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BILE BEANS.

WHAT THEY ARE. AND WHAT THEY CURE. Bile Beans are essentially a liver remedy. They regulate that organ, and thus cure or prevent about fourfifths of the ailments that affect mankind to-day, and which have their origin in a disarranged liver. The liver is a fibrous, glandular body’, and its special duty is to remove noxious and poisonous matter from the blood. It also secretes and furnishes the bile, which is one of the indispensable elements for the digestion of food.

The symptoms of a sound liver are cheerfulness of mind and perfect healthfulness and vigour of the whole body. Of one thing the reader may be certain: If anything be wrong with him or her there is just about five chances to the hundred that it can be anything else than Live Trouble.

When the liver has gone wrong, symptoms vary' greatly in different persons. Other organs are extremely liable to suffer in sympathy, and when this happens many misguided sufferers make the mistake of using medicines for these effects, instead of applying the proper remedy at the fountain head of their sufferings—that is to say, at the liver. The proper remedy’ to take in such cases is Bile Beans for Biliousness .which get right down to the cause.

When purchasing, insist on having Bile Beans —not something which your chemist says is ‘just is good;’ the

just-as-good kind bears him more profit, and that is why’ he prefers to sell them. Bile Beans are not a cure-all, but they are an undoubted specific for Biliousness, Sick and Nervous Headache, Indigestion, Constipation. Piles, Female Weakness, Palefaced Girls, Irregularities, Bad Breath, Pimples, Blotches, Dizziness, all Liver and Kidney Troubles, Dyspepsia, Heart Palpitation, Pain in the Back and Side, Fulness after Eating, Lack of Physical Tone, Heartburn, and that Tired Feeling. Their chief ingredient is a vegetable substance, which, when properly compounded, has identically the same effect on the digestive organism as the bile of Mother Nature. With this specific within easy reach of all, the old methods of starving and purging, and the use of pepsin and bismuth, sink into utter insignificance. Being a purely vegetable preparation, the action can in no way be harmful to the system. Here they differ ma-, terially from the great bulk of laxative remedies sold to-day. Millions use Bile Beans annually, and the reason for this is to be found in the absolute genuineness of a specific so aptly termed ‘A Medicine for the People at a Popular Price.’ They are manufactured in one of the best fitted and equipped laboratories in the world, at Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A., and they have been used throughout that country by the best physicians for years. Their success throughout Australia is a positive proof of their superiority over all other purgative medicines. They are to be obtain 'd at all chemists. Australian Depot, 39 Pitt-st., Sydney. N.Z. agents, Kempthorne and Prosser, Dunedin, Christchurch, Wellington and Auckland.

mediately cancelled; (4) the vendors to forego £ 304 rent of offices, etc. This proposition, said Dr. Fulcher, was’ placed before the directors of the vendor company, but they did not consider they would oe justified in accepting the same. As, however, the vendors held between 26,000 and 27.000 shares in the company, and were desirous for the development work to be completed at as early a date as possible, they agreed to advance the company the sum of £l5OO free of interest and without security. Under these circumstances the directors did not propose to ask the shareholders to pass the reconstruction proposals as by this arrangement with the vendors the development could be proceeded with at once and the necssity of asking the shareholders to supply further funds had been removed for the present. In view of the fact that the balance-sheet and accounts had already been made up and audited to the 11th Septemb-i. the directors proposed at an early date to call the annual meeting of shareholders to pass the same and elect directors.

Dr. Fulcher then intimated that as there was no business to discuss the meeting was closed. He and his colleagues forthwith left the room, but the meeting was by no means at an end. Dr. Ross, a member of the committee, jumped up at once and invited the shareholders to ‘have a meeting on their own.’ The shareholders were agreeable, and elected Mr Devers Summers to the chair. A free and easy discussion ensued, and finally' it was resolved that the offer presented by the directors be accepted on the following terms: ‘That the vendors advance £ 1500 without security or interest; if, in the opinion of the directors and a majority' of the cash shareholders holding not less than 100 shares after crushing 100 tons, it is worth while to proceed, the vendors shall agree to accept 1500 fully' paid shares in lieu of the £l5OO cash advanced; they shall agree to accept 1000 shares for the £lOOO balance of purchase money; they' shall forego foreclosure under their mortgage while the mine is being proved, and until six months after the decision of the directors: that the directors forego all their fees; that two of the directors remain, and three new ones be elected by' the cash shareholders. KAPANGA. Mr Henry' Wilson had a somewhat more pleasant tale to tell the shareholders in the Kapanga Gold Mining Company when moving the adoption of the report and accounts to June 30th last at the annual general meeting. He said they had not departed from the policy of testing the mine to a depth of 1,000 feet, but the mine above the 420 and 300 levels were let on tribute. They had now suspended deep sinking, all their operations being now confined to the 420 and the 300, the localities in w'hich the tributers had been so successful. They had obtained £5695, and the company had received as its proportion £ 1,669. The chairman said that an enormous amount of work had been done east and west of the shaft, with indications which from time to time were very satisfactory, but which were fluctuating and. in fact, unreliable. The New Zealand Goverment lent them its boring machine, free of charge, with men to work it, and also gave them a subsidy' of £ 1 per ton. The stuff brought up fairly proved that the ground was auriferous, and samples from the boring machine were subjected to analysis, with results varying from 30/ up to £5, but they could only regard the boring results as indefinite. After slight discussion the reports were adopted. KATHLEEN G.M. COMPANY. Mr Wilson also presided at the meeting of this company to discuss the annual report and accounts and the advisability of reconstruction. Mr Wilson explained that the mine being situated under a hill, they knew it would be absolutely necessary to sink some depth before they could find the lodes. Therefore, as they would see in the balance-sheet, a powerful pumping and winding plant had been provided at a cost of £ 5062. The plant was capable of taking the mine down to a depth of, he might say, thousands of feet. They had now reached a depth of 240 feet, and the indications there were sufficiently' favourable to justify them in proceeding further. Captain Hodge recommend-

ed that the shaft be sunk to a depth of 300 feet, from which point levels would be driven to intersect and develop the Hartridge and other refs. With reference to Hartridge's reef, the manager reported that it was a true fisure vein enclosed within two good walls extending throughout the whole length of the property. The chairman said the shareholders had to decide whether they would subscribe a further 6d a share, or abandon the property. Ultimately the motion was agreed to, and at an extraordinary meeting held subsequently resolutions providing for reconstruction were adopted.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP18981231.2.32.3

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXI, Issue XXVII, 31 December 1898, Page 854

Word Count
1,309

BILE BEANS. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXI, Issue XXVII, 31 December 1898, Page 854

BILE BEANS. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXI, Issue XXVII, 31 December 1898, Page 854

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