Don’t cram a new pipe with tobacco and smoke it right out,” writes "Old Smoker,” in a Melbourne paper. "It subjected to intense heat the bowl, until protected by u layer of carbon, is very liable to crack; knocking a pipe against something hard to get the ashes out, und lighting up from tho liarno of a candle should also bo avoided.” Correct, fclirl Hut how about tho baccyf If loaded with nicotine (as it often is) a pipe quickly fouls, necessitating con stant scraping until the bowl's worn as thin as a sixpence. Impure tobacco’s bad for tho pipo and worse for the smoker. But why smoko it when you can get "toasted,” combiuing a fascia ating 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 baccy’s rendered as harmless as it can possibly bo. The five brands, Cut 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 tobacco.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19370208.2.53.7
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Manawatu Times, Volume 62, Issue 32, 8 February 1937, Page 6
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180Page 6 Advertisements Column 7 Manawatu Times, Volume 62, Issue 32, 8 February 1937, Page 6
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