\s'—% s'. ;r.=& 7' cva•I 1 •* -i| i i ’N »§ rm \ i\ p m?A m W r /a r \j K$ c Z$ w, «£. J 8 a raer rj) one! Christmas Day is a great --_ festival day to your _J kiddies. Always looming large in their little innocent expectations is a big rounded steaming plum pudding bursting with currants and a gorgeously iced Xmas 'cake. Wouldn’t you like to surprise tkem this year with a very, very delicious cake. Try this Recipe for your Christmas Cake lib. Butter 4 breakfast cup* Flour 2 „ „ ' Sugar 10 Eggs 1 heaped teaspoon Ed11b. Currants 11b. Raisins lib. Sultanas 141 b. Mixed Peel 141 b. Almonds monds Baking Powder Wineglass of Brandy Beat butter to a cream and add sugar, then mix eggs one by one unbeaten. Mix Baking Powder with flour and put in, then fruit, dredged with flour, and finally brandy. Cook 4Vi hours, moderate oven. - BAKING POWDER - 1 a L'rJ ILOTT
■I % 4c • • [with apologies to RGWxiehouse) ' “Jeeves!” “Sir!” : V / “Rally round, Jeeves.” Psmith’s man entered the bathroom and gazed unblinkingly at his unadorned master. Psmith reclining in lukewarm water was absently regarding the mole which was a feature of his left knee. * “Drape yourself on yonder chair, , Jeeves. Your distressing habit of standing without support makes me sympathetically exhausted. Stagger chairwards.” / Jeeves obeyed. Psmith continued: “One loses one’s pep, Jeeves. One wakes at some ungodly hour before lunch with no desire for matutinal exertion. One vents one’s spleen on such people as may be tottering / round——” r r / , “Inver, Sir!” pronounced Jeeves. “Spots before the eyes, pain in the dome—and all that sort of thing.” “Liver, Sir! Slight impurities in the blood.” ' “Don’t be beastly, Jeeves. You have twice mentioned my so-called liver. It behoves you to suggest a remedy.—mayhap the surgeon’s knife?” “I know of a delicious, bubbling drink, Sir, quickly compounded by adding a New Zealand-made powder to a glass of cold water. It is refreshing, invigorating and health-;giving. It costs 2/6 per bottle.” “Have we that sum, Jeeves? Poverty must not be the banana skin on the portals of health!” “We have, Sir.” “Then trickle around to the chemist!” Jeeves trickled. N.B. —The result was that Psmith became so vigorous that he is now of no earthly use to Mr. Wodehouse. K.P. LIFE SALT—the powder recommended by the inimitable Jeeves, is a delightful, healthful and gentle laxative. It effervesces into a cooling drink which should be taken as a matter of course when you bath o’mornings. It is made carefully and conscientiously by Kempthorne, Prosser & Co., Ltd., and is sold by chemists and ( stores. One Size—Big Bottle—Family Use —2/6. Kll3
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Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 20 December 1924, Page 16
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443Page 16 Advertisements Column 1 Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 20 December 1924, Page 16
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