New Zealand, long; famous for it* dairy produce, meat, .hides, footwear, tweeds, blankets and rugs, bids fair to become no less celebrated for its tobacco. After many years of experi meriting. experts have at length succeeded in producing tobaccos (grown ami cured within the Dominion) which in certain respects are actually superior to the best imported. The latter frequently contains an excess ol nicotine, while the former contains comparatively little, with the result that you can smoke these pure tobaccos with impunity, and their cultivation is Ikely to prove .of inestimable value to men on the land because the average vield of a tobacco crop i.s worth £;7» per acre nett. Strange to say. the barren gum country in the North, while quite unsuitable for ordinary crops, grows splendid tobacco and ultimately the industry must prove of national importance. N.Z. tobacco already oil the market and selling well, so smoker*-' can ‘‘try it out tor themselves. Ask for “Riverhead Gold” mild. “Navy Cut” (Bulldog) medium, or “Cut Plug No. 10” (Bullhead) full strength. 32
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Bibliographic details
Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 21 January 1926, Page 5
Word Count
174Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 21 January 1926, Page 5
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