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The Grocer's ; mm^ UP! UPli- UP.H! The sales o£ Amber Tip§,,Tea mount constantly higher as the days slip by. " '■ -' ~~ . «,„«. „ This is the surest proof—if pr°of were wanted—that Amber Tips Tea is everything the housewife requires- „ . Amber Tips Tea wins over for keeps " all who try it. Its fragrance and flavour never vary. It is sold only in damp proof air tight packets and tins. Teas offered in any other way as Amber Tips are substi- • • tutes. . • , ' ■ , -) •■■'•-• I ATVvTRPP TTPS This grade delights tens of thposajids. Tft''tt - . AMBh-K Hl-ft in the flavour and strength WMnejEcellen , . y: ]f/lO per 1b.,, J. . ..;,, . . ■ —— :L'Xls:'- k: '"W -~ . - :" ' '-r- Uneqiiailed for purity, f taa^^^^^lf 2/- per lb. -pleasure in Tea is soiibW ; :^ :*; ', > A third grade is packed at 1/8 i>er %|^^ 3ce caiiiot *^' & , >■ No old'or stale teas ever snter into .Amneriipb. g3 , WMOtESALE ACrBNTSi LEVIN & Ca, LTD. Merit alone has built up the great sales of BorimhgtonV Irish Moss. Half a centuryago it was the best cough remedy. To-day it is still without an equal for all affections of the throat and lungs. For fifty years it has stood "the searching te&t of time. There is no „ medicine so good and so # effecttial. Refuse all substitutes and insist on getting |$^*^V CARfiAGEEN //^^^jT^l - Irish Moss C^^W , Mr. William Caiitek, Mataura, writes.—"Bonnineton's 'T-'^-'j ■ tfi liish Moss has prored a valuable friend in our house. Jor a -I . TTT1 number bf-years I h«va been compleiely cured of a bad cold .1 I" I »nd cough/and I have much pleasure in fecommenditig it to . | 1 1 I all suffering from a bad cough or influenza.' ■• ZW >\ 11 in r fM^yui . I' "■ '« jSt- In the hot Summer nrontha it is necessary-for Comfort and ffljt ma Hi •'": jo% ■■- ......i. i. Health's^sake liiat ybnr Children wear J\^k W m J-i«f. They are Cool and Comfortable. >=^ 9.1

Among the latest suggested improvements on Caroline Bay, Timarn, is the formation of a lake from one and a-half to two acres in extent, on which model yachts and children's boats could be disported. It is proposed that the lake should be about two feet deep.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19110919.2.11.1

Bibliographic details

Marlborough Express, Volume XLV, Issue 216, 19 September 1911, Page 2

Word Count
349

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Marlborough Express, Volume XLV, Issue 216, 19 September 1911, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Marlborough Express, Volume XLV, Issue 216, 19 September 1911, Page 2