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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-03-15, Page 20. ritE { uottar, -OM-OR BCH Iback, the sei whale and the blue o sulphumbottom whale are, alto- gether a different kettle of fliih. Mf. Bay Chapin= Andrews as- sistant iseerator of mammale at the Aermtiesa- Museum of National His- tory, whe* has hunted and* Photos graphed and eaten 'whales for Yearie say that ..a.sles, contrary to ) general opinion) haYe no . fishy flavor and he Abe eXPIOdes anether bombaiell to the effoot that whales do not est fish, Now, the nOtion that wheel; feed exclusively umen little fish which they etram through an extremely email throat into -an extremely large stomach, iti even more widesptead than a dis- belief in the story of Jonah. Mr. Andrews says.that the whale, when extremely hungry, will peck at a few !Milian .sea hewing, but his real staple diet is composed of shrimps. In the matter of diet, few animals that we now eat are so particular. SEAFORTII, Friday* Mariik 15, 1918 The World is facing a sugat.tatnirie-not any vague possibility, but au imminent and threatening probability. Right now, in United States cities, only one pound *On some cases, one -halt pound) of. sugar can be bought at a' time, an -d that only with a fainily ordei for other foods. - Sugar is one of the two coutents,form jug the class of food that supplies the body with heat and energy, We, at home, need this espintial food. But far more ou soldiers and our Allies need it. It will be a very real factor it) winning our war,if we are to win it, against Prussianism. The production of sugar, including rthe distinctively Can- adian MAPL.r, SUGAR, is a patriotic duty, immediate and But it is more than that, too. It is a profitable enterprise to the pioducer. In 1916, Quebec realized from this source three million dollars and that out -put could te very much increased other Provinces have approximately two.thirds the available bush that Quebec has. Both for self, and for Country, utilize this resource this The unusually heavy frosts and deep months predict an abundant run of sap erep if you will only TAP TAP snowfall of the past - a bumper sugar TAP Our sugar making supplies are com- plete -long and short pails, gal- vanized sap pans, spiles, auger bits and cans. Procure your sup- ply now. AN -OLD TIME WIN IN Sear Expositon-Reeently I read an 'item in One of yotir colimes stat- ing that Jattuary,t 191.8, hied been the' cooiest January emee 1:35r. New ibis year was a eaemotable one in the ble- and Oth concessions of MeKillop, my- -alive and Well, whereyer residing. Of course, all of them are prett old boys now. January, 1911, at the head of the lakes was fietcely cold. from the. lst to ehe 31st, inctlueive. It never got above zero, an the coldest wag 37 beloW zero at. Duluth, and rhuch colder tit the range ;towns in Minne- sota, a difference at times of 10 to 16 de ees. The sparrow is a pretty tou h bird and can stand lots of cold but large numbers succumbed to 'the cold this particular January. On March 9th, 1892, oceuxred the meni- I orable storm and blizzard which en- folded the head of the lakes in its em- brace. About -7 ann. a soft snow almost a rein began to fall as the time progressed the snow carne down heavier and heavier. A furious wind accompanied it, and gradually became much colder. Ofi this same day I called upon some friends residing on east Superior Street. A young son, some 18 years of age, who had been working at Carlton, Minn., was home, having cut his knee with an axe. His parents asked me if I would get a hack' and driver to take the injured boy to a local hospital, but not to nl- low more than one dollar for the same. Now this hospital was located two Miles away. One livery concern of- fered to d'o it for tWo dollars, another 04 tot three dollars and the last one I Wed; for five dollars, but would rather not take a team out at all, ow- ing to the fierceness of the storm. Coming back on Superior Street, Du- luth's main thoroughfare, I did not meet a single human being in several block's travel, so desperate was the storm. I went back and told the par- ents .of the 'younis man the results of my efforts. They made _no. further move to have him taken to the:hospi- tal for several days. Owing to joint oil escaping from the wounded knee this young man beca.me a cripple for life, Owing to the terriffc storm and now blockade, it was nearly a week before traffic againebeca,me normal. Another terriec storm commenced on the evennig of Novermber 28th, 1905. to the best of my remembrance. It came from the north east. A heavy snow conenenced to fall, which clung to the telephone, telegraph and other wires. Soon • they were crosing and burning each other through. ,,,The sparks were flying and the air seemed to be full of lightning in different lo- calities. Owing to the violence of the wind and the weight of the clinging snow and sleet the dross arms which suppotted these wires came down ey- erenehere. 1 was onnight duty at the Marshall Wells Hardware Co.'s build- ings. Watencommenced to rise in the basement of their main building. The :night ifireman thought .an _under- ground water pipe had broken and was' leaking; He tfied several times to call up the ehief engineer by phone, but central would not respond. She was afraid to touch the phone system, ewing to sparks flying and wires cracking, so it deVolved upon me to go to the chief engineer's residence, some tep blocks away and acquaint him with the situation. So with a fair description of where he lived and car- ryin.g a cold blast lantern No. 2, I un- dertook the task at four a. m., with a fifty mile wind blowing, snow com- ing down in a driving frenzy, wires cracking, firing and failing down. By counting the blocks, walking at times on the sidewalks, some times over the gutters, at times in the streets and avenues, I came to a house where I made enquiries. As snow blocked all enteance to the, front door, I replied by the side of a window. A lady got out of bed,'gave me the desired mfor- Illation, after I told her who I was, the circumstances and who I was look- ing for. Finding the chief engineer's residence, I woke him up- and inform- ed him of the cause of my early call. H;e premised to come down as soon as possible and I made my way back to the building; the lantern I carried nobly doing its duty . and refusing to be blown out by the terriffic wind. The cause of the flooding of the base- ment was owing to the driving of the water in the lake through the canal, into the bay and slips, by the furious hurricane. The freight steame Ma- taafii with a cargo of ore and towing, another vessel? after leaving the Du- luth harber found that it was iniPess- ible to proceed on her course, so drop- ping her tow to take care of itself, the Mataafa was steered for the canal entrance, but just as she had reached this point a huge wave dashed her a- gainst the north eide of the pier, breaking her in two as it were, and drifting to the north gide of the canal she rested in shallow water. This oc- curred the next day after the com- mencement of the storm and in the afternoon. Owing to the huge waves daghing over the vessel and breaking on the beach, it was trapossible f r the life saving crew to remove nine survivors until 8 a. m. next morn- ing. Seven of the crew perished with the wet and cold, or were frozen to death. One corpse had to be chopped out from the ice by the funnel and then the ice thawed from the body at an imdertaker's establishment Anoth- er boat was beached on the south side of the canal on the lake side of Minn- esota Pont, another boat was wrecked near the Lakewood pumping station for the Duluth waterworks, and dis- tant about ten miles from the heart of the city. Asiother vessel some dis- tance further up on the north shore was dashed on the rocks. One man in this case lest his life as he tried to jump on shere..These were only sortie of the distasters on Lake Superior caused by/ this storm. This present winter has been Pretey cold up this. way. At Duluth it has registered. as low as 35 below zero, but at Buhl, - Minn. it went to 49 below. Last Oc- tober it was cold with several falls of snow. November was mild but after December was ushered in winter has not been slow in asserting its author- ity. I have it on what I consider B- abel authority, that a yonng man front Duluth who had been fighting for the A.SILLS, Seaforth Firei Insurance Co J. Connolly, Goclerich, President Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice-Presideri AGENTS Minchley, Seaforth; John Murray, litrucefield; J. W. Teo, Goderich; R. DIRECTORS - William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Sumewies, Broclhagen; James Evans, Illeochwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: Winghara and Kincardine. S.53 p. m. - For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine. 11.03 p. m. - For Clinton, Goderich. g.•51 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia; North Bay and points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. 4.16 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal andhpoints east. LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going South Belgrave 6.0 Londesboro 7.13 Clinton, 7.33 Kippen 8.16 Exeter 8.40 Centralia 8.57 e--- Going Mirth a.m. London, depart 8.30 Mensal 9.59 Kippen 10.06 Clinton 10.30 Blyth 11.37 Belgrave 11.50 yVingbam. arrive 12.05 a.m. p.m. 3.20 Dizzy ant hint' Spells Are Warnings:of Heart Trouble That Should Be Heeded. 'Those feelings of weakness, those dizzy spells and "all gone" sinking sensations, which come over some people from time to time are warnings that must not ge unheeded. They ihdicate an extremely weakened condition of the heart and a disordered state of the nerves. Those who are wise will start taking Milburreg Heart and Nerve Pills before their case eecomes hopeless. Then have no equal for strengthening the heart and invigorating the nerves. Mrs. Emil Brooks, Tepper Gagetown, N.B., writes: -"All last summer and winter I had dizzy and weak spells, headaches and faintieg and blind spells. A friend recommended Milburn's Heart and -Nerve Pins to me. I hid only taken two boxes svhen I found great re- lief.- I highly recommend them to all who suffer from heart trouble." ' Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pilbi are 500. per box at all dealers or mailed direct.on receipt of price by The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. • CARRIAGE FOR SALE. Two seated Gladstone, natural wod, as good as new and easy running, com- fortable family rig Apply at Tito Expositor Office, Si;aforth. 257841 SUFFERED WITH II HACKING COUGH 4.33 4t13 COULD NOT SLEEP AT NIGHT. 5.13 6.15 4.40 5.45 6.09 6.16 6.24 6.40 6.57 7.05 7.18 7.40 C. P. R. TIME TABLE TO TORONTO Ooderich, leave 6 40 Blyth 7 18 FROM TORONTO Guelph, arrive 9 38 7 00 iWalton 11.43 9.04 Blyth 12.03 918 Auburn 12.15 9.80 Conneations at Guelph Junction with Sian, Line for Galt Woodstock, Lou - Skim' Detroit, and Chicago and all * SaiMedlitte points. 1.35 2.14 2.20 The constant hacking cough that sticks to you in spite of everything you have done to relieve it, is a source of danger. The- longer the cough stays, the more serious menace it is to your health. It is easy to check a cough at the out- set iyith Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. If you have let it run tpough, it takes a while -longer to cure, leut Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup wile cure it even then after other remedies have failed. Mr. J. Henry Landryi, South River, Burgeois, N.S., writes:- ‘I received -such great benefit from Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup that I cannot help expressing my thanks. I suffered with 'a hacking cough for over a month, and could not sleep at night. I used many kinds of remedies, but they didn't do me any good, until I used ' Dr. Wood's,' and found great relief right4rom the start. I only used two bottles, and was com- pletely cured. I will never be without it as lona as I live." • There are a number of substitutes on the market for Dr, Wood's Norway Pine S!yrup, so when you ask for it see that it is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; price 25c. and 50c., and that it bears the name, The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. US We Are As Pull of Deadly Polliwog As A Germ AUTO:01NIOXICATION .OR::: SELF-POISONING 64FRUIT-A-TIVES" Absolutely Pre- vents This Dangerous Condition. The chief cause of poor health is our neglect .of the bowels. Waste matter, instead of passing from the lower intestine regularly every day, is allowed to remaie there, generating poisons which -.are abeorbed by the her words, a person who is habitually constipated, im poisoning himself. We know now that Auk - intoxication, due to non -action of the bowels, is. directly responsible for serious Kidney and Bladder Troubles; that it upsets the Stomaeh, causes Indigestion, Loss of .Appetite and Sleeplessness; that chronic.Rheum- Algol, -Gout, Pain In The Back, are relieved as soon asthe hcrwels become regular; and Met Piiniples, Bashes, Eczema and other Rill Affectiona disappear when "Fruittatives" are taken to correct Constipation. 4`,Fruit-a-lives" protect you against Auto -intoxication because this wonderful fruit medicine acts directly on all the eliminating organs. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 2500 At all dealers or sent en receipt of cause of freedom and civilization in France, had both legs and both arms cut off by the Hun brutee, and was thus found by some of his companions. One of them wrote the circumstanres to his sweetheart residing in Superior, Wis. She did not believe it and thought it 0, cruel joke, but writing to this soldier's mother, residing in Du- luth* the latter grief stricken, informed her it was 'only too true. This is simply another sample of the Huns' Sincerely yours, ROBERT McNAUGHTON EAT A WHALE AND WIN THE is the back aed tongue that the .WAR. I Amereian publie. will be invited to A New York banquet at which the consume. The canning of whale chief dish was whale meat was given meat is a well-recognized Japanese a few days ago, and is to be under- industry, and a similar industry has stood as -the opening gun of a cinn- I been `)stablished, or is about to be CA.PITAL AND RESERVE ,e00.000 98 BRANCHES IN CANADA CIRCULAR LETTERS --OF CREDIT e BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT ',Merest allowed at highest Current Rate. BRANCHES IN THIS plenum Brucefield St Marys Kirkton Exeter Clinton Hensel' Zurich as is the whale. He does not de- ! your every Tom, Dick Mid Havre' slight chance a battle, instead n lurched forward. Springing - that he meets in the sea, but only a on this bobbing tub where .there was ina on him like a eat, the young Briton - favored few. He would not swan iow a inan unless he iinew well his nwoetverodonlrenctoheclwilianlla zoant, bwohaerrde ewvertyh seized the body of the enemy, that it ' spray, and where there was never a mnight not be drawn back down the antecedents, a fact wbich seems to show for any sort of fight? What iladdee and so make et poseible to cline - put another dent in ttlat story about Jonah. opportunity was there here to do awl' the door and submerge again: -He It would seem that the ergument thing that might win promotion, high • aimed to kill and had made a bullese that the friends of the whale Put . er pay, a medal, a few days' leave? ' eye. The body blocked the do i -8 He had entered the navy because be of the door. Still holding his pi forth in. favor of it being eaten, i perfeet It is good to eat, it is. wanted to have a part in the fighting pointed toward the single exit? cheep; it is said to look Us yeni- and here•he ems doing the work of a squatted upon the shoulder of t ' .son and taste like beet Mr. An- marine eiliceman! - dead commander whose legs dan . ace i Ai white streak -different to his down the ladder and might be p drews, who anneara to have in by the crew below. qtured the habit of eating a whale trometisea eve from the white streaks . ess a day, SaYS that be has freauentlY kw/xi-gime' waves -tore thraugh the had whale serYed to his dialler water, cominn. Straight teftra, guests, and when masqueraded as A shocks and it seemed as if an venison or bear, it has fooled nine out of ten. He admits that there earthquake had struck the trawler. Art explosion smashed her to bits in an should die. They must come em is an oiliness about the meat, but instant, and the tieulig lieutenant single file. The doorway- was so -na this can be abolished by putting a fowid himself ineeneming with hits of row that there was not room for mom than one at a -kime. He squatted and waited, bo his pistol pointed_ 'through the doorway that could net be closed cause it was Necked by the body which he sat, Minutes passed. Still the head did not appear. Would rush him? Would SO' Wait unlit was too stiff with cold and wet shoot straight? He thought of the Germans below must be ilisettlA ing. There were enough of theim overpower hirn if they could him. They could 31Qt kikOW110W- cartridges he had in reserve. must know that the first lye at I who came ue would be killed. there. five of `the brave hn comm,it suicide,? For Coming ladder would be sure -death. And still he -waited. He they would rush hinn end lie, teadte. But nothing happened, was silent except !for the solash the ehotmy veawes on the metal of the man-made sea monster. ute after mirnite passed. The was great and the lieutenant Iost track of time. Motionless and he began. to feel nusels. But hand holding the pisfol never and he never toek his eye •off the After an int-rminable wait ke earne awari of a stream of smoke the Vanes. Turning his eyes a from the doorway for an instan saw a British destmoyeri swiftly through the water and c in his direction. He stood up and ienfaohrmis bedanhdim Athloiottefruoz tbeheztfli In a few minutes the destroyer alengside. The lieutenant, amid eheer of the destroyer's crew, over to its commander the prize eaptured single-handed, intact, her crew save one dead officer a onera The Victoria Cross was ward. tvaited for the simnel head emerge. * Theft 'settee lithe * left im the magazine of his pistol, e he planned that five more Gemmel* dash of soda in the water in which ehe meat is boiled . In Japan -the "allele eaten raw' and mineecir and it Might be that Dr. Garfield, whose business it is to conserve feel as Mr, Hoover's business is to con. serve bacon and beef, would suge gest that this is the proper way to coustime a Whale; but it is not ex- pected that the people on 'this con- tinent will consent to eat raw whales. The whale is to be coek- ed, and will be devoured chiefly in the form of steaks and chops. It is recommended that the Meat 141,01ild be cut thick -about two inches and a half thick -in ithe case of a steak, and that plenty of eeasoning should be used. something' a seeond time. He reated Wreckage and dYinir abeut Mph Slipping out of the hampering folds bis great coat, he scam Ile aaw Sane of his men seize bits of Wreck - ewe and drift away. He saw the mangled bodias e others bob up for an instant in the trough of s wave. There seemed no pi'ece of -wreckage big enough to support Wel. 'But he was a strong swimmer, and he kept afloat He did not know in what di - radian he was swimming, he just Suddenly his feet struck sioniething solid. He Pushed. baek on it and gave himself a foreword spurt, but as he extended hie feet 'seaward again they touched that solid subsn.erged The tongue a a whale is sup- his feet against it; end it seemed like posed to be the tid-bit There is a great irmooth rode But it was move this difference between a lark's ing! was coming up under hem! tongue and a whale's that the latter "The sulmnarine that sank nal" This is considerabliy larger. In fact, the thousiht flashed into the swimmer's tongue of a grey . whale weighs mind. ,Turning quickly into the wat- about a ton, and as A is not em- ter, he saw alrearbi above the sprface played in fruitless controversy it is a pair of periscopes and the top of a tender. Apart from the tiongue, the conning tower, with the sea Water back is the next best chow. The streeming down them as they rose.. hams, haunches and shoulders are He ceased swimming instantly, and not CPAten in the best eirclee, and. it braced his feet upon the slippery iolid, which he knew nOiN was the deck of the U-boat that had just sent his vessel and crew to the bottom. As it came sup he.. came with it A few eeconde more, and the conning tower was out of water and the eleeks awash. The eye ofethe lieutenant was fixed upon a little narrow trapdoor, expect- ing every instant to see it open and the head of the German commander emerge. He drew bis Colt's auto- matic pistol from its case sted pointed it at the door. 'The modern naval pis- tols are waterproof.) Scarcely were the wayee pouring off the glistening steel of the deck that was now above the surface than the door swung open and the face a a German. officet appeared. The auto- paign . which has for its object the popularizing ef this food ote the North American continent. The idee is to tee& the AMericasr and Canadian people to eat whale meat, which will be placed on the market at abont 12c a pound, under the a-uspiees of Mr. = (Hoover, and thus release an equal ; amount of pork and beef to be ship - i tied evereeas. It is calculated that the ' . whehne industry on ehe Pacific coast, which is the largest in the world, can supply about 75,000,000 pounds of 1 would be less than a pound a year for Ievery man, woman and child in the United States. Mri Hoover believes that the effort to tnake even thi* sav- ing important. This fact in itself shows 'how grave the food situation is in Europe, and how critical will be the next efew months. If it is pre- sented to -the people as a patriotie duty to eat a petuid of whale meat a year, there can be no doubt of the re- sponse. The man who could not get away with a pound the course of Undoubtedly there does exist a popular prejudice against regarding whale as anything but a source of valuable oil and the raw material for women's stays. Many people suppose that the whale is construct- . ed of whalebone and whale oil to about 95 per cent. of his person, the I other 5 per cent. being the space ad-, ! vertised in the story of Jonah. But the fact is that whale is about 95 per ' cent. sneat food. In Japan where whale meat is a popu- lar article of diet the whale is hunted and killed for his meat In the United States and else- where the whale is killed for his blubber and for whalebone, the flesh being used as a fertilizer. It is ads meat, hitherto used as a fertil- izer, that Mr. Hoover purposes to save for food. The notion tha:t the whale is not fit to be eaten is due to the fact that the whale with which people along the Atlantic coast are familiar, namely the sperm whale, the so-called right whale, and the bowhead are not fit to eat. But -just as there are pigs and -pigs so there are whales and others. The hump -beck, the fin - Hurrah! How's This , Cincinnati authority says corns 4 dry up and iift out 4 with fingers. a Hospital records show that every time you cut a corn you invite lock- jaw or bloortpoison, which is needleso, says a Cincinnati authority, who tells you that a quarter ounce of a drug called freezone can be obtained at lit- tle cost from the drug store but is sufficient to rid one's feet of every hard or soft corn or callus. You simply apply a few dropo of . freezone on a tender, aching corn and soreness is tinstantly relieved. Short, ly the entire corn can be lifted out, root and all, witheut pain. This drug is sticky but dries at once and is claimed to just shrivel up any corn without infiarnieg or even irri- 'ating tlie surrounding tissue or skim If your wife wears high heels she. established, in the United States. Doubtless canned whale, which is said to require little cookie' g, will make its appearance in Canada, if not from the American whaling stations, then from those on our own Pacific coast. The whales will be the product, not of the deep sea expeditions with which -most of us are familiar in books, but of the somalled off -shore" industry, which provides most of the Pacific , coast catch. Men go out in fast boats' with harpoon guns, shoot a few whales., buoy them up, and return later to -tow them ashore. Canada is readyeto eat her share of whales. THE UNEXPLAINED VICTORIA CROSS Laconic in their brevity are the of- ficial accounts of the deeds of valor for which the Victoria Cross is be- stowed. Once in a long while, how- ever, the annals of this most coveted decoration contain the bare an-nounee- ment that it has been awarded to a certain soldier or sailor and the world is left in the dark as 'to the epecific reason. In thege rare cases,one bows with awe before the honored name, for behind the silence of the record he knows that there is a feat of heroism se extraordinary, so important, that it has been deemed wiser to withhold it from the record until the war is over and the hero shall no longer be a marked man to become a special target for the enemy. Twice since the beginning of this war the reasons for which the Victoria Crow- was given have been officially withheld, the two men thus distinguished are Com - mender Gordon Campbell of the Royal Navy, and Lieut-Commender W. E. Sanders, of the Royal Naval Reserve. A British naval officer 'of high rank who"was in New York on h:s country's business a few weeks ago told the story of the extraordinary feat that won the V. C. for one of these two men. ',He woe' not say which of them it was, and we shall probableehave to wait tmtif the war ends and the Official Gazette sets at rest all doubts by pub- lishing the record. It is only fair to remark, however, that trawlers are command.ed by lieu- tenants of the Naval Reserve. The story told by the British naval officer in New York is of a feat so unusual and so picturesque that Jig recital loses little by the uncertainty as to whether its hero should be called Campbell or Sanders. -Here it is: Rolling slowly on the cold grey swells of the English Channel, wept - ward over a certain number of miles of waves then back eastward over ehe sant-el miles, steatning steadily to and fro Yike a policeman over a lonely beat, a trawler was patrolling monot- onously., the young lieutenant who commanded fter scanning the tossing surface about him as a detective scans the faces of a crowd. Nothing relieved the ,monotony of the rhythmic rise and fall of the boat and the westward and eastward pa- trol, except an occasional British or French cruiser and the regular ex- change of signals with other patrol- ling- trawlers as either end of the beat ems reached. * • The young lieutenant had plenty of time to' growl inwardly at his luck. Why wag he not on some great bat- tleship where there was at least room to stretch his legs, where one could keep dry and where there wigs wrap Seheo r of Sr. III - Lest ePe IVem ter Wort k pia During convalescence, and when appetite lags RIGLEYS brings to the hot. dry mouth a freshness and a soothing balm that coaxes back the enthusiasm of health. Thousands of soldiers in Europe have cause to,thank Wrigley's for its tonic effect. The Flavour Lasts KeeP Your lighter SUPPlied MADE CANADA ea isfargare undsies swim bo lord esi with her In Mom -in me -took up -they he idition -of Gran Mrs. G Ingetsol funeral selec -were gr 'The flom Brnseel trims A enembei share The townithi iTownsle eloptefit ief F. ler, M liasmoel the eke and th interim the will Counce Neeb pert be they Carri EXeter lEnitted The fo erreasu Bed e on hlexpree itifureci Radial accom front Rill ative, color not a. 10.00 Ply taeaf