Jasper Republican, Volume 2, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 January 1876 — What Shall We Do? [ARTICLE]
What Shall We Do?
It is no wonder that we hear this question on every corner. So many are dying suddenly of disease* of the brain in these day* that everyone is alarmed, and is asking: “ What shall we do?” There is alarm on account of dizziness of the head, a whirling sensation when rising up suddenly, a bad, “ all-gone” sensation at the pit of the stomach, like the gnawing of an ulcer, with a feeling like a load after eating, pains in the back, sides and chest, at times, with costive bowels, scanty, high-colored urine, sometimes voided with pain, appetite poor, and when food Is eaten it oftentimes distresses; the skin, after a time, becomes dark, cold and elammy, eyes sunken and tinged with vellow, spirits dejected, with evil forebodings. When any of these symptoms are present no time should be lost In using a proper remedy. The one that we have Known to operate with the most certainty Is the BHAKBR EXTfiACT OF ROOTS OB UUBAtivb Bybup (not a patent medicine), sold by Druggists and A. 3. White, 319 Pearl street. New York. ; Economy.—You will save money by using Procter <fe Gamble's Original Mottled German Soap. It* will not waste nor become soft like ordinary yellow soap when used in warm water, nor is it cheapened with articles injurious to clothes. Remember, you obtain a full one-pound bar if you purchase their brand. To protect their brand from imitator* Procter & Gamble patented it, and the patent was sustained in the United States Courts. Examine the stamp on the bars when you buy. Take their Soap only. Gentian was our grandmothers’ hobby for a tonic, and no bitter would be considered complete without it; hence it enters into nearly all. But experience has proved that it is injurious to the stomach if frequently used. A far better tonic is found in Guarana Bitters. Pebsonal.--E. Boughton, Ashbourne, Pa.— “ I have been greatly afflicted for the past two years with general debility, and have tried various remedies. Was induced to try LIVER REGULATOR, which, after the use of one package, has made me feel like another being.” A Massachusetts lady writes: “ This morning early, as I sat by my open window looking down upon the busy street, 1 saw a woman-butcher jump from her wagon and take a piece of corned beef round to the side-door of the residence across the way. How neat and tidy she looked, with a dark calico dress, blue checked apron and white over-sleeves which came to her elbows, with a brown hat and a red scarf tied carelessly about her neck. She came out, jumped briskly into the wagon, took up the lines, at the same time putting her foot upon the brake, for it was a down-grade, and drove off like any other butcher.”
