000000000000 Union Harness & Repair Shop GEORGE H. BUSH Harness repairing, Harness washed and oiled. I nse the Union Stamp and' solicit Union Trade. All kinds of work fur nished on call, j.1343 0 Street 3000000000000 Royal Hotel Barber Shop HENRY DEIYES, Prop. Satisfaction Guaranteed 1 i OFFICE OF DR. R. L. BENTLEY, Specialist Children Office Hours 1 to 4 p.m. Office 2116 O st. Both Phones. Lincoln, Nebraska. ELECTRIC AMD GAS FIXTURES. Electric Supplies, electric wiring, electric motors. Contracts for electric re pairing. Contracts for all kinds of interior electric repairing done by ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT GO. K. C. MARRJNEI, Mr.. 127 l(. 12ti Stmt kk4-0 60 YEARS'' kT" - tvBBDicmrc Tradc Marks design CoVRIQHT AC Anrone eendln- a akctrb and tfeeerlntlon may qulcklr aacartala our opinion froo whether as on Patents rate. InTentlon le probably patentable. Cjoi Moneatrletlroonadentlal. HANDIOOIo aent free. Oldeet aaener for aecurlna oatei ratenta taaen tnroua Munn s vo. reoeire tptciai not lea, without charge. In tow i Scientific Jlaricam A handeometr tlloatrated weekly. Ireat eia eolation of any olentlflo Journal. Term a, It a year ! four month!, $ L Sold brail newedealen. KIS&io,,8,'NewYwk . Braoon Oatoe. Oa r at- Waahtnaton, D. C. FF1CI iSWS-fl to 12 a. M., 2 ta i F. . Dr. JOS. M. SMITH -OSTEOPATH nut. UTO Bit umm-wu koh imctLi, lEl. -GILSOM'S SORE THROAT CURE. Good forTonoilltla. Office of W. M. LINE, M. D. Germantown, Neb., Feb. 8, 1904. I have had most excellent results with Gllson's Sore Throat Cure in dis eases ot the throat and mucous lin ings. I find its application in tonsi litis and cases where a false mem brane exist -In th throat, as In diphtheria, to hare an Immediate ef fect, loosening and removing the mem brane, and -thereby at once relieving this distressing sensation of smother ing noted la these cases. My clinical experience with Gllson's Sore Throat Cure has proved to me Its value and 1 can heartily recommend it to all as a safe and reliable preparation for the disease it is recommended. W. M. UNE, M. D. Grad. L. M. C. 'J3. Address all orders to Mrs. J. S. Gilson, - Aurora. Neb SMOKES A FINGER. Paoullar Cigar Filler Makes Smoker Violently III. K The following item sent out by the Associated Press is only one feature which the smoker of machine made cigars is liable to get against, says the Streator Trades and Labor Gazette. Should care and time be given in the making of trust made cigars, as do the blue label hand made factories, such Incidents would be unknown. But the desire to get large dividends on stock (water and otherwise) by the tobacco trust, embraces no time for careful Inspection before being placed on the market. The dispatch follows: "Des Moines. April 28. George Lou bard, of Fort Dodge, was made vio lently sick today by smoking a cigar in which a jrart of a human finger was discovered. While the piece of finger was com paratively small it was easily recog nized, as two joints and a part of the finger nail could be discerned. It had evidently been cut oft the hand of a cigarmaker by a machine in some factory and unnoticed became mixed with the filler. Loubard had bought several cigars. On smoking one of them he noticed a peculiar flavor. A few minutes later he was taken sick. Breaking open the cigar he found the finger." SCHAUPP KICKS. Will Not Take the City Directory Until He Has To. Adam Schaupp is being sued by the Polk-McAvoy Directory Co. for an ad vertisement in the Lincoln City Di rectory.' Mr. Schaupp base3 his de fense on the fact that the solicitors for this concern guaranteed that th? work on the directory would be given to Lincoln prlnteries. That this is the case will be testified to by scores of people who were misled into patron izfng the outfit by reason of these promises. Not only were . the people led to believe this, but the managers of the outfit shrewdly led certain- Lin coin publishers to believe that thev were to secure the work. . Not until the book was almost ready for deliv ery was it ascertained that the 'work v as being done elsewhere. The Wage- worker immediately advised people not to accept delivery nor to pay the money for advertising therein, as promises had been violated and con tracts rendered void. Mr. Schaupp, whose friendship for organized labor ai d readiness to stand by Lincoln in stitutlons is well known, refused to ac cept a copy or to pay for the adver tisement. Suit was brought before Justice Bacon, who appeared also as counsel for plaintiff. A change of venue wa3 taken to justice Kisser's court and the trial set for May 8. The plaintiff took a continuance until May 23 to secure evidence showing that the Polk-McAvoy concern is not a trust. Whatever the outcome of the trial, Mr. Schaupp deserves the thanks of organled labor for his firm stand in this matter. GENERAL AND LOCAL. News of Interest Gathered at Home and Other Places. Demand the label. The union label that's all. If it is not labeled, refuse it. Long hours and low wages are sis ters. - Union made shoes are sold by Rog ers & Perkins. The Capital Beach carpenter job is on the square. It is only the genuine reformer who says but little and saws a lot, of wood. " ' Miners in the anthracite coal fields have resumed work. Louis Maupin has secured .a position with the Farmers and Merchants bank. "Blue Ribbon" cigars ' are union made, Lincoln made and well made. Sold by all dealers. Congress has refused to pass a law guarding workmen against the compe tition of convict labor. Mr. and Mrs., Will Bustard have pur chased a home at 2536 H street an! scon will be snugly settled under their own vine and fig tree. The North Prlntery Is just finishing the printing of the minutes of the Ne braska Press Association's 1906 conven tion. Secretary Maupin saw to it that the label was on the job. Buy union made cigars at P. J. Wohlenberg's. His brands are: Extra Fina 5 cents, Little Bully 6 cents. Dominos 10 cents. Sure Thing 10 cents. P. J. Wohlenberg, 128 South Eleventh. The Jones overall and shirt factory now observes the Saturday half-holiday. . It's coming, slow but sure. If you see It in The Wageworker it is in the Interests of organized labor. The Fulton Stock company at the Oliver every night. New standard plays presented by a capable company headed by Miss Enid Jackson and Mr. Jess Fulton. New and up-to-date specialties. Glass factories' In the Steubenville, O., district threatened to shut down because of lack of employes said to be the " result of the ' prosecution for violation of the child labor law. A delegation may be sent to the legisla ture to urge the passage of a law pro viding a higher age limit. The Commoner force will hold Hs annual picnic tomorrow (Saturday) at Milford. The fifty or more employes will be transported to the picnic grounds at the expense of the man agement and the girls will serve a din ner fit for the gods. The entire force regrets keenly the fact that W. J. Bryan will not be present at the festi val this year to captain the losing baseball team. - 2 Pennsylvania State i Federation of Labor wants the office Of chief factory inspector made elective. After three weeks' strike the Boiler Makers of Duluth, Minn., secured an increase from 33 to 36 cents an hour. F. E. Smith, a custom tailor of Quincy, 111., was fined $100 for using the union label on non-union clothing. The Actors' National Protective Union will meet In annual session in New York city on May 21. The largest line of union made shoes in Lincoln may be found at the store of Rogers & Perkins. Two hundred new members were initiated by the Stationary Engineers Union of Chicago at its last meeting. The eight-hour law of Michigan has been declared valid in a recent deci sion by the supreme court of that state. - Cleveland machinists are building up their organization with a view of making a demand for, a 20 per cent increase. Eighty-five new members were ad mitted at one meeting of the Street Carmen's Union of New ' Orleans re cently. Fifteen new unions have been added to the . Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' International Alliance since the first of the year. United Garment Workers have in stituted a new local in Philadelphia composed of Italian tailors with a membership of 200. A bill has been i introduced in the New Jersey legislature requiring em ployers of women to furnish them with seats on which .to rest when tired. Union employes of the Chicago City Railway demand an increase of four cents an hour for electric trainmen and a ten-hour day for all other employes. A union intended to include every negro railway employe in the Pullman car service in the United States has been organized by the porters, cafe and dining car men running into New York city. Chicago painters have won an Im portant victory. They recently ob tained an increase of S cents an hour' in wages, which in the aggregate means about $4,500 a day to the mem bers of te craft. Organized labor is charged with in juring industry, but in the past ten years the United States has come to lead the world in the exportation - of manufactured products. An organization that makes np its mind never to do any striking maj rest assured that the employers will do all the striking necessary in the form of low wages and long hours. Nearly 7,000 new members were ad mitted into the Order of Railroad Telegraphers the past year. During that time the order arranged new or revised Schedules with thirty-four rail road companies. Having sold the Eleventh Street lunch counter, I opened a table res taurant on South Twelfth street. I have now removed the tables and put In a lunch counter; open at 6 a. m. and dinner from 11 a, m. till 2 p. m. Quick service. Don Cameron, 110 So. 12th St " .The differences heretofore existing between H. C. Sessions & Sons of Sioux Falls, Iowa, publishers of the A. O. U. W. Bulletin, and Typographi cal Union No. 217, have been amicably adjusted. After a strong anti-strike speech be fore the convention of miners at Scran ton, Pa., President Mitchell succeeded In securing the adoption of the report presented by the scale committee, and that there will be no strike in the An thracite fields is assured. The arbitration board of Chicago Carpenters' and Builders' Association the Unites: Brotherhood of Carpenters and Amalgamated Association of Car penters have signed an agreement which provides for an increase of fire cents per hour for the carpenters for the first year, and tor six and one fourth cents an hour during the two years following. The present scale Is fifty cents per hour. ' THa Union Labels of QUALITY & PURITY Mark all our goods. Ours is the laboring Man's Drug Store. - Ours are the cut-rate prices, where' we share profts with him, and return 5 per cent in cash on every $ invested with us :: :: : : Tie Store Where Yoo Saie Car I Fare Is Rector's Pharmacy FffiUC til IDT TO BE SOLD AT AUCTION NEXT WEEK WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY MAY 23-24 The highest point in all the town, The hill to northward sloping down, Fair as a maid in new spring gown, ' Is Franklin Heights. Beyond the city's noise and din. Beyond the smoke that one breathes in Outside the bound'ry lines of sin 1 Is Franklin Heights. Have your own home why pay rent? New sidewalks builded of cement; Buy, and you never will repent, 1 At Franklin Heights. Remark the sale a year ago; Those Elan Park lots were not so slow, They went like cakes now watch 'em " flo . - At Franklin Heights. Elm Park values have increased By thirty-five per cent at least; An Intimation of the feast At Franklin Heights. From every point the view is fair; No lack of pure, untainted air Ten-minute street car service there At Franklin Heights. Here is a chance to buy to suit: v Say what you'll bid; don't stand there , mute ' Terms fit the poor man or the plute " At Franklin Heights. .'" ' V , j i Water and sewer pipes are laid, Trees old enough to furnish shade; Step up and buy, don't be afraid, At Franklin Heights. Take no man's word, for men may lie, But reason to the case'apply; ' ' See for yourself arid you will buy At Franklin Heights. .". ;' ::: bix. Do you own a piece of Mother Earth? Here is your opportunity to buy at your own price on easy terms. Lincoln's Choicest Residence Property. On the Hill Top, Modern in every way, ten minute car service, water, sewers, five foot cement walks, ten year old trees. WOODS BROS. 1 BOGGS ' AUTO PHONE. 1840 ' eg ta- 9. The Ideal Summer fuel Gas is t the Ideal summer fuel. - It would be cheaper than coal at any price. Saves work, saves health, saves time. " Adds comfort, adds convenience, adds pleasure. All - the - heat under the articles to be v cooked. Keeps the kitchen cool and -the cook's temper, too. '. We furnish the fuel; all you need furnish is the match. When the cooking is done the expense ends. : If you haven't a gas range, call and see our fine line. Sold on installments f if desired. Let us submit an estimate for piping your house for gas. Lincoln Gas & Electric Light Co. : : Open Evenings : : Bell 75 Alto 2575 ' During courtship an ounce of flat tery is equal to a pound of caramels. ? One way to acquire new friends quickly is to inherit a million dollars. ' He who would enter politics should first learn the art of sidestepping. , What would the result be if we all followed the advice we give to others? A $6 gold piece in your pocket 's better than a five-pound gold brick In your hand. The human race is full rans." of "al3o cx?tf6bdcoococxxxxx .-THE OLD PEI.IARLE. CINCINNATI SHOE STORE As a money saving proposition, we call especial attention to oar , t - . UNION MADE AMERICAN UNE ; Satisfaction guaranteed. We' cordially invite ' i yon to personally inspect the goods we carry. WOLFANGER, WHARTON & CO. 1220 O Street - f Us