Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 May 1912 — Page 7 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

‘A Welcome Chance to Those Who Suffer" Coming to Rensselaer, Indiana Friday and Saturday May 10-11,1912 To stay at Makeever House DR. ALBERT MILTON FINCH of Jamestown, Ind. Consultation and Examination OofidvMitial, Invited and FREE. From a late snapshot. I will be in your city at Makeever H use on Friday *aii«l Saturday, May lo and 11, to see people that are afflicted with chronic diseases. I have visited your -city every month for a long time. I have treated and cured many that were given up to die. Why suffer when you can get cured. Come and I will examine you free of charge. If you wish will put you on treatment at once. I charge by the month, and prices so low the very poorest can be treated. If incurable I will not take your case, but will give you advice that may prolong life many years. Have cured iUore hopeless eases, than any doctor in Indiana. Remember I treat all Chronic Cases. ' V v

Glasses flitted by DR. A. G. CATT Optometrist Rensselaer, Indiana. Office over Long’s Drug Store. Phone No. 232.

DRUNKENNESS 4 The ready or periodical (ipree) drinker can be saved in 3 days with hia knowledge. Or secretly. Wy remedy Is guaranteed. Gentle, pleasant, perfectly harmless. It does not matter how many years. This Is the genuine home Treatment, medically endorsed and proved by a legion of testimonials. Book and particulars, free, postpaid. Address: EDW. J. WOODS, 534 Sixth Av. 266 B NewYork.N.Y.

Stupid Greed at Lawrence. The more we learn of the strike at more astonishing do the greed and stupidity of the mill managers and owners appear. Whatever may be one’s feeling about the methods and leaders of the strikers — whether abhorrence of mob ideas or sympathy with a sorely driven and distressed people predominates—one thing stands out with unmistakable clearness. In this motley array of foreign workers we have the “pauper labor of Europe,” from which our tariff wall was supposed to protect us, here within that wall. It might seem that the astuteness that caused the woolen and cotton manufacturers to insist on high protective duties as a protection to American labor would have kept them from the blunders that have brought on this dramatic exposure of the absurdity of their plea. But greed, it appears, has blinded them and they have felt too great a sense of security both in their hold on the government and in the helpless igr no ranee of their imported laborers, to whom the low wages offered at first seemed prosperity .-Indianapolis News. Why, Perhaps It Was! The Springfield Republican most unkindly brings forth a ghost of the past, saying: It was in the Republican national convention of 1908, wasn’t it, that Henry Cabot Lodge said to admiring thousands: “Nothing has added so much to his just fame as his persistent and irrevocable refusal to break the unwritten law of the republic by accepting a nomination for a third term. By this act of self-abnegation he places his name and fame in the secure keeping of history by the side of that of the immortal Washington.” . He doesn’t care to have the nomination handed him on a golden platter, 'they can hide it under his hat', while he ifiakes believe he isn’t looking.— Atlanta Constitution. Real Rotation In Office. The popular demand that Mr. Roosevelt be a candidate is so tremendous his campaign managers simply cannot stand up under the attendant strain. First there was Mr. Medill McCormick, who did his best-as long as he could before retiring in favor of Senator Dixon of Missoula. But the man from Montana could not do much better, so he is now retiring in favor of Mr. Ormsby McHarg, who hails from North Dakota. It is intieed a wondrous example of ’Station in office.