Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

CHRISTMAS is coming very near! Such a lot of baking to be done! The Christmas Pudding, the Christmas Cake . . .and cakes and biscuits to fill every tin to save cooking over the holidays. || - They'll be needed when the whole family and their friends gather round. "A full house needs a full pantry," mother says, and cheerfully ,|f '■% sets to work. aA.4-* She never worries about the result of her cooking... it is always •••••' <» ».• '» excellent . . . results made certain by that famous old friend, Edmonds /jfrat* Baking Powder. "You can't make good cakes with poor ingredients," x%. ,- v * /jgPI says mother, "and Baking Powder is very important. That's why I - v# /M » always use Edmonds 'Sure-to-RiseV 7 : T£ : Edmonds Christmas Cake brown sugar. ! dessertspoon treacle I lb. butter, I lb. raisins, 4 oz. mixed Kmore), £ 0 ®" f" 6 "" ' t ped')!' 3 | almonds (blanched), Boz. mixed peel, * I heaped teaspoon EDMONDS BAK- i packet spice, \ level teaspoon salt, ■/ ING POWDER. Beat butter to a i nutmeg (grated), 2 tablespoons 4 cream, add sugar, then eggs one by brandy. Mix well dry ingredients, one (unbeaten); mix baking powder add fruit previously prepared, MHflKfes. with flour and put in, then fruit treacle, eggs well beaten, and lastly dredged with flour, lastly brandy. milk, essence and brandy. Darken t. Cook 4\ hours in moderate oven. with sugar desjred^jPut EdmondsChristmas Pudding cloths or well-greased basins covered BAKING POWDER, 12 oz. bread- cloths. If divided into <wo, P boil I '* crumbs, l£ lb. chopped suet, !2 oz. hours; if into four, boii 6 hours. EDMONDS P 'SUe-MK&e' BAKING POWDER MAKERS ALSO OF EDMONDS 'Sure-to-Please' CUSTARD AND 'Sure-to-Set' JELLIES

SLEEP.. the vital importance of the second two hours! Science has found that it is during the third and fourth hours of sleep that nature repairs the day's wear and tear of body, brain and nervous system. If this work of restoration is to be perfectly performed, sleep must be profound. This it cannot be if your stomach is sour, disturbed with acid, fermenting or laden with undigested food. Your sleep is fitful or troubled, you wake heavy, with a furred tongue, and feel tired before your day is started. This distressing condition can be remedied with positive certainty by taking a little ' Bisurated ' Magnesia in water before retiripg at night. ' Bisurated ' Magnesia instantly sweetens the stotnach, neutralises excess acid, stops fermentation and induces sound refreshing sleep. Then you wake rested, fresh and full of energy. Get' Bisurated' Magnesia, the quickestacting stomach remedy, and try it tonight. A concentrated preparation, jrery economical. The packagm jrcgr< the 'Bimmaaf Trade Mmrh

"SMITHY'S" LIFE STORY. A TALE OF HIGH ADVENTURE. Told for Readers of the "Auckland Star." BEGINS ON SATURDAY. DECEMBER 5. Recognised by airmen as the greatest birdman of them all, not even excepting the famous Lindbergh, Sir Charles Kingsford Smith rode the air as a knight of old rode to the wars. He sought adventure wherever it was most perilous, and it can be said of him more than of any other man he lived dangerously. He died a year ago when nearing the completion of another epoch making flight, how and when will probably never be known of men. His life story is as full of interest as the greatest "thriller" ever written, and splendid use of the wealth of material provided by his many exploit* has been made by Mr. Beau Shiel, his biographer and his personal representa" tive in Australia. Mr. Shiel had access to all the documents connected with the life and adventures of Sir Charles, and he has woven them, and a mass of other material, into A story fascinating interest. It will begin in "Star" on December 5. READ THE FIRST CHAPTER—YOUR INTEREST WILL DEMAND THE REST.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19361201.2.160.1

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 285, 1 December 1936, Page 14

Word Count
622

Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 285, 1 December 1936, Page 14

Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 285, 1 December 1936, Page 14