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"Anyone oblige with a till?" he asked with an ingratiating* smile as he entered the club > smoke room; "Bally nuisance—left my pouch in > my other coat." No one "obliged" until a new member passed his pouch along. "Who's that bloke?" 4; he asked when the "absent-minde\i i$ beggar" had left the room. "Thai's *\J the club cadger," said somebody, w; "tons of oof but never buys tobacco ,'i if he can cadge it. He'll smoke "y anything; but his particular weak*. ''- ness is Toasted Cut Plug No. l&F - "Same here," said the new member with a laugh, "I smoke it because I can't get anything else so good, but By Jove, I wish I'd known about that blighter! I've no time for cadgers!" And everybody Zi laughed. Most smokers, as -it ~ '/< happens, have a "particular weak- ; ness" for "toasted." Hence the run '' on all five blends—Cut Plug No. 10 "> (Bullshead), Navy Cut No. 3 r* (Bulldog), Cavendish, Riverhead t'' Gold, and Desert Gold. They're not *~^ only famous for flavour and bouquet *"^P but owing to being toasted (by\tlie 1i manufacturers' exclusive process) ./^j are the purest and least harmful of ~]s all tobaccos, . # \

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EG19380726.2.18.2

Bibliographic details

Ellesmere Guardian, Volume LIX, Issue 59, 26 July 1938, Page 4

Word Count
193

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Ellesmere Guardian, Volume LIX, Issue 59, 26 July 1938, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Ellesmere Guardian, Volume LIX, Issue 59, 26 July 1938, Page 4