Bi&k,.® /t/u See New Zealand Thirst "Here with a loaf of bread beneath the bough, A flask of Timaru, a book of verse and thou Beside me in the wilderness, is paradise enow." The Rubaiyat of Tim and Ru. Tim: Aha. The call of the Great Open Faces, what! It seems that a spot of nourishment is indicated. Ru: And remembering my New Year resolutions, I'm going to be really g<>tierous and give the girls old Omar's "book of verse and loaf of bread" for their lunch. Especially now that we have our own food in bottles. Tim: This liquid lunch by Timaru is guaranteed to take the sand out of sandwiches and put the nick into picnic. And, brother, I'm so dry I could swallow a river of Timaru. Ru t I'd like to be streamlined, too. So here's down the hatch with the first instalment. A spot of Timaru on a hot day is like snoiv upon .the desert's . dusty face. What a drink, man. What a drinkl «t FOHW REID'S ntciri J dO>le c " Bottled with loving tare by John Reid & Co. Ltd. Antac Avenue, Auckland
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS19350301.2.32.2
Bibliographic details
Thames Star, Volume LXV, Issue 19346, 1 March 1935, Page 3
Word Count
194Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Thames Star, Volume LXV, Issue 19346, 1 March 1935, Page 3
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