Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 January 1895 — ASTONISHING, BUT TRUE. [ARTICLE]

ASTONISHING, BUT TRUE.

Some Wonderful Things Can Be Accomplished in This World. A number of our great and most inveterate tobacco smokers and chewers have quit the use of the filthy weed. The talismanlc article that does the work is No-to-bae. The reform was Started by Aaron Gorber, who was a confirmed slave for many years to the iise of tobacco. He tried the use of No-to-bac, and to bis great surprise and delight it cured him. Hon. C. W. Ashcom, w ho bad been smoking for sixty years, tried No-to-bac and it cured him. Col. Samuel Stoutner, who would eat up tobacco like a cow eats hay, tried this wonderful remedy and even Samuel, after all his years of slavery, lost K the jrlesire. J. C. Cobler, Lessing Evans, Frank Dell. George B. May, C. O. SkilP lugton, Hanson Robinett, Frank Hershberger, John Shinn, and others have isince tried No-to-bac, and in every case iliey 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 use of tobacco had been injurious to them in more ways than cue. No-to-bac is popular with the druggists, as they all sell under absolute guarantee to cure or refund the money.—From the Press, Everett, Pa. An old man of 78 was sent to jail for three days by the Maryelbone, (England)police magistrate recently, as he was unable to pay a fine of 60 cents for not seeing that his twelve-year-old grandchild went to school.' He was a perfectly respectable workingman, his wife was bedridden, the child’s parents were dead and he could not go after the truant himcelf.