THIN PEOPLE DESIRING INCREASED 'WEIGHT. I Thin, men and women troubled with simple mal-nutrition, and who would like. [ to increase their weight to a normal poundage of healthy "stay there" flesh, should try eating a little Sargol with t.heir meals for a while, and note results. I Here is a good test worth trying. First weigh yourself and measure yourself. Then take Sargol—one tablet with every meal—for two weeks. Then weigh and measure again. It isn't a question of how you look or feel, or what your friends say and think. The scales and j the tape measure can tell their own story, and most any thin man or woman should easily add a good number of pounds in the first fourteen days by following this simple direction. "And, best, of all, the new flesh stays put. Sargol does not of itself make fat, but is designed to_ mix with your food, and to help the digestive organs to turn the fats, sugars and starches of what you have eaten into rich, ripe fat-producing nourishment for the tissues and blood— prepare it in an easily assimilated form which the blood can readily accept. Mayhap all this nourishment now passes from your body as waste. But Sargol aims to stop such waste, and do it quickly, and aid the fat-producing contents of" the very | sam» meals you are eating now to de- [ velop pounds and pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones. Sargol is perfectly "safe, pleasant, efficient, and inexpensive. W. S:\lek, 32. Willis-street ■ Claude H. Perretl, M.P.S., corner Wil- | Ks-street and Manners streets, and other other leading chemists in Wellington taid vicinity, sell it in large packages—forty tablets to n package—on a guarantee of weight increase or money back. This treatment is not intended for wasting diseases like tuberculosis nor diabetes. Special medical treatment should be given such cases.—Advt.
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Evening Post, Volume XCIV, Issue 114, 10 November 1917, Page 11
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311Page 11 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Post, Volume XCIV, Issue 114, 10 November 1917, Page 11
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