Rensselaer Union, Volume 8, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 December 1875 — What Shall We Do? [ARTICLE]
What Shall We Do?
It Is no sronder that we hear this question on every comer. 8o many are dying suddenly of diseases of the brain in these days thnt everyone is alarmed, and ia asking: “ What shall we dos” There is alarm on account of dizziness of the head, a whirling sensation when rising up suddenly, a “ all-gone” sensation at the pit of the stomach, like the gnawing of an ulcer, with a feeling like a load after eating, piiins 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 clammy, eyes sunken and tinged with yellow, 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 iMiAKbit Extract of Roots ok Curative Syrup (not a patent medicine), sold by Druggists and A. J. White, 319 Pearl street, New York. r iTiE Paris Figaro says that an American lawyer who had been retained to defend a desperate character on a charge of mur- < der has just taken out an insurance policy on the life of his client; and that this showed such confidence on the part of the company in the ability Of ‘''e lawyer tc secure an acquittal that the office of the latter has ever since been over-crowded with clients. ♦ You can’t depend on Kansas flour. A loaf of passed into Leavenworth jail contained two files, a knife, a bottle of acid and a roll of money. A country which grows such wheat as that cannot axpect to get ahead very fast.
