GemLab Laboratory certified The Real Certified Natural Gemstones Ruby, Blue Sapphire, Yellow Sapphire, Pearl, Red Coral, Emerald, Hessonite, Cats Eye, Diamond.
Wheat, yellow corn, sugar, rice, tallow, full cream milk powder, plam fatty acid, mbm, fish meal, red lentils.
ORIGIN INDONESIA Quality WHOLE & SLICE Moisture 11-12% max Admixture 2 % max Colour Red with Brown Yellow Clean, Dry and no Mouldy Shape Whole, Slice. Aroma Spicy taste, similar with dry ginger sweet smell Packing 50 KG PP BAG
- Item - Rubber Band / Elastic Band - Round Section. - Rubber Compound in Bands: 100%, 90%, 80%, 70%, 60$ - Colors - Natural / Red / Green / Yellow & other colors as required. - Sizes - Thickness / Diameter as required. - HS Code: 4016 9920 Packing Per Poly Bag : 1kg, 500 gm, 150 gm, 75 gm, 1 Lb, 4 oz(or) upon your request (By digital scale). Bands Packed in Poly Bag / Boxes as per required weights Packed in Cartons with required Poly Bags/ Boxes Quantity Per Container In 20 Ft :Approximately 660 Cartons In 40 Ft :Approximately 1400 Cartons In 40ft HQ :Approximately 1550 Cartons Delivery : 30 - 40 Days // As agreed Payment :LC at sight // 30% Advance and Balance Before Shipment Origin of goods :THAILAND
Broken 25% Max 100% Moisture 14% Ma Damaged, Shrivelled and Yellow Kernels 5% Max 1.5% Max 6% Max Chalky Grains 12% Max 5% Max 6% Max Foreign Grains 2% Max 0.5% Max 1% Max Paddy 0.8% Max NIL 0.5% Max 30 grains Max per kg Under Milled & Red Stripped Kernels 4% Max 5% Max 1% Max Milling Degree 14% Max Well Milled Brokens to be obtained from milling/polishing rice 5% and 10% Aflotoxin 5 PPB Max Crop Year 2012/2013 2013 Description Normal/Regular Polished. Free from alive weevils, free from odours, fresh fumigated Silky Sortexed. Free from live insects and substantially free from dead insects. Silky Sortexed. Others Whole Grain 10/10:1% Max Brokens 8/10-10/10:4% max Brokens 6.5/10-8/10:15% max Brokens 3/10-6.5/10:75% min Small brokens C1:5% max Whole kernel length average (mm):6.2 Average length: 6mm Min
Senna pods Botanical Name Cassia senna L. Scientific Name (s) Cassia acutifolia Delile, syn. with Cassia senna L. Also includes references to C. angustifolia Vahl. Family: Fabaceae (beans). History Senna appears to have been used since the ninth or tenth century, its introduction into medicine being due to the Arabian physicians, who used both the leaves and the pods. It was formerly exported through Alexandria, from where the name of the Sudanese drug is derived. Definition The plant has a pale green stem with long spreading branches. The sweetish taste of the leaves distinguish Senna from the Argel leaves. It has small yellow flowers and oblong pods about 2 inches long and 7 to 8 inches broad. Description It is also called Nubian Senna or Alexandrian Senna or even Khartoum Senna. It grows in parts of Sudan and in some Arabian countries. The best senna is distinguished by a bright yellowish-green color of the leaves with a faint odor resembling the smell of green tea and a bittersweet taste Cultivation Senna is usually found in wild, but they have been extensively cultivated recently. It grows in September after the autumn rains and in April. Constituents Senna contains a family of hydroxyanthrancene glycosides, the most plentiful of which are sennosides A and B. There are also anthraquinone derivatives and their glucosides which are responsible for its purgative effects. There are also small amounts of aloe-emodin and rhein 8-glucosides, mucilage, flavonoids, and naphthalene precursors. Uses It is known for increasing the movement of the colon by increasing the functions of the intestinal wall. It is also a remedy for hemorrhoids, alimentary canal and prolapus. Similarly, both leaves and pods of the plant are used to cure breathing problems. An infusion of the pods is used as an effective way to suppress fever and to stop chronic nosebleeds. An infusion of the leaves is consumed to stop spasms or convulsions. The roots of the plant are consumed with milk to treat malaria. Medicinal Uses 1. Uses supported by clinical data: Short-term use in occasional constipation. 2. Uses described in pharmacopoeias and in traditional systems of medicine: None. 3. Uses described in folk medicine, not supported by experimental or clinical data: As an expectorant, a wound dressing, an antidysentric, and a carminative agent; and for the treatment of gonorrhea, skin diseases, dyspepsia, fever and hemorrhoids