Choosing a birthday, present for a man' is not as simple as shelling peas. , You may so easily give hmi something :. he has 6 no use for. Tons of money I are wasted on presents that are re- . ceived with perfunctory smiles and s thanks but are not valued. Tastes » differ but there is one taste i common to 95 men out of every hun- • dred— the taste for tobacco. If you •want to give a present that will appeal r . to nearly every man, give him somei thing to smoke, preferably a bit of good , "cut-up," and the best cut-up tobacco i is our own New Zealand -grown. This • 'baccy is the purest of any : (unlike/ the imported) it contains only ' a minimum quantity of nicotine. Cons' sequently it can be smoked all day long • "and then some" with enjoyment and Without injury to health. So a really • acceptable (and inexpensive) birthday [ gift is, say, a pound (or -a couple of > pounds), of N.Z. tobacco. It is. made I m vai-ious strengths. "Riverhead i Gold" is mild; "Navy Cut (Bulldog) . Is medium, and "Cut Plug No. 10" (Bullshead) is full flavoured.* '
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTR19280906.2.47.1
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NZ Truth, Issue 1188, 6 September 1928, Page 14
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192Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 NZ Truth, Issue 1188, 6 September 1928, Page 14
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