FR.OIEN OIL CANHOT LUBRJ CATE s - «s 'P-f. c’r m i . m O/ K - Sg : ; * i. 4 mi 1 i / mmt'/, . , & C'.'V-I * *£& ■ ■ m REA TER than any other wear your motor can experience is the wear that comes from using an oil that thickens with cold. The starter struggles with the engine. It wears down your battery. Bearings are starved. Lubrication is impaired. Texaco flows and lubricates instantly from a cold start, covering all moving parts with a grateful film ■of protection—because it contains no paraffin wax. THE “HOUR-GLASS” TEST. Here is a simple test that can be made in any home refrigerator. An “hourglass , filled with Texaco, was frozen in a cake of ice. Texaco flows freely at this low temperature. It flows even at zero—very much below the freezing point of water. In the average engine there are twenty or more fine oil channels no thicker than the waist of the “ hour-glass ” shown here. Through these narrow channels oil must flow—quickly. Many oils hesitate until they are thoroughly warmed-up by engine action. Then it is too late. More wear has occurred than during miles of warmed-up driving. Texaco protects from the very start. ©DL THE TEXAS COMPANY (AUSTRALASIA) LIMITED fiIMRrtASTINO /
Children lire very susceptible to coughs and colds. lie prepared! ( Keep a bottle of “Tonking’s Tanseed Emulsion” always handy. The children love its pleasant taste and it’s a sure remedy for throat and lung complaints. Sold everywhere. 1/0, 2,/G, and 4/0. Woods' Great Peppermint Cure for Children's Hacking Coughs.
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Bibliographic details
Feilding Star, Volume 9, Issue 2796, 13 August 1932, Page 7
Word Count
251Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Feilding Star, Volume 9, Issue 2796, 13 August 1932, Page 7
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