Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 June 1894 — A TOBACCO HEART. [ARTICLE]
A TOBACCO HEART.
Th ouudi of American) Can’t Get Inlaranco Becanso Tobacco Has Destroyed •he Heart Action and Wrecked the Nerrou Sjitem- No-To-Bm Works Many f Miraculous Cores. Delanson, N. Y.—Engineer O. N. Bates stepped off Engine .no. 47 with a long oiler in one hand and a bunch of blue waste in the other. Not a bystander there could help remarking his youthful, healthy look and active, vigorous movements, and contrasting his appearance with his condition of two months ago. “Say, Colonel, how well you look;* I am we’l; better than I have been for j ears. ” “What have you been doing?" “Oh, not much. No-to-bac cured me Oi the tobacco habit and braced me mentally and physically. In fact, made me a new man in more" ways than one. I hid no appetite; couldnt sleep; now 1 sleep like a baby and eat three times a day with a relish, for the first time in years. My heart action is regular and no longer a bar to increased life insurance. You know throttle pulling requires a pretty steady nerve, and my nerves are O. K. now. One box and a quarter of No-to-bao cured me completely in ten days, after using tobacco forty years. No-to-bao is told by all druggists and made by the Sterling Remedy Company of New York and Chicago. You ought to get one of their litt e books called ‘Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away,’ and post yourself. They send them free to any one that writes. It cost me $2.50 to get cured, and I spent three or four dollars a week for tobacco. If I had failed to get cured I would have gotten my money back, as the makers guarantee three boxes to cure any case. I have'recommended the use of No-to-bac to fifteen of the boys on the line, and every one of them,so far as I know, has been cured." The cab bell rang, the engineer climbed up quickly on the footboard, and the big train rolled away.
