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The North Canterbury Acclimatisalion Society has decided to have printed on its "nine ■ licenses the following “Advice to Sportsmen” : “Don't go shooting till you know the game laws. Don't shoot harmless ild life; practise on vermin. Always ask permission to shoot. Kespect property, and tasten gates; you will he welcome again. Don’t shoot unless you clearly see and are sure of what you are shooting at. It may save you being before the court. Always leave a clean camp and a clean record — you may want to go back.” “What constitutes good tobacco?" asks a writer in the New York Tobacco Journal, and he sums ui> the points thus: < 1 > Flavor, (?) bouquet. (3) combustibility—it must burn away to the last particle, (4) color. (D) it must not burn the tongue, (ti) the most important of all —it mast eontain little or no nicotine, because nicotine is a deadly poison. Having described the ideal tobacco, our expert confesses tie tias not the faintest idea where it can be obtained, or whether it can be obtained at all. Were lie in Now Zealand be would know that such tobacco may lie bought at the nearest tobacconist’s shop. Our New Zealand toasted tobacco possesses every one of his six qualities, and is specially noticeable for its freedom from nicotine. That is because it is toasted. You can smoke it. as freely as you please. It. is harmless. Famous for flavor and aroma, too. There are four brands only: Riverhead Gold, Cavendish, Navy Cut No. 3, and Cut Plug No. 10. No other toasted tobacco is manufactured,’*

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19301230.2.8.4

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LV, Issue 17453, 30 December 1930, Page 4

Word Count
263

Untitled Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LV, Issue 17453, 30 December 1930, Page 4

Untitled Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LV, Issue 17453, 30 December 1930, Page 4