Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

Arrange a Free Home Demonstration ■f' Easy starting. — A Unique flow-vane. Directs grass straight to the /Z •$■ *^ e President A back of the catcher, so the catcher is packed /•' star L? without Ik A full—less emptying for you. JF > trouble every time. Fingertip height adjustment. 7 different if & easy on * V ▼ IF cutting heights to cope with any grass or Z # fingertip starter and terrain. Operated with on easily adjust- s?•’ i? • mower s ready for able counter-balance lever. businessEjertomotic catcher. The big, hungry .. — ,New wide wheels give 1 M —Pi BB B| d "L cotcher , empties wide # the President better UMVHRI J open with a simple act>on. Wet /' 4jk?xZ stability end help preX WIN =»■— ”*” destructible. Not only I Permanently hardened uB BV MB 01 completely rustproof, but . JB?’s&£'' I blade. Masporfs patent- ° 3O l'9ht and easier to tHF'®®*’’. jjEr/:' '. ‘ 'BKj|sgjF ’ r • J ed drag-free blade has c se ; . . . r-iiiaMk A- - -Sf-’IMMBr . : ' ./ been specially hardened Sealed - bearing 4-■ z**7? tS ~ tHSaS .BBt / by a process unique to - ; ■ Vjj# S'* Swt, . ' / Masport known os "Aus- .■• ’ — ently sealed I.jfiSsFfti >-W tempering". The blade H against dust and MU ■< y will stay sharper for moisture. Com- £ longer. j£f pletely mainten- ;J ‘ SsSßfeg once f ree Qnc j PF Quick-lock handle. No makes the mower nuts or bolts to unwind. (A $2OO Voucher always easy to Just snQ P the catch on the A ~ Redeemable in any pu ±l handle and it folds right Department ) few B O “57 0R ft *■ 010 k WKLY down for easy storage or I m B transport in the boot of your car. UWMp free home ~ DEMONSTRATIONS We'll show you how to cut gardening time Smiths C-ty Market, Masport Mystery Photo Contest. Here's all you and effort all year round. We'll prove it with ®“ sa W!B v g fc» B ha\e t_ do. Q demonstration in your own garden. Phone StaES *‘ I I 8% S , ... ... . now and arrange a time for a free demon- Btee■ •?.d®rei«sßS«* -*»• t*l .•wT | lacnbty tne 6 photograpns in the store and match them to the stration. s ’ correct Masoort feature. iMrP»ite-> < B|Ai^- l: ; 2 ' ~-e f ne number of envies for this contest which Is running . TRADE-IN AND SAVE f ,7n a° * £e ? e' C T S ifV x e ' Northl ? n I d , s Branch and Butlers possess a new Masport mower or cultivator. COLOMBO STREET PHONE 71-859 142 Armagh Street. Entry forms available at each store. We offer up to $ 100 for your old motor mower mzwtiji AKine nniuru ninnum buaue e«c nec Al I MACDfiDT Mfind Cma mcm AV on a new Masport. Simply Phone 71-859 and NORTHLANDS BRANCH, PAPANUI PHONE 526-056 ALL mAarUK I mUUCLS UN UIdrLAT arrange for a FREE Home Trade-in Valuation. BUTLERS, 142 ARMAGH STREET .. .. PHONE 69-857

fIU NNHI ■ 1 ‘i. i ' < fluiß l'/Jf ' 'BLOpFW What a war you missed. r- <i m... — —K - in. in- ~«>| ?-•—•fflissrrasssjyywn 9 ”"j00r ‘ . jkor = IfllglLßlW J ? AtTi ; elk . - .. Mt j&A&’mniSSMHRSk- . yQw £7 ■ JOHk' ' AlK' --.TLi El JMk.ooBte«fe i i J y-MM MSI wui ■IBSS Wwt*M IW* jPwWF. Why did Germany scutrie to-best 6attfesh<p? Why did Hitler hesitate Why did the Bth Army collapse Why did15,000Glh surrender ta WhtV did, Truman dmp in 1940? at Tobruk? I,oooJapanese on Corregidorf thesectmd BombT be first into Berlin? y-n j J he ..^. econd V orld War WaS m ? n ’ s greatest self-inflicted wound. It British POW camp. A Dutch woman tha Thebrillian<»of theßHtziariegcdncept. J. ilea o 5 mill ion people; more than six times as many as the First World War. hazards of the Resistance. The of Pdland’s resistance. Tte 1 1 sucked 56 nations into its maw. It engaged the entire efforts and econo- This is not dull old school book- treachery of Stalin’s stab in the back* jNk. rmiesof all the major powers for up to six years. Why did it have to happen? history. Instead every article has been „ Why did no one stop it? Why did Hitler sack his best generals? Why did bitten to be read and enjoyed. Every Churchill send 6,000 men into the death-tran at Dienne? Why did Statin make «sue is crammed with pictures, maps, ' FT.. i taken. Polish caval- full background oftheevents that led to Paiand. ~ Thpfuilstoryaswenowknowitis andColonelAdamSaw- rv in action against Septemberl939.HowHitlermanagedto . hardly be. l ivable. And so huge that no cynski, give the Ger- Among the 200 contributors tanks. The death, seduce the whole German people. Why ‘‘■- jmmß? cne hisrorian could hope to write it all. man and Polish views from both sides are: ovens at Auschwitz thewarhadtohappen.Howßritainand The late Captain SirßasULiddeU- in operation. Hitler FranceactuanyeggedHitleron.WetHnk ct tiie Second World War. An editorial sinkingof theßismarck Hart, Constantine Fitzgibbon, dancing a jig nf tri- youandyourfanulywißwantto read PurBoard under Bame Pitt (who is described both bv Lt. Col-Antonov, a. J. p. Taylor, nmnh Mussolini ndl's History of the Second World War . «» edited the BBC series‘The Cmdr. PeterKempßK. murder'edandmuti- eveiyweek.Becauseifyoudon’t, 1L Great War ), is supervis- and Lt. Cmdr. Gerhard w™i?- lated with his mis- youll never know what-a W ingtheworkof something J unack, one of the two mont, Freiherr von dcr Hcydte, tress. you missed. ® 7OC —u over 200 contributors. German officers to sur- W/Cdr. Asher Lee, John Erickson. ' Militaryhistorians.Scho- vive the action. M t r l^S!S’2^ la V :l?r m , v d? ’ : du* ■ • » - r '’ sHandeome tas- Experts in tactics Major Yoshitaki Blltzkliegl W hmdenavaMtU. I 1 and weaponry'. Generals. HorietellsthelwoJima O’Gowan. Probablythe 1 ■ 1 Politicians. Not just story. Marshal Zhukov ... —.. , largest, certain- jk f British or American, himself explains how he saved Moscow, ly the definitive work on the war, 1 m. Russian, Yet experiences of ordinary men and Purnells Historv is being pub- ■ ' 'Blook l 1 ' 1 -Dr..:-, e. French. I tai- women haven't been overlooked. A Brit- lished in weekly parts. 96 in all. wjio|| I. I N h.Yi:y-r;..v. i~h soldier describes the last moments at 70c each. The first is nw nt " ' - i unique pic- TotTuk. A Japanese the hardships in a yournewsagent.lttellsofHit- MJ’ftp ture of the war from all lerssuddenattackonPoland I points of view. .... that precipitated the world HBw In. me first i uc, into war. The terror as ' Saw's the Stukas stormed out *4* " ~ 1 f ers,GeneralWaltherNehring ■ ®nH | of the sky over Warsaw. ’ HISTORY OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR tells all. Distributed by Gordon & Gotch (NX) Ltd. M . OT ,

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19721107.2.91.1

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CXII, Issue 33067, 7 November 1972, Page 14

Word Count
1,049

Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 Press, Volume CXII, Issue 33067, 7 November 1972, Page 14

Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 Press, Volume CXII, Issue 33067, 7 November 1972, Page 14