Car Care Key to Trouble-Free Winter Motoring Improvement in Automobiles9 Choice Of Spots To Enjoy Winter Fun Join To Create Van for All Seasons There was a time not too many years ago when the family car went into winter storage along with the beach gear, the golf clubs and the cotton clothing. - Cars just couldn't take the rigors of winter driving and, be sides, where was there to go? So, into the garage and up on blocks was the rule until the following spring. But today, the car is a van for all seasons. Engineering and design improvements and good maintenance make a car as dependable in foul weather as it is in fair. Furthermore, there is such an enticing array of fall and winter attractions that hibernation is foolhardy unless you are a bear. First, let's look at the modern car versus those of grandpa's time. Today's coolants, when properly looked after, are vir tually foolproof. Cars of yesterday had to depend on coolants that boiled away quickly or could withstand only moderate cold. Modern tires with new designs attack ice and snow with the surefootedness of a tight rope walker. Even things we now take as a matter of course like efficient heaters and defrosters, improved suspension, steering and fuels take the doubt out of winter driving. Thanks to the new dependability of the automobile, motor ing families are enjoying a bountiful choice of places to go. Winter motoring vacations to the southern United States are becoming almost as common as summer vacations. Fall and winter sports such as hunting, skiing, snowmobil- ing, skating, ice fishing and tobogganing are luring mil- lions to resorts throughout the U.S. and Canada. With artifi cial snow making machines, even mild winter-area eleva tions are becoming ski resorts and are attracting throngs of enthusiasts. ~ But even with better cars and more places to go in them, winter motoring is not im mune from unusual hazards. For example, one out of every four cars in North America will experience winter starting trouble. Of all who have trou ble starting, three out of five will have it more than once. Yet there is no need for starting trouble -- even in the coldest climates. Exhaustive studies prove that in instances where ignition maintenance is practiced, starting problems are rare. Conversely, where maintenance is neglected, starting trouble is common -- even in warm weather areas! If there is any conclusion to be gathered, it is this. More people are going to more places by car in winter. Cars are cap able of coping with the most severe rigors winter can offer. That is if the cars are proper ly maintained and equipped. 1 This section is intended to show how proper car care will give you more fun behind the wheel this winter. Growth in popularity of cold weather *port* has made winter automobile travel almost as vital to fun as the summer variety. Ski resorts lind parking lots filled with ears. To Ret to these resorts and other sports areas, cars must be in extra good condition. Play It Safe Advice to All Car Drivers Perhaps the only thing growing more rapidly than school and college enroll ments Is the volume of traffic that speeds along streets and highways of the nation. An estimated 95,000,000 motor vehicles, many of them driven by teen-agers, are In operation. Fifty per cent are estimated to require servic ing to make them perfectly safe. This Is why police and school authorities at all lev els join In urging all motor ists to take care, for the safe ty of all youth In traffic. Check Your Car Advice to drivers Is have their motor vehicles checked Immediately for quick re sponsive action to meet any emergency of driving; to pre pare to become alert to the sometime Irresponsible youngsters who thoughtless ly dart out Into traffic on the way to or from classes; to co operate with school traffic patrols manned by the young at school crossings. > Parents of youth who drive their own cars, motorcycles or scooters, whether they are high school or college stu dents, must assume the re sponsibility for instilling in them the need for extra cau tion, extra care for their ve hicles, as the opening of school term approaches. Observe Warnings Signs will warn motorists when schools open. Other signs will warn of the ap proaches to schools and of school crossings. "Slow down," will be the order of the day. Considering the number of youngsters going to school, the education in safety con ducted in classrooms and the past cooperation of motor vehicle drivers has yielded excellent results. The aim of the current pleas to motorists is to make the safety record even better. MANHATTAN IN PARIS . . . Paris seems to look more like New York every day. The Eiffel Tower is forever, but the skyscrapers rising along the banks of the Seine have that New York look, and the miniature Statue of Liberty -- which was a gift of France to the United States -- in front of the American-style high-risers seems to be a reminder of that part of Americana that has been given to France. PG. 12 - PLAINDEALER OCT. 8, 1969 ft IRtMmtR • V T H E O L D T I M E * Deaths DR. ANTHONY DELFOSSE Dr. Anthony Delfosse, 78, for many years a summer res ident of 1824 OrchanJ Beach, McHenry, died at 1?15 p.m. Monday, Oct. 6, in McHenry hospital. He had been in fail ing health in recent years. Dr. Delfosse retired last win ter as a staff member of Bel mont hospital, Chicago, which he had long served. Funeral arrangements were incomplete Tuesday morning. From Allen Fretz, Salford, P e n n s y l v a n i a : I r e m e m b e r the good old days when I was small and stood in the street to listen to the old grind organ on wheels. There were others with small organs and a small m o n k e y o n a c h a i n . T h e monkey wore a red cape and carried a tin cup to collect coins from the audience. Then there were medicine shows that come to town and put up a stage to entertain us with banjo music. They pre sented slapstick comedy and sold salve, liniment, snake oil and herb medicines. When we went into town, there was always a peanut vendor selling fresh roasted peanuts from a push cart, with an oil burner beneath the cart to roast the peanuts. A couple of times each sum mer they had those wonderful Farmer's Picnics. There we could treat ourselves to home made ice cream, root beer and sassaparilla. We ran all over the woods and went on hay rides. At night th#ey would have have a dance called the "Cake Walk" where you could win a cake. Later, the old German band played "Turkey In The Straw" while the grownups danced. Those were the days of silent movies, with stars such asWm. A. Hart, Fatty Arbuckle, Ken M a y n a r d , B u s t e r K e e t o n , Harold Lloyd, Charlie Chap lin, Will Rogers, Theda Bara, Mary Pickford, Lillian Gish, Pearl White and others. American people carry about 13 million pounds of keys daily. I l h i i { I \ ( , i l l ) * Fish Fry Friday 5 until 9 p.m. Fresh Ocean Perch f -- Golden French Fries %1 V f| • Tangy Cole Slaw ^ I W - Also Serving Chicken and Steaks - PISTAKEE COUNTRY CLUB 815 W. BAY RD. PHON^ 385-9854 Rich Maender thought solely belts were just for high speed driving. What* yeyr excuse? 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