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THE RISING TIDE OF BREAD.

As soon as tea was finished Farmer Becton announced to his household that he Mas so tired of eating badly made bread that he would make the next day's supply himself. "Good idea,' agreed a visitor. "I'll leni you a hand, if you like.' Together they departed kitchenwards, one bearing a bag of Hour, the other a drum of yeast. It was past midnight, and still the ama tour bakers were hard at work. The farmer's wife ventured to ask whether the bread was in Iho oven. "In the oven?" cried .Becton. "We can't keen it in the kitchen, let alone the oven."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19280609.2.250.9

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CV, Issue 135, 9 June 1928, Page 21

Word Count
108

THE RISING TIDE OF BREAD. Evening Post, Volume CV, Issue 135, 9 June 1928, Page 21

THE RISING TIDE OF BREAD. Evening Post, Volume CV, Issue 135, 9 June 1928, Page 21