NO NEED TO REMAIN THIN AND WEAK NOW.
GOOD ADVICE FOR THIN, UNDEVELOPED MEN AND WOMEN. Thousands of people suffer from excessive thinness, weak nerves, and feeble stomachs who, having tried advertised flesh-makers, food fads, physical culture stunts, and rubon creams, resign _ themselves to lifelong suinmness, and think nothing will mako them fat. Yet such cases are not always hopeless. A recently-discovered regenerarti . rce helps make fat grow after years of thinness, and is also unsurpassed for repairing the thinness of sickness or faulty digestion, and for strengthening the nerves. J his remarkable agent is called Sargol. several of the most effective elements of acknowledged merit have been combined in this great preparation, whose essentials arc endorsed by physicians abroad and used by prominent people everywhere. It is absolutely harmless, inexpensive, and efficient. A month's systematic use of Sargol should help produce flesh and strength by correcting faults of digestion and by enabling your assimilative functions to pass highly valuable food fats into the blood. Increased nourishment should accrue from the food eaten, and tho additional fatts that thin people need be provided. H. L. Sprosen. "• waters, Johnstone and Haslett. and other leading chemists eupply Sargol. and " n , f ' there is a large demand for it Whilst this new preparation has given splendid results as a nerve tonic and \ italiser, it should not be used by nervous people unless they wish to gain a considerable amount sof flesh. This treatment is also not intended for thinness from complaints like consumption or diabetes. *5
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19180523.2.78
Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 17322, 23 May 1918, Page 8
Word Count
253NO NEED TO REMAIN THIN AND WEAK NOW. Otago Daily Times, Issue 17322, 23 May 1918, Page 8
Using This Item
Allied Press Ltd is the copyright owner for the Otago Daily Times. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons New Zealand BY-NC-SA licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Allied Press Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.