I’. G. Wodehouse, whose books have made us all laugh, has found, he says, “there s nothing like a quiet smoke to soothe the savage breast,” or words to that effect. Well, the tranquilising influence of good tobacco cannot be over-estimated. It’s as comforting as the recovery of a bad debt. But just as good tobacco soothes and calms, the regular use of some brands may have precisely the opposite effect. Tobacco too rich in nicotine, for example, may if persis tently smoked, render the smoker irritable and disagreeable: his nerves become affected, and may, tn popular parlance “go all to pieces,” or he ■ may suffer in other ways. Unfortunately such brands are almost alcommon as wet days in New Zealand. Beyond the shadow of a doubt the purest tobaccos on the market are the well-known toasted varieties’, Cur Flug No. 10 (Bullshead . Cavendish. Navy Cut No. 3 (Bulldog-, Riverhead Gold and Desert Gold. The manufacturers’ own toasting process eliminates the poisonous nicotine and renders them as safe for the smoker las they are remarkable for flavour and bouquet. But 'ware imitations!
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Taranaki Central Press, Volume IV, Issue 388, 20 March 1937, Page 3
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182Untitled Taranaki Central Press, Volume IV, Issue 388, 20 March 1937, Page 3
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