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| Direct " Lipton’s own tea plantations to your tea-not! 5 jS I I’VE LIVED IN CEYLON... BUT IVE MEVER TABTED il F*- I BETTER TEA THAM THIB, I Jr YES. ■ ■ IT’S It T ea grown in Ceylon has the finest flavour of all, for the Ceylonese soil, sunshine and climate provide the ideal conditions for tea-growing. Lipton’# "W L : Tea is grown on Lipton’s own Ceylon plantations — the finest on the island — and is blended in Ceylon. After being i "% 111 packed in air-tight cases it is sent straight to New Zealand IL — to be transferred to the famous yellow packet. There is no delay, no risk of lost freshness. Lipton’s tea reaches you with every leaf flavour-full. MPTOMS the world’s favourite Tea 61.6.87 NZ

PAf C Cf TTDC General Oddments (1111.1* CLUDd British Xylonite Mirrors and Hairbrushes, were 32/6; NOW __ J Z’' I — from w-; Moccassins (fur topand vaddy nags now i 6/ .; sun cases, nrnTTfirn Manicure Sets, Overcoats, Krill II rl» Gloves, Li<Ue8 ’ Leather HandItvVUvwV bags from 3/6; Badminton Racquets - etc., etc. Leather Goods SEE * Shafts). — Were 10/6, wj .* UUR m 22/. ar® Heavily windows ™ Sacrificed • NOW 17/6, 20/- —— GOLF WOODS (wood shafts) W JO Land & ... 2./., Heidhwa v NOW 17/6, 25/-, 27/6 O V Caddy Bags at 10 per cent Limited. Reductions Market St.— HASTINGS

Here’s A f I Chance. I CASE CARVERS ODD LOTS OF CUTLERY AND SPOONS Be<luce<l by GREATLY REDUCED TO CLEAR AT— F. L. Bone a few special seta. |l|| QUALITY IRONMONGERS - HASTINGS

A meeting of supporters of the National Government was held at Matawai yesterday to select a candidate to represent the party for Bay of Plenty, Mr K. S. Williams having intimated some time ago that he did not intend to stand owing to ill-health All areas in the wide-spread constituency were represented at the meeting, and after discussion Mr J. T. Merry, of Opotiki, was unanimously selected as official National candidate. Delegates present also passed a resolution expressing sincere appreciation of Mr K. S. Williams’s long service as the I member of Bay of Plenty, and sincere wishes for an early reeoverv. — Press Assn. The majority of road accidents in England ar* ateted to take place at! speeds not exceeding 20 miles per I hour. I

A fungus on paspalum grass has been noticeable in the Kaipara district since thp summer. It ruins silk stockings, and smears the bare legs of children with a persistent sticky substance which only wear can eliminate. Now that live stock are being fed on the grass turned into hay the unfortunate beasts stagger round drunkenly and are temporarily blind. Several farm horses have been affected, and two on one farm at Woodhill had to bo bled. If fodder is held against the nose of affected cattle they eat ravenously, hut when a bundle is laid at their feet they are unable to see it, and stare blindly ahead. Government experts have been around the district studying the phenomenon

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBTRIB19350725.2.106.3

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXV, Issue 186, 25 July 1935, Page 11

Word Count
493

Page 11 Advertisements Column 3 Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXV, Issue 186, 25 July 1935, Page 11

Page 11 Advertisements Column 3 Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXV, Issue 186, 25 July 1935, Page 11