"Coffin nails " according to a Lon- , ? ; 1 don correspondent, was the engaging name by •which cigarettes were known when he was a hoy. A lot of water has passed neneath the bridge since those days, and "coffin nails'*.. must have been manufactured from' very inferior tobacco to have de"-?.> served their name. But things have!;? changed. There's as much difference' 'twixt the old-time cigarettes the correspondent writes of and those^ 1 made of Kiverhead Gold, Desert (iold or Pocket Edition, as there is ; between an old-fashioned motor car';and a modern Rolls Royce v Onlv the: choicest leaf grown in carefully selected localities goes to making the two brands named. And it's precisely the same with the three pipe brands Cut Plug No. 10 (Bullshe ad)_ Navy Cut No. :i (Bulld:t|g), : • and Cavendish (the popular sporting V mixture). Made and blended by ex'-M, perts in an up to date factory s thes&¥</ ' tobaccos are toasted, which in£em-|l\ ous process not only enhances- flftyouri&~" ,
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 8, Issue 72, 11 May 1945, Page 5
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162Untitled Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 8, Issue 72, 11 May 1945, Page 5
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