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British Government stops all exports of Tea to Holland! fl The cables tell us that the British Government has stopped all exports of Tea into Holland. If British Tea, because of its superior quality, was being supplied to the enemies of the British Empire through Dutch .territory, ( while large quantities' of the inferior ,'Dutch Java Tea were dumped into British Colonies. (Java Tea is used 'as a "cheapening" with other Tea in order to reduce the quality and , so lower the cost). , v d ~•. J il Liptons Tea is British Tea; it ' comes from India and Ceylon, from the great Lipton Tea Gardens. Lipton Ltd, is the only tea firm operating in New Zealand that owns private tea plantations. Thousands of,acres are under crop every year producing enormous supplies of Liptons Tea for consumers all over the World. • U Help the Empire to increase and maintain its revenue to carry on the War I The nation with the longest purse is the one that will win 1 Every pound of Indian and , Ceylon Tea you drink helps the British nation. lj Lipton Ltd. guarantee that so long as India and Ceylon are in existence they will give you Indian and Ceylon Tea. Tl And they further" guarantee that not a grain of Java Tea enters the ■ famous Lipton blends. •■ \ ' % Grown everywhere itoek Liptoni Tea. . , If your grocer cannot supply you, Lipton Agents will tend you any quantity, arritgt paid. Don't forget this. fl Imiit upon Liptoni—betides helping Britain and our loyal Indian and Ceylon subjects—besides helping the British revenue—you get the best, the purest, and the most delicious Tea on the New Zealand market, and you have the line satisfaction of knowing that you have dona a duty to the Empire. f Try the Lipton flavour in any of the following blends: 1/6, 118, 1/10, 2/f You can havea Jib. sample packet of the jj/> grade by sending two penny stamps to Upton Ltd, Box 222, Wellington. . i

..'.' [Wellington Distributing 'Agents for . '-•• • —Lipton's least < ■-- ■ ' MESSES. ELLIS AND MANTON, Old .Customhouse Street, Wellington. *161 The Secret Good Cooking TJ f\ is in the flail ': I vouring. b • tß&noiraft The flavour "| | . favoured by ' ' an experienced cook fip ' ' — one who really & knows —is that im- in parted by |Uj • . • . Mellor'g , |j :iauteW:' Its inviting granoe, its tasty ■ ' zesfy appeal to .moat discriminating; Just a drop or two of J£sSSH£3»5 Mellor's in Soup, I-sj-SiSCSg!. Stew or Gravy, makes I" " all the difference. . raOL&a fev- ~ ■■ 'A IMP ;. ; f//////#/#| yA Accept No Substitute -jwa CfA -fcr Boomngton'i Iriih jiloii. EmS V M Tbtfe is but one formula, Solved fgs? year* ago—it is unchanged WA to-day. There are scores of J@r imitation* bidding against Bon- Kg? yj& one of which c«n pouiblr firSsj fir.i stand against the grind original and in- Haft v| ffjs comparable remedy for coughs aadcoldi. Get a bottle to-day— two sizei—the jjfiKg botlt« u (he more economical Momimtssl '^J m lrishMoss -J ■ - for a •. 1 ■o:6bb>EiPFßil DRINK ONLY STAPLES'. ACKNOWLEDGED BY 'ALL CONNOISSEURS TO BE ABSOLUTELY ' |THEBEST ■ ■ Brewery and Offlo^i Uolesworth and Murphy atresia j Gargle at _ Interval* LW^ i. Cure that ® ore throat /"IENEKAL Printing in all ita hranohes ■ !\JT neatly and promptly execrated at { moderate charges 'at the "Dominion" , General Printing House, Dominion At. I #nue, 1412.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19150107.2.70.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 8, Issue 2352, 7 January 1915, Page 9

Word count
Tapeke kupu
546

Page 9 Advertisements Column 1 Dominion, Volume 8, Issue 2352, 7 January 1915, Page 9

Page 9 Advertisements Column 1 Dominion, Volume 8, Issue 2352, 7 January 1915, Page 9

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