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The News Journal from Wilmington, Delaware • Page A8

Publication:
The News Journali
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
A8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A8 THE NEWS JOURNALdelawareonline.com By Damian Wexler, Freelance Health Reporter ecently, alternative medicine expert Bryce Wylde, a frequent guest on the Dr. Oz show revealed a simple secret that amazed millions who suier with digestion nightmares. And people stopped talking about it since. give anything to make it what most people will tell you when asked about their digestive problems. just horrible says Ralph Burns, a former digestion victim.

I was tortured for years by my Acid-Refux. Sometimes almost pass out from the pain. My wife suiers with digestion problems too. If she eats one wrong thing, she spends hours stuck in the bathroom dealing with severe bouts of constipation or FDA Warns About Popular Antacids A recent FDA warning explained that excessive use of antacids could lead to an increased risk of hip, wrist, and spine fractures. Especially in people over the age of 50.

So when alternative medicine expert Bryce Wylde discussed an alternative on National TV, you can imagine how thrilled people were to gnd out they could gnally get relief without having to rely on Prevecid Nexium Prilosec and other dangerous proton pump inhibitors. But now, according to Wylde, your stomach problems could be over by simply drinking a small amount of a tasty Aloe Vera extract. as simple as that! Finally At grst, the thought of drinking aloe vera might make some people back away. But in fact, this delicious is doing amazing things for people who suier with stomach problems even if had them for years. how it Stop Stomach Agony Your stomach naturally produces acid so strong, it can dissolve an aluminum spoon in just 30 minutes! And when excess acid escapes into your esophagus, throat and stomach lining, it unleashes the scorching pain of Acid-Refux, heartburn, ulcers and more misery.

Add the problems of stress, and heck breaks Dr. Liza Leal, a well known expert on chronic pain management AloeCure can work genuine miracles. It buiers high acid levels with amazing speed. So your stomach feels completely at ease just moments after drinking In fact, it could wipe out stomach pain, discomfort, and frantic runs to the bathroom. Until Now, Little Could Be But AloeCure can help virtually anyone.

Even people with chronic stomach pain can feel better right says Dr. Leal. And really exciting is AloeCure aids in keeping your digestive tract healthy, so intestinal distress stops coming back. As Ralph Burns goes on to say, know AloeCure never claimed to be a substitute for drug store products and is only meant to be a helpful supplement. Now though, AloeCure is the only product I need for all my digestion Digestion Defender Balances Stomach Acid Your grst line of defense is calcium malate.

jis natural acid buier instantly sends stomach acid levels plunging. And holds acid levels down so they return! Digestion Defender Instant, Soothing Relief AloeCure is brimming with polysaccharides, a compound that gently coats the throat, esophagus and stomach, carrying instant relief to cells scorched by excess acid. What Doctors Are Saying! AloeCure is backed by important scientigc studies that aloe calms stomach acid and allows your body to heal itself. Dr. Liza Leal, M.D Chief Medical Odcer at Meridian Medical.

says, why I recommend it to patients who suier from bouts of heartburn, Acid-Refux, ulcers, and irritable bowel Dr. Santiago Rodriguez agrees. two ounces of AloeCure reduces the acids in your stomach by ten Francisco DeWeever, a Certiged Nutritional Microscopist, patients report their IBS, Colitis, Constipation, Acid-Refux and a host of other digestive problems have all but After conducting an unpaid investigation about AloeCure claims and success stories, Bryce Wylde commented that pure Aloe Vera extract like AloeCure may be the most important application ever discovered for digestive health. He stands wholeheartedly behind his study into natural and complementary health and to this day, he receives no compensation from the sale of or any other product. Safe And Easy To Use With no sugar, no stimulants, and zero calories, is safe, all-natural and has absolutely no side eiects.

tasty, drug-free, and simple to use. Just drink two ounces, once in the morning, and once at night, and start enjoying immediate life- changing relief! je makers of have agreed to send you up to 6 FREE bottles PLUS 2 free bonus gifts with your yours to keep no matter what. enough for 30 days of powerful digestive relief, absolutely free! To order simply call our toll free hotline: 1-855-575-5041. But hurry! jis is a special introductory oier, reserved for our readers only. Call now, supplies are limited! If you suier bouts of acid reHux heartburn diarrhea constipation bloating gas or IBS Chief Medical Odcer, Dr.

Liza Leal says beware of digestion remedies like Prilosec Prevacid and Nexium Iey Can Cripple You! TV Talk Show Doctor's Shocking Revelation Washington, D.C. All across the country, those suiering with digestion issues are ecstatic with the relief getting from a new, natural remedy called Everyone is well, everyone except major drug companies, who apparently may threaten to take appropriate legal action. hear the rumors, but not going to be intimidated. We owe it to our satisfied customers to continue to produce a natural digestion solution that poses no possible side than ever, I want to introduce digestion suierers to our remarkable product, improve their health while saving them money, and provide long lasting relief." -Doug Jewett, CEO American Global Health Group Major Drug Companies Are Threatened by Natural Digestion Remedy. Over 4 million bottles have been sold nation Doctor recommended may be the most important application ever discovered for digestive health! NJ-0000726039 With the image of the shooting victim branded on her mind, 42-year-old Lafonia Kinlaw said she had trouble sleeping.

was on my she said. seeing that a person, lying there fighting for this life. just sad, very The man collapsed a few doors down from her Sparrow Run house in Bear. New Castle County police identified the victim as 18-year-old Dewayne Barfield of the first block of Three Rivers Drive in Bear. New Castle County detectives learned the victim was shot multiple times in the upper torso in the area of the first block of Heron Court in Sparrow Run, said Officer First Class Tracey Duffy, a department spokeswoman.

Arriving officers provided first aid until the arrival of New Castle County paramedics about 10:10 p.m. Barfield was taken by ambulance to Christiana Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Two New Castle County police vehicles were parked early Tuesday afternoon on Heron Court, blocking a portion of the road where the man was found. Crime tape streamed over the front yards of six homes, while multiple orange paint markings could be seen on the street, sidewalk, driveways and grass showing where investigators collected evidence. All neighbors interviewed Tuesday morning said they wanted the violence to stop.

Only Kinlaw was willing to give her name. She originally thought the man was passed out drunk in a driveway, but when she got up close, the man was on his back, his chest heaving and blood coming from his mouth. His left hand was clinging to a cell- phone. She told her husband to get their phone so she could call police, but another neighbor told them 911already had been called. She and other neighbors urged the man to and to say Kinlaw said.

seemed like he wanted to say something, but the blood was coming Kinlaw said the violence needed to stop, adding people not speaking out against street crime were just as culpable because their silence was essentially condoning it. needs to stand she said. need to stand up and stand together because not going to stop until people put a stop to In 2012, 30-year-old Jeremiah M. McDonald, of the Odessa area, was gunned down in the first block of Heron Court. He died on the scene.

Contact Esteban Parra at (302) 324-2299, or Twitter New Castle County police continued to block a section of Heron Court on Tuesday in the Sparrow Run community. A 42-year-old man was killed there late Monday. ESTEBAN NEWS JOURNAL Slaying leaves Bear woman unsettled By Esteban Parra The News Journal NEW CASTLE COUNTY DRUG, GUN ARREST: A car stop for an abrupt, unsignaled lane change at the Del. 1toll plaza south near Biddles Corner ended in the arrest, state police said. A trooper found a stolen .357 revolver, 29.5 grams of cocaine and 10.3 grams of marijuana after Jacob Taylor III, 28 of Wilson, North Carolina, was pulled over about 3:15 p.m.

A computer check revealed Taylor was a convicted felon and the gun was stolen in 2005, police said. He was charged with cocaine possession with intent to deliver, cocaine and marijuana possession, firearm possession during commission of a felony, carrying a concealed deadly weapon, receiving a tolen firearm and other weapons charges. Taylor was committed to Young Correctional Institution in Wilmington, lacking $173,102 bail. POSSIBLE ABDUCTION: County police asked uesday for tips to find Nefertiri Trader, 33, of the first block of Freedom Trail in Saddlebrook, off Del. 273 near New Castle after she may have been a bducted in her own car about 4 a.m.

Monday. A witness reported seeing Trader 5 feet 6 inches tall and 124 pounds with brown hair and eyes being forced into her silver 2000 Acura RL with the Delaware license plate 404893, Officer First Class Tracey Duffy said. Police do not know who was driving when the car left the Saddlebrook neighborhood, she aid. Anyone with tips on location is asked to contact Detective B. Shahan at (302) 395-8110 or bsha- visit www.nccpd.comor call Delaware Crime Stoppers at (800) TIP-3333.

SUSPECTS SOUGHT: County police released surveillance images Tuesday, seeking tips to identify two would-be thieves they say assaulted the owner and an employee of a Claymont iquor store. After seeing a man and woman trying to steal bottles of liquor, the unidentified owner and employee of Carpenter Liquors in the Carpenter Plaza Shopping Center chased the pair hortly after 6 p.m. Sunday, ounty police said. The woman was initially was before using pepper spray on the mployee. The man returned to the store and hit the owner, police said.

TPolice ask anyone with tips to call police at (302) 395-8110. DRUG ARREST: A traffic stop in Middletown led to the arrest for crack cocaine, heroin and prescription drugs, town police said. Scott Moon, 5 6, of Middletown was stopped for improper lights shortly before 730 p.m. Sunday on Ashland Street near Gibbs Drive, police said. The stopping officer iscovered Moon had 127 bags of heroin, 6 grams of crack cocaine and 19 Adderall pills without a rescription in his vehicle.

Moon was charged with three counts of controlled substance possession with intent to deliver, violating erms of release and other charges. He was committed to Vaughn Correctional Center near Smyrna, lacking bail. SUSSEX COUNTY BOMB THREAT ARREST: David C. Detwiler, 40, of Seaford, has been charged with terroristic threatening in a June 24 bomb threat that caused a five-hour evacuation and search of the Delaware Technical Community College campus in Georgetown town police said. Detwiler was committed to Sussex Correctional Institution near Georgetown after failing to post $5,000 cash bail on that charge and $5,000 cash bail on an administrative warrant from state probation and parole.

In a Monday interview with police, Lt. Lawrence A. Grose said, officers admitted to calling in the bomb RUG ARREST: Twelve pounds of marijuana, 2 ounces of cocaine, two guns, ammo and cash were seized in Milford in a drug inv estigation, city police said. Assisted by state and Dover police, raids June 25-26 found the drugs, weapons and more than $4,400 cash in vehicles and a home on Marshall Street, city police said. Officers arrested Darrin E.

Johnson, 46, of Milford, and Bobby Eric Jackson, 43, of Greenville, North Carolina, charging each with marijuana possession, drug possession possession with intent to deliver and other charges. Johnson also was charged with firearm and ammo possession by a prohibited person. He was freed on $42,000 unsecured bail. Jackson, who also had charges of cocaine possession exceeding 25 grams and firearm possession during commission of a felony, was being held lacking $176,000 secured bail. WILMINGTON THREE-STORY FALL: A discarded box spring apparently spared a todder from life-threatening injury in athree-story fall about 6:30 p.m.

Tuesday, city police said. The unidentified 2-year-old fell out a third-floor window of a home in the 200 block of N. Broom Cpl. Mark Ivey said. She was taken to I.

duPont Hospital for Children in Rockland, where she was being treated for injuries hat were not life-threatening, he said. No charges were filed, but the incident remains under investigation. KENT COUNTY ROLLOVER CRASH: A car veered Tuesday from Del. 1south of Dover and rolled into oncoming traffic, ejecting the 17-year-old driver and 9-year-old back seat passenger, state police said. An 18-year-old ront-seat passenger also was hurt in the 4:10 p.m.

crash, police said. The three, all from New Jersey, were taken to Bayhealth Kent General Hospital. Driver Satchel I. Edeen, 17, was airlifted to A lfred I. duPont Hospital for Children in Rockland, a ndc ited for inattentive driving and failure to aintain a single lane, police said.

POLICE FIRE Scott Moon Nefertiri rader David C. Detwiler Darrin Johnson Bobby Jackson.

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