AN ISLAND i SAVED BY TEA ! Ceylon was depressed. Coffee had failed. Ordinary commerce was of little promise and less immediate value. What saved Ceylon was the discovery that Ceylon could grow A TEA LIKE SUHATUBA ! The island picked up. Population increased. Commerce was extended. The good time had come. STIRATURA “D” 2/NO OTHER TEA APPROACHES IT 1 ALL STOREKEEPERS. ‘ ■■ WAGES BOOKS WE can supply Vv . i BOOKS, approved of K y the Labour Department, to mill-owners and all employers of labour at 3s 6d each cash. Herald Printerv £1 REWARD. LOST —Black pony mare about 14 hands, aged, white strip on nose, slightly girth galled, above reward for information leading to recovery. A. W. PLAYLE, Tailor, Palmerston N»
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXII, Issue 931, 15 December 1910, Page 3
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119Page 3 Advertisements Column 8 Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXII, Issue 931, 15 December 1910, Page 3
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