Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 5 Nov 1926, p. 40

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

· Mr. and t.trs. Fredecick Crossley, 600 Washington avenuel spent the weekeDd with .Mrs. Crossley's sister, Mrs. Charles Comstock, at her home in Elgin. W-ILMETTE Mrs. Harry L. Street of 592 Sheridan road, Winnetka, opened her home Tuesday, November 2, for a benefit given by the Woman's guild of Christ church. LIPE November 5, 19Z6 Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Fischer entertained a number of Wilmette and Evanston friends at a Hallowe'en party Saturday evening at their home in Evanston. UNIFORM SPEED LAWS SUGGFJTED BY SURVEY Revampin8 of OMolete_ Laws Essential, Declarea Er6ine, Reaeareh Bareaa &pert The time has 'Come when definite consideration must be given to minimum as well as to maximum speed limits in Chicago and all communities within the Chicago automotive area, says the traffic committee of The Chicago Association of Commerce which has just finished a comprehensive survey of traffic conditions. While condemning excessive speeds even under favorable circumstances as well as malicious disregard for safety on the part of the driver, the survey cites the 10 mile an hour ... dragger" on a 20 mile an hour roadway as the cause of traffic delays and in some caees serious accidents. After studying the volume and speed of traffic on scores of Chicago streets as "··ell as on highways that connect the larger city with stiburban communities and after securing accurate information on slow drivers who hold up traffic, Miller McClintock, the director of the Albert Russel Erskine bureau for traffic research who conducted the local survey says: "Uniformity of speed is a very important factor in regularity of traffic and regularity and smoothncs~ of flow assure~ \·otunw which Chicago and many growing s uburbs need in view of the increasing- use oi m(){or vehicles. Drivers who insist upon holding up tratli c to a snail -lik e pace of f1\'t: or ten mile s an hour on important st reds should he subject to some legal prodding. \-Vhen strec·ts are filled with \'chides tiH~ slow driv er regulates the speed ui all flowing traffic and by hi s sclftshness or carelessness often delays hun<ln·<l ·. Slow drivers also are un\\'ittingly the cause of many accidents h\' making it nece ssary for overtaking ·motorist s to cut around." The· sttr\'c\'. points out that somewhere between the excessively slow driver and the dangerous speeder is the middle ground of sensible traffic flow and to determine where this mid dle ground is has. been or~c of th.c tasks of the traffic engineers 111 ma~mg t~c Chicago suncy. In (\iscus~mg. tins que stion of n~inim~nn and ma~tmum speed and Ch1cago s speed laws, Mr . McClintock stresses the fact ~h~t tl!e state taw governing speed hmtts.. m this city and neighboring commm11t1e~ has been antiquated for ~en years. The maximum rates accordmg to the law specify 8 miles P.er hour at o~ structed corners, 10 mtles per ~our m the closely built portions, 15 mtles per hour in residence portions at.ld 20 tmles per hour out s_ide clos~ly .hutlt up p~r: tions and res1dence thstncts of tO\\ n. and cities. ffi "These re strictions," says t~c . tra 1c survey, report of the Assoctatlon o~ Commerce, "were obsolete. ten years ago, yet Chicago is techntcatly. governed by them. Should the pohc~ of Chicago attempt to enfor~e them hte:atly traffic would. be ser.tous_ly handt capped. ~heir ~tue! servtce _1s to ~er mit techmcally mchne~ yub.ltc officta~s in some of the small ctttes m the Chtcago automotive region to l~vy unwarranted toll upon the motormg pub. " 1 te. f The survey points out that a ur ther technical restraint rarely if ever enforced is laid upon Chicago motorists by the rules ~f . the Ridge P~rk district which prohtbtts the operatt<?n of motor vehicles at a rate of speed m excess of fifteen miles per hour. That immediate standardization of speed regulation is needed in Chicago and the adjacent region is the belief of the traffic committee as this region is operating under old laws which need to be adapted to the changed traffic conditions. r r·· t 'mJmen and Children is P.rovided in the Oiicf!fo Passenger· · Terminal CHICAGO & NORTH WESTERN kY. provided for women and in this magnificent terminal. U children facilities NUSUAL EveriJ Comfgrt for To wait here between trains means to be sur· rounded by all the comfort, convenience and service of a perfectly appointed home or hotel or club-with the sole exception of sleeping rooms. It means to have a carefully chosen personnel of refined women looking for opportunity to help vou. There are perfectly arranged separate women's apartments including private rest rooms, open at all hours, with experienced matrons in charge) tea rooms, baths, retiring and dressing rooms, and provisions for manicuring, hair dressing and shoe shining. There is an emergency hospital with every facility for caring for the aick. There are dining rooms and lunch rooms. A Bureau of Information, parcel check rooms, telegraph office, telephone bootha, and cab office. Thereisadrugstorefullyequippedwithtrav·n'necessities. And last but by no means least, a nursery for the children! It is indeed an institution dedicated to the comfort and happiness of women and children away from home. Few informction regardin1 train schedules, fares, etc., apph E. E. Omer, Ticket A1ent WUmette, IU. Telephone4 CHICAGO &NORTHWESTERN R't Best The of Everything In the Best of the West 1439

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy