THIN FOLKS WHO WOULD BE FAT. 'INCREASE IN WEIGHT WITH SOLID, HEALTHY FLESH. "I'd certainly give most anything to be able to fat up a few pounds and stay that way," declares every excessively thin man or woman. Such a result is not invariably impossible, despite past failures. Thin people .are often v'cfims of malnutrition, a condition which prevents the tatty dements of food from being taken up by the blood as they are when tho powers of nutrition are normal, Instead of getting into the blood, all the fat and flesh-producing elements stay in Ihe intestines until they puss from tho body as waste, in such instances. To correct this condition and to produce a healthy, normal' amount of fat the nutritive processes may he artificially supplied with the power which nature has denied them. This is often accomplished by eating a Sargol tablet with every meal. Sargol is a scientific combination of sevoral of the most effective elements known in medicine for this purpose. Taken with meals, it mixes with the food to help turn the sugars and starches into rich, ripe nourishment for the tissues auu blood, finfl its rapid effect is remarkable. Gains of from ten pounds upwards in a surprisingly short timo are by no means infraiucut. Yet this action is perfectly natural and absolutely harmless. Sargol is sold by C- H. Pcrrett and W. Salck, chemists, Wellington, and other good chemists everywhere, and every package contains a guarantee of weight increase or money back. ' Whilst Sargol has produced remarkable results in the treatment of nervous indi"estion and general stomach disorders, it"siiould not be used ,by those who are not willing to increase their weight ami flesh Cases of diabetes, consumption, or other wasting diseases are not intended to use this treatment—Advt. The brain of the ant is larger, in proportion to size, tlian that of any animal. : QNIFF UP, GARGLfc OR SWALLOW
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Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 178, 17 April 1918, Page 3
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318Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 178, 17 April 1918, Page 3
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