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Made in the Old Country EhHL Economy X. without sacrifice You give up nothing in the way of quality when you smoke the new Myrtle Grove Cigarettes at 10 for 6d. These cigarettes are made to English standards, from precisely the same choice Virginia tobacco as the most expensive cigdrettes you can buy. Packed under ideal conditions in a famous London factory, they come to you with all their freshness unimpaired at a price which makes them an economy as well as a pleasure. MYRTLE GROVE CIGARETTES I 20 for 1/-; Oval fl at tins of 30 for 1/6. tins of 50 for 2/6. A beautiful series of cinema stars in all packings. MADE IN LONDON BY GODFREY PHILLIPS LTD. MG. 12 39 7nd T I JL o-day WHO would want to go back to the standards of even a generation ago ? We I have travelled far since then. Inventions and scientific discoveries have fur- I nished the principal vehicles: New conveniences, improved merchandise, p better foods, added health-conserving means. | But the thing which has hastened us on to the knowledge and acceptance I of their benefits is advertising. It has brought new things quickly to all of us and sped us toward a different, better mode of living. Modern advertising sells us, not only things, but ideas. The advertising of soaps has sold us the health advantages of more frequent bathing. The » advertising of modern bathroom equipment has made bathing a singful pl&iure. The advertising of improved razors and beard softeners has made whisking off whiskers a simple daily ditty instead of a weekly major operation. ! Tooth-paste, tooth-brush and mouth-wash manufacturers and retailers j are saving us untold aches and years of marred smiles, by advertising the I importance of oral hygiene. $ As a result of the advertising of food manufacturers and purveyors, we : have escaped from the drowsy dullness caused by heavy breakfasts and are | full of forenoon vim and clear-headedness. < The clothes we wear, furniture we use, fuel we burn, car we drive, tele- -i phone we’ve installed—all these would not so quickly have come home to j us, were it not for the silent but irresistible force of advertising. j 8 Keep pace with the world you live in by ! reading the advertisements in this newspaper

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19350119.2.156.3

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 98, 19 January 1935, Page 21

Word Count
380

Page 21 Advertisements Column 3 Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 98, 19 January 1935, Page 21

Page 21 Advertisements Column 3 Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 98, 19 January 1935, Page 21

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