Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 October 1894 — NICOTINIZED NERVES. [ARTICLE]

NICOTINIZED NERVES.

The Tobacco Hi bit Quickly Broken Nerve Force .Restored—A Boon to Humanity. A number of our great and most inveterate tobacco smoker-s and cbewers have quit the use of the iiuhy weed. The ta ismanic ar.icle that does the wor.c is eo to-bac. Th? reform was itart< d by Aaron Corb r, who war a toa.r r.ed slave for many years to the a e of tobacco. I e tried the use Jf no-to-Lac, and to h's great nirprise and delght it cured aim. Hon. <J. W. Ashcom. who had ben smoking for iLt/ years, ;ried no-to-ba; ard it cured him. DoL Samuel Stoutener, who would eat ip tola eo lir e a cow eats hay, tr cd ; this w< nJeHul rexedy, and even bam- , lel, afier all his years of slavery, lot iha c e ira. J. C. Cobler, Lessing Evans, I Crank Dell, George B. May, C. Skillington, Hansen Robinett, Frank Her. h er/er, John Shinn, and others aave since tried no-to I ac, and in every ?ase they report not only a cure of the Jobacco habit but a wonderful improvement in their general physical *nd mental condition, all of wh.cb ;ces to show that the u e of tobacco lad been injurious to them! in more says than one. No to bac is popular vith lhe druggists, as they ajl sell unier absolute guarantee to car? or rehnl the money.—From tile Press, Lverett, l a.