Rensselaer Union, Volume 8, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 January 1876 — What Shall We Dot [ARTICLE]

What Shall We Dot

It 1* no wonder that we hear this question on every corner. So many are dying suddenly of diseases of the brath in these days that everyone is al.irmed, 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 halt, “ ail-gone” sensation at the pit of the stomach,like the gnawing of an ulcer, witii a feeling like a load after eating, pains in the back, sides and chest, at times, with costive bowels, scanty, high-colorcd 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 vellow, spirits dejected, with evil forebodings. V hen 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 ithe "iiAKEH Extract of Roots ok < rrati ve Syrup (not a patent medieinei, sold by Druggists and A. J. White, 3iU Pearl street. New York. Economy.— -You will save money by using Prortfr tt Gamble'll Original Mottled German Sohp.. 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. Hcrneniber, you obtain a full one-pound bar if you purchasj till ir brand. To protect their brand from imitator* Procter A. Gamble patented it, and the patent was sustained in the United State* Courts. Examine the etamp on the bare i then you buy. Take their Soap only.

Sghenck’* Pulmonic Strut. Sex Weed Tonic and MutDBAEE Pills.—These dceervertlv celebrated ind popular medicines have effected * revolution in the healing art, and proved the fallacy of several maxims which have for many years obstructed the i progress of medical science. The false supposition that “ Consumption is incurable” deterred phvsiciana from attempting • find remedies for that disease, and patients afflicted with it reconciled themselves to death without making an effort to escape from a doom which they supposed to be unavoidable. It is now proved, however, that Consumption can be cured, and that It lute been cured in a very great number cf cases (some of them apparently desperate oner) by Schencks Pulmonic Syrup alone: and in other cases by the same medicine in connection with Schenck’s Sea Meed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, one or both, according to the reiinireiuents of the case. Dr. hclietick himself, who enjoyed uninterrupted food health for more than forty years, was supposed. at one time, to be at the very gate of death, nis pnysi. l.ius having pronounced his case hopeless. and abandoned him to his fate. He whs cured hv the aforesaid medicines, and. since bis recovery, many thousands similarly afiected have nsed Dr. Schenek s preparations with the same remark able success. ' Full directions uccodlpnny each, making it not absolutely necessary to personally see Dr. Schenek unless patients \vi»h their lungs examined, and for this purpose i.e is professionally ut his principal office, corner Sixth and Arch streets. Philadelphia, every Monday. where ail letteis for advice must be add: e-red. Scheuck's medicines an told by all druggist*.