rer's Sarsaparilla ekes ,k your skin You willsei that ifc is ; c^% blond cov- Vy > --- J ers the skin with eczema, rashes, pimples, pustules, salt-rhoum, boils, carbuncles, and other sores. Those simply toll of something bad down deep in the blood itself. Ointments, washes, powders and cosmetics will not reach the evil. You must take out all impurities from the system with and then see how quickly the skin troubles will disappear. As now made, At/er's Sarsaparilla contains no alcohol. There are many imitation Sarsaparillas. Be sure you get "Ayer's." ?■:■' .-M by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co,, Lowell, Mass,, U.S.A. Housewives who want to bake delicious, appetising, wholesome cakes, scones, biscuits, muffins, pastry and bread should HUDSON'S pow v Thousands of particular women use no oth< r. For thirty years it has been the standard. Hudson's Balloon Brand is best because it < best results. The price is, (id, 1/-and 1/9 per tin.
TQNKIWG' The Really Modarn Cough Remedy. In olden clays our grandmothers used h> i"ko so much oE linseed, so much of squill.-, and so much of several other homo remedies, boil them together, und make into a cough remedy [or all members of the home. But not so nowadays. Tonking's Linseed Emulsion is the modern exponent of "(he old family standby. To-day "TonkingV can be found in almost every home. And that.is been nso " Touking's" is worthv of such a place. For children's coughs, grandparents' coughs, or any coughs in between I'-p-'.e ages, Tonking's Linseed Emulsi;>:> .-.tanils easily (lie Queen of Cough Kemedies. Sold by all medicine dealers in thr«e sizes. Is 6d, 2s 6d, and 4s 6d. 12
TEA BLENDING. AN eminent Tea Expert, writing in the "Tea and Coffee Trade Journal, says : —"Tea blending is a scientific art and the acme of the art is to ' lift' blends up, not to deprets them to a dull average. The expert will blend low-priced, medium, and fine quality teas in such a way as to make a ' fine liquoring,' not a medium cup. The great secret is to select for your 'fetching up' grade a tea that can dominate the blend. For this, great experience and a highly trained palate are essential. No hard nd fast rules can be laid down, but there is a great prize to be gained: by the succeseful individual who by his skill can make, for two or three pence a pound less money, a blend that shall cual the more expensive one of the inexpert blender " In New Zealand expert tea blenders are few and far between, and whilo there are many brands of blended teas on the market, few are the work of real experts. For the most part the teas are mixed in a haphazard kind of way, the main object being the obtaining of a maximum profit. Uniformity of quality or flavour under such conditions impossible, and purity pioblematical. There is one firm in New Zealand who have fjr many years been selling the finest blended teas in Australasia. Mended by an expert of great experience and unique skill, who also has the great advantage of his firm's superior buying and importing capabilities, these teas are undoubtedly very fine examples of the blender's art, and at the various prices at which they are soid they are undeniably the best value obtainable in the Dominion. We refer to "Tiger" Teas. That they have fer so many years retained their supremacy and groat popularity in the face of increased coinpetition is evidence of the public's critical abilities. The people of New Zealane are, on the whole, good judges of tea, and as " Tiger" Tea is sttlJ the pick of the great majority, nothing further need be added, except that they are obtainable from all stores at Is 4d, Is bd, Is Bd, Is lOd, and 2s per lb. That at Is Sd per lb is the most favoured at present. It is a very fine tea,/and those who cannot afford the higher pr.eed "Tiger" Teas find it quite as good as other brands of tea at 2s a lb. Those, however, who are compelled to buy a low-priced tea will get the best value for their money, both in quality and flavour, i«f they buy the Jow-piiced " Tiger" Menus. —('.).
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 3178, 1 May 1909, Page 3
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708Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 3178, 1 May 1909, Page 3
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