Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 1, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 January 1894 — a Boon to Humanity. [ARTICLE]
a Boon to Humanity.
A number of our great and most in* ▼erato tobacco smokers and chewers have quit the use of the filthy weed. The talismanic article that does the work is No-to-bac. The reform was started by Aaron Gorher. who was a confirmed slave for many years to the use of tobacco. He tried the use of No-to-bac, and to bis great surprise and delight it cured him. Hon. C. W. Ashcom, who had been smoking for sixty years, tried No-to-bac, and it cured him. Col. Samuel Stoutener, who would eat up tobacco like a cow eats hay, tried this wonderful remedy, and even Samuel, after all his years of slavery, lost the desire. J. C. Cobler, Lessing Evans, Frank Dell, Geo. B. May, C. O. Skillingtcn, Hanson Robine'tt, Frank Hershberger, John Shinn and others have since tried No-to-bac and in every case they report not only a cure of the tobacco"habit, but a wonderful improvement in their general physical and mental condition, all of which- goes to show that the u e of tobacco had been injurious to them in more ways than ore. All of the above gentlemen are so well pleased with the results that we do not hesitate to join them in recommending it to suffering humanity, as we have thoroughly investigated and are satisfied that No-to-bac does the work well and is a boon to mankind. The cost is trifling—a dollar a box—and the makers, the Sterling Remedy Company, have so much faith in No-to-bac that they absolutely guarantee three boxes to cure any case, or refund money. One box iu every instance in the above effected a cure, with one or two exceptions. No-to-bac has a wonderful sale upon its merits alone throughout the United States, and can be secured at almost any drug store in. this country or Canada, and it is made by the Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago office, 45 Randolph street; New York office. 10 Spruce street. —From The Press, Everett, Pa., Dec. 15, 1893.
