10 WINNETKA TALK July 17, 1926 i= [mm mm |) Your first gE keen pride continues-- when the finish is DUCO For the DUCO finish is as durable as armorplate, yet as soft and rich in appear- ance as velvet! When your car is finished with DUCOQO, time ceases to age, wear fails to dim the beauty of the finish. Our shop is fully equipped, our work- men are experts and our workmanship has been approved. We do the work in one-third the time required for old style finishes. Phone or call and let us give you an estimate of the cost and a delivery date. Let us put DUCO on your car now! FENDER AND BODY REPAIRING We not only remove dents--but we repair torn and wrecked fenders and bodies so that all traces of the damage are removed. We also replace broken windshields and window glass. ARE #03 3 Robert W. McIntyre Finest Automobile Painting and Trimming "Gasoline Alley"--rear Wilmette State Bank--Telephone Wilmette 684 --There is only one Duco--du Pont Duco -- els Now This Boy Knows Winnetka Parking Rules William B. Kelly, colored, residing at 365 Monroe avenue, Glencoe, made two mistakes in parking when he stop- ped his car on Lincoln avenue, Win- netka, last Tuesday morning. For one mistake he was fined $10 and costs. He left the car in a diagonal posi- tion, obstructing traffic, and that first attracted the attention jof Officer Harrold C. Lewis, who loitered for a time about the car, awaiting the re. turn of Kelly. During this vigil, the officer chanced to peer through the sedan window, and behold, there, in plain sight, on the seat, was a bottle half filled with liquor --another violation of parking rules. Chief of police W. M. Peterson was summoned and had arrived when Kel- ly returned. The latter was taken to the station and when arraigned before Judge C. T. Northrop, entered a plea of guilty to transporting liquor on the public highway, for which the fine was assessed. All Pies in Truck Are Mince After This Crash A Case and Martin company pie truck driven by C. A. Roe, of 2518 Moffet street, Chicago, and a Haynes sedan driven by F. E. Richmond, of 1808 Kenilworth avenue, collided at Maple avenue and Fourth street, Wil- mette, Monday morning about 7 o'clock. Both truck and car were hurled to the parkway at the northwest corner of the intersection and both were seriously damaged. Neither of the drivers was hurt. Richmond was driving west on Maple avenue and the truck was coming from the south. The latter was loaded with freshly baked pies, of various varieties, for the north shore customers of the com- pany. After the crash, the only kind of a pie Roe was able to find in his truck, was "mince." Hubbard Woods Company Supplies Stadium Lumber Many people have been watching with interest the construction work now in progress on the Northwestern university stadium and have comment- ed on the unusual amount of lumber required for this work. It is interest- ing to know that one of our north shore firms, the Hubbard Woods Lumber and Coal company, is supbly- ing many thousands of feet of lumber to J. B. French and company, the con- tractors. TO GIVE RADIO TALK "Character Education" is the sub- ject of an address to be given by President Fdna Dean Baker of 'the National Kindergarten and Elementary college. on Mondav afternoon, July 19. The address will be given between 4 and 4:30 o'clock over WMAQ, the Dailv News broadcasting station. This address is one of a series on Child Training which is being given monthly bv the college in connection with the Mothers-in-Council program conduct- ~d by the Dailv News. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Anderson and their family, accompanied by Miss Winifred Odh, have returned to their home at 937 Spruce street after a trip to northern Wisconsin and Michiean. They stayed at Manistee for ten days. --_--0-- Mr. and Mrs. Nash C. Cazel, and baby, of 860 Pine street, will leave Winnetka Monday, Tuly 19, for a two weeks' trip to La Crosse Lake. Wis. They expect to drive, and to return about August 2.