3 3 Named for Lincoln Made in Lincoln tr- Ui'l ' W I'm. w F IBERHS H.O.BARBER 8c SONS LIBERTY 3 Demand Liberty Flour and take no other. If your grocer does not handle it, phone us about it. H. O. BARBER & SON FIRST SAVINGS BANK of Lincoln The directors of this bank are the same as the directors of the First National Bank of Lincoln 4 per cent Interest on Deposits H'e gladly open accounts for sums as low asone dollar A TRIUMPH IN THE ART THE LEADING BEER IN THE MIDDLE WEST HOOS & Distbrutors LINCOLN. NEBRASKA Once Tried Always Used Little Hatchet Flour Made from Select Nebraska Hard Wheat WILBER AND DeWITT MILLS RYE FLOUR A TELEPHONE US Bell Phone 200; Auto. 1459 145 Test of the Oven Test of the Taste Test of Digestion Test of Quality Test of Quantity Test fTime Measured by Every Test it Proves Best OF BREWING - Ws 1 FRAAS SPECIALTY So. 9th St, LINCOLN, NEB. LABOR DAY. Before any central labor body decides upon giving up the now generally accepted features of Labor day demonstration. In cluding the parade, meetings and addresses, let its delegates dis cuss what would happen If these observances should be abandon ed for a single year In all the cities of the country. Opponents would declare that the labor movement had collapsed, non unionists would no longer on la tor's own day be made to feel the reproach of their absence from among the defenders of their rights, the press would re main silent where It now is a helpful vehicle for the cause of unionism, and much of the op portunity and occasion for our propaganda of unionism would be lost. Samuel Gompers. WARNING TO UNIONS. American Federation Urges Caution In Giving Indorsements. Recently warning was sent from American Federation of Labor bead quarters in Washington to labor pa pers and the unions cautioning them against entering Into business rela tions with irresponsible men who are traveling about the country getting out special editions. This warning was issued because In several instances these men had gone into various cities and after securing the indorsement of the central body would take advertise ments indiscriminately and fail to ful fill the obligations they had entered into. Information has come to head quarters that another scheme has been concocted. The placards having the lithograph ed union labels of the various crafts issued by the American Federation of Labor have been secured in some" man ner and advertisements solicited to be placed around the lithographs as a border, the solicitor agreeing to divide the proceeds with the union from which he got the indorsement. It Is stated that In numerous Instances these obligations have not been ful filled. The unions are cautioned by the American Federation of Labor to be very careful in giving indorsements to any one. no matter for what pur pose. Mr. Poet's Suit Failed. Charles TV. Post lost his suit against the American Federation of Labor and the Buck's Stove and Range company through a ruling of Judge D. P. Dyer in the circuit court at St. Louis. Judge Dyer sustained a demurrer to the bill filed by the defendants. Post sought to recover ?7ri0.000 damages and to get an injunction against the defendants. The suit for damages was filed under the Sherman anti-trust act. Post sued as" a stockholder and di rector of the Buck's Stove and Range company. He was the firm ally of the late J. W. Van Cleave, president of the stove company, and the Citizens De fense association. Post sued to pre vent the carrying out of an agreement between the labor organization and the stove company to make the Buck plant a union shop, which followed Van Cleave's death. He sued as a mi nority stockholder. A "Rabbit" Union. While the labor unions in this coun try are largely confined to trades and special callings, those of Australia cover nearly every imaginable charac ter of work. There is now being or ganized a "rabbiters' ' union. This or iganization is being formed under the auspices or what- Is known as tLe "Trappers league." The men eligible to the "rabbiters union, as the name signifies, ar-e those engaged In the hunting of rabbits for the market. Al ready through the efforts of the young organization the minister of agricul ture has made arrangements for the freezing and packing of rabbits to meet the requirements of the rabbit bunt ers for the coming season. This ac tion on the part of the minister Is to guard against the "rabbit combine." LABOR AWAKENING. The abolition of slavery la this and other countries and of serf dom in Russia Is but a part of a worldwide Improvement In the condition of the tollers of the world, the working classes, upon whom In the last analysis de pend the subsistence, the cloth ing. Indeed the continued ex istence, of the human race. And the betterment In their condi tion Is only Just beginning. With the diffusion of knowledge among them as to the Impor tance of their labors and the power of their numbers It Is cer tain they will not remain con tent with the small share allot ted to them out of the results of their toil and their relative un importance In government. Chief Justice Clark, Supreme Court of North Carolina. Lawyer Strike. Even lawyers nave been known to go on strike. Three years ago the barristers practicing In Sierra Leone were so dissatisfied with the judge acting as substitute for the chief Jus tice while the latter was on leave that' they unanimously elected to give up pleading before him. Legal business In the colony was therefore at a stand still until the chief Justice-- veturned. France, too. affords an Instance of a legal strike. One of the judges of SC Amand recently accused the local law yers of deliberately promoting disputes' in order to fill their pockets with fees Thereupon all the lawyers In court departed In a body and forwarded a letter stating that they would not re turn until this Insulting statement bnd been withdrawn. Eventually the Judpe apologized, and the lawyers returned to work. London Chronicle. TRADE UNION BRIEFS. Thirty-six states restrict night work by children. Forty-two states have set maximum hours for a working week for cbikJri-n Renewed Interest In the Faruwr" union movement Is being taken in southwest Missouri. Forty-four states nave adopted iu age limit for the employment of chil dren. Tile limit In some states 1 i i-l pitifully low. Deputy J.abor Commissioner Smith of Michigan has declared that women will not be employed to work in tb Detroit saloons. Wage workers, it is not necessary to proclaim it to the housetops, but jut say It to yourselves yes. each of yon. "I am joining actively in the movement to agitate, educate and organize." The action of the Cigarmakers In ternational union in adopting a label to distinguish its products from tb; of AT paid convict. Asiatic or child la bor was gradually followed by ofbr labor organizations until now tbro are seventy-nine union labels In use In the United States.