Makes Friends with Savages Escapes Death And has still better luck when lie gets home f. JOHN J. WHITEHEAD, explorer and lecturer, has returned from eight months in the jungles of South America, where he was searching for traces of the lost Colonel Fawcett and his son. Dangerous as he found the jungle, he encountered a worse danger at home. But let him tell it. "One of the great problems of a trip of this kind is keeping in healthy condition. When we started, some of the members of the party had laxatives with them, but made wise by experience I carried Nujol. All too quickly my stock ran out. Soon I was in bad shape—what with a diet of rice and beans, lacking vitamins and greea vegetables. "When we finally came back to civilization, I became positively ill. Severe stomach pains and poor elimination made me realize that Nujol would again prove the reliable, trusty keeper of health. Sure enough, with the first bottle the trouble disappeared—and you ran be sure, that no matter what important equipment I have to discard, my next adventure •will see me taking plenty of Nujol along." Don't think Nujol is a medicine. It is as tasteless and colorless as clear water. It brings you, however, what your body needs like any other machine—lubrication. Just as a good bath washes our bodies clean, Nujol sweeps away, easily and normally those internal bodily poisons (we all have them) that make us feel dull and headachy and sick. Nujol cannot hurt even a little baby; it forms no habit; it contains not one single drug. Doctors and nurses use it themselves and tell you to use it, if you want to be well. Take Nujol every night for two weeks and prove to yourself how happy and full of vim you can be, if your body is internally clean. Get a bottle today at any chemist. Start travelling the health - road to success and happiness—this verr day! Quick. ..delici ous.. .cheering Clyminq PTmrk) 7>a<rf# r^ork) COFFEE & CHICQRY ESSENCI *Bl
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Press, Volume LXVI, Issue 20102, 4 December 1930, Page 5
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343Page 5 Advertisements Column 4 Press, Volume LXVI, Issue 20102, 4 December 1930, Page 5
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