\ . Packets of Ten fjii ■ ■ M'M and A* Smart Tins of m CORK T,PPED ' # OR PLAIN I;Pt7\*ER?S BACHELOR CIGARETTES " . ' '/■■ DOWN. • COMPETITIO NS.CO RNE R. I—The man without a will of his own ,"'■■'■:.' will naturally not have these. ; ■ ■ :, ' 2 —English actor who earned a knight- * ! — hood. 3—Opera title. ; , TES T S FOR OUR •. READER'S( how have I frighted thee" ("Henrv ;-,.;■ •* iv.,» Pt. I.). 6—-There is one example of this in the ■ quotation above. 7—Kind of fur. S—Masculine name. 11—Kind of shell-fish, flower, or boat. 14 —No heavy blow, this. 18 —Artist's medium. 19—One end of this opening in a parapet is certain. 20 —Authorised. 21—Part of your car. 23—Part of an angler's tackle. 25—Not abundant. 26—Fix at the end exactly. 2!)— Mythical monster. 30 —There are five of this in the world, it is usually said. (x) THURSDAY'S SOLUTION. 7~: ACEOSS. —Fortune, Creeper, Stopped, Scoffer, Nymph, Enmasse, Retired, Pied, Year, Goad, Bale, Seventh, Atelier, Touch, Bestrew', Kingdom, Scrappy, Essayed. DOWN.—Content, Stopgap, Incense, Trochee, Setfair, Severed, Dyed, Spry, .; Simon, Table, Defence, Gentian, Attempt, Dhow, Back, Athirst, Elegiac, ''■- Devotee. ; (w) •/. i ■:-■■ ===== :.' The word "lyric" is from lyre. It is applied to a species of poetry, because '. the lyre used to be their accompaniment. . „ *, Songs and hymns are lyrics. Well-known • '. example's are Tennyson's "Maud" and ..-.-■■••■ Burns' "Scots Wha Hae." ACROSS. ■.'-". ' ■■•■•■-■.■• g , 1 pigment that is half made of I I " ■ . 4—Kind of serpent. - I 8lllc&' *flfl 9—There's always a noise in this little liiils 'o£Mjs§WsMf-M *lii ■ ■ A f\r\l / • I $ftM&U H H/VvkV 10—"Traced me" (anag.). « v T| f*-M H 1/—%| 1 | 12—Character in "As You Like It." ' 13—A worker is also working. ' - 11/1 til /il'/ th/> 15-The man who matters at G.H.Q.- ||| , 16—This man could live free at the , I, -A-A * /"/ '7-T// expense of his fellow-men (collo- "'« " OCtppinCSS Of DBCtIWI 22—This French town annoys in ' Xmmmmmmmmmmi^mm^m^ma^mmmm^X English. • 24— Golfer's club. . Rosy cheeks and plump limbs now—a sturdy child--2r_ ba h thinT " DOt ° btained b7 SUn " ho °d—schooldays free from epidemics? That's what 28—source° of a beacon for ships in the Lane's Emulsion promises your children., Bring defence. . them up on Lane's—it's the finest thing you can do. 32 —This article of attire is distinctly Price 2/9 and 4/9 a %^B9k challenging. bottle at all Chemists V W\. 33 —Bodies should ha 10 across instead and Stores. H Jfma °L tlliß ' Manufactured by The Lam M FMI IT SIONII A _ 34—"Heron-net" (anag). Medicine Co. Ltd. (B~G. S= - «^^ : that~Bb.unds aimost'apt to " ' ' • ' . , V.,
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXIV, Issue 83, 8 April 1933, Page 8 (Supplement)
Word Count
405Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LXIV, Issue 83, 8 April 1933, Page 8 (Supplement)
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