• They were talking about local industries in the smoke-room of an Auckland Club the other night. “I remember when the first New Zealand tobacco came on the market, nigh upon half-a-century ago,” remarked the ancient mariner smoking the big cherrywood, “the lines included both cut and plug—of sorts —'also little smokes called “cigarillos”—just a bit of leaf with a filling of ‘cut-up.’ They had a fair sale —for those days—but the manager (an old friend of mine) told me it was the foreign labels he’d had printed and stuck on the boxes that sold them. No use, he said, to offer them as New Zealand made—no one would have looked at them!” What a change the years have wrought! Today our beautiful New Zealand tobaccos —,C' u t Plug No. 10 (Bullshead), Navy Cut No. 3 (Bulldog), Cavendish,
■Riverhead Gold and Desert Gold—re-
quire no foreign labels to sell them!. They sell at sight, and’ the demand is aways growing. Not only is the quality superb but they’re harmless no matter how freely you indulge. They’re toasted!
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Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume VLI, Issue 3405, 8 November 1935, Page 3
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177Untitled Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume VLI, Issue 3405, 8 November 1935, Page 3
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