THROUGH Our EXCHANGES.
K 0 MILD DERBY satisfies tho exacting smoker for it is not too heavy nor too light. Fragrant, cool and satisfying. Try a plug or a tin. y “i am not a suffragette,” cried an indignant witness at the West London Police Court recently. “J am a respectable married woman” There’s a power of consolation in a pipe of fragrant MILD DERBY PLUG or CUT. Cool, satisfying and soothing, it is the best of all tobaccos. Try it. r The world’s record in fires is not the great fire in London, but the Moscow fire of 1570, in which 200,000 people perished. You will value the old briar as never before if von fill it once with MILD DERBY PLUG or CUT. It has that rich “nutty” flavour so much appreciated by pipe smokers. x A party of turbaned Indians, some six in number, has been prospecting the Hawke’s Bay district in search of suitable holdings. Evidently they found nothing suitable, as they left for the King Country. The man who likes medium strength tobacco should try a pipe or two of MILD DERBY. It’s tip top. In tins or plug. There’s nothing to equal it. x Tame Indian runner ducks wore shot recently at Fcilding by some youths in mistake for the genuine wild duck. The owner, through the court, obtained judgment against tho “sports*, men” for £7 10s and costs, amounting to £3 2s, which is a good price to pay for 10 tame ducks. A “Warners" is rno most economical Corset a woman can wear—it oa.i be kept sweet and fresh by washing. Wo guarantee Warners to wear wed and not rust, break, or tear; local drapers. x A Hastings fishmonger was offered 10s for a bottle of whitebait weighing slightly less than 11b on Monday last, but was in the unfortunate position of being unable to fill the order. A email supply was quickly disposed of at up to os per bottle. B 6 fair to your corns—order “Anticor,” the perfect safety corn shaver, from your local dealer to-day. Only 2s 6d Immediate comfort guaranteed or your money back. x Mr B. Mathias, of Christchurch, who was at one time resident in the Mackenzie Country, told a “Press” reporter, when contrasting the conditions of sheep farming to-day with those which obtained in the early days, that in bis younger days in the Mackenzie Country be laid seen 50(1 sheep, after being shorn, killed and left to rot. They could not be sold. Even their skins, once the wool was taken off, were valucks?;. No homo should be without the famous Roslyn Writing Pad, 100 sheets. Only Gd and Is each from all dealers. Ask for it. x In Egypt, the variation in the flow of the Nile is an important factor. For .several years the Nile has been comparatively low, but in accordance with precedent a series of exceptionally high Niles may now he expected, which means a danger of floods in Lower Egypt and possible wide-spread disaster. The danger was lessened when the raising of the Assuan dam was completed last December, but it is proposed to build a new dam on tho White Nile forty miles above Khartum, by which the supply can be a!ill further regulated.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVI, Issue 60, 16 July 1913, Page 7
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546THROUGH Our EXCHANGES. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVI, Issue 60, 16 July 1913, Page 7
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