THE ENEMY BEATEN.
THAT DREADFUL COMPLAINT AGAIN. MRS HINES SUFFERED PROM PILES AND CONSTIPATION FOR MANY t YEARS. BILE BEANS CURED HER. The peculiar feature of piles is not so much its danger and seriousness as its inconvenience and torture. Certain members of the German medical faculty go so far as to state that many patients they have attended for piles were in other respects not only healthy but healthier than the majority of their patients. By this it might be assumed that piles is an index of health but the same members of the German medical profession tell us in the same breath that it is a disorder which should be dispelled as soon as possible. And that such is the case there is little doubt, inasmuch as it causes the patient an enormous amount of ingWhere doctors have failed, Bile Beans have cured the complaint. Mrs Sophie Hines, of No. 3 Brown Street, Newcastle, writes : "I- was recommended by a friend to try your Bile Beans. I suffered from costiveness and piles for %ome years, and have taken a number of different medicines without getting permanent relief. " I tried the Beans, and am pleased to say they have cured me. I recommended them to the neighbours, and they speak very highly of them. You can use this when and where you please. — Their action is gentle ; there is no griping, purging, and no evil effects. Their formula is purely vegetable, and such drastic ingredients as aloes, calomel, and mercury, as found in most purgatives, are emphatically and positively not employed, even in the smallest degree. Occasion may come when you wish a medicine to thoroughly search out and get to the root of a digestive ailment. If it does, remember Bile Beans for Biliousness are the people's popular-priced preparation, and they cure when all other remedies fail. If you doubt the fact, inquire amongst your friends, and see if you cannot find someone who will give you ocular demonstration of this fact Thousands of Australians have been* made well, happy, and strong by this great remedy, and amongst your friends you # will most likely find the names of some of those thousands.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TT19000502.2.2
Bibliographic details
Tuapeka Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 4749, 2 May 1900, Page 1
Word Count
364THE ENEMY BEATEN. Tuapeka Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 4749, 2 May 1900, Page 1
Using This Item
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.