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OUR RECIPES

DRY HASH.

Mince a suitable quantity of cold boiled salt beef, and mix it with the same weight, of mashed potatoes; season with pepper and onion if desired. The addition of a little good gravy or a little Worcester sauce is an improvement. Bake in a pie dish till well browned. It can be served in the dish or turned out. A man might eat. all day, and die of starvation. "Food does not nourish un-le-fi it is fully digested. The blood is the life, and it grows weak and unhealthy unless we renew it by the- food wo eat. When wholesome "food disagrees with us, when we begin to .suffer from constant headaches, broken sleep, depression, when our tongues are always furred and white, when constipation become* more and more frequent, there is cause for alarm. Violent remedies should be avoided; when your body is out of condition it is least able to bear a rude attack from, purgatives. In such oases it ie agreed that a vegetable medicine is the best. Doan's Dinner Pills are made from carefully chosen and tested herbs and roots: their action on the liver, stomach and bowels is stimulating, and mildly laxative. They put you right and keep yon right. Sold by ail chemists and storekeepers, or post free on receipt of price from Foster-McClellan Co., 76, Pitt-street, Sydney, N.S.W. Sample free for Id stamp* '"Doan's" Dinner Pills. 16

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19060416.2.34

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXIII, Issue 12479, 16 April 1906, Page 5

Word Count
238

OUR RECIPES Press, Volume LXIII, Issue 12479, 16 April 1906, Page 5

OUR RECIPES Press, Volume LXIII, Issue 12479, 16 April 1906, Page 5