HOW THIN PEOPLE CAN GET FAT. ' INCREASE IN WEIGHT TEN POUNDS OR MORE. A PHYSICIAN'S (ADVICE. "I'd certainly give most anything to be able to inc -up ft few pounds mid stay that iray/' declares every exces-. sively thin maa or woman. Such a result is not impossible, despite past failures. Thin people are victims of liml-Hutrition, a condition which prevents the fatly elements 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 iiesli producing elements stay in tiie intestines until they pass from the body as waste. To correct this condition and to produce a healthy, normal amount of fat the nutritive processes must be "artificially supplied with the power which nature has denied them. This can best be accomplished by eating a Sargol tablet with every meal. 'Sargol is a scientific combination of six of tho best strength-giving, fat-producing elements known to the medical profession. Taken with meals, it mix's with the food and turns the sugars and starches into rich, ripo nourishment for the tissues and blood and its rapid effect is remarkable. Reported gains of from ten to twenty-five pounds in a single month are by 110 means infrequent. r Yet its action is) perfectly natural and absolutely harmless. Sargol is sold by all good' chemists everywhere and overv package contains a guarantee of weight Increase- or money back. Caution—Whilst Sargol has produced remarkable results in the treatment of nervous indigestion and general stomach disorders, it should not, owing to its remarkable flesh producing effect, be used by those who are not willing to increase tiicir weight ten pounds or more.— Advt.
|Ovep6o jfj I a.ViS I || J of unvarying succpu in relieving 11 | coughs and colds, is the ] on g || ff record of Bennington's Irish Moss; 11 " | To-day, as in the days of our jl JB grandfathers, it occupies first placc Jjj BM in tens of thousands of homes. la IL l ' s ' J' Russell, of Oaraaru, jr f ,j& writes;—"l can remember as long J I | as thirty years when Bonnington'a | I 8 ! Irish Moss was used for me as a | 1 | child by my mother, and I now use | it in my own home for my children," J M^SMbss'l seldom fails to relieve the most I stubborn cases of coughs and B colds, Avoid substitutes. Insist [. | on Bonnington's Irish Moss. At i i a all^ Chemist! and Stores, 1/6
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Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 309, 23 September 1920, Page 3
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415Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 309, 23 September 1920, Page 3
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