Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 March 1895 — WAS GOULD INSANE? [ARTICLE]

WAS GOULD INSANE?

Financial Worry and Physical Exertion Not the Greatest Destroyer of Human Life. ' ’i —! For Humanity's Sake,After Thirty-six Years of Ncrve-Crecpins Slavery, He 'i‘« lis Ho w He WasStt Free. Caldwell. N. J., March 11. ISftj.—iSpe ••inl’.)-s-Siii«‘ one of-our-protniuent'citi-zens suffered so terribly from tobacco tremens, lias made known his friglitfn) experience in behalf of humanity, the ladies “here are making tobacco-using husbands’ lives miserable wi:h their eutreaties to at once quit tol’',,.; r . The written statement of S. .’. Gould is attracting widb-spreatl a-* Kt.-ton. When inter-re We- to-nighfr-Im-e-a dr T commenced using tobacco at tl irteen; J am now forty-nine; so. for thirty-six years I i bewed„sraoked, snuffed and rubbed snuff. In the morning I chewed Lefort I pvt my pants on. and "for a long time I v c ed two ounces of chewing nnd eight o-oices of smoking a day. Sometimes I had a chew in botli cEceks anti a pipe iir my mouth at once. Ten years ago I quit drinking whisky. I tried to stop tobacco time and again, bift could not. My nerves craved' nicotine and I fed them till my skin turned a tobacco-brown, .cold, sticky perspiratipn oozed from my skin, and trickled down my back at th? least cxertion or excitement. —My u<-rv<> vig<>r and my life was being slowly sapped. 1 made up my mind that I had to quit tobacco or die." "On October 1 r"stoi)pFd.mndMor — three days 1 suffered tlie tortures of the damned., On the -third-dax-that my partner accused me of being drunk. I said. ‘No, I have quit tobacco.’ ‘For God’s sake, man.’, he said, offering me his tobacco box, ‘take a chew: you will go wild.’ ami I -was wild. Tobacco was forced into mq and-I was taken home dazed. I saw double and my memory was beyond <-on.trol._bnt I still knew how _to_<liew and smoke, which 1 did fill day i.-ntil towards night, when my system got jobacco soaked again. The next morning I looked and felt as though I had been through a Jong spell of sickness. I gave up in despair, as I thotight that I could not cure myself. Now, for suffering humanity, I'll tell what saved my life. I’rov-. idence evidently answered my good wife’s prny<-rs ami trirm gh t t o h<■ r all ent ion in our paper an article which read: ‘Don’t . Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away!' words! Just what T was tloing. It told about a guaranteed cure for the tobacco habit, calk’d No-To-Bae. I sent to Druggist Hasler for a box. Without a grain of faith 1 spit out my tobacco cud, and put into my mouth a little tablet upon which was stamped No-To-Bac. 1 know it sounds like a lie when I tell you that 1 took eight tablets the first day, seven the next, five the third day. and all the r;erv.c-creopiiig._feeling, restlessness and mental depression was gone. It' was too good to be true. It seemed like a dream. That was n month ago. I used one box. It cost me sl. and it is worth a thousand. I gained ten pounds in weight and lost all ilosire for tobacco from the first day. I sleep and eat well, and 1 have been benefited in more ways than I can tell. No, the cure was no exception in my case. I know of ten people right here in Caldwell who have bought No-T<>Bac from Hasler, and they have Been cured. Now that I realize what No-To-Bac has done for me and others, 1 know why it is that the makers of this wonderful remedy, the Sterling Remedy Company, of New York and Chicago, say: ‘We don’t claim to cure every case. That’s Fraud’s talk, a lie; but we do guarantee three boxes to cure the tobacco habit, and,in case of failure we are perfectly willing to refund money.’ I would ndf give a public indorsement if I were not certain of its reliability. I know it is backed by men worth a million. No-To-Bac has been a God-send to me, and I firmly believe it will cure any case of tobaccousing if faithfully tried, and there are thousands of tobacco slaves who ought to know how easy it is to get free. -There's happiness in No-To-Bac for the prematlively old-wren, who- think as I did that they are old and worn out, when tobacco is the thing that destroys their vitality and manhood.” The publig should be warned, however, against the purchase of any of the many imitations on the market, as the success of No-To-Bac has ibrought forth a host of counterfeiters mid imitators. The genuine No-To-Bae is sold under a guarantee to cure, by all druggists, and every tablet has the word No-To-Bac plainly stamped thereon, and you run no physical or financial risk in purchasing the genuine article.