The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-????, June 08, 1906, Image 5

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    News of Interest Gathered at Home
and Other Places.
. Demand the label.
You J$ re Lucky if You Have
The union label that'si all.
If it is not labeled, refuse it.
Get ready for Labor Day. It Is com
ing.
a Boy to Clothe
mi nr - -i-j-r Al''! ' ' ' -,! Vw '
" T) s S I
M 1 If , - : I I '
f r j 1 1
-uLiL.joiiiwjjiBiijjyiii';f;i,- for c "m "'L iiii
j "tv" -)A'vtiicimtiw.Yjj.'.'.j toVififtw'tiiar'"
Ko .Pre Twice Lucky if You Have not Bought
Your Boy's Spring Clothes
A word to the wise is sufficient. The opportunity of buying Boys' Clothes
at such prices has never before been presented during the very heighth of
the Boys' Clothing season.
It's May Clothing at July Prices
The Jarge increase in our Boys' and Children's business necessitates the en
larging of our selling space., and in order to make this change advantageously
we are compelled to reduce stock. '
Study These Prices CarefullyThey Are Just in Time to Save You
Money on Your Boy's Graduating and Vacation Clothes
BOYS' NORFOLK SUITS Made with
knicker-bocker trousers, in blue serges
and fancy mixtures, which sold up
to $9.00 Rearrangement
sale
$5.98
BOYS' D. B. COMBINATION SUITS
Made with two pairs of pants. It's a
, wonderful suit for vacation time. . Sold
early at $4.50 Rearrange
ment sale price
$2.98
CHILD'S EATON SUITS Made of blue
i- i j i it. . ri . -i
serge, iancy cneviots ana tne nice, ten
$2.98
different styles
up to $5, now. .
that sold
BOYS' DOUBLE-BREASTED 2-PIECE
SUITS These come in Bannockburn
tweeds, blue serges, and nobby cheviot
effects. They are suits that sold up to
$8.00. All put in at the one price
during this Rearrangement ttjf rD
Sale, at .S0
SUITS for LITTLE FELLOWS Chil
dren's Sailors, Russian Blouse and Buster
Brown Suits in all the latest production
each one a credit to the designers' art,
suits which sold up to $8.50 fo
Rearrangement Sale Price. . .pr.jfO
BOYS' DOUBLE-BREASTED SUITS
Five hundred in all the best suits
ever sold at $3.50 Sale OJP
Price. "O
Jzrmstrons
These bargains will be carried out throughout all other departments
of our boys' store
to thing Co,
Good Clothes Merchants
J
co30ooaoooooo
n O
Union Harness & Repair
Shop
GEORGE H. BUSH 8
Harness repairing, Harness eS
'washed and oiled. I use the 2
Union Stamp and solicit Union 0
Trade. All kinds of work far- Q
nished on call, 1343 0 Street A
Royal Hotel Barber Shop
HENRY DEIVES, Prop.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
OFFICE NOURS-1 to 12 . M., 2 to 5 t. M.
Dr. JOS. M. SMITH
OSTKOFATH
pre ie.
AUTO 22M
132-133:8111 HOC
LINCOLN, NEB.
DR. A. B. AYEBS
Dentist
310-311 Ftnke fildft. Auto 1591; Bell 915
Bring this ad and save ten per cent on
your bills.
AN INFERNAL OUTRAGE.
GIVE US A TRIAL
Lincoln Local .Express
PHONES: Bell 787, Auto 1787
OFFICE OF
DR. R. Li. BENTL.EY,
Specialist Children
Office Hours 1 to 4 p.m.
Office 2116 O st. ' Both Phones.
Lincoln, Nebraska.
llTtlllIIIIIIIIllI
ELECTRIC AND
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
CO.
R. C. MUIIO, ip.. 7 No. 1211) Strut
mm
..GILSON'S SORE THROAT CURE.
Good for Tonal 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 find its application in tonsi
litis and cases where a false mem
brane exists In th 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 smother
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
safe and reliable preparation for the
disease it is recommended.
W. M. LJNB, M. D.
; Grad. L. M. C. '93.
Address all orders to
Mrs. J. 5.1 Gilson, - Aurora, Neb
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
4
iiaaaaa
Trade Marks
"V" CfiPVKICHTt Aff.
Anrone sending a sketch and description may
(Ulckly ascertain oir opinion free whether an
tiventlon Is probably patentable. Communlca
sons striotljr conadet,tCal. HANDBOOK on Patent
tent free. Oldest asecj tor securlna; patents.
Patents i taken through Muun cSTreoelTe
QMcioi notice, without onanre. In the
sciemmc American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I-anrest elr
eolation of any sclenting lonrnal. Terms. S3 a
I1Y.:. I2?r J"0"10- L Sold by all newsdealers.
MUNN & U0.a
36teratdw.,.NpwYnrk
Braaoh Offloe. 636 F tjt Washlnston, D. C.
Prosecution Takes Continuance in the
Moyer-Hayward Case.
When Moyer and Hayward were ar
rested on the charge of being impli
cated in the Steunenberg murder the
officials of the law claimed that they
had all the evidence necesary for con
viction. The prisoners were illegally
taken out of Colorado and thrown Into
a Montana jail without being allowed
to give bail. They insisted on their
innocence and demanded a speedy
trial. The case was called last week,
but the minions of the law took a con
tinuance of several months, and Moyer
and Hayward were sent back to jail
and bail again refused.
This is an outrage, and it shows
clearly that the enemies of the West
ern Federation of Miners are engaged
in persecution, not prosecution. Moyer
and Hayward are entitled to a fair and
speedy trial, and in view of all the
claims made by the prosecution there
is no excuse for the continuance. Now
that it has been continued for months
justice demands that the accused be
admitted to bail.
Has the prosecution fallen down on
some of its purchased testimony? Is
it afraid that some of its purchased
witnesses will go on the stand and tell
the truth?
The outrage perpetrated upon Moyer
and Hayward by their abduction and
persecution demands the attention of
every lover of justice and fair play in
Americaj
QUOTING SCRIPTURE.
History abounds with instances in
which tyrants sought to justify their
position by quoting scripture. Even
the devil quoted scripture to fortify
his position and to strengthen his ar
gument. It is not surprising, there
fore, that his disciples have sometimes
followed his example.
Men have recognized the value of
having the Bible back of them in a
particular controversy. It was com
forting to feel that they could quote so
strong an authority, although it re
quired a considerable stretch of the
imagination to make them believe that
the scripture quoted applied to their
case.
It is a great thing to have the Bible
endorse one's position, but most men
proceed in this matter, first, with a
wrong motive, and, second, in a wrong
manner. They frequently seek to se
cure God's approval of their own
selfishness and general meaness, and
then they will accept only so much of
His testimony as seems to harmonize
with their own ideas and purposes.
Their opponents may be guilty of the
same faults, with the result that the
Bible is made out to be a book full of
contradictory statements, and neither
side will accept the other's arguments,
even though both seem to quote from
the same authority.
The Bible is an inspired account of
what God has said, of what the devil
said, of what men, good and bad, have
said and done.
The fact that a certain statement is
found in the Bible does not necessarily
make it true. It all depends upon who
made that particular statement, and
its value depends, also, upon the cir
cumstances under which it was spok
en. Much that is found in scripture is
intended only for certain people. This
does not refer to moral standards, but
to other obligations and - to special
promises.
It should be recognized that the
Bible is not a book of mere statements.
It is an historical account of certain
developments in the life of particular
persons and nations. These facts have
an accumulative value. It also pre
sents commands and promises which
were given by inspired men of old. It
should be remembered, however, that
the moral and ethical standards of
Abraham's time, for instance, would
not, 'in some respects, satisfy God's
demands of the twentieth century,
with its greater advantages and op
portunities. One can readily see that it is not
always an easy matter to quote scrip
ture in order to "prove" that one is
right. It is true that thecase may be
so clear in its demands that there will
not be the slightest difficulty in getting
an undoubted statement from scripture
concerning it. Fortunately God has
made the way so plain that any man
may know what is his duty towards
God and towards his fellow-man. But
frequently it will require the most sin
cere and the most reverent searching
after the truth to know the mind of
Christ. This is not given to the flip
pant disputant, who has only his own
ends to serve. Rev. Charles Stelzle.
THE RESPONSIBILITY OF CHURCH
AND LABOR.
Three thousand workingmen attend
ed the mass meeting recently held in
the Auditorium in Des Moines, under
the auspices of the Presbyterian De
partment of Church and Labor.
Among the speakers was the Rev.
J. Gray Bolton, fraternal delegate to
the Philadelphia Central Labor Union
"I bring to you the greeting of
ninety thousand men in the labor or
ganizations of Philadelphia," he de
clared. "I have reviewed the great
procession of labor in that city on
Labor Day and feel justly proud, for
I did not see a rowdy or a drunken
man in that procession as it passed
by; and, as I look over this great
audience of men I cannot tell who are
preachers and who are workingmen
you look so much alike and we think
ourselves a fairly good looking and
orderly set of men.
"Organization has brought you to a
point where you stand as a power with
organized capital and with the organ
ized professions. Your day of respon
sibility has come. The use you make
of your power settles the length of
your days. I have a word from organ
ized Christianity to tell what the
church may do for organized labor.
The church can have her fraternal
delegates sit in labor councils, and
learn her life and purposes. Organ
ized labor may have her fraternal dele-.
gates sit in church councils. Educa
tion and co-operation are the demand
of the day. . The time has come when
tnere win oe neither barbarian nor
Scythian, bond nor free, but we shall
all be one in Christ Jesus. Now, this
friendliness must be confirmed by
practical tests. The local church may
prove how it can be done. It is not
enough to tell the message of a beau
tiful home far, far away, while chil
dren are overworked and underfed in
the homes of the poor. We want and
we expect to have Heaven begin on
earth, and without the comforts of
home and home life that is practically
impossible."
Now a. word as to how organized
labor may help the church of Christ.'
A very large percentage of working
men believe in, support and attend
church. There is not a city in the
United States that could support ten
churches which exclude the personal
presence and support of workingmen.
If the world is to be saved it must be
saved by the moral force that lies in
the honest workingmen of this coun
try, and they must unite to dethrone
wrong wherever it is, and to enthrone
right, and put the corrupt and the cor
rupting out of business. They must
teach men everywhere to honor law
and to build up a kingdom of right
eousness here upon earth. This, if it
is to be done, must be done by edu
cation, co-operation and love of Christ
in all our hearts." Rev. Charles
Stelzle.
Union made shoes are sold by" Rog
ers & Perkins.
New Jersey factory laws are being
rigidly enforced.
Men of Milwaukee building trades
will have no open shop.
In Milan there are 38,000 families
living in one room each.
Born To Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mays,
Tuesday, June 5, a son.
Central Labor Union meets next
Tuesday eevning Be there.
Woman's Label League social at C.
L. U. hall Monday evening.
St. Paul carpenters are making it
lively for unfair contractors.
Sign a Union Buyers' League pledge
and get into the union game.
The local Bartenders have decided
to meet but once a month during the
warm weather.
Miss Maeeie Fereua of Falls Citv.
Neb., is the guest of her cousin, Mrs.
W. C. Norton.
Mrs. Thomas Burk left last week for
a protracted visit with relatives and
friends in Canada.
The coppersmiths have joined the
Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers'
National Alliance.
"Blue Ribbon" cigars are union
made, Lincoln made and well made.
sold by- an dealers.
The Structural Building Trades Al
liance is now holding its annual con
vention in St. Louis. "
Don't forget the social given by the
Woman's Label League at C. L. U.
hall next Monday evening.
Street railway employes at Omaha
have adjusted their differences with
the street railway company.
Members of the. Trades Council of
Cleveland are delivering lectures in
the evenings in the public schools.
Union blacksmiths of St Paul each
contributed one-half day's pay to the
Rtrikiner nrintera of that (itv.
The average monthly income in
Japan, after recent advances in wages
is officially stated at less than $.
The United States government is
about to take a hand in the investiga
tion of the lumber tyist in MisissippL
The eight-hour law of Michigan has
been declared valid in a recent deci
sion by the supreme court of that
state. ,
A fine of $5 will be levied on any
member of the Worcester, Mass., cigar
makers who is caught smoking a cig
arette. ,
The Carpenters of Racine, .Wis.,
have a little trouble on hand, Jmt-the
indications- are that, it will be amicably
adjusted. ' -r
The Citizens' Street Railway Co.'s
building operations give work to a lot
of people, and there Is work for more
men if they will only show up. . ' '
RoyKennedy has returned from an
observation tour through the north
eastern part of the state. He saw-
some that he is thinking of buying.
The Burlington's big improvements
will bring a big army of labor to Lin
coln. The advance guard is already
here and the work is well under way;
If you know any news that will inter
est union men and women, either write
it out and send to The Wageworker,
or telephone it to the editor. Bell 835
or Autophone 2277. 4
"Ye editor" went fishing last Satur
day. He wet a line in Big Lake, Ho,
and caught a fine strlnsr of hass. tn bit .
nothing of a 5-pound channel cat and
toothed herring too numerous to mention.
Having sold the Eleventh Street
lunch counter, I opened a table res
taurant on South Twelfth ' street. I ;
have now remove I the tables and pot
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 at
Your Stomach
Just Forget It
Durand'8 Dyspepsia Tablets
make yon forget yon have a
stomach.
They relieve and overworked
and rebelling stomach of all ag
gravating stomach ailments.
They take the worn off, and
help it to regain its lost strength.
Convenient and uleasant to take.
50c Boxos Cat to -43c
RECTOR'S
PHARMACY
12th & 0.
,tlIHlllTTTllllJ