defeated Notre Dame. Instead Nebraska is one of the three big games in the Illinois stadium this season. The whole sporting world will look to the Illini amphitheater that day. From New York is com- ing a delegation of sports writers, headed by Grantland Rice, dean of the corps. All of the big news reels and news photograph syndicates will have their photographers on the Everybody wants to see Red Grange start the 1925 season. Bob Zuppke says that it will require the best performances of Grange, backed up by a good line and excel- lent team work, to repulse the Corn- huskers. Two years ago Grange made his first appearance in varsity football against Nebraska, scoring three touchdowns on the team which afterwards licked Notre Dame. Last vear at Lincoln, Grange did not score a touchdown in the tight game which Illinois won, 9 to 7, but Red did throw the pass which spelled victory. It is a cinch that Red will play the greater part if not every bit of the Nebraska game. If it is as tough a game as the | | Optometrist Illini expect he will be in there every minute. The Illini expect to entertain the biggest first game crowd in history, - Want Ads Bring Results 3 Aays g Light 48¥ 0.H.BERSCH. OD. AID TO BEAUTY Worried wrinkles about the eyes come from strained eyesight. We fit you with glasses that will not only improve your sight but the looks of your face as well. 15 years of successful practice DR. O. H. BERSCH 1177 Wilmette Avenue Wilmette For Appointment Phone Wil. 2766 Keep the {temperature BY DEGREES the temperature falls or rises, in the former case demanding more coal. present supply -- sufficient for the winter, or We can furnish you at once with good coal of any size in any quantity, and at prevailing market prices. Good, clean coal free from dirt or slate. WINNETKA COAL and LUMBER CO. getting lower? 823 SPRUCE ST. vem RRAR i Lig How is your WINNETKA field. | Find "Y" School Is Genuine "Melting Pot" Chicago as a "melting pot" is strik- ingly illustrated in the evening high school of the Central Y. M. C. A, where nineteen foreign nations are represented by 45 native-born sons, ac- cording to records compiled yesterday by H. L. Buck, principal, following the opening of the school year. An analysis of a group of 234 new students reveals that 62 percent had one or both parents born in 25 dif- ferent foreign nations. Intelligence tests applied to the new students showed a high average in- tellectual level for high school stu- dents. Twenty-eight percent have an I. Q. or intelligence quotient, which is the unit of measurement in the tests, of 105 or above. Seventy-seven, or 33 percent of the group, measured 05 or above. NORTH SHORE BOOTERY 529 Davis Street at Chicago Avenue In the North Shore Hotel Bldg. The Store of Good Shoes Any Laundress will tell you this is the best soap to buy Laundresses know best what soap gets clothes whitest in the shortest time and pro- longs their life. They can't be fooled: years of experience in washing have taught them the truth. And almost without excep- tion, they use American Family. There can be no greater trib- ute to this wonderful pure soap. If you aren't using it, begin now. Your clothes deserve that protection. KIRK'S AMERICAN SOAP IN BAR OR FLAKE FORM FAMILY LAA AANA AAA AANA AAA AA A Libertyville and Mundelein --eastly reached on the North Shore Line ARGE numbers of people are visiting Libertyville and Mun- delein these lovely fall days. Thousands are seeking the natural splendors of this beautiful vicinity-- the rolling hills, the stately oaks, the lively fall colorings. Others are interested in the great new home development that is taking place in this attractive section. Every day we are asked how to get there. Every day, too, we are asked about the new Skokie ValleyDivision of the North Shore Line which will bring faster DEERFIELD RD. CLAVEY RD. % DUNDEE RD. 3 P WILLOW RD. 2 [] GLENVIEW 3% SIMPSON ST. & DEMPSTER STg OAKTON ST. ™ High-Speed . Service The Scenic Route LAKE BLUFF LAKE FOREST CHICAGO LOOP service to Libertyville, Mundelein and the entire Lake County Countryside. Here is the way to reach Libertyville and Mundelein now--a short, pleasant journey. Take the North Shore Line to Lake Bluff. Transfer there to the Libertyville-Mundelein Division of the North Shore Line. Trains leave every 30 minutes from Adams and Wabash, and from Wilson and Broadway. 'New High-Speed Service Over Skokie Valley Division Early in 1926 Early in 1926, the new high-speed Skokie Valley Division of the North Shore Line will be completed. Fast, frequent service will then be avail able from Libertyville and Mundelein direct to downtown Chicago -- with- out change or transfer. The Libertyville-Mundelein Division has re- cently been double tracked to meet the growing needs of this locality. Foreseeing the early development of this desirable section, the North Shore Line is preparing fully to meet the transportation requirements of the thousands of home seekers who even now are laying their plans to live there. Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad Co. The high-speed electrified railroad