52 WINNETKA TALK September 29, 1928 Highest Grade UPHOLSTERING Cabinet Work Drapery and Upholstery Fabrics ANTIQUES We specialize in Antique Furniture : Repairing and Refinishing Hair Mattresses and Springs Made to Order G. LINDWALL Highest Grade Upholstering Established 1895 808 Oak Street Ph. Winnetka 145 Highway Speed Increased in State of New Jersey New Jersey has increased the speed limit from thirty to forty miles per hour in open country. The new uni- form traffic act passed by the State Legislature. also permits municipali- ties to fix a maximum speed limit of twenty miles an hour, but only when a street is controlled by synchronized, progressive, or some similar signal system. It also eliminates the necessity of slowing to fifteen miles an hour in approaching a grade crossing, reduces to ten miles an hour the speed limit in passing through school zones and maintains a speed maximum of fifteen miles an hour in rounding curves. Chrysler is to build and market the new line of Fargo commercial cars and trucks, according to announce- ment, and will soon announce two lines of vehicles bearing that name. You've Seen Nothing to Com pare with the NIEW 1929 CENTWIRY HUPMOBILES With a majority of 1929 models revealed, Hupmobile relinquishes not one iota of the style and value leader- ship it has held among fine cars since the first Century models were announced last fall. Brilliantly refined in tailored metal appearance and lux- ury of appointments, the new 1929 Century Six and Eight now more than ever present the century's greatest advance in mechanical excellence, SIXSEIGHT GOULD C. DAVIS, body design and beauty. By direct comparison and your own sense of values, you will select a new Century Six or Eight as the most modern development of twentieth century transportation. {Forty-two body and equipment combinations, standard and custom on each line. Six of the Century, $1345 to $1645. Century Eight, $1825 to $2125. All prices f. o. b. Detroit. NEW 1929 HUPMOBILE CENTURY 548 LINCOLN AVENUE WINNETKA, ILLINDIS Sales Room Phone Winnetka 3090 Service Station Phone Winnetka 3099 "| congestion. NARROW HIGHWAYS NOW BIG MENACE TO HEALTH Air Polluted by Monoxide, Which Causes Big Increase in Heart Disease, Says Dr. Bundesen The narrow 20 foot highways in our congested areas are a distinct health menace, according to Herman N. Bundesen, Director of Health, Sani- tary District of Chicago, in a letter to Charles M. Hayes of Winnetka, president of the Chicago Motor club. "More than two million people in this country," says Dr. Bundesen, "are hampered in their efforts to earn a livelihood by heart disease. Poison- ing from carbon monoxide gas is one of the reasons for the alarming in- crease in this disease. Many persons believe that carbon monoxide is harm- ful only indoors; as a matter of fact, however, as early as 1923 Henderson and Haggard of Yale University desig- nated city streets among the localities where the deadly poison might be found, net indeed in quantities to cause death, but in sufficient quanti-, ties to impair health, and in some in- stances to be the proximate cause of death. Highway Air Polluted "The pollution of city streets has spread to the country highways, and on Saturdays and Sundays when our radial highways are crowded to the point of suffocation, it is certain that the air will contain a greater percent- age of carbon monoxide than will be found on 'most city streets. The dan-' ger zone has moved from the city to the country. "We used to place our congested, area within the confines of Cook county but year by year that line has been pushed farther out. The main roads for one hundred miles and far-, ther from Chicago are suffering from Although congestion achieves its most intolerable condition: on Saturdays and Sundays, neverthe- less week days now are-not free from traffic tangles. With this condition existing today, what will it be five or ten years hence? Motorists who use the high- ways of Illinois say that throughout the touring season highways that for- merly were deserted in mid-week now carry an endless procession of cars, and that this condition exists one hundred and one hundred and fifty miles from Chicago. - A motorist told me recently that he struck congestion one hundred and twenty miles from Chicago on the Lincoln highway and that this conges- tion did not decrease until he drove into Cook county. Here the forty-foot pavement on Roosevelt road thinned the traffic to a point where travel was comfortable. "From these facts it is easy to for- mulate a theory concerning the health hazards encountered by the motorists who take their families out on Satur- days and Sundays. The narrow twenty- foot highways in our congested areas are a distinct health menace. The! plan of the Chicago Motor club for widening seven radial highways to forty feet from. the outer line of Cook county into the state for a minimum disance of one hundred miles should meet the approval of public-spirited, citizens everywhere. 4 KANSAS LEADS ON HIGHWAY Chicago--The state of Kansas leads all others for the density of automo- biles per mile on its highways accord- ing to the results of a survey just completed by The Automobile Club of Illinois in cooperation with the Ameri- can Motorists Association. The fig- ures show that the five leading states, from a standpoint of automobiles registered per mile are: Kansas with 159.2; Oklahoma, 158.2; Rhode Island, 130.6; Nebraska, 97.1; and New Jera sey, 86.8.