Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 9 Nov 1928, p. 49

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·November 9, 1928 WILMETTE LIFE a~y time you are out in your car. And even if the owner knows that his brakes are not dragging, it is good to make this test regularly, for it wiD show whether there is any other car disorder that exerts a drag on the running geas. If the car slows down too rapidly, and the brakes are found 0. K., then there is too much frictional resistance somewhere, and the qulc~er the owner has it corrected, the better. "Most motorists do not realize the extent to which dragging brakes will affect the acceleration and hill-climbing abilities .of an automobile. IF YOU'RE A"GRID" FAN Brake Testing Easy YOU'LL·READ THIS STORY Declares ,Dealer of Graham-Paige Chicago Motor Club Recom- A simple test by which any motormends Routes to Two Football ist can readily ascertain whether his Battles on Saturday brakes are dragging, a condition that Mindful of the definite improvement credited by experts to the U niversitv of Chicago football team, many Coo'< county motorists will be pointing their cars late this week toward Madison, Wisconsin, where Coach Stagg's men tackle the University of Wisconsin team next Saturday. The Chicago Motor Club recommends two main routes to the scene of the conflict. The first, which wilt be selected by those living in the northern part of the count.Y. is vic. Lake Geneva. The distance of this route from Chicago to Madison is aporoximatelv 153 miles. anrl is via the Rand Road. or Illinois No. 60. to Volo; Illinois-20 to McHenry;. US-12 through Lake Geneva, Elkhorn and Whitewater to Madison. This Route 161 Miles The second route is about 100 miles ton~. It leaves Chicago via Illinois-5. or the Lake street road, and runs through Elgin to Rockford. Illinois-2 is the highway from the latter city to Beloit. Wisconsin. From Beloit one · drives on US-51, combined with Wisconsin-26, to Janesvitle, and from there on Wisconsin-13 to Madison. Slightly less traffic may be encounte!'ed on the second route. The first, however. runs through the nearby Illinois and Wisconsin lakes re~don, anct those who possess a penchant for duck hunting- may want to remain in those parts overnight and turn out, bright and early, in the morning. The rabbit anct pheasant season opens Saturdav. and those species of game will be. or should be. found adjacent to both routes. Of course, one must look to those important details of licenses and permis~ion to hunt on private property. Three Routes to Indianapolis Other grid fans in this vicinity may want to ~ee Illinois, 1927 champion of the Big Ten conference, play Butler at Indianapolis. Three routes to the Hoosier capital are offered. The shortest is about 198 miles, and is by way of US-41 through Hammond, Dyer, and Kentland to the intersection with US52, which is followed through LaFayette and Lebanon to Indianapolis. The second route leaves · Chicago on Illinois-1. which ts followed to Danville: Illinois-tO and lndiana-34 through Kern to Crawfordsville: Indiana-32 to Lebanon and US-52 to Indianapolis. The mileage is approximately 231. The third route ~egins on US-41 out of Chicago and runs to Schermerville; US-30, the Lincoln Highway, through Valparaiso to Plymouth; US-31 through Peru to Indianapolis. The distance is about 223 miles. The above routes are over concrete highways. It is to be expected that some congestion will be encountered, particularly on the narrow eighteen and twenty-foot roadways, just outside Cook county. The same conditions may prevail on the Madison highways just beyond the Cook county limits. Most of the roads in this county have either been widened to forty feet or are scheduled for such action. seriously ahects car performance and operating economy, is passed on to the motoring public by Cari Hanson of Hanson Motors, Winnetka GrahamPaige dealer. ' To test for dragging brakes, attain a speed of · 30 miles an hour on a smooth and level road, then shift to neutral and let the car coast. When the speedometer shows 25 miles an hour, begin timing the deceleration. If your car is not rolling 5 miles an hour or faster at the end of 60 seconds, have the brakes inspected. To offset the effect of the wind, the driver should make the test in both directions over the same level stretch, and note the average time taken to decelerate from 25 miles per hour to 5 miles per hour. The average should be 60 seconds or more. "The beauty of thi~ test," says Hanson, "is that it can be performed at Ask fOr It by NamePines AUTOMATIC .. . Winter/ront The Only Automatic Radiator Shutter on the Market HEN you buy a radi·ator shutter W this year-to make certain you get the method of motor protection that the motor car industry has endorsed-ask for it by nam~Pines Automatic Winterfront. You may be offered substitutes which are represented as being "like" Winterfront-or "just the same" as Wir.terfront. There is only one Pines Automatic Winterfront. It is the · only Automatic Radiator Shutter on the market. There is nothing else like it - none that works always without thought or attention on the pa~ ~f the driver. Pines Automatic Winterfront protects your motor from cold and the costly repair bills caused . by cold-automatically, and with scientific accuracy. Your motor tells it when to operate. You have nothing to remember-no chance to guess. Automatic Motor Protection is now standard on Hu.Pmobile 8, Chrysler 75 and 80, Dodge Sen1or Six, Cadill~c, LaSalle, Lincoln and Pierce-Arrow. Naturally you · want the same kind of protection these leaders in the industry endorse and use. Only ·b y demanding the original Pines Automatic Winterfront can you be sure of full, positive, automatic protection against the destroying force of cold. In Your Own Interests Buy Your Radiator Shutter by N~e ~--\'p ·i N£ S , Say \RlERJROMl-It~ Automatic FERD. PLATE HYDRQ,_ELECTRIC BRAKE SERVICE Authorized Service Bendix Mechanical Brakes Loekbeed Hydraulic Brakes BIRD-SYKES CELEBRATES Bird-Sykes company, Grah~m-Paige distributors in Chicago, will have reached it~ twenty-fifth birthday, . a distinguished pioneer of automobt~e row on November 17. On that date m 1903 George H. Bird and Bernard G. Sykes entered the motor car . sales business together, although the mdustry was looked upon as a. doubtf~l experiment and people in tt constdered adventurers. LOBRAIMB LIGHTS 2212 West Railroad Avenue, Comer Noyes Street Greenleaf 2122 EVANSTON l

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