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A RECIPE FOR PANCAKES. A FAVOURED DISH. Once yon taste pancakes made from Tucker’s Pancake Flour you know what real pancakes arc. They are not stodgy, heavy, or indigestible, hut just the. reverse. The combination of cereal flours, milk in its purest and most hygienic form (dried milk), and all the other ingredients winch arc present hi this perfect pancake recipe, make Tucker’s Pancake Flour a valuable build log-up fond for young and old alike —full of nutriment and delicious in flavour. It comes to vou a!I ready for instant use.: Simply' add water and mix, and in a few minutes you will be able to serve pancakes that are a delight. Children revel "in this nutritious dish, which is so beneficial to them. One packet at a cost of a few pence will make enough tasty pancakes for a family. In addition to the food value of pancakes made the “Tucker'’ way, parents get the advantage of an economical meal, and that is important in view of the high cost of living generally. Tuckers Pancake Flour is a nov.elty—a superior preparation which has been placed on the market at the right time. Its worth has been proved over and over again. Besides pancakes it is suitable for many other tastv dishes, such as pikelets, omelets, fritters, delightful _ Yorkshire puddings, and so forth, which are. always in demand. A racket of Tucker’s Pancake Flour is a veritable cornucopia. It is packed full of goodness. Try a packet and see if we are not right, All grocers.* 1

Avery’s Bosks for Christmas Before the war-Books were wonderfully cheap and although prices are advanced Books are .-..ti1l EXCELLENT VALUE. Look about you and make comparisons and you will find it |j wise to select Books for your Christmas presents. p THE GEM BOOKLETS, PRICE 1/6. | Dainty Booklets with mottled cover and gilt edges, giving | choice selections from the following poets and writers:— | Whittier, Scott, Rosetti, Longfellow, Burns, Keats, Brown- I ing, Procter, Dickens, Holmes, Tennyson, Wordsworth, Rus- | kin, Byron, Lamb, ' | THE GEM LIBRARY, PRICE 2/8. i This series is a little larger than the Gem Booklets; mottied cover with gilt edges. The following titles; Cardinal ji Sewman, Emerson, Marcus Aurelius, Bishop Walpole, In i Memoriam, Shakespeare’s Sonnets, The Changed Cross, | Browning’s Christmas Eve and Easter Day, Imitation of | Christ,, Saint Paul. | CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR GARBS CALENDARS I Ladies’ Hand Bags and Men’s Leather Oases and Wallets | We always have a range of Leather Goods of high quality. | English manufactured articles have been hard to obtain this 1 year, but we have secured Australian-made Leather Goods | that have satisfied us and will please you immensely. They I are made of real leather and the workmanship and finish are | equal to any goods we have had in previous years. | Ladies’ Handbags to 50/-. g Letter Cases and Pocket Books to 40/-. I Thomas Avery, PRINTER, BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, | Devon Street New Plymouth. I THE NEW ZEALAND GOVERNMENT’S- t POPULAR HISTORY OF THE WAR. j Sir James Allen, Minister of Defence, has authorised the | publication of the complete and official record of the doiugs t of the New Zealanders in all theatres of the great war. It | is the Government’s wish that everyone shall be able to oh- | tain this inspiring record. The Government has supplied the | entire contents free to the publishers and stipulated the price | at which the volumes are to bo sold to the public. Were all I the costs connected with the compilation of this record to lie | charged the price would bo at least four times what it is.’ | Every New Zealander should possess this work and it is to | be sold at a price that brings it within the reach of all. The g history is to be issued in Pour Volumes, as follows, price 6/- I per volume (by post 6/6): —. | I. THE NEW ZEALANDERS AT GALLIPOLI I 11, THE NEW ZEALANDERS IN FRANCE I lIS. THE NEW ZEALANDERS IN PALESTINE | IV. ' THE WAR EFFORT IN NEW ZEALAND Volume I. is now in the press and will be ready at an early I date. It will give for the first time the true story of Gal- g lipoli—the facts about New, Zealand’s share in that great | adventure. It is written by Major E. Waite, D.S.O. a | Main Body man who served on the Peninsula. In addition I to his own knowledge and experience ho has had official I documents, hitherto guarded as secret, placed at his disposal g for the purpose of writing this book. It is not a journal- I ist's history. Every Anzac will recognise pen-pictures of | the life he lived and the places he fought in. General Sir | lan Hamilton contributes a foreword and General Birdwood | a*characteristic appreciation of the New Zealand soldier. | Orders for Volume I. should be sent iu now, a_s lire demand | will be very great, and orders will be filled strictly in rota- I tion as received. Volumes will be sold singly or in sets as | desired. Agent for the Publishers—the trade supplied : | rnUAR/I AC- A V/Sy DV Printer, Bookseller and Stationer, | rjvJiVlA J A * 1 i Devon Street New Plymouth. |

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TH19191210.2.69.1

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Herald, Volume LXVII, Issue 16613, 10 December 1919, Page 6

Word Count
861

Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 Taranaki Herald, Volume LXVII, Issue 16613, 10 December 1919, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 Taranaki Herald, Volume LXVII, Issue 16613, 10 December 1919, Page 6