THROUGH OUR EXCHANGE.
An lowa engine building company uses the power developed in testing its products which ordinarily would ho I wasted, to generate electricity for numerous purposes. Manv a loading article lias been “helped along” by MILD DERBY TOBACCO. Journalists like it be- • cause ’tis neither too light nor too dark—promotes ideas without worrying the palate. In tins or plug—try it! ' 2-3 Gustave Crepin, iafter travelling through Morocco and Indo-China in search of his missing wife, was fined £4 in Paris for forcibly entering a house in that city where she was living with an old sweetheart. j If dark tobacco “dizzies” you and | a light brand nips your tongue—-then i the obvious smoke is MILD DERBY I —the true medium strength “weed.” I A tin or a ping will prove it! 26 j A sentence to attend church nine I consecutive nights, and occupy seats in the front row, where the minister can watch them, was the penalty imposed in the Kansas City Court on two men charged with disturbing the peace in church. <■ ,j i As a seasoned smoker you’ll like I MILD DERBY. It’s just dark enough ■ to be rich and nutty—just light ! enough to he smooth arid fragrant! In fact the happy medium. Try a tin or a plug—to-day. 27 | The following advertisement appeared in the Times last month:—“Two thousand golf balls for sale.—Advertiser, living on the .boundary of a Golf Club, not 100 miles from London, offers 1 a collection of various brands of sliced golf balls. This is the only way of recompensing himself for broken windows and ruined flower-beds. What | offers?—Box .” I Do yon smoke and work too? Then a light tobacco plays up with the tongue while a dark brand is miles j too' heavy! Try MILD DERBY—the 1 perfect , “medium” smoke-—plug or tins. 28 What may he called a baptismal freak seemed to he disclosed to the Brighton Bench the other day, when a witness to whom the oath had been administered, said his Christian name was “J.P.” (relates the Melbourne Age). All concerned promptly desired to know what names “J.P.” stood for. The man rather petulantly reiterated that his name was “J.P.C-r-jJiat and no more. A solicitor .on the other side asked him whetherf‘J.” stood fox “Jay,” but the witness hotly rejoined that he was no more a jay than the inquirer. He then informed theix worships that from his birth his father had called him “J.P.”—noting more and nothing less—and had christened him so.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19140629.2.55
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 57, 29 June 1914, Page 7
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416THROUGH OUR EXCHANGE. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 57, 29 June 1914, Page 7
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