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.■'■ 1 m .;.;.,. ;■.,':: »» mv illiilllll mmm mm ■.■*:•:;■: ... I iiiliiii li\l llilflllll i^^^j^^w^i^ .ULintiii iV ■ihiiXti imWB Baron de Beef says Kl A-ORA (Ail) Black Outlook for Springboks "POOD LUCK!" shouted the Baron de Beef, as Brownlie's; boys mustered on the quay-side for the South African ■ boat. "And mind you sweep the board, and bring the bacon home!" * We always manage to sweep the board when there's mustard on the table," chuckled a hefty forward. " You can't shove weight in the scrums without seven outsize appetites, and you can't have a real appetite without plenty of mustard." " That's right," said the Baron, glancing at his own ample upholstery. "Mustard stimulates the digestion. That "delicious tang makes your mouth water and that's the mustard sum-1 moning the digestive juices to do their work! Mustard with your beef, with your mutton, fish, smoked fish, ham, eggs t ,cjj*jese with pretty well everything that takes a bit of digesting."/" " In fact," he added slyly, " if you take plenty of mustard you'll even be able to eat up the Springboks!" " We're taking Mark Nicholls to have a few pots at goal," said Brownlie, " but we aren't a pot*hunting team. All the pots we want we are taking with us," and he showed a large assortment of mustard pots! " You ought to make a reputation with your passing movements, both with the ball and the mustard pot," murmered the Baron happily. " Here's another tip. You'll find the grounds harder than you are used to. Sometimes you All Blacks will be all black and blue, and then you'll find a mustard bath after the game a wonderful relief." Join the Mustard Club! '.^•. >fe)B .'••■!■ ",m ■4»\ MS :.■■■'■: The Badge of the Mustard --'Club 'v;v; Members of the Mastoid Club can' obtain an enamel badge, made as a brooch or with stad for lapel, by cutting out thin advertisement and sending:, together with 3d. la stamps, to Miss W (Jester, G/o ColmanKeen (Australasia) Xtd, S Victoria Street, Wellington.

your Cigarette Number Four— Character is revealed by the way you hold your cigarette. For instance: Here is the dreamer—not practical enough to catch a fly in an Italian fish and chip saloon. Is usually • all brain, but as often as not it has gone in the welt. Rather a crank on hygiene, he will dust his slipper before dusting an erring offspring. A pessimist at heart, probably considers insanity a cause of marriage rather than for divorce. Number Five— The straight, direct, outspoken man this. Quick thinking, he sees in a flash that a mother-in-law is no joke after all. Utterly reckless, would drive over the Rimutakas at . 70 per—if she was a passenger. Farseeing, he would change his mind on sailing day if there was to be a shipwreck. Has a keen sense of humour and can always laugh when the joke's on the other fellow. Would make a good doctor. Takes life easily. Number Six— This is the impulsive type, alert, impatient, thoughtless, imaginative. Calls a girl a " skirt," for instance. Rich in ideas, would succeed as a barber, selling bay rum in dry • areas, and mixing hair restorer in his shaving cream. Of a Bohemian type, doesn't mind a man's English so long as his Scotch is good. If cross-eyed, could succeed as meter-reader for a gas company. , How do you hold your cigarette? Does it matter, after all? So long as you hold the right sort of cigarette, your character will look after itself. Smokers, of The " Three Castles " have character, for it is the cigarette invariably chosen by men of good sense and sound judgment. The best smoke for all who will take no middle course—The "Three Castles."

I INEW-JViAKJiIAU OUTFIT (Rubber I Stamp of your name), pad, brush, indelible ink, nod a box to bold Lbe lot, V 6 —At th» H>n»i.n Oft.*-

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REASE-PROOF PAPEK, tur Meat or Batter Wrapping, now on sale t HIBM.B Nbbina o«MrtnMnt

ILK DOCKETS and -.Milk: itecuvd IVJL Books, ready printed. At Heraw Jobbing Department.

UM ARABIC, in large or small P quantities, for sale at Hebalp •vbbing Depjiitmout.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19280414.2.99.4

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LIV, Issue 16622, 14 April 1928, Page 7

Word Count
720

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LIV, Issue 16622, 14 April 1928, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LIV, Issue 16622, 14 April 1928, Page 7