“Don’t cram a new pipe with tobacco and smoke it right out,” writes “Old Smoker,” in a Melbourne paper, “If subjected to intense heat, the bowl, until protected by a layer of carbon, is very liable to crack. Knocking a pipe against something hard to get the ashes out, and lighting up from the flame of a candle, should also be avoided.” Correct, sir! But how about the baccy? If loaded with niconicotine (as it often is), a pipe quickly fouls, necessitating constant scraping until the bowl’s worn thin as a sixpence. Impure tobacco’s bad for the pipe and worse for the smoker. But why smoke it. when you can get “toasted,’ combining a fascinating flavour with a delicious bouquet, at any tobacconists. As for purity—there’s no tobacco like it. The nicotine *is absorbed by toasting and the I baccy’s rendered as harmless as it ! can possibly be. The five brands. Cut i Plug No. 10 (Bullshead), Cavendish. Navy Cut No. 3 (Bulldog), Riverhead Gold, and Desert Gold, merit their immense popularity. The world can show no finer tobaccos. | Tane sI I E ? I I BODYBUILDER I
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TCP19370127.2.80.3
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Taranaki Central Press, Volume IV, Issue 344, 27 January 1937, Page 7
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187Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Taranaki Central Press, Volume IV, Issue 344, 27 January 1937, Page 7
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