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Winnetka Weekly Talk, 8 Nov 1924, p. 20

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20 WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8. 1924 GUARD AGAINST MONOXIDE PERIL Travel to Yellowstone Again Breaks Record The headquarters of the Lincoln High- way Association at Detroit is in receipt of word from Horace M. Albright, sup- considerable gain over the first three- quarters of last year. While the revolution in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, slowed up business all over the country the recovery has been very swift and 1,741 units were sold head and foot respectively of the table showing motor vehicle registration to the number of people in the state. Cali- fornia has a car for every three persons. Alabama has 19 people to every car. JOHN MURRAY DEAD The National Association of Real Estate board regrets to record the death by drowning of John L. Mur- ray, executive secretary of the Phil- adelphia Real Estate board. Mr. Mur- Halfway is Missouri with seven indi- there during September. The Ford plant| H ; viduals to each motor vehicle. at Sao Paulo was, of course, shut down during the revolution. The tractor market continues to im- prove all over the world and there are few places where substanital gains have not been made. In the Scandinavian countries Fordson tractor sales are over three times as high as for the whole of last year and in Belgium, Holland and the Near East the record is within ! a very small margin of being as good. : The market in Germany also is improv- FLO WERS ray lost his life while attempting to save an aged woman from drowning. - erintendent of the Yellowstone National Park, that again this season all Yellow- stone National Park travel records were broken. The total travel into the park was 144,158 persons as compared with 138,- 352 persons in the season of 1923. That the motor car and the highway are the preferred means of reaching this great national playground is indicated by the fact that 100,186 persons entered the park by automobile as against 41,- 054 persons who entered it by rail. Mo- tor visitors in the park this year came and which really deserves far more from every state in the Union, from Alas- attention. This is the insidious carbon | ka, the Phillipines, Hawaii and the monoxide vapor which takes its victim | Canal Zone, and from twenty-three for- unaware and many times accomplishes | eign countries, including England, and fatal results. Motorists in this vicinity, | seven other countries of the British Em- who own small private garages, will do| pire. The majority of the motor tour- well to heed the warning recently is-|ists who made the Yelowstone tour this sued by the American Chemical so-|season came from east of the Mississ- ciety. ippi River, in fact one-fourth of all the After an extensive investigation con- visitors entering the park came from the duted by W. P. Yant, W. A. Jacobg|states of Iowa, Illinois, Indiana and and L. B. Berger, of the United States | Ohio. The majority of these travelers Bureau of Mines, and made public by | followed the Lincoln Highway as far}, ¢ ecently been established at Santiago the American Chemical society, it is|as Cheyenne, Wyo., and thence on the Chili emphasized that a dangerous indif-| Yellowstone Highway reached the east- In ference to the perils of carbon mon-|ern or Cody entrance to the park. oxide still exists. On each of seventeen days at the "In summing up the dangers arising | height of the season over 2,000 people from running an automobile engine | entered the park and at many times 10,- in a closed private garage, it can be|000 to 12,000 visitors were in the park said," according to the society's state-|at one time, camping out in the big pub- ment, "that there seems to be no limit | lic camp grounds or using the park ho- of time during which the engine may| tels. "LE FORD FOREIGN BRANCHES BUSY Keep Doors Open "The doors should be opened pre- Reflect Improved Conditions in Europe Chemical Experts in Warn- ing to Motorists Although there has been much writ- ten within the last few days of dis- asters caused by tetraethyl lead poison (it has been commonly called "loony gas"), there is a lurking enemy of the automobilists which often gets its greatest toll during the winter season ing and a recent order for 500 Ford- sons from that country has just been filled, making a total of 1,500 so far this year. The increasing demand for Ford prcd- | ¢ ucts in Europe has made it necessary to open a new Ford plant at Stockholm, al- though a year ago all this territory was handled by the Copenhagen plant. A similar situation prevailed in Holland | where Ford business increased so rapidly that the Antwerp plant could no longer take care of it and Rotterdam got a new Ford factory of its own. Also, a branch 290 Greenwood Avenue Glencoe, Illinois. Glencoe 155 Wilmette 2221 S ' Pot Plants Chrysanthemums Primroses Cyclamen Begonia b Ferns 4 Neatly decorated, 50c up. Cutflowers Mums Pompons Carnations Calendula Sweet Peas Snapdragon domestic business sales reports show that retail deliveries of Ford cars and trucks in the United States during the month just ended were the largest for September in the history of the com- pany. They exceeded the sales of Sep- tember a year ago by more than 5,000. Perennials Achillea Lupinus Columbine Veronica Statice Phlox FRANCE BUYS U. S. CARS Statistics for the first six months of 1924, as reported in an Associated|§ Press dispatch from Paris, show that during that time France bought 6,327 automobiles from the United States and sold 144 French cars to Americans. No other country approaches the United States in automobiles im- ported into France, Italy being sec- ond with 611. Delphinium { Purple Daisy Shasta Daisy Golden Glow and many others vious to starting the engine, even if $1.50 per doz. plants it is only intended to take the car out, because no matter how careful people may be a few unheeded minutes taken to look at the tires or measure the gasoline tank may prove dis- astrous. "If it is necegsary to run the engine for any lengthy period, as in making repairs or adjustments, the car should by all means be run into the open, and even then the direct exhaust should be avoided in order to decrease the possibility of headache and discomfort. "The public has become so accus- tomed to seeing men working about engines which are running and to breathing exhaust gas in low concen- i trations, that it has become more or i less indifferent to its dangers," the statement continues. oe people have regarded. or Evergreens Shrubs Roses . Bulbs California and Alabama Present Motor Contrast . ; : gy California and Alabama are at the ro The improving economic situation abroad is reflected in the September re- ports from the managers of the Ford Mo- tor company's foreign branches and as- ® sociated companies. These show that this is the biggest year the Ford Motor company has ever enjoyed in the foreign field. Although the reports cover only nine | months of the year the sales of Ford units--cars, trucks and tractors--are al- ready close to the record for the entire year 1923. From january i to October 1, 1924, the sale of Ford products over- seas amounted to 138,291 cars and trucks and 10,303 Fordson tractors. ures do not include the production of the Ford Motor Car company of Canada, Ltd., which supplies to all parts of the British empire except the British isles. If truck sales are any barometer of economic conditions then foreign com- merce is coming back rapidly for the January to October sales have run over 13,000 ahead of the entire year's record of 1923. Argentina leads the export field in the purchase of Ford cars having taken near- ly 16,000 since the first of the year, a Dope OROTHERS TOURING CAR ; for all-weather driving These fig- ' hought that the atmosphere they are 3 cothing ic Lol fxLoUSt gas in..o sense, Bat an exceedingly dilute 'mixture of exhaust gas in air made comparatively safe through natural or artificial ventilation. Also, from each i engine that may be running in these ] places atmospheric space is many times greater than that in a private garage at home." Evidence was revealed of disastrous results should the engine be started and left in operation while the driver went elsewhere. "A concentration of 2 per cent," the statement adds, "may easily be built up in a short time, and on his return but a couple of minutes would be required to asphyx- iate him. Victim Taken Unaware Widespread comment on the beauty of the car has not over- shadowed public appreciation of ' itsreally exceptional riding com- fort, smoothness of operation and long life. Bad weather also emphasizes the value of other features--the un- failing response, in extreme cold, : of Dodge Brothers powerful starter, and the snug protection "Although these higher concentra- afforded by suitable curtain ' tions are of importance and interest, Let the enclosures. they should not detract from the fact ) : : that the matter of first importance is AN Weatherman A special enclosure with glass | the rapidity with which the minimum wo windows, which will provide % concentration and exposure that will . operate your d 1 d com- | render a man helpless, although not 0H h closec cat appearance an { necessarily at the time unconscious, Furnace fort, is now available at slight will be formed. 80H additional cost 4 { "Carbon monoxide is in many cases, Cold | especially in these relatively high con- o { centrations, very insidious in its ac- 1 Outdoors | tion, and the victim will often sud- . b Sud * i denly collapse and be entirely help- ©0H rings | less--although conscious for a time : Heat | of his condition, yet unable to make 50H an escape or give alarm. . ; 0% Indoors v "This state will quite rapidly develop "oH! Hart a begins to radiate heat into unconsciousness and death, espe- 5 when the weatherman turns on cially if the engine continues to oper- 30H the chilly Fall winds and it goes ate, which in all probability will be a a i the case." 20H It keeps the house clean and com- . . . fortable--no soot nor ashes. The Motor Registration Still GLIl Hart it Burner is the most eco- 3 : : nomical (o operate. It can be 'n- 4 Going Up m All Countries > stalled in acing system. Motor vehicle registration is still go- o ing up throughout the world. The Na- : Ask for full linformation. tional Chamber of Commerce estimates -10 AYRES TEFFT CO. W ERS | ED MOTOR CO ¥ there were about 18,100,000 in use Jan- Tel. 1146 566 Center St. Winnetka uary 1, 1924, 88 per cent of which were | in the United States. The United King- dom comes second with 642,853, while Canada is a very close third with 642,571 | HART HZAT | DODGE BROTHERS ED T. LEONARD MISS M. HETTRICH Builder Real Estate MOTOR CARS ® Wi wish to announce the opening of a Real Estate and Builder's office. If you want to build--If you have anything for rent or want to rent, sell or exchange--see us. secure what you desire. | | COMPLETE AUTOMOBILE SERVICE Glencoe Realty Co. | Tel. Glencoe 1158 TELEPHONE WINNETKA 165 . We can surely help you 665 Vernon Avenue Residence Winnetka 1943

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