1 rvL Q) 1 Patronize I The Wageworker j I Advertisers i THE WAGE WORK A Newspaper with a Mission and without a Muzzle that is published in the Interest of Wageworkers Everywhere. VOL. 2 LIXCOLN, NEBRASKA, APRIL 14, 1905 NO. 1 E R f ; . Child Labor The Industrial Curse Mrs. Ed D. Donnell, general secretary-treasurer of the Woman's International Auxiliary of the International Typographical Union, in a letter to the Cincinnati Chronicle says in part: The Woman's Auriliary to Typographical Union No 3 was visited at its last meeting by Mr. Joseph Heberle, secretary of the Educational committee of the Central Labor Council. Mr. Heberle is very much in earnest as to the rights of the children of Cincinnati to be furnished with free school books, and that the curse of child labor in our factories should be stamped out. I am free to confess that until very recently I had never given the question of child labor any thought because 1 suppose, I didn't know anything about it. Having been born and reared in. a smaller city, where most chil dren are expected to attend the local schools until they graduate, the thought of children at! the age of 10 to 14 years being required to work that the rest of the family might live, was derived from a story in a Sunday school paper, where the boy always turned out to be a great man and finally became a banker. We are informed by. those who have made the .question a study that the Cincinnati factories employ a very large number of children under the legal age. If this is true, and we have no reason to doubt it, it were time that the Central Labor Council take the matter up in , earnest and insist that the state law against this practice be enforced, and that other and more stringent laws be enacted if necessary. Surely every mother, if she has one spark of feeling for her chil dren, desires that they grow to manhood and womanhood to be an honor to themselves and to her who gave them birth: It is not to be denied that the influence which surrounds young girls in factories is not of the best. It is true that there are hundreds of girls in our factories who arc just as pure and ladylike as girls in other walks of life; but they will admit that the moral atmosphere is not the thing for a child just budding into girlhood. We have all respect and admiration for the young lady of proper age who is willing to go out to work in a factory or some one's kitchen, where the necessity requires. She has the same right to make and pay her way as her brothers, but we know that she should be kept under the watchful eye of her mother until she knows at least the difference between right and wrong, and has received the training and acquired the knowledge to maintain her respectability and guard her character above reproach. Aside from the fact that these chil dren in our factories working for a mere pittance, take the place of men who are walking the streets today looking for work, is the thought of what their future will be. Mothers, if you are at all interested in this question, other than from a monetary standpoint, take your stand on one of the downtown corners some morning at G o'clock and look into the faces of the young girls from 10 to 14 years of age who hurry by on their way to work. Pale, tired-looking, worn these are the girls whom we expect to be the mothers' of a future generation of toilers. One can only imagine what the outcome will be. As a means of awakening public interest in this question, it has been suggested that the ministers of our city churches be asked to aid in this work by demanding from their pulpits that child labor be sup pressed. iW e shouldn t think that any self-respecting minister IIIIIirillllllllllHITITTITITITTTt Volume Two, Number One With this issue The Wage worker enters upon, the second year of its existence. This is not the first labor paper ever started in Lincoln, but it "is the first one that ever lived long1 enough to issue fifty-three consecutive week ly numbers, and in that respect, at least, The Wageworker has broken all' ' records. Whether or not it has broken any other records in the labor news paper line remains for its patrons and supporters to say. The Wageworker was started to meet what seemed ' to be a growing demand for a newspaper that would be a medium through which union men and women could gecorae better acquainted. It started out without a single subscriber paid in advance, and only 150 who had promised to pay a quarter for a three months' subscription. The 'second year begins with 1,073 bona fide subscribers, nine-tenths of .whom . have paid in advance. The regular" weekly issue now exceeds 1,150 papers. During the year The Wageworker "has made an 'earnest effort 'to be of service to the unionists of the city. It has not, and never will, pose as a "leader of labor," but will always strive to be an educational force. With politics as politics it will have nothing to do in politics as it affects the interest of union men and women it will undertake to play a prominent part. What The Wageworker has been and what it has done it will continue to be and to do, only to a greater and a better extent if possible. To the earnest and loyal union men and women of Lincoln who havei given The Wageworker their hearty support and co-operation the editor returns his heartfelt thanks. Without them The Wageworker could not have lived through the year. With them it has come through with flying colors. Through and by a continuance of their support it hopes to accomplish greater good for the cause of unionism in the future. TTt.nuy"niiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiTiTmiTTinTTT1 Pleasantly Entertained Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Caster enter tained a number of friends last Mon day evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. George DeBolt. The evening was de voted to games and sociability and at a seasonable hour the hostess served a two-course luncheon. Mr. and Mrs. DeBolt are preparing to move to Cali fornia in a short time, and the affair was planned as an expression of friendship. Those present enjoyed a most delightful evening and in part ing wished for the guests of honor a XXIXI1 CAPITAL AUXILIARY'S APRIL SOCIAL. At Bohanon's hall on Wednesday evening, April 19, Capital Auxiliary No. 11 to Lincoln Typographical Union No. 1509 will give its April fpcial, and all union printers and their wives are cordially invited to attend. The last was poorly attended, and the excuse offered by printers who were not pres present was: "I knew nothing about it until it was over." This notice is" prominent enough to make that excuse ineffectual. There will be an unusu ally good program, good music, a social good time and good light refresh ments. Everything will be good. It will cot a union printer just 15 cents to get in and have a share in these good things. Being good hearted and great on bargains, the Auxiliary members offer this good bargain a union printer and his wife will be admitted for 25 cents. cxxxxxj EXXXXXXXXXXXXXX3 EXXj rrttttumimi would refuse this request. We have thought at times that our clergy are not as much interested in saving the souls of the working man and his family as they are in catering to the whims and fancies of that so-called upper class who contribute so largely to their salaries. If they were they would get out and solve for themselves the oft re peated question: "Why do the laboring class not attend church?" With few exceptions the ministers of Cincinnati take little or no interest in the working man. Two of the largest religious publishing' houses in Cincinnati the Methodist Book Concern and the Christian Standard Publishing Company are notoriously unfair to organized labor. We believe we have yet to see a single bit of printed matter sent out by a minister which carried the Allied Printing Trades Label. Why is this? That is the question that the trades. unionist is-asking today, and the question that the minister will stutter over every time it is put to him. Let our ministers indicate a willingness to meet the working man half way, let him occasionally add to his offer of salvation in the hereafter a plea for the-4etter conditions of roan "here on earth, and we believe there will be fewer empty seats in the churches and more standing room in the opera houses. CENTRAL LABOR UNION Declines to Recommend Men for Ap pointment to Office Last Tuesday night the Central La bor Union went on record as opposing the official endorsement of any particu lar man for political appointment.. The matter wus brought up because several union men were after the appointment as street commissioner and sidewalk inspector under the new city adminis tration. Teamsters' Union No. 440 rec ommended the re-appointment of John Anderson as street commissioner and Bert Corner us sidewalk Inspector. The recommendations were placed on Die. Afterwards the action mentioned rage was "good, plus." This was greeted with applause from all sides. The attendance was unusually good, owing perhaps to the fact that every body thought there might be some "doings" relative to political endorse ments. The excitement was sup pressed,! however, and .tilings moved along smoothly. BUSH RE-APPOINTED Popular Deputy Labor Commissioner Will Hold His Job Deputy Labor Commissioner, Burritt Bush, has been re-appolnted for an other term by Governor Mickey, and the re-appointment meets with the above was taken. It seemed to be the I hearty approval of every unionist in general opinion that the best way to do was to submit a list of several names, wit II the information that the appointment of any one of them would be satisfactory to the union men of the city. A meeting of the Central Ijibor Union was called for Thursday night, for the purpose of recommend ing a numb of men to Mayor Brown. The Labor Temple committee report ed progress and promised to have something definite to report at the next meeting. ! Every union represented reported the state of trade from "good" to "never better," and the general ave- the state. Mr. Bush has made an ex cellent official, and during the last session of the legislature kept the unionists posted on what was. being done in matters affecting their inter ests. He has also enlarged the scope of the bureau's work. Don DeSpaln, his assistant, has also been re-appointed, which was a recog nition of good work faithfully per formed. The roster of clerks in the of fice will remain unchanged. . safe journey and good fortune in their future home. ' , Notice The International Union of Flour and Cereal Mill Employes asks The Wageworker to make the following an nouncement : "All flour made by the Washburn Crosby Milling Co. is still on the 'We do not patronize' list. When a settle ment is reached you will b officially notified." The 1 Lincoln Gas & Electric Light Co. have a few words to say to you this week. Gas for fuel is cheaper ON THE CANAL Government Jobsters Seek to the National Statutes Evade Chief Engineer Wallace of the Is thmian Canal Commission had an In tel view with Secrets. ry Taft last Mon day in which conditions on the canal were discussed. '"Afterward Mr. Wal lace met such members of the commis sion as are in the city. As to the right of ; the commission to employ labor for more than eight hours per day, there is a belief that the eight-hour iaw'Joes not apply to the canal zone." Chief Engineer Wal lace says that It would very seriously impede work to have the - eight-hour law in effect during the construction of the canal. It would be impossible to make uniform hours for all labor, because some labor must be twelve hours, while ten hours is the regular rule for most of the workingmen. . Chief Engineer Wallace could "ex pedite" the work of the canal by working the laborers twenty-four ,hours a day instead of twelve or thirteen. If the canal work and the canal zone are under the control of this government then the laws of this government, and not the whims -of some engineer, should prevail. The government law makes eight hours a day's work for the government although compara tively few among the clerks and chiefs work that long. But the common la borers and the mechanics in the gov ernment employ have to put in full time. , There is no more reason why the canal laborers should be made to vio late the law than there is that the flag should float over a territory where United States authority does not pre vail. ' Tom Foley of Omaha,, was in Lin coln one day last week, shaking hands with old friends and making new ones at the rate of sixty a minute. "Hustling Harry" Harry E. Moores, general agent of the Wabash Passenger department, with headquarters in Omaha, was in Lincoln Thursday, looking up the fes tive tourist and telling everybody he met that the Wabash was the real route to all eastern points and re sorts. This is Mr. Moores' first ap pearance for some time, as he has been laid up with a pair of fractured ribs, but the "slats" are all right now and he is more than making up for lost time. Varctamatm's Foolish Talk Governor Vardamann, of Mississippi, seems to have some very queer ideas of what constitutes "Industrial progress,", and equally queer ideas of what constitutes "inducements to prospective home seekers." Recently William E. Curtis of the Chicago Record-Herald interviewed Governor Vardamann and asked him, "What is your ad ministration doing to improve the condition of the people of your State?" ; : "Mississippi is making noticeable industrial progress," replied Governor Vardamann. "I think the state is in better condition than ever before and is improving every month. Our greatest need, in my judgment, is the immigration of the better Class of 'white people; not laborers, but farmers and mechanics, who are competent to be landlords and nofmerely tenants. We want home owners and home builders ; men who will save their money and invest it wisely ; and give permanent prosperity to Mississippi and stability to the laboring element of the state." ' . This was all right, had Governor Vardamann stopped there. But he went right on and opened his mouth so wide that, it admitted his foot so far that his instep collided" with his epiglottis.. After enumer ating Mississippi's undoubted advantages of soil and climate, health fulness and opportunity, the governor tried to show up some other things that he called "advantageous." Listen to what he said; - "The people of. Mississippi are absolutely free from the tyranny of class; we have no plutocrats, no monopolies' to grind us down and NO LABOR UNIONS TO INTER- ' FERE WITH THE FREEDOM OF WORKINGMEN. We have no strikes, no strife over wages or hours, no riots." Having no labor unions it naturally follows that there is "no strife over wages and hours" and a further result is that the hours are longer and the wages lower than in a majority of the states. Men and women who lack the energy to organize to protect themselves against oppression are usually content with whatever their taskmas ters see fit to give them. , A little investigation of the census figures may serve to show up Mississippi in a little different light to "home owners" and "home builders" who may have their eyes turned towards Mississippi as a probable and likely place of residence. ' ; In Mississippi where there are no labor unions to "interfere with the freedom of workingmen," the average wage for workingmen is 70 cents a day for an average day of 0y2 hours, or an average of &y2 cents per hour. - , In Nebraska, where the number of wage earners is practically the same as in Mississippi, and where the labor unions are compara tively strong and active, the average wage is $1.72 a day for an aver age day of sy2 hours, or an average of 20.2 cents per hour In other words, the "free and independent workingman" of Mississippi earns as much in ten and one-half hours as the "servile slave of the labor unions" in Nebraska earns in three and one-half hours. ; . . - ' In Mississippi the number of child laborers is 1 in 21 of the adult working population, and the work day for them averages 11 hours and the wage 3 cents per hour, ''-..' ' UnilIIfllllIrttTirTYTTTTt.M,,TTtTTTTTTTTT1 CAPITAL AUXILIARY'S APRIL SOCIAL. At Bohanon's hall on Wednesday evening, April 19, Capital Auxiliary No. 11 to Lincoln Typographical Union No. 209, will give its April social," and all union printers and their wives are cordially invited to attend. The last social was poorly attended, and the eycuse offered by printers' who were not pres ent was : "I knew nothing about it until it was over." This notice is promi nent enough to make that excuse ineffectual. There will be an unusually good program, good music, a social good time and good light refreshments.! Everything, will be good. It will cost a union printer just 15 cents to get in and have a share in these good things. Being good hearted and great on bargains, the Auxiliary members offer dais good bargain a union printer and his wife will be admitted for 25 cents. TTTITtlHIIIIIttllTIITITIITTTTttlTTIIHTmiTTIIHIIITITl Lost' an Arm The sympathy of the whole orga nized labor movement goes out to Sec ond International Vice President Jas. Wood of the Cigarmakers' Union, In his sad affliction in losing his arm, which had been shattered. It was cut off by the Washington, D. C, surgeons after every effort to save it had' failed. Atlanta Journal. Smoke Lincoln union made cigars and help boom home industry. It will pay everybody. Null & McCoy have a new advertise ment in this issue. This firm handles union made shoes exclusively. ITHTIITIIHIimtttHtlTT The Armstrong Clothing Co. adver tisement deserves your especial atten tion. It is easy to find. THE UNLICENSED SALOON MUST GO. In every move the new excise board may make looking towards the abolishment of the "drug store saloon" it will meet with the hearty support of all right-minded people. The drug store saloon must go. It must go be cause it is an unmixed evil, a menace to the boys and girls, an infringement on the rights, of men who have paid for the privilege of dealing in liquor, and illegal in its very nature. No drug store should be allowed to sell alcoholic liquor save as a. medicine, and then only on the prescription of a reputable physician. There are drug store soda fountains in this city that sell more alcoholic beverages than the average saloon, and sell them openly and notoriously to boys and girls, whory parents are in ignorance of the fast pace their chil dren are going. A large percentage of the fancy mixtures sold at these drug store soda fountains not all of them but some of them are practically bar mixed drinks that are worse than the festive cocktail, the insidious julep or! the hilarious fizz. The excise board shows gratifying signs of shutting down on this sort of thing. More power to the. board ! - There are drug stores in this city doing more damage to society than any saloon ever run in the cor porate limits of the city. The saloons have no wine rooms. Some of the drug stores have worse they cater to children of tender year. It would be a good thing if several hundred fathers and mothers of Lincoln keep a sharp watch on thfjr boys and girls. Their children are no better or no worse than other children and "Young America' today is a mighty smooth youth. The smooth-faced lad of 12 to 17 years of age knows he can not get alcoholic liquors at a saloon, but he knows drug stores where he can take his "steady" and bowl up without let or hindrance as long as he can hold up papa for the money. That's the kind of drug- stores The Wageworker is after, and the kind of drug stores and excise board is after. And between the two of us we'll get 'em." . ' The unlicensed saloon in the guise of a drug .store must get out of the saloon business ! ximxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxTTTxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxnx In Nebraska the number of child laborers is 1 in 33 of the adult working population, and the work Iay for them averages a fraction less than 9 hours and the average wage is 7 cents per hour. Mississippi has no child labor law worthy of the name, and as a result children from 5 years old and upwards are worked in the mills In Nebraska children under 14 are barrel from employment in mills and factories. ' ' But Mississippi has no labor unions to "interfere with the liberty of workingmen," while Nebraska does. , . -v ", In Mississippi 1,049 children under 16 work for wages, and work an average of 11 hours a day. In Nebraska children under 14 are barred from employment in an average of less than 9 hours a day. Mississippi's child workers range in age from 5 to 16 years of age, while Nebraska's child workers range from 14 to 16. years, Mississippi's 23,643 adult workingmen earn $7,035,534 a year, while Nebraska's 21,059 adult workingmen earn $10,749,706 a year, and work one-third less time than their Mississippi brethren. . Bt (t Mississippi has no labor unions , to 'interfere with the liberty of workingmen," while Nebraska has several hundred local labor unions. . - , . The figures given above refer only to manufacturing industries, and are given because the labor unions are more intimately con nected with manufacturing than with any other branch of national industry.. ' i - A craftsman who is content to work eleven hours a day at his trade for the average wage of 70 cents a day could .hardly be ex pected to have independence enough to strike for his rights and cer tainly not energy, enough to stir up "strife over wages and hours." But The Wageworker is of the opinion that Governor Varda mann has not pictured Mississippi in a light that is calculated, to attract working men. His picture may appeal to Puritan Massa chusetts whose millionaires have accumulated their wealth through the Wood and tears and sweat of child labor and are looking for fresh pastures where youth runs free. . What retail . business man in Lincoln would trade his location in a city where unionism is comparatively strong and wages average $3.00 a" day or more, for a location in Mississippi where there are no labor unions to inter fere with the liberty of workingmen" and the average wage is 70 cents a day? Doubtless Governor Vardamann means well, but he is an ass, nevertheless. - . General Mention Sadie Puckett is a new advertiser in The Wageworker. ' Capital Auxiliary social at Bohanon's hall Wednesday evening, April. 19. Printers and their wives cordially in yited. . O. W. Burnes of Omaha, represent ing the wholesale liquor firm of -George Biele & Sons, Cincinnati, was mak ing the rounds in Lincoln one day last week, and dropped in on The Wage worker for old times' sake. i A Good Business Last Saturday was the best day in the history of the Lincoln Clothing Co. This company has been a steady and liberal advertiser in the columns of The Wageworker ever since It be gan business, and it would seem that its efforts to deserve the patronage of Wageworker readers are meeting with success. . n If a man gets run over by aa street car a woman is never" sure that isn't his way of trying to flirt with her J' ) , -"f I, 5