Switching Gears!!

We have researched and used adaptogens for over 4 years with great success and this website has been dedicated to educating people about them and their health benefits. The company that formulated and marketed the original formula we used with great success was failing and combined with another company. Their product was "fiddled" with and persons that had used that formula for years experienced return of their health problems. We can no longer recommend that product but the good news is that we now have alternatives that we can recommend and have experience with.

There are many ways to achieve better health and adaptogens are only one of those ways. We now recommend a multi-pronged approach that can bring much faster relief of symptoms and a massive unloading of the immune system using unique products from a 6 year old company. These products have large amounts of scientific research validating them and clinical tests also.

Please visit our website for further information:

http://www.MySunshineHealth.com

RhodiGandha is Potent Natural Medicine

This blog was originally dedicated to a powerful adaptogen product called Frutaiga. This company was sold in September of 2008 and the top distributors of the original company decided to create their own super powerful adaptogen product that was more powerful and faster acting than Frutaiga. This new company and product are called "RhodiGandha". Read this blog post for a fuller explanation "Frutaiga Got Sold - RhodiGandha is Better"

RhodiGandha is powerful, natural medicine with 500 milligrams of extracted active ingredients in each ounce. These active ingredients come from two adaptogens (rhodeola rosea & ashwangandha) and four plants that are rich in functional anti-oxidants, caucasian billberry, georgian pomengranate, blueberry leaf and the legendary superfood -acai.

RhodiGandha has no added sugar or any artificial sweetener and is not pasteurized and has no preservatives.

There is massive scientific research and documentation establishing RhodiGandha's credibility and we have many thousands of testimonials from person's attributing huge health benefits to these adaptogens, including more energy, stress elimination, improved blood pressure, improved insulin system, improved cholesterol, better sleep, headache elimination, menopause symptom elimination, increased sexual vitality, relief from aches & pains, better memory & concentration, cellulite reduction and lots more.

In many people's opinions including some MDs, RhodiGandha is the most effective way of coping with metabolic syndrome, also called syndrome-X. Per the FDA, because RhodiGandha is a nutritional supplement, not a drug, we cannot and do not make any claims that Frutaiga can treat or cure any ailment, that is the realm of doctors and drug companies. But it helped many thousands of people achieve much better health and does a wonderful job for people with Syndrome-X.

For more great information visit: http://www.miracleadaptogens.com/

Welcome to our blog - be sure to listen to our Wednesday conference calls!

Try RhodiGandha yourself and see what great health benefits you get!
Visit our info website at: http://www.MiracleAdaptogens.com/ Call 1-800-759-7593 email mark@Power2Heal.biz

Wednesdays at 8:55pm Eastern Time (5:55pm Pacific Time) listen to a live conference call about RhodiGandha.

Call us for the conference number.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Update on Zrii

If you haven't listened to our latest Zrii Update click here> Zrii Update

This post has been moved to: http://zrii-expose.com/
Also see the posts about Bill Farley here: http://www.scam.com/showthread.php?t=31339

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Maybe you should post this in your blog (A simple search in the Chicago Sun-Times on Zrii owner Bill Farley). Under current post Enron laws this guy would be in jail.

Author: DAVID ROEDER
Date: August 28, 1997
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 53
Word Count: 727
Excerpt:
Fruit of the Loom Chairman William Farley sold more than 900,000 shares of the underwear company in May and June, just weeks before investors were warned that earnings would decline and the share price began falling.

Farley's stock sale in May and June, disclosed in filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, netted him at least $30.6 million. It came before his company announced this month that it would lay off 4,800 employees, 15 percent of its work force. There is no...

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Date: December 24, 1993
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 31
Word Count: 856
Excerpt:
FARLEY SUED: Two stockholders sued William Farley and other officers of Fruit of the Loom Inc. Thursday, charging that they misreported the firm's health and thereby netted $40 million in sales of overvalued stock. The class-action federal lawsuit also claims the officers took the action between July, 1992, and June, 1993, to help solve Farley's financial problems, including "achieving confirmation of the bankruptcy plan" of Farley Industries and...

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Author: Susan Chandler
Date: July 9, 1992
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 60
Word Count: 323
Excerpt:
Farley Inc. and its related companies have agreed to partially settle a lawsuit for $6.7 million stemming from the botched 1989 acquisition of Georgia textile maker West Point Pepperell.

The 1990 suit charged the company and its high-profile chairman, William Farley, with making false claims in its tender offer for West Point when it failed to complete the acquisition. Farley Inc. purchased 95 percent of West Point's shares for $58 apiece and promised to pay the same amount for...

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Author: Chicago Sun-Times Wires
Date: March 19, 1992
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 58
Word Count: 264
Excerpt:
A group of WestPoint-Pepperell Inc. shareholders - including Kidder, Peabody & Co. - have sued Chicago financier William Farley over his failure to consummate the last phase of his ill-fated Pepperell takeover.

The other plaintiffs in the suit are onetime Pepperell Chairman Joseph L. Lanier Jr. and an investment partnership known as Grace Brothers Ltd., it was disclosed Wednesday. Earlier this week, Pepperell Chief Executive Farley confirmed the company's industrial...

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Author: Patricia Moore
Date: February 13, 1992
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 60
Word Count: 421
Excerpt:
The federal government is suing leveraged buyout specialist William F. Farley and asking for a $910,000 civil fine in connection with his tumultuous 1989 takeover of West Point-Pepperell.

In a suit filed Wednesday, the U.S. attorney's office charges that Farley violated antitrust law in the spring of 1988 when he failed to disclose promptly the acquisition of $15 million worth of West Point stock by himself or Farley Inc. The Hart-Scott-Rodino law requires timely disclosure when...

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Author: Patricia Moore
Date: September 26, 1991
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 70
Word Count: 346
Excerpt:
As expected, Farley Inc. has filed for bankruptcy and presented the court with a prepackaged reorganization plan.

Judge John H. Squires agreed to expedited proceedings after the filing Tuesday and set several hearing dates including Oct. 24 to consider a $30 million debtor-in-possession loan from Bank of New York and Dec. 19 for consideration of the reorganization. The reorganization plan calls for the company to swap 3 million shares of Fruit of the Loom stock for $172 million in junk...

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Author: Reuters
Date: June 27, 1990
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 57
Word Count: 190
Excerpt:
WASHINGTON William Farley, the brash Chicago entrepreneur who built an industrial empire on a mountain of debt, could lose control of his prize - the Georgia textile company West Point-Pepperell Inc., the company said Tuesday.

Farley's buyout company is behind on its debt repayments to finance its approximately $1.8 billion hostile takeover of West Point, and is in negotiations to restructure the finances, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission....

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Author: Greg Burns
Date: April 3, 1990
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 43
Word Count: 425
Excerpt:
The company Chicago industrialist William Farley formed to acquire West Point Pepperell took a step closer to bankruptcy Monday, defaulting on its bank loans and junk-bond interest payments.

That announcement came amid reports that Farley is offering West Point Acquisition Corp. bondholders a majority stake in the Georgia-based textile firm if they agree to a bailout he's proposing. The acquisition company failed to pay $796 million due Friday to its banks, and $28 million in...

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Author: Greg Burns

Frederick C. Lowe
Date: February 19, 1990
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 35
Word Count: 526
Excerpt:
The collapse of Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. and its high-yield-bond network is threatening the shaky financial empire of Chicago industrialist William Farley, financial analysts and junk bond brokers say.

Farley's plan to rely on junk securities to complete the $3 billion acquisition of WestPoint Pepperell is colliding head-on with a market that's shunning high-risk, low-grade debt, the analysts and brokers said. "I'd steer clear,"...

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Author: Susan Chandler
Date: January 18, 1990
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 60
Word Count: 247
Excerpt:
Farley Inc. and its high-profile chairman, William Farley, violated securities laws by making false claims in a tender offer for Georgia textile maker West Point-Pepperell, according to a class-action lawsuit filed late Wednesday.

The suit was filed in federal court here by the Chicago law firm Sachnoff & Weaver on behalf of Peregrine Options, an Illinois company that beneficially owns 46,800 shares of West Point common stock, and other West Point shareholders. Neither Farley...

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Author: Edwin Darby
Date: September 29, 1987
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 1
Word Count: 972
Excerpt:
Chicago industrialist William Farley, who has spent millions in preparation for a dark-horse run for the Democratic presidential nomination, went public with his private life Monday.

Farley, who is separated from his third wife, made a series of disclosures in an exclusive interview with the Chicago Sun-Times to put the "facts on the record" to clear the air for his possible candidacy. Farley, 43, chairman of Fruit of the Loom and Farley Industries, said he spoke out...

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Author: Edwin Darby
Date: April 1, 1986
Publication: Chicago Sun-Times
Page: 60
Word Count: 701
Excerpt:
Along about this time last year, a number of senior people ensconced in oak-paneled offices on Wall Street and La Salle Street were telling each other that William F. Farley was sitting out there on a very slender limb. Some were even betting that he would soon come crashing down like others who have flashed briefly to high places in the financial world.

After all, at age 42, the man owed $1.2 billion. This week Farley, chairman of Farley Industries Inc., is in the best of spirits, not at...