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fC^^X Brown &l Polscn^^HOY/ TO MAKE . DO MOTHERS KNOW BEST? ~ The other day a mother was asking \j\SjJ^ (J what sort of sweets she ought to give v ■ her little girl. "Joan won't look at Ingredient.: 2 owgc,. anything 'heavy' in hot weather » she A^Z%tton Sm K.«r. i ««. 53JJ "but she laves blancmanges ?^^^^^^ and things like that. Do you think fIHfIBKpf^VHSQI mother what w,is good for her. Blanc- -Wfllk^«^'.^^mf^j siv / Brown & Poison Corn Flour arc the Ij^jfe^ finest energy-foods you can have. .^.^ o Jnto (lish> spr i,,kl e with They keep children lively, and well j de^sertapuonful sugar. Blend com flout however much running about they with «'little of the milfc; heat rest with a do. They're very digestible, too. Try i^TJ^ri^jt corn'flo" the two dishes in the next column, wc u Boil 1 minute, cool slightly, j ■ . rtir in the egg yolk and cook 2 minutes. \ . Pour over the oranges. Add egg while ■ . beaten atiffly with 1 dessertspoonful sugar. <*, , ■ brown in moderate oven. Serve cold. i ■•■■■ M%VIEMF/v / ■iitm^f mm' self. Carbohydrates supply your energy. ■ "SWh <*£&',. . ; Some foods have more than others. l ngM dienu: IS on. Brown & Vohon Corn Corn Flour, for example, is simply full fi our . I pint milk. 1 oz. tugar. 1 /*. of carbohydrate, f- and it's so easily prune ,. J pin, vale r. Lemon pect. . digested, too. Both children and grown. St „„,,,, with (itt) e lemon rind. Make ops keep fitter on bUncmange, and other Hllncn , ojing j pint mi ik andj pint sweets made with Brown Si Poison Corn ( , let> . 'ajj prune ,, stoned •••■ Floul. . . a^ Pcut into small piece.. Cook for 1 | ; ■'I minute. Turn into a wetted mould. "Turns swei*' £7TT} It's getting about that I'm bit of AGBm a swe" ** * os^> but I don't feel it! ■ill ' It's the gov'nor makes me wear ■ Hi this hat so folk1 II notice it. He ■ HI thinks that when they see it they'll j^Bl read the advert, and learn that M |B\ CASCADE BOTTLED ALE — the ;^^B\ famous beer that put the "happy" into Tiahape—can now be had in , m/KI all Hotels and Bottled Stores. You I Bl couldn't get a more wholesome HLHL^^^^^Bn ale, pure as the ice-cold water,of wX the mountain stream which sup■KflHj^^Bjil ill P''es '*s refreshing stimulus. No, it ■fl^^^Hj II isn't me, it's Cascade that's Swell. |f|f^PlH||l Ask always for "CASCADE." ' lvi^^rvj rowyi n) ai w * *an unusua* JlS&^iisL. :, Suggestion Ky[« Ml Caster pribe a BAROMETER **« You will find displayed 'in our Retail Department, an array of Barometers in Charming Modern Designs, which have just arrived from England. Among these are models in Oak and Inlaid Wai- "tf f L i, nut, with chromium*plated bezels; attractively priced from Mmm ' O BRISGOE, E. W. MILLS AND COMPANY LTD. - . HUNTER ST., WELLINGTON | CHARM OF NEW ZEALAND ] J March "Railway Magazine" | ' New Zealandeis, you will see much of your pleasant country I brightly described and well illustrated in the March issue:—, J : "The Birds of Rakiura" (Stewart Island), by Robin Hyde. J - S "A Wilderness of Enchantment—South Westland and Beyond * 1 —^New Zealand's-Least Known and Most Fascinating Coun-> S ; | try," by G. G. Stewart. N • S "A Cluster of Jewels—Towns of South Taranaki," by O. N. ' | Gillespie. _ s •* S "Goof's Guide to New Zealand," a humorous chronicle by \ ', jj Ken Alexander. . | I k Ninth Version of "The Thirteenth Clue," by C. A. Marris. 5 I S Romantic History of Dusky Sound, by A. Shanks. | - * Randolph Rose, Athletic Thriller, by W. F. Ingram. j| Sixty Pictures. ~ S "TJ «d.V AT BOOK-SHOPS AND NEWS-AGENCIES 6d. {

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19370310.2.52.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 58, 10 March 1937, Page 8

Word Count
590

Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 58, 10 March 1937, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 58, 10 March 1937, Page 8