THROUGH Our EXCHANGES.
“Bonnie D6on"—How the words ;onjtti'6<up the thoughts and memories ji tire days rot our fathers in the Old uaud. So too, BONNIE - BOON—the NEW TOBACCO for the imtu who
wants a MEDIUM BLEND—brings satisfaction and delight to every smok-->r. In plugs and 2oz. tins 2 B.D. At Hull a Lincolnshire, woman was
lined Is and costs under the Children Act for giving her fourteen-months-uld baby a drink of ; stodt. She told the' policeman Mie did not know she was doing any "Jturhi, as the bairn was thirsty.- •• - ‘ ■ Men—nave 1 you tried the new MEDIUM STRENGTH tobacco—BUaXIE UOONK ‘Like'the old, song its rich mellowness has a.,charm and fas-, cinatibh that always lingers with the smoker. In plugs and 2oz. tins. 4 B.J). A Paris'merdhani, who is an inebriated condition tbcilt' 6ff His' boots and socks and dangled his feet, over the parapet of a bridge, was considerably startled on finding some time later that his foet woro jet black. They had
been hanging in the outflow of a drain flowing from a dyke works.
BONNIE DOON is a new MEDIUM STRENGTH TOBACCO unuer an did name and unique in quality and flavour. Like ; the melody or, the old mng one pipe of BONNIE DOON will jonjure up many a pleasing memory. In plugs and 2oa. tins 1 BD. There are-eighty miles of tunnels in Great Britain, and their total cost exceeds £6,500,000. “Bonnie Doon’—vryio can toll al! that tjjo words mean to those who know pie land o’ Burns p To Maorilanders BONNIE, DpONi TOBACCO vi’lT bting all the smoker has so long men wanting—“Body’’—-yet not too strong... Fragrance-,' “"fla vour—above dl, Quality. In iplugs and 2ox. tins. ... , ... -mi 3 B.D. Among modern nations the greatest eaters are the British, Germans, French, and Americans—the ruling people of civilisation. The diet of the Spaniards and the Italians is notably less substantial than that o the British and Gormans, while the Americans are, on the average, the greatest eaters in the world.
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Bibliographic details
Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVII, Issue 57, 7 November 1913, Page 3
Word Count
332THROUGH Our EXCHANGES. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVII, Issue 57, 7 November 1913, Page 3
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