Clearly a promotional item. Other than "Made in Canada", it's stamped "ENR. 1976 No. 40773." I can figure out the bottle opener (maybe to save the seatbelts--see Seat Belt Bottle Opener) and screw driver, but the functions of the prongs at the bottom and stepped recess at the top elude me.
Update 2017: A visitor had already identified the function of the tool, but today I found an ad for it in the December 1971 issue of Woman's Day (why I was looking at that magazine will remain another mystery). This one is made in the U.S. so, unlike the Canadian-made one, doesn't include a beer bottle opener.
Update 2017: A visitor had already identified the function of the tool, but today I found an ad for it in the December 1971 issue of Woman's Day (why I was looking at that magazine will remain another mystery). This one is made in the U.S. so, unlike the Canadian-made one, doesn't include a beer bottle opener.
I would "hazard" a guess that this is a golf tool and that the two prongs are for repairing golf ball divots on the greens.
ReplyDeleteThe small point (on the right side of the recess) is for cleaning the grooves on the club face, while the recess itself might be a wrench for tightening the spikes on the shoes...
Many thanks! I'm glad to have the mystery solved. Now, if only I were a golfer!
ReplyDeleteI own a similar golf tool. Not a GM Canada one, but one from C.T.C.U.M. (Commission des Transports de la Communauté Urbaine de Montréal) now known as STM.
ReplyDelete