What would smokers do if the supply of tobacco suddenly “stopped short’’—like Grandfather’s Clock—and no more was forthcoming for an indefinite period? Thb idea may seem fantastic, but the possibility of such a stoppage has actually been foreseen —and provided for —in England. It is stated that there is “enough tobacco to supply every man and woman in the Kingdom with an ounce of tobacco every week tor a year always in store in the warehouses in the London docks." Happily for Maorilanders, N.Z. is a tobacco-producing country, and there is not the slightest fear of any smoker having to go short, for the supplies of “masted" (the real toasted) are practically inexhaustible. In fact, the manufacture of Cut Plug: No. 10 (Bullshead). Cavendish, Navy Cut No. 3 (Bulldog:, Riverhead Gohl, and .Desert Gold n.iw constitutes an important, and rapidly-expanding industry affording steady employment to many hands, while in the growth of the raw material is found a profitable! side-line to not a few men on the land.' The fame of this tobacco is spreading beyond these shores.—Adv!. ;
Combat Coughs, Colds, Influenza. Woods’ Great Peppermint Cure.
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Greymouth Evening Star, 23 August 1939, Page 11
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186Page 11 Advertisements Column 1 Greymouth Evening Star, 23 August 1939, Page 11
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