Nature generally makes compensations. Here’s a case in point. The gum country in the North of Auckland is so poor in quailty that the soil refuses to lend itself to agricultural operations. Yet this land, so unsuitable for the growing of ordinary crops, is splendidly adapted for tobacco culture, in proof of which you have only to sample the really fine tobaccos now being manufactured from North Auckland grown leaf. These include “Biverhead Gold” a mild aromatic with a distinctive flavour,- “Navy Cut” (Bulldog), medium strength, and “Cut Plug No. 10” (Bullshead), full flavour. All theso tobaccos are toasted, a process that has a good deal to do with their excellence, by the way. Another of their good points is that they may be smoked with impunity. That is because they contain but comparatively little nicotine. The success attending the culture of these tobaccos in what was formerly regarded as barren country, is convincing growers that “there’s money ni it.” The yield of leaf per acre represents £SO and often more. 33
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Wairarapa Daily Times, 31 March 1925, Page 6
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172Page 6 Advertisements Column 2 Wairarapa Daily Times, 31 March 1925, Page 6
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