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A POLITE BOER.

Such an individual as a polite Boer is almost unknown. Every civilised

man and woman invariably associates the Boer with brutality, vulgarity, dirt and everything that is ignoble, yet, strange to say, a polite Boex- has turned up in Wellington, N.Z., in the person of Francisco Kurtz. This man, who was interviewed the other day by a representative of the press, is described as being handsome in appearance, with gentlemanly and polite manners, and whose sympathies are entirely with the British in the present war. There is yet hope a Boer can be made ixolite, clean and gentlemanly. This simile applies to the liver. If that organ gets thoroughly out of order, and severe biliousness, jaundice or dyspepsia follows, the patient often gets into a melancholy state, and imagines that his liver Is done fox- ever. Such an idea is erroneous, as has been proved by thousands who have used Bile Beans for Biliousness. No mat,tex- what state the liver might be the Beans will arrest the disorder. They will go direct to that organ, and in a gentle manner cleanse the system of all Its Impurities. No one should ever think jhily are incurable, as enumerable examples can be given to show that Bile Beans have proved to be a success when all else has failed. Hence the motto, nil desperandum, is one that should always be taken to heart.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP19020524.2.59

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXVIII, Issue XXI, 24 May 1902, Page 1033

Word Count
234

A POLITE BOER. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXVIII, Issue XXI, 24 May 1902, Page 1033

A POLITE BOER. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXVIII, Issue XXI, 24 May 1902, Page 1033