The Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-10-17, Page 20
t oberitir ttatufftar
oosnim Ttne oopution atoi.!.6.1_, AND TIM obtogramt OTAit
Published' br $lignif-star PreSS. Liaatted.
West iitreet, Goderieb, Orttarlo
A,Y; OCTOBER, 17th, 1010
auziazia. pie 1.443)2,1WOR
Air Wilfred Vlrenfell, beloved phyAl.
,01:4411, MigiSienarY, eCransellor, and 'friend
Air the folks' down 'in Labrador, bus'
Awpti,,and. with, his Passing has
fone the -One Whom/ Lo p& Stratheona
Wined' 4the 'raOSt useful man on the"
North :Ainerieant Continent." .
4Iis a 'Young 'Medieal student in Lonei
Wilfred Grenfell ".‘,.happeried4 ge
a meetiurled by OVviglit.,4'itt;ciay,
neneed deeplyt,
•, ;beard, deeided, uselfiS Own eiverdS,
°either to 'chuck. Christianity or to Make
worth while" in his life. '. He began
- put,111$ ..r.e4:1„
lieWorked'aramagfongli boys i‘endon
oluinswhile „Anishing Ids medical
(coarse; then,' 0,iastead of settling
ID
Londen, Where, with his abilities and his
omiectiens, he Might have become a
popular and fashionable doetor, he ae-
Opted...an opportunity to wqrk- among
'tlke (deep sea. • fishermen in the North
• Bea. .short time later he aecoraPanied
.EDITORIAL NOTES-.
expedition sent to investigate con -
MMus on the bleak toast -of _Labrader,
_
Il'be appalling eonditions of life among Air Force blue has become a familiar"
the "live 'yeres" of 'that. country ap- and:popular color in these parts.
43, .11 • •
pealed Strongly to him Mad he began
work there With' a hOtpital Ship 'Nvhich The drone of the airplanes, has be-
le-himaelf_ePeTated, .havieg taken, ,out come Sp familiar a sound hereabouts
his master mariner's papers. , - that it eau, hardly disturb anYbodY-
•
In this little (vessel he travelled np unless they start sheoting.
and down the Labrador coast, bringing
beth physical and sPiritual, to the "Huron County Flying "Training-
eioverty.stricken, ignorant innabitants, Sehool" is too mucb. of a mouthful for
In a short ,'thrie ,he had established a everyday use.. 'Sky . Harbor" is
dis
Itespital at Battle Harbor; then as tinctive and shorter and has already
funds .permitted other .hospitals were 'becoMe the popular terin. - 4,
* and orphanages,Ischools. nursing * • - -
atations were openid. Two million Turkish bayonets stand
To make the need known, and obtain, across the road whiCh Germany would
funds,. Dr, drenfell made lecture. tours lake to wrest control.* of the Suez Canal
- "thrOugh, the iOnitetr States anti Canada, from the . The urks. are fight
-
and with holri-alio froM, sympathizing ers, and in the last war' they fought
f:riends d...a Britain the work Prospered against the :AllieS and for 9erniant:
until -there are now six 'hospitals; foul Then German influence was , dominant
orphaliage bottAling sehools, seven iturs in a -large part of the Eastern Mediter-
ing stations, four' hosPitat-ships,, four- raneaa - territory govv, under British:
teen indlistrial centres', a Seamea's controlYand. it was not until late in the
Institute, a supply schooner, a co-oper- war that the Allies got the upper hand
ativkrjUinber and a: Ship* for in that area, Even vvith,ltaly on his
eerkeoner repairs. - side 'Hitler will have a big task on his
Dr.. Grenfell and-. his ' work had a bands ff he tries to push on through -
Wonderful fascinatiop. for students In the. fBalkans to-Palestiae. and Egypt.,
the colleges of, Canada, and the Uaited. That he thinks it AU of trying it. at
'Mates, and every summer 'numbers this.time filar be'taketrasTpro4t-of"his
,79-ang Men sought 'permission to- give !failure in the direct_assault on dreat,
.voluntary service in the various stations ,Britain. Ile has ,abreist reached the
Ihe. had established. There :theY did. end of his tether, and..though he will
inr04.4of-iVork flint -Was= neededv stitebeeable.toL,do_ Innen misehief. the
lumbering, „digging, unloading supply odds in his favor are dropping Steatifiy.
• - •
building --•-anything to help. The • •
story is told ,ot'a tiergyinnn offering -to - -Conservative Leader }T on says_110'
vend his next year's holiday *there if does not want to join 'Mr. King's Gov-
„ eould be ,'of service, asking -what ernmeat. Mr. , Coldwell,. the C.C.F.
work was most needed at the time. leader, has all along stated that he
The most pressing need,. Dr. (Greaten Would. not partieipate 'in. any union
told hint,...iinS to have , plumbing .put government. , That should be enough to
in a new hespital. The plergyinan took settle the talk about a 'coalition. In
- lessons la plumbing during the autumn any case; the experience of 191.7 proved
and winter mouths, and the following that a union government does not do
annatter did a satistacary job On the , away With politiCal controversy. In
stew LabradOr hospital: that ease it greatly aggravated politica
Honors cattle to this indefatigable ' bitterness. The "union!' of 1917 did
worker: he was 'knighted, reeeived de- not come about because the Liberals,
grees from many college, bequests and asked for ,a share in the Government ;.
-medals from various societies, and it was the desire of the Borden Govern-:
-Teeognition everywhere for his unusual meat.. to seeure ‘Libetal ass•istance in.
and self-saerificing serviCes. passing the Military ,Service Aet. that
Sir.Patrick McGrath, the Newfound- brOught. about the "union” that did
Iliad writer, said of, Sir Wilfred : not unite the peOple. „There is no
. • "He effected a revolution so complete such eonabination of circumstances now
and Comprehensive in the emiditions of as existed * 1917, and it iS to be hoped
-existence' tb.ere as td, seem .almost a there will not be.
Miraele. Beginning by clothing the • * •
- sulked and suecoring the sick:he gradu- The view has, been expreised that
lly, byjndicionS Charity, encourage- because Of the ease with which they caik
meat of thrift, incitement' to self-help be bOittbed big eities'
wilt-go--ottt of
and industry, and the preaching .of th,e fa.shion, and home S and taetoriee will
doetrine pra.etical .Christianity, be -spread all over the cotintry where
created a people eomfortable, contented, they will be ..comparatively, eafe, We
and free in the main from the fear of don't believe it. This war will not last,
perishing by hunger.. or nakedness,- ,forever, and assoon as it IS over people
will began to floek back to the titles,
:'./f the "back ttte land" movement is
to have any permanency it will be,
avYt because of the .fear of bombs, lint
inecanse ef ehange in economic' 'and
terocial -eondition,s which as, yet is '...not
in sight, More people would live lit
the countr3r and in email towns if. they
teeuld Make a liVing there: and this
Will erne aboutt When ifistal laws are
altered so that -rural pursuits will be
financially . attractive to a greater
. ,
particular juncture; bit is in order dickree than they are at preeent,
to torestion Whether there has not been •
too much emphasis off the Munich in- Witaints annpunced intention Of re-
ieldent and too little stress upon what opening the Burma road, • over which
went. before. Eividently a great many China will receive much . of „her war
Peolge did nOt wake up to the interne. material; is the first real slap in
the
noel situation urifil the Munich, [face the Saps have had since they began
episode bralight it rudelY to ae. " their marauding adventure nine years
*Nation, and they bad no elear ' under. ago. The Malted States,,too, has warned
Ames, deeeeteed Japan riot to venture too far in her
ottindlng of What the
!et Czech.oelorakia Meant. xf 1eit4e3 program of atzreggion, It would haed
was ,not prepared to fight, Whose 'fault saved a lot, of trouble if both. nations
wag IQ Cham.herlain'S party had I had been as firm. ie 1031 and. had
been he control of British 'poliey for (checked the Ninponese at the 'beginning
leven year and ,during all the period' -of their assault' linen China. When
ainee the rise Of littler and the aseend., London and 'Washington all&wed thein
selves tinie and'again to be bluffed; the
Saps becanie inereashigly bold and' in.
olent and evidently becarne possessed
of the idea that they eould do as they
wished in F.:astern Aeia.* Now they,are
up against something stiffer titan the
Leliden 'and Washington -of -1031, and
will no doubt ,change their attitude to
meet the altered einelltiong that on.
front them.
might hasten her rearmament, is to
pat aside many outstanding fads. It
18,much easier, in eOnsideration theSe
!fads, to reaeh the eOncluSion tha.t he
sincerele believed that he bad per.
Stacked Hitler to staY his hand and that
be lind really insured Britain "peaee
in Our time thought heeec'enI4 Pt
flltler tiesee reason as he saw it, u.tte17
ty' falling tO realize, that littler' was
isiZing. hiM 'tip; Man 'desperately,
0,4-og tetord---War arid Was more
eonvineed thien.evee caul&
ale fooled into -ClimPlaisaike.
1 The:British people were only too'
eager to aecept the assnrance of,,Peace,
bet they, were soou disabused of the
-notion-of iiitler's--goodeintentions; and
rpeblie opiniOn foreed the stiffer it.
titude which eventually led to War,
It is not by what he did* September,
1938, but by hIS entire course* office
before and _after Munich thatMi
!Chamberlain will be judged wnew the
.history-ef these times is w-ritten•
THE GODERICII SIGNAL -STAR
Current Views on the War
1 PhilOsiterotiazylissdows
07 IlarrY J. 04000 4
AN/40E86MM
Oue flick.ering eandle On a eun.all white
birthday ;cake. There it was, buffeted
about by every draft . Winging and
swaying to and fro and then straighten,
-
Lag and reaehlariligher. Acro$a from
the cake on tbie table in the high chair
sits theeobject of: the celebration
Patricia Ann.
A man mice told me never to "look
back. But semehowthelliekerieg light
of the, oue mettle and the rosyeeheeked,
fair.haired little lady who has new pro.
gresSed from th.e infant elass makes
one go back.' ,Sometintes it 'seems .1O
far away and sometimes it 'seems for, while it is profitable for reproof
so elese-that daY.when the nurse said, ilnd eorreetien, it is, I think, one' of
Well, Daddy Phil, you'i-e got fine 'Consolation and encouragienient. It
baby girl anti both it and the should be a help to all who ,tontemplat-
4%.N ENCOURAGING PAR-4144EL
Though history never reKats itself
exactly,Yet. like other "scriptures'," it
Is "profitable for teaching, for reproof,
for tiorrection"; and it is to be Wished
that seine of our leaders had borne its
lessons,in railid. Nothing, 'for example,
bas happened during the last few years
to which. the hietorical student earanot
find a parallel. The dictators. have
raised themselves to power by'thelery
saine,arts by Wel) the Greek tyralati
attained their eeds ; ofte of these 'worth-
ies, la faet, Proeided a remarkable aiti.
cipation a the lteiehstag lire.
• But, 'eSpeolally In .heur ex'.
treme peril, I prefer to dwell on anOthe,r
Parallel, More retent and more familiar,
rtzgeigRojvitilli* *R."'
0 _ •
•
Can. ' 'be the ..Sitnie 'baby girlZ
That one was, wrinkled and 'red . .
and when, sne tried it sounded like one
of those dolls 'that are almost human
'and which Cry when you turn them
eveze -Slie-dookedesmall,in-that ,ShaW1
. and helpless. And now, look .at
her . smiling as hired- III=
tickles her toes . . . and pounding two
"ehubbr fists on the shelf of the high
chair demanding supper. ,
How we hated that doctor the night.
--re,aS, roused from -his steel).- by -it
frantic ,volce that said, "Doctor, come
quick, the baby's *dying!" It seemed
hours Until his car eoasted up in front
of the house and he came tripping in
with his little hiack bag. By turns
yve hqd been walking the
while Patricia'S wail giew louder
and louder. Be fi.ddled and funibled
with her and stroked his chin .
suppose- to cover his own amusement
, . . and then said . . . "She's got a
little tummy ache. Give her a *little
peppermint - water and_she'll he- an
right." Dubiously the peppermint water
Was administered, and, winvier of won;
ders, after it few belches she settled
7dOWn. to 'sleep . . . and at ten the next
morning was still • eejoying ' restful
elimber. •
Then there was teething. First of
all, with. ideas gathered from solicitous
^friends,'.we'gained the impressioiti that
She would go through life with toothless
gums.. But a tiny white gni:timer' ap-
peared one Morifing atter a. restless,
night, and by degrees -more, of them
have been appearing since then.
The walkirtg problem was another
difficultY. First of all, some said She
was too heavy to let stand. The?
paieted verbal piCtures bowed:legs
that would I make . a cowboy shudder,
Then there was the scheol of . thougnt
firmly convinced in cits own ;opinion
that if she di.t.ln't. stand her muscles
would become useless. Others would.
look at you with a glassy stare and
say, "Walking?" What cottld you say
--but "No.-----I'lley-would -then, purse
their lips up into a tight knot and
shake their heads in that terrifying
way that can only mean calamity. But
one day Patricia Ann fooled, us. Grasp-
ing a copier of. the play box shelioisted
herself up on to. unsteady legs, atid
when we loOked she was smiling broad-
ly . . quite pleased. with herself.
Since then it's been a problem to, keep
her from elutching eiers;thing
ht todfui
from cavalry leaders or to mere glamors,
and the 'country lay prostrate and as,
membered. gore than half her terri-
tory wa$ taken aWay, and the domirrion
of Frederick the 'Great NAB erowded
with French garrisons. and forbidden
to keep an array of 'more than forty
.thonsand.raeu.
Well might things Seem hopeless.
'"The roan is too strong for you,' said
toile eratitnutirtthlb: t:trtull:g9ele;witla4wittikeVe
were many in Britain who agreed with
him. But it was iiist at that Moment,'
whe4 the 'sky was as threatening as
Pow!..:Ithat Word9Wortb, wrote the im-
mortal' sonnet, *high coulit- wish
every Jaint-heart to read and winder.
Another mighty empire overtlfravin"
And We are left, or shall be left:
alone;
The last that dare to struggle With
ing the inunenSe force arrayed for our t e oe.
clest-rnetim-OnaY inell'1040`40BOX 'Tis well! from this day forward we
shall know,
That lir ourselves our safety ,must' be
sought. .
, .The Revolution, after many viels,'
situdes, had left' France facie to face
with defeat abroed and eliaoe at home.
A great soldier saw his opportunity,
and, by promising victory,' peace, and
orderly-goVernhient gained-v:4er.- -Ali
these, by wonderful energy and ability,
he secured; and the peOldel for the
time being, a.ceepted his domination.
But it W45 soon seen that Napoleoe's
real aims ' were personal aggrandize-
ment. Possible.rivals Were _Put Pnt_Of
the vivay, .freedem of epeech was
checked, sixty iparisian newspapers
were Suppressed, and a censorship of
the theatres was set up. Nothing was
to.be knoivu and no opinions were to be
public*. uttered ,which did not- suit his
convenience. " ,
Abroad things were similar. The
peace, solemnly signed in 1802, was
found in 1803. to be, a farce -a Mere
cloak for aggression. Every Etiropean
nation Was in terror, and finally the
verY l'ritish Government which had
O dastard whom such foretaste (loth
not eheer.! , „
We b'i1l exultrif they whernie;tlie
. land
Be men who hold its many blessing
. dear,
Wise, upright, valiant, not it servile
band.
--Like so many. great poem% this vvas
also a pror•hecy ; for the next year
Britain,Was left alone. 'After a savage
and terrible contest with , Russia,
Napoleon mettle Ozar on a raft2in the
Niemen, and the Treaty ••,Of Tilsit was
signed. The two Emperers practically
divided •the western world between:
them; ,aand the reason was their com-
mon hostility. to Britain. "I hate the
Ifinglish as much as yon. do," were, the
words with vvhich Alexander opened
the conversation. "In that ease,"'
answered Napoleon, "peace is made."
made,, theY-peace -saw itself compelled
Among other thiags, Russia was to sup -
to. make war. Everybody knows, bow, port Napoleon's "Continental System,"
at Boulogne, Nafelo eon assembled his ,the .alm -of which. was to ruin Great
army of invincible veterans, hoping for •
Britain's, commerce. • .
twenty or thirty hours of relaxed vigil -
Thus, in 1807, many, even of the most
nance on the part of our navy in order to •
sanguine,. thought that. the enemy' was
transport his troops to our. shoree and
destroy,. his chief enemy. • bOund to; triumph. The ,'20otitineiittit
SYsteni, though 'based on a false econ-
Meanwhile ,Pitt, • the British Primer
-orate theory, did us great harm. The
Minister, bad been, working to form a
He succeeded ju -French privateers, even atter Trate:l.
contipentaI alliance.
ngaining Austria and Russia. Had gar, .captured an average Of live
Yrussia also Joined, .it is almost certain bundled merchant'vessels a year, and,
that (Napoleon would have been over though less murderous, were tar more
'were. effective than Hitler's submarines.
thrown, but the Prussian rulers
Franee proper held the Rhine bound -
cajoled by prc•rdise that tHanover
ary, *eluding Belgium. „with Antwerp,
ShoUld be handed over to them,. and in Napoleon's- .phrase,
Auve way to mingled bribery and terror, "a. Pistol,"
at the heart of England."
The result • was that Austria was. "P°Inted
Holland, all Germany west of the Elbe,
crushed at Austerlitz. - Napoleon's
armies marching' contemptuously to vic ••••••. .....•••••••••••••••,,
tory over Prussia's n,ominally neutral
seParate peace. 11. • Alta' kft
territory. Austria had to make a. el
Switnerland, and Italy were in reality,
.not in, naule, alo Portiona
eon's Empire; and Spain wa$ kind of
idly, if a deceptive and uncertain one.
In ,population the disproportion was
e1ormo4.19 ; Napoleon underrated it
when he said, "A nation of fifteen mil-
lions inust give way. forty
And Pet a man of .clear vision might
have detected that things were not as
they apPeared on the surface. Vast as
Wb Napoleon'trength, he had over-
strained it. Ile was sow: to lind that
his soldiers were no longer those of
Austerlitz; they were wasted in garri-
sons, worn out with their exertions, and
poorly reinforced by raw recruits. The
conquered peoples were restless' and
mutinous, a burden rather than a,gain ;
the boasted system impoverished. and
exasPerated thent The Iseldiers who
Id them down: aronsefl. hatred
erever they carne.. "
Above all, the British sea -power Was
unbroken, and an invasion of our island
vcas out, of the question. Was it not
likely that ere long, Napoleon " might'
stretch the loyalty of his ,allies,and
de-
pendent
some strategic 'would eti.
able us to interfere, Oen on land, .With
atboic:b°111$211:mt:e4Sreeeel)sofAiassan:lus'irpY(;),1°r'titia,?7°:111:a:tri:nlielttIlteal4:11revri:139vti'Ptirt7vindlhari:
-
Russian ally and lost more arnaieo, And,
adienispo6itte inaadaeless,11Cegeinniwlish,lehhadhefinishoanywre
surrender. Vugland, to nae words long
before uttered by Pitt, luutsaved,
ber
tbat
:11weigifRit ee sl futhooehtroee :re recir ens:ill:ant:11;11 aUwilYenttedt
/y in arras against her, and with Ireland
lt
wI as
now, with all this added strength oft
rereaaedhY thoerliresro°rIliel 3•1:1(laInnvawde"(ieshurtittilibaet
°wxiathilloPlite* thr wanithVAlloutlatlint
then?
Kellett in The, Dritish WeekTyr
Tin
na othst
JUST LIKE
11••••••••••■11.1.8.0110.00100:1•1•11•MOMIW
%
Incidentally, I may mention that the •10, US C
was fought almost at this very atne.
-Liver Complaint
French people were alloWed to know
nothing about islisastens. Trafalgar -
All that 'Napoleon's 44.oniteue said.
about it was, "An engagement hastily
entered into led to the loss of .a few.
hipse-tr The -reit. of the paper - was
Med with. , accounts of giorfoui
triumphs, the . cost of which was al -
Ways minimized. Do we not knoW
-today 116We 'gee pOrtentotts German
at losses are studiously concealed from, the
sig to_4uPPort,herSe u 4..g.- - - ctorrimilaeoso ____-_ _.,„ • ..... ..„ .... ,,,, _.--_-
Raisitik babies is much the same as
for ten yegrsBut Pitt
the babies' that have full sets of teeth 'aP
Austerlitz killed Ina. "Roll up the
any 'other oceupation, Von. hear about
at a year orage .• . . .1W -one -that View -ni
wanted_agaire, ."
of Europe," be said, "it won't be
twelve months of age . . . wonders of did not know the ...worst, In the next
walk and dance the Highland fling at
babies that eatt• sing and talk about yteera:c1; .wthiet'hwirmai'el-791.edihbelesafw°11!i°°Prrtel'atheant-
. . . but never the regular "honest to she, had been cheated, - In an amazingly
world affairs atit year and six months
goodness" babies that Jena and Atterstadt Great fort -
take their natural short time she was utterly oirerthrown
time in maturing. And so, we wonder at c
and fret and fuss • . . but Patricia And.
is a year old now.
The candle hifins down . . . the cake
is cut . . „ the supper over. . . and
Patricia Ann, tiringa the fuzzy dog
and the sin -ging top . . .and the other
presents . . . rests a curly, goldenliead
against ray shoulder and drops, off to
sleep and -we hick her into bed and
wonder SOnetiow about all the things
hound to happen between the time when
there's one candle and two candles on
' the cake. ,, ' - •
••••••••••••,
•,..•••••,•••••••.••••••••••
Mere * a saw
Firestone super.bie.;0
lion you Can leave.
on Your 'car all the
Whine and readY,
for . at* , emergency.
. Off- the highway in
mud or snoWit pulls'
through the worst
conditions possible.
Bea.. on payement . it
is quiet at a watch, .
smooth liable -aW
tong wearing. We.
. have .Studded
Ground Grips for
cars or trucks. Drive
in and lotus - put them
out now:
Biliouswes is just, another nms
for
clogged or sluggish liver.- It
Is a very common complaint, but 0e3.1(
be 'quickly iiiiiatea:Isr-athmdatingt--
' the Bo*, of....late This. softens „the
statimulsted Maas, the poisons ' s.rs
eurrild-olit of the, systesni
liver and bowls are relieved swift.,
Wilburn% TA= .1iver
n every-cliannel, by !musing
and- enliven. the sluggish' liver,. open-
p-
. free flow of bile and thus cleansing:
the liver of the clogging impurities..
They are oian and easy to taka,
Do not gripe, weaken or, sicken.
The T.1111burn 0o., Ltd,, Toronto. Oah.
Iorraerly the fate of large numbers of,,
t'die permanents."
MR. CliAltifERLAIN IS OUT
•••••••••••,••••,,
The resignatiOn of Mr. Chamberlain
from the Churchill Government has
revived talk of Munich and the
abandonment of Czechoslovakia in 1038.,
orbere.40.1.1 alwaY,s be a difference of
opinion as. to the wisdom or lolly of
Mr, Chamberlain's emirse at that
ancy of the Nazis in Germany. They
!bad -been warned, by Churchill And
ethers, of the Aaneer that Wag impend.
log, but they chose to disregard the
**amino. They must be Judged', not
be •
the or40-11 episode, ..bet by their
whole course elate 1031. ,
To believe that Str.
sought only to gain time by surrtuder.
kg At Munich, hi order that Itriltin
"I'll MAKE
YOUR BREAD
A SUCCESS—
%Vs.* to,••••••••••
•91111
MA 'F t rANAA
FINE FLAVORED,
LIGHT TEXTURED,
DIGESTIBLE"
•
.resses opened (their gates to demands
••":.`-•-"
rint*ton.
STUDDED
CleOlind Orin
TIDes
Made_for_
;ARS 4ind
TRUCKS.
'
-GROUND—
GRIP
,
- GEO. PlacEWAN, Victoria St -,---Phone 234
.31. JANE, Colborne St., Phone 454,
REQ. MeGEE, TIE4nilton St., Phone 695
NIIEN TIIE MERCURY RISE
etRY DROPS** NO 'FREEZE-
•
OCT i NOW DEC Silk FEB I... SAAR
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..CANADO '.E.*.$AW.7..WINOlt.TEIVITERNTIME
1
•
• Mire "than ever before, your
present car is •an' investment to be
safeguarded: • ,
Winter's wotst hazard is a freeae-up..
MILS Year, take no chances --buy alt
winter' protection now.
!!Pzestone" Anti..Freem and
water, hi the right propor-
tions, won't freeze at any
winter driving temperature --
'won't boil away on mild days.
AIM Pi' FREEZE
Special ingredients protect ltgainst •
rust and Forrosiori-- and future
expense. Today -L -,more ihatt
1.5,000, dealers are ready to save
Despite an upward.trend itt
various commodity prices,
the price, of this product
remaimrthe same. Asi for
"Prestone" Anti -Freeze
now!
\MORI IS ONLY
ONE
"tkill.91/1"
ANTI -F1101121
CANADIAN NATIONAL. CARBON COMPANY, LIMITtla-e1-14taax, Moored!, Tpootithi Winnipto, Vaammer '
„
11.
PRESTONE
A. ricer
F IR. E lE IE
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