Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Original 1939 Inland General Motors Corp Magazine Advertisement- 10 1/2" X 14" on 2040-parts.com

US $5.00
Location:

Joplin, Missouri, United States

Joplin, Missouri, United States
77 years old, fair condition, examine scans before bidding
Country/Region of Manufacture:United States UPC:Does not apply

Vintage original 10 1/2" x 14" 1939 FORTUNE magazine advertisement in fair condition for INLAND Manufacturing Division, GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION. Scans shows all of both sides of the page. Copy reads in part:"...Steering Wheels are just one of some 425 products, produced by the 3600 people in two Inland plants..." Great to display with your vintage vehicle at shows and cruises. Decorate your office or garage. Add to a collection.

So which is your greatest performance car?

Mon, 17 Jan 2011

CAR took eight of 2010's best sports cars to France to test for the best in our Performance Car Of The Year test. After six days, 2500 miles and much toil (honestly), we anointed the Ferrari 458 Italia as the finest performance car of last year. But do you agree with the result?

AA warns of automated penalties

Thu, 03 Oct 2013

DRIVERS are still suffering a year on from the time most wheelclampers were banned from operating in private car parks, according to the AA. Twelve months on, parking enforcement firms are reaping large sums from issuing automated "penalty" tickets. The AA said that while Communities Minister Eric Pickles is reining in local authorities who over-zealously use CCTV, private parking operators now rely heavily on this technology and automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) to watch drivers and issue tickets through the post when they put a foot wrong in parking areas.

World Health Organization condemns diesel exhaust as Class 1 carcinogen

Thu, 14 Jun 2012

News flash: Diesel exhaust is bad for you, particularly if you're a miner. Following eight days of deliberation, the World Health Organization's cancer-research board has named diesel exhaust a Class 1 carcinogen. The finding puts the fuel in the same category as asbestos.