THE WAGEWORKER WILL M. MAUPIN, EDITOR Published Weekly At 137 No. 14th St., Lin coln, Neb. One Dollar a Year. Entered a second-class matter April 21, 1904, at the postoffiee at Lincoln, Neb'., under the Act of Congress of March 3rd, 1879. BROTHER ORR MISSED THE POINT. Rev. Mr. Orr, of this city, in last week's issue took exceptions to the Chicago Public's indict ment of the pulpit, and proceeds to show what every unbiased man will admit that ministers as a rule are deeply in sympathy with the work ing man. But we greatly, fear that Bro. Orr missed the point. We have heard hundreds yes, thousands of ministers denounce wrong doers in the aggregate. We have heard them denounce corporate greed and rapacity as a whole, and we have heard them denounce po litical corruption as an abstract proposition. But up to date we have heard only one or two ministers who were specific in their denuncia tions. Fifty years ago there were thousands of preachers who upheld slavery as a divine insti tution, and thousands of others who opposed slavery as a system. But how many preachers thundered against that system like Beecher did? Has any. one in Lincoln ever sat in the pew of a rich and fashionable church and heard the minister denounce greed and corruption and while pointing his finger at the corrupt financial gamblers in front of him shout, "Thou art the man, and thou, and thou, and thou!" We have Jieard preachers denounce violence perpetrated by workingrnen, and that, too, when the denunciation could apply locally to men who were crazed by injustice. But up to date we have never heard a minister specifi cally denouncing the crookedness of some well known members of the congregation whose whole business careers were strewn with hopes they had wrecked and lives they had blighted. I. is easy enough to denounce wrong in the iifcgregate, but what the Chicago Public meant was that the ministers as a whole had never dared to be specific when the object sof denun ciation were the liberal corporationists who occupied the most prominent pews. We do not blame ministers as a whole. They are creatures of environment like the rest of us. The average minister leaves the public schools at an early age and enters a theological semin ary. There he is practically .secluded from the workaday world. ' His study carries him away from ewryday affairs, and after he actively enters the ministry he gets still further and further away from the matters which materi ally concern the men who must toil with their hands in order to obtain a livelihood. Very naturally he becomes more concerned about the life to be than about the life that is. This is not through inclination or considerations of self-interest, but wholly through environment. The editor is not very old, but ,he can remem ber the time when preachers specified when they went after wronir and wicked men. They grabbed the evildoer by the. nape of the neck figuratively speaking and held him over the yawning pit of hades. And those were days when religion meant something, weren't they, Brother Orrf Nowadays it's different. The rich, sum? and aelf-complacent manipulator, of public funds, or the gambler in the necessaries of life'.'sits in a front pew, drops a ten dollar bill in the bas- ket and then lolls back on a comfortable cush ion and listens to a sermon that wouldn't rufiie the breast of any human being. Remember, please, that we speak generally, not specifically. We 'have hundreds of minis ters, arid some of them right here in Lincoln, who do not do that sort of thing. They are plain and outspoken, and among them is Brother Orr. But it is not true as a general proposition that the ministry has seldom been in the lead in the accomplishment of great economic and so cial reforms? Is it not true that the ministry has produced the staunchest defends of existing abuses? It was so in the days of slavery. It was so in the days of the revolution. It is so in these days of so-called "vested rights." There are evils right here in Lincoln that our ministers could root out if they had the nerve. It would rejoice us to' see one minister espe cially; right here at home, get down to brass ' tacks , and denounce specifically one "sweat hop" manager who is loud in prayer and then v-fjays a woman $2.42 for fifty-nine hours work with, a sewing machine. : WftSVjre want, Brother Orr. is specific, not generalllenunciation of existing abuses. We hope, we have made our meaning clear. ARE YOU LIKE THE ELEPHANT? ' The elephant is the largest beast on earth, and is accounted the most intelligent, next to man. It possesses tremendous power, which if exerted to the full would make it a terror. But despite its boasted intelligence the ele phant is the most foolish of beasts. . A little man whom it could crush like a boy crushes an eggshell rides it with a bit of wood reinforced with a sharp hook, and the slightest motion of that iron hook frightens the elephant into submission. As a result this powerful beast tremblingly performs the hardest kind of labor, and endures without resistance the ill treatment of its master. Now don't go to making fun of the- ele phant's foolishness. Perhaps you are just as foolish as the ele phant. Better stop add investigate a little bit. The wage earners of America form the great majority of the voting population, and there fore possess a strength compared to which the fttrength of the elephant is as nothing. But what of it? Their strength does them.no good. Either they lack the intelligence to wield it in their own interests, or they, are content, like the beasts of the field, to toil from day to day for a miserable pittance of what they create. Have they any reason to make fun of the foolish elephant? T . . . I I . . ' . j f" . . j low loug woiiui varnegie s larnr iomtsreu monopoly of.the.iron business have lasted if the wane earners oi tne country naa usea tneir coi . . ai xA J a. a 1 . ctive BirenKVii u uemruy iubi couosai irraj.ii low long would they continue rJaying trib ute to Rockefeller if they combined to crush that despotic king! How long could some pimply-headed politi cal manipulator use them to his own selfish ad vantage if they awoke to a realizing sense of their power and used it to advance .their collec tive interests? How long would a lot of subservient tools of great corporations be living in high state in Washington as congressmen and senators if the wage earners of the country quit "playing the elephant" and exerted their strength to secure justice for themselves and families? Why even a donkey balks once in a while against ill treatment. And we claim to be intelligent men. yet we endure a thousand and one wrongs when the remedy lies within our. own hands. We laugh at the foolish elephant and wonder that he stands for it. Wouldn't it be interesting to know what the elephant thinks of his even more foolish human brother? There are two sides to this elephant business. Suppose we pause and study over both of those sides for a little while. of the National' Stone Cutters' Society against the associated building trades, therefore be it Resolved, By the members of Local No. 1813, P., D. & P. of A., of Lincoln, Nebraska, that we most sincerely appreciate the action of Judge Gary and his moral courage to carry out his conviction in behalf of justice and freedom. Be it further esolved. That these resolutions be made a part of the minutes of this local, a and that a copy be offered to the press for publication; and that a certified copy be sent to Judge Gary. DID SECRETARY KINNEY SAY IT? Secretary Kinney of Omaha Typographical Union is quoted as deprecating the "Omaha plan" of boosting the union label and saying : "How does it benefit the printers it one more Elgin shirt is sold?" We do not believe that Mr. Kinney said it. We give him credit for more intelligence. But if he did say it the sooner his services as a union official are dispensed with the better it will be for the Omaha printers. Such a doctrine as that, carried to its logical conclusion would dis rupt every labor organization in the land. Surely Secretary Kinney has intelligence enough to realize that fact. As we said before, we do not credit the asser tion that Secretary Kinney made any such re mark. We prefer to believe that he was mis understood. But if he did say it we unhesitat ingly declare that he is not a union man. that he is a detriment to the union cause, and that he does not reflect the views of an infinitesimal fraction of 1 per cent of the genuinely' union men of the country. When the Carpenter of Nazareth saw that the money changers had converted the temple into a den of thieves he didn't content Himself with general denunciation of them. Not He The Master knotted a whip of cords and the way He went after the thieves was good to see. Wouldn't it make a woeful decrease in church membership in the large and fashionable city churches if all the corporation. Wall street and insurance thieves were lashed out with whips of cords. Judge Sears has modified his injunction against the Omaha printers. But the mere fact that he issued the injunction in the first place is sufficient to damn him in the eves of all jus tice loving men. What the workingrnen ought to do to Judge Sears when' they get a whack at him through the ballot box would be a plenty The Parryites would have us -believe that President Mover and Secretary Ilayward of the Western Federation of Miners framed up a plot to have Orchard assassinate Steuenberg, and then wrote Orchard a letter telling him just what to do and how to do it. And there are a lot of damphools who believe it. lhe daily newspapers are using: up columns of space to tell all about the nasty details of the Mizener-frkes case. But neither Mizener nor. Mrs. Yerkes-Mizener are b advertisers. They ought to take a few lessons from Post. The daily newspaper never dared to expose the in side details of the Post divorce case. President Eliot of Harvard savs the law a&ainst contract labor should not be enforced, and that it should be repealed as soon as pos sible. The trouble with President Eliot is that he is using automobile oil to think with. Judge Gary is one of the few judges who be lieve that the laws were enacted to secure jus tice to all men instead of special priivleges for a few men. Such old-fashioned ideas are se verely reprobated in Parryite circles. i on can t get squarely into tne union game by walking in a pair of scab shoes, nor can you talk straight unionism out of a mouth under the brim of a scab hat. If it is union made it will have the union label on it; and don't let any clerk convince you to the contrary. ' ' ' MR. PLATZ "RUBBERED." Omaha Printer Man Attended the Nebraska Press Association Meeting. . G. L. Platz, of the Omaha Bee, ajid one of the old time printer men of this section, attended the session of the Nebraska Press association this week, and looked up a few matters per taining to the strike situation. He found sev eral of the newspaper boj's with old-time cards in their pockets, and he found a. whole lot of others who were in sympathy with the Typo graphical. Union. He also found that the coun try newspaper men liad, as a rule, beeii discour aging the country printers from seeking work in the struck shops of the cities. COMMEND JUDGE GARY. Lincoln Painters Say He Is Right on the Ques tion of Injunctions. The local Painters, Decorators and Paper- hangers' Union has expressed by resolution its commendation of Judge Gary's recent decision that he would not issue and more injunctions until he had summoned both sides before him. By this action Judge Gary took a sarcastic fling at .Judge iloulom, and at the same time showed himself to be a just, judge who is more intent on doing justice than he is on doing the bidding oi a lot of selfish schemers. At its recent meet ing the local adopted the following resolutions Whereas, Many judges of late have been try ing to outdo one another in granting injunc tions at the behest of employers and others who saw fit to ask for them, no matter how trifling the plea or inconsistent the argument in favor thereof, restraining workingrnen from congre gating, , from picketing, from persuading and iroti what-not. and- hereas, Judge Gary of Chicago recently re J .1' . i 1. . . 1 sucn an injunction to ana at me request KEEP THEM OUT OP COURSE. Lafe Young Tells a Few Things About the Pro teges of Dave Parry. Hon. Lafe Young, editor of the Des Moines Daily Capital, was a member of the Taft Phil ippine party, and made a long visit in China. This week Mr. Young addressed the Nebraska Press Association, telling about his visit. He said : 'Morally the Chinaman is the most unclean thing in human form. His moral filthiness has been ingrained into him through countless gen erations. It will take countless generations to change him. As a laborer we do not want him. As a social compeer he is unthinkable. As a citizen he is impossible. To those who say that we need him to pull weeds out of beets, pick fruit, clean our stables or do our menial work, I will say that before I will let a Chinaman do any of these things for me I will clean my own stable, curr yniy own horse, pull my own weeds and let mv fruit rot upon the trees if I can not pick it myself, before I will employ a Chinaman to do any of these things for me. Foul morally, filthy personally, dishonest to an unthinkable degree, superstitious beyond conception, the Chinaman must be kept out m self defense. "China will remain the same superstitious. poverty-stricken dangerous country that it is today for centuries to come, and then its better ment will result in changing the Chinaman. "This is a nation made up of different na tionalities. but practically all Anglo-Saxon. am eternally and everlastingly opposed to mix ing it with Chinese. They must be kept out. " TRADES UNIONS IN POLITICS. British Workmen Show How to Secure Results . That Will Surely Count. The trade unionists of this country heartily congratulate their brethren across the sea in wresting from, the aristocracy forty, or possibly nity, seats in the House of Commons. Thev have achieved a wonderful vietbrv for indus trial freedom, and it is hoped that the intro duction of trade union influence in the Com mons will be powerful enough to wipe from the English statutes the unjust features of the com bination laws which have seriously impaired the prosperity of organized labor and been a great injury to English workimjuie. Such de cisions as that in the Taff-Wla CP.-e aroused the trade unionists to the i jiporiance of securing representation in Parlit.Tiient, and the election shows how energetically they have "worked to arouse public sentiment in their favor. The revolution will resnlt in the retirement of manv members from the Ilousa. of Commons who have represented only the aristocratic point of view in industrial legislation. To, the American trade unionist the English election furnishes much food for reflection and opens up possibilities of a "political overthrow in this country it th,e rights of the -w-orkmgmeu are unheeded by the moneyed aristocracy Avhieh too often controls, much of our legisla tion and the decisions of our courts. Wood Carver. SOMEWHAT SARCASTIC. Minnesota Union. Advocate Refers Thus to a ' Noted Employer of "Scahs." The name of John B. Stetson will not sound strange, at least to a few of the most active and intelligent men in the ranks of organized labor. It is that of a . hat manufacturer of Philadel phia. He has just departed for the other world at his "winter home" in Florida. He was one of the great' champions of freedom in other words, of long hours, small pay and resulting semi-slavery for working people. He was, of course, as a result badly abused and oppressed in his day by tyrannical trade unions and trade unionists a circumstance that, no doubt, ex plains his being forced to live in Florida in the winter season. So great was the oppression practiced on this poor man during his life that he was known to have declared that he would make arrangements to haye his factory ran as a "scab" concern after his death. It is now being so run, and the Stetson hat will probably be found on the head of more than one scabby unionist. Pity He could not take the factory with him where he. is gone, and where the sup ply of "free drudges is, no doubt, large enough to suit him. Minnesota Union Advo cate. i LOOKS RATHER . QUEER. "Wor,ds are Good When Backed Up by Deeds, and Only So," Says Roosevelt. The Lincoln Commercial Club is doing a wonderful lot of talking, about "building up Lincoln, patronizing home industry, and all that sort of thing. If the gentlemen of that club saw an opportunity- to secure a factory employing fifty or sixty men ,;t would go after it with a vim. But it is overlooking an oppor tunity to boost something that would furnish employment for that many, u not more men although they- would be distributed among several factories. . lhe Commercial Club maintains a cigar stand. In that cigar case are displayed a doz en or. more boxes of cigars, ror every Lin coin made cigar sold from that case, a hundred cigars made elsewhere are sold. There are ten boxes of foreign made cigars for each box of Lincoln- made cigars in .that case. The Commercial Club ought to practice what it preaches. Here is an opportunity to boost a home industry to treble the number of cigarmakers now working in Lincoln. If one half the cigars smoked in Lincoln were Lincoln made, there would be more than 100 cigarmak ers at work, drawing wages that would be spent right here in Lincoln. As it is there are less than 3o cigarmakers at work in this city. Wake up, gentlemen of the Commercial Club, and do p. little less preaching and a lot more, practicing. v . r d w itii C 61111aiir IBtwtt0)im Sail See Immenc2 Window Display IHMMMBMBMMMMB . ..... Every Button Warranted The Sale Opens Monday and Continues for One Week In order to familiarize the people of Lincoln with the wonderful Crown Collar Buttons, we will sell 20,000 this week at half price. Every button is guaranteed. A new one FREE for any that break. The Crown Collar Button Co., makers of these well known buttons, have allowed us to sell 20,000 of these at the low prices wc quote. They are willing to lose more than their usual profit for the purpose of advertising, and we are willing to do the same to introduce these buttons. . ' . i .' 10 Karat Gold Fille' Collar Button, 5c values I 2y2c 14 Karat Gold Filled Collar Buttons, 10c values Sc. 29 Styles to Select From for Men, Women and Children Carpet Sized ...Rugs... 200 carpet sized rugs at present on our leaf-turning rack, ..with something to: suit every taste artd every purse. Medallion centers surrounded by a body of solid color. Fine allover Persian, geometric anil Paisley centers. Bokhara, Herman, and other strict ly oriental designs. Floral patterns for the many who prefer thein to any other. Colors to harmonize with any fur nishings all brown rags, all bine rugs, red rugs, pink rugs; green rags and rich combinations of every description. AH the best ' guaranteed .-makes-r velvets, Wiltons, Axminsters, Tap estries, Body Brussels, etc. " Rugs Made S to Order among the standard sizes 'of the ready-mado rugs, we make rags of any propor tions, or odd shape from carpets with ljorders. We bave new spring lineH of these in ' Beattie plushes, Wiltons, ' Axminsters, Velvets and Brussels. We make rugs that lie as flat as a board, without a tack. . ' V ' 50 new ingrain 1 Og 13. Ill 'art squares have RlISTS j"t been open . ed and placed on sale. These, with what we had on hand, make a fine col lection. They are seamless, reversible, easily bandied and cared, for, and conic in a great variety of patterns and color ings. :.' MILLER & PA I N E The Winter of Our Discontent COL. Bill Shakespeare made one of his ehar-- ; ' acters speak about "The winter of our discontent' That's what this winter has been. We put in our usual line of winter goods, . and it's been summer all winter.i - Had a day or , -two of winter, but it didn't help much. But we've JUST GOT TO SELL 'EM . We mean the winter goods. Can't carry them over until next winter because that means too much expense. We'd rather give you the benefit. So we've shaved a bit more from our already attentuated profits. . "Attentuated" means thin and that's what our profits are. We've got any thing you want from hats to shoes and all between ' Suits from $5 up, and all good ones. Overcoats' from $5 up, and they are bargains. Shoes from $1.50 to $3.50, and worth more money. Help us ' get rid of these winter goods. You'll profit by ' , -v it more than we will and we assure you that we are not doing business at a loss. :: .:: :: :i Xfncoln Clothing Company " TENTH AND "P" STREETS . ' Madsen's Market 1348 0 STREET GOOD MEATS , Cheap for cash Will Move to 1127 O street aborat March 1. , Twenty per cent discount on all work to March 1. J. A. Haydcn 1029 0 Street FlFTEEHniWJBTrHOOm. New Windsor Hotel Lincoln, Nebraska , American .m4 , European slam. Amcrieau rUa Stt to fe3 par day. Euapaia - Plam, - Rcomi M to 91.90 per aiaV Kt. rooms all out aide. Popular priced reatanraat lumcb counter and Iadle' safe. SERVICE UKEXCBLLED. : , E. M. PEN NELL, Mgr.: Henry Pf eiff . . ' DEALER IN Fresh and Salt Meats Savsage, PovlQy, Etc Columbia National Bank LINCOLN Staple and Fancy Groceries. Telephones 888-477. 314 Se. IHh Street ..GILSON'S SOKE TKKOAT CURE.. Good for Tonci litis. Office of W. M.' LINE, M. D. -Germantown, Neb., Feb. 8, 1904. I have had most excellent results with Gilson's Sore Throat Cure In dis eases , of the throat and mucous lin ings. I And its application . in tonsi litis and cases -where a false mem brane exists in the , throat, as in. diphtheria, to have an immediate ef fect, loosening- and removing the mem brane, and thereby at once relieving this 'distressing sensation of smo'ther ing noted in these cases.. My clinical experience with Gilson's Sore Throat, Cure has proved to me its value and I can heartily recommend it to all as a disease it is recoti , . , - . 1Ujr J