Prices Reasonable Highest Grade Work Let M. Grossman and H. Raymer THE GLOBE TAILORS MAKE YOUR NEXT SUiT We do cleaning, pressing and repairing. Work called for and delivered AUTO 7967 1607 O Street, Lincoln, Nebraska THE RIVERSIDE BASE RNERS For hard coal or coke. Largest amount of radiating sur- ' face. Improved flue construction produces more heat units ; from coal consumed. Easy to take down or set up. Three flues, thus afiording double radiation and taking cold air from ' floor. HANDSOMEST AND BEST Riverside Base Burners are as good as they look, and they 1 are the best looking stoves on the market. STOVES IRNEST HOPPE STOVES 108 North 10th Street THE PRESSMEN'S HOME. Rtrat For Disabled and Aged Work era Dedicated. The International Printing Press men and Assistants' union held its twenty-third annual convention in the auditorium of the technical school and administration building on the union's properties at Hale Springs, near Rog ersville, Tenn. The dedication ceremonies were held on the opening day of the convention, and all the speakers were generous In their praise of the doubly worthy and noble purposes of the. union's new in stitutions. When fully completed these will Include three separate main buildings a home for superannuated members, a sanitarium and a technical school and administration building. The first and last named of these buildings are completed. The plans for the sanitarium have been accepted, but construction work has not yet been begun. The completed new buildings as well as all the smaller auxiliary buildings which were on the property when it was acquired by the union are of frame construction, the lumber coming from the hillsides on the property and was cut on the ground. The home for the superannuated is a typical summer hotel building, with all necessary appointments and 123 rooms. There are spacious accommo dations here for a library, a substan tial nucleus for which" has already been provided by James L. Regan, a lead ing Chicago employing printer, who was in his earlier connection with the trade a pressman and still cherishes the associations of that time. In the administration portion of the technical school building are housed on the main floor the offices of the president and secretary-treasurer of the international union. It is purposed that the American Pressman, the offi cial journal of the union, will also be established here after next September. The auditorium occupies the space on the second floor above the offices and will Beat about 300 persons. TEACHING UNIONISM. Whiwi'i Trad Union League Adopts New Methods. A novel method of spreading the gos pel of unionism among Chicago's for eign population has been adopted by the women trade unionists. Lessons la English are being given foreign working girls, but the old primer has been discarded and a new one substi tuted by the Women's Trade Union league. The time honored cat, which has done service In connecting ideas with objects, has been discarded and the "union" substituted. In getting her first lesson in reading the pupil no longer reads "I see the cat." Instead she reads I am a union girl. The lesson proceeds: "1 start work at 8 o'clock In the morning. I quit at 5 o'clock in the afternoon." In another lesson the condition of the nonunion girl is contrasted -with the union girl. It reads: "I am not a union girl. I begin -work at 7 o'clock In the morning. and I -work until 6 o'clock in the evening. I get $4 a week." Bio Strike May Spread. It is very probable that the garment workers' strike In Cleveland may spread to Chicago and cause a renewal of the big strike which tied up the clothing industry there during the win ter. Cleveland manufacturers have been shipping their goods to Chicago factories and having them made up Into clothing there. This the union men object to and declare that unless the practice ls stopped immediately they will call a strike in every Chicago factory where such work is being done. New York's Organizer. Calvert Wyatt of Pittsburg, the new organizer of the American Federation of Labor, has taken charge of the New York office of the American Federation of Labor in place of Hugh Frayne. who resigned to take a position as manager of the United Stores asso ciation. Mr. Wyatt is an old member of the International Typographical un ion and has for fourteen years been traveling as an American Federation of Labor organizer. Trade Unbn Notes. Governor Tener of Pennsylvania has signed the full train crew bill passed by the last legislature. Twenty thousand miners are on strike in Norway over wages and con ditions of employment. The Green liability bill passed by the Ohio state legislature has been signed by the governor. The organization committee of the Minneapolis trades and labor assem bly has Just organized a shoe repair ers' union in affiliation with the Na tional Boot and Shoe Workers union. The state of Ohio has five free pub lic employment offices, one each being located at Cincinnati, Cleveland, Co lumbus, Dayton and Toledo, under the supervision of the bureau of labor sta tistics. The international convention of the Boot and Shoe Makers union re-elected its old officers as follows: General president. John F. Tobin; general vice president. Collis Lovely; general secretary-treasurer, Charles L. Baine- The Quarry Workers International Tnion of North America reports that thirty-eight local unions have this year effected new agreements which run f rom one to five years and with an increase in wages of from 1 to 6 cents per hour. Miners Show Solidarity. A fund of $25,000 was subscribed by the United Mine Workers of America, in state convention at Seattle, Wash., to assist the striking coal miners in the Crows Nest fields of British Co lumbia and Alberta. TRADE UNION NOTES. In Manhattan borough. New Tork city, 50,000 organized workers paraded n Labor day. Since 1S7S the Cigar-makers Interna tional union has paid out in sick, death, strike and out of work benefits more than $ 7.000,00a Twenty-four states require factories to be so ventilated that a sufficient amount of air space shall be provided for each operative. , Cleveland Federation of Labor has voted an assessment of 10 cents per capita to aid the striking garment workers of that city. During the last ten years nearly 10, 000 cracker bakers have been eliminat ed from the trade union movement through the tactics of the cracker trust. Organized labor in Connecticut has decided to enter the political arena and oppose the re-election of the members of the Connecticut legislature who were responsible for the defeat of their measures. In Los Angeles the Garment Work ers union has more than doubled its membership within the last year, and practically every union garment work er is employed, so great is the demand for the garment workers label. LEGAL NOTICE. Seth W. Lowell, will hereby take notice that William Foote has filed his petition and commenced an ac tion in the District Court of Lancas ter County, State of Nebraska, enti tled "William Foote, Plaintiff, vs. Seth W. Lowell, Defendant," and plaintiff has filed affidavit therein that the defendant is a non-resident of the State cf Nebraska. The object and prayer of said ac tion is to recover the sum of $170 45, with interest at the rate of six pei cent per annum from the seventh day of March, 1890, upon a promissory note that plaintiff has caused to be tttached in said action, the undivid ed one-third interest in Lot Four (4), Block Two (2), Trester's Addition to the City of Lincoln, Lancaster Coun ty, Nebraska, and the undivided one third interest in Lot Eight (8), Block Forty-three (43) in University Place, Nebraska; that the defendant is re quired to answer the petition of the plaintiff on the ninth day of October, 1911. 24-4 SETH W. LOWELL, By TIBBETS & ANDERSON. Attorneys NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. Notice is hereby given that the.uir dersigned have associated themselves together for the purpose of forming a c rporation under the laws of the state of Nebraska. The name of the corporation shall be tne Maupin-Schoop Publishing Com pany. Its principal place of business is Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska. The business of said corporation is to do a general publishing and print ing business and any and all things necessary and consistent therewith, including the right to buy and seU real estate. The authorized capital stock is five thousand dollars, divided into shares of fifty dollars each. Said corporation shall commence business on August 7th, 1911, and con tinue for twenty years, unless sooner dissolved by- a majority vote of its stock, or by process of law. - The highest amount of indebted ness to which it shall at any time subject itself shall not exceed two thirds of its authorized capital stock. The affairs of the corporation shall be governed by a board of four di rectors, who shall have power to elect from among their own number a president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer. Dated this 5th day of August, 1911. WILL M. MAUPIN, FRANK L. SHOOP. 25-5 Rates: Day 50c Week 92. $2.50. 13.00 New B3at: 153 Newtr FnkM tmmmm F.l ROPEAN PLAN GLOBE HOTEL E. WILSON, Huiitr 1323 P Street, Lincoln, Nebraska 1-7- 5 Everything in Watches and Clocks Repaired REPAIRING ONLY HERRY ENSLIN 114 So. 12th St.