8 OOCOOCXDOOOCOOCOO UNION LABELS AND CARDS There are now 56 labels and 10 cards issued by the fol lowing organizations, which have been indorsed by the Amer ican Federation of Labor : Organizations Using Labels. A COSTLY REVENGE American Federation of La bor. Bakers and Confectioners. Boilermakers. Blacksmiths. Boot and Shoe Workers. Brewery Workers. Brickmakers. Broommakers. Brushmakers. Carriage and Wagon Work ers. Carvers, Wood. Cigarmakers. Cloth Hat and Cap Makers. Coopers. Engravers, Watch Case. Flour and Cereal Mill Em ployes. Fur Workers. Garment Workers, United. Garment Workers, Lady. Glass Bottle Blowers. Glass Workers. Glove. Workers.. Gold Beaters. Hatters. Horseshoers. , Jewelry Workers. Lathers. Leather Workers on Horse Goods. Machine Printers and Color Mixers. Machinists. Metal Polishers. Molders. O Painters. Paper Box Makers. Paper Makers. Piano and Organ Workers. Plate Printers. Powder Workers. Pressmen, Printing. Print Cutters. Rubber Workers. Sawsmiths. Shirt, Waist and Laundry Workers. . Stove Mounters. Tailors. Textile Workers. Tip Printers. Tobacco Workers. Travelers' Goods and Leath er Novelty Workers. Typographical. Upholsterers. Weavers, Goring. Weavers, Wire. Wood Workers. Leather Workers. ORGANIZATIONS USING CARDS. Actors. Barbers. Clerks. Engineers, Steam. Firemen, Stationary. Hotel and Restaurant Employes. Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen. Musicians. Musicians. Stage Employes, Theatrical. Teamsters. The following crafts and callings are using the American Federation of Labor label: Artificial Limb Makers, Cos turners, Badge and Lodge Paraphernalia Workers, Bottlers (Soda, Mineral Water and Liquor), Coffee, Spice and Baking Powder Workers, Cloth Spongers and Refinishers, Carbonic Gas Workers, Cigar Makers' Tools, Nail (Horse Shoe) Work ers, Neckwear Cutters and Makers, Oyster Workers, Paint Workers, Photographic Supply Workers, Soap Workers, So da and Mineral Water Workers, Starch Workers, Suspender Makers, Steel Case Makers. OOCKXXXXXXXJOCXOOOCOC eOMM0M'KMeM044tf00 ColumbiaNational Bank Gtnaral Banking Business. Interest on time deposits LINCOL.N NEBRASKA OMH0000000000 The Dr. Benj. F. Baily Sanatorium Lincoln, Nebraska For non-contagious chronic diseases. Largest, best equipped, most beautifully furnished. HITTTTTTIIITITItTIIITIin 14 M PREWITT'Sf PHOTO GALLERY I 1214 O STREET I When you want a g oo D photograph call and see my work. Satisfaction guaranteed .... We are expert cleaners, dyers and finishers ot Ladies' and uon tlemen's Clothing of all kinds. The finest dresses . specialty. THIS NEW FIRM M M ' J. L. WUUU & tU. U Ada fun XXlJ.l.CI10 i. . M "PHONES: Bell, 147. Auto, 1292. 1320 N St. - - Lincoln, Neb. CUKE OF SUTHERLAND UN LOADS KICH ESTATE. Compels County Council of Stafford shire, Eng., to Cleanse River Trent, Which They Had Re fused to Do for Him. COCXXXDCXXJOOOOCXXXXXXXXXXXX) CXXOOCXXXXXXXXOCOCXDOOCXDCXDO Your Cigars Should Bear This Label.. Isiuod by Auilioiiloi the Cigar Makers' International Union of America. union-made Clears. V(vC?Tr2p All Wii.fltn.wi pw this 10.1 mU b pvMsM KMrdma 10 Mw. r m ui j I ewitwetf inthi box km Mtn nu by MIS-UCS WWIMU iMEMUHOMl UNION AjerfKA. Of UUMiM MvOlM TOWaO- wncraiMl of the MORAL MATERIA! jnd iNlUlfnuALrtlifARi. Of TKC CHATT, TkcrrlofC art rMOMMM vmtm l9r$ to ill smoMn UMMfXMt tM mono It is insurance against sweat shop and tenement goods, and against disease. . . . OOOOCOOOCOOOCXDCOC It takes a wealthy man to get sweet revenge and at the same time heap coais of fire upon the heads of those who have disappointed him, if they have not absolutely abused him. The duke of Sutherland has turned the ta bles upon the county council of Staf fordshire by donating his princely es tate on the River Trent to the county for use as an institution for higher education. ' Some months ago, it may be remem bered, the duke publicly announced that owing to the polluted condition of the River T'ent, which flows past Trentham hah, ;s magnificent Staf fordshire seat, phyJ'ins had pro nounced it an unsafe and insanitary TRENTHAM HALL,. Palace Which Duke of Sutherland Has Given for Educational Purposes.) abode for himself and his family and. therefore, he had decided to close it up. The condition of the river is due to the use made of it by the potteries which are centered at Stoke-on-Trent. The duke had appealed in vain to the Staffordshire county council to adopt measures that would abate the nui sance. That democratic body would do noth ing. It did not propose to interfere with an industry which provided many poor people with a living just to make things more comfortable for a duke and his family. If he could not put up with the stench and run the risk of typhoid, as humble folk had to, why he could go and live somewhere else. So the duk turned out, the county council tri umphed and the Trent continued td flow its polluted course. But the duke had a card up his sleeve and he has just played it. He has presented Trentham hall to thj county council for the purpose of es tablishing there a college for higher education. The gift is a princely one. It cost $750,000 to build it many years a0 and at present prices it. would cost consid erable over $1,000,000 to duplicate it, Standing in the midst of a spaciou park, and surrounded by beautiful par dens and conservatories it is one o; the finest show places in the kingdom. Of course the county council cannot reject such i magnificent donation. l it did it would cause no end of a nowl. Metaphorically speaking, it will navrj to go on its knees and humbly thanij the duke for it. And after doing that it will have to take proper steps to se cure the purification of the Trent be fore the college can be set a-going, lor obviously, in these days at least, the most humble of students could not b? expected to pursue their studies in a place that had been pronounced unsafe for a duke to live in.-. And that u where the duke's triumph will come in. It is uncharitable to estimate the value of a gift by what it costs the giver to part with it. But it is a 1'r.ci that the duke makes no great sacrifice in parting with Trentham hall. He has several other residences, three oi which, at least Stafford house in Lon don, Dunrobin castle in Scotland anii Lilleshall in Shropshire kings might count themselves fortunate in owning! The duke has more land than any other of the king's subjects. His es- tates exceed in area that of any county in England, except Yorkshire, Lincoln shire and Devonshire. He owns aboui one-sixteenth of Scotland 1,176,345 acres to be as exact as Doomsday booh permits besides 30.000 or 40,000 acres in Staffordshire and Shropshire. From Dunrobin castle, his seat ic Sutherland, he can walk 50 miles in a straight line without stepping off hi-i own property. But he generally pre fers using hi3 own private railways and enjoys acting as his own engine driver. OUR INDIAN VISITOR MAHARAJA GAIKWAS, RULES OF SARODA, DOING AMERICA. Interesting Prince Whose Record for Goodness Began When He Was a Boy His Life at Home and His Priceless Jeweled Cloak. Daily STheatr Dr A. HIGH-CLASS, popular-priced amusement resort. Four rehned shows daily. Mati nee 3 p. m; Night, 7:15, 8:15 and 9:15 p. m. Twelfth and O Streets, Lincoln, Nebraska Entire Change of Program Every Week , Maharaja Gaikwr, Indian prince and ruler of Baroda, together with .his pretty wife, the Maharani Gaekwar, has come to the United States to see the country and learn all he can for the betterment of hi3 own country and people. This purpose reveals the char acter of the nan, for he is as progres sive as he is good and as good as they make them over in India, and by this we do not mean to imply that Mahar aja's goodness is of a mediocre kind. As a boy he was known for his up rightness of character, and this qual ity has not diminished with the years In fact, as the story goes, it was hit goodness as a boy which led to his se selection as the ruler of Baroda. It seems that the former Gaikwar was deposed by the British government for gross misrule, and as there happened to be no direct heir to the throne, ac cording to the Hindu custom, the selec tion of a ruler devolyed upon the Maharani, the wife of the deposed ruler, who has been obliged to flee from her husband to escape death at the bottom of a well. After consulta tion with her guru, or godfather, she decided that the new Gaikwar sbould be chosen from among the three best boys in -Baroda. From those three most excellent boys the present visitor to the United States was accepted as the one of greatest promise to wield the sword of state wisely. That this contest of good boys proved a judicious procedure few among the Maharaja's 2,000,001) sub jects would now question. Under his rule the state has progressed titeadily, and the city of Baroda has been so modernized with handsome public buildings, wide streets, and pleasure gardens that it has ceased to be the typical Hindu capital of the picturesque though malodorous description. Per sonally Maharaja Gaikwar is a man of much force of character. Maharaja Gaikwar rises early and proceeds first to distribute alms to his personal Brahmins, or, as we would say, private chaplains. The amount of the daily gift is about S15, for which the Brahmins offer a short prayer in his behalf and presence. On such festivals as the day of of?rings for the dead and the day of birth day thanksgiving he attends public worship in the palace temple. During the setson of mourning all such cere monies are omitted. After his pooja, or devotions, the Maharaja partakes of light breakfast of bread, fruit, and milk. Then he fides or drives for 'At 11 he lunches with his sons and the members of his staff. This meal MAHARAJA GAIKWAR. an hour or so, and. returns to the pal ace for reading of a serious character, is served in European fashion, 'though no alcoholic liquors are offered, and needless to say no dish comes upon the table which bears the slightest re lationship to beef. From noon until about four Gaikwai attends to affairs of state. The heads of the different departments make! their reports, he revises sentences of the high court, and discusses the gen eral policy of his government. The Maharaja then visits the Maharani in the zenana, which in his particular household is not an inclosed quarter of the palace, but merely the apart ments occupied by his wife. Toward! j sundown the Maharaja drives out in stale, escortea oy nis Doayguara o lancers. Maharaja Gaikwar possesses th most costly piece of jewelry in the world. In dazzling magnificence it never has been, or is ever likely to be, excelled. This treasure is in the form of a shawl or cloak of woven pearls, edged with a deep border of arabesque designs of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, and sapphires. Originally it. was in tended as a covering for the tomb of Mahomet, but somehow it was divert ed into a former Gaikwar's posses sion. In cold figures the stones alone have been appraised at $5,000,000. WORLD'S HIGHEST BRIDGE. Colorado will possess within a few months the highest bridge in the world over the deepest chasm in the Rc?ky mountains. The bridge is toeing con structed over the far-famed Royal gorga of the Araknsas river, at a point where the abysmal rent in the earth's cni3t is but 50 feet wide ac the bot tom and 230 feet wide at the top. The walls rise almost perpendicularly for a distance of 2,600 feet, and are gran ite, decomposed and iron-stained un til colorings blend int8 innumerablo pleasing effects upon the senses. Necessarily. "She's excessively stout and so home ly." "But there's no deceit about her, When she speaks she's the acme ol frankness and candor." "Naturally. When she speaks she's bound to come out plump and plain." Philadelphia Press. The Great Parks as of Colorado constitute one of her chief glories. They contain fields, forests, and plains; they are watered by creeks and rivers, and contain villages and farm houses; they have springs and lakes where hotels and other places of entertainment are found for those seeking health and recreation. -1 -t ; The popular route t " "; COLORADO is via t i Union Pacific Past trains. low rates. Be- sure your tickets read over this line. Inquire of E. B. SLOSSON, Gen. Agent. A Few Reasons Why Solid vestibuled trains of elegant equip- ' ment, owns and operates its own sleeping 1 and dining cars. Longer, higher and ' wider berths in sleeper cars. Lighted with electricity. Heated with steam. Protect- ' ed by a thorough system of block signals. Union depots at Omaha and Chicago. These are only a few reasons why yon should travel via the . Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway 3 fast trains to Chicago every day leave Union Station Omaha, at 7:55 a. m., ' 5:45 p. m. and 8;35 p. m. F. A. NASH, G. W. A., 1524 Farram, OMAHA Take a Trip to Union College on the Open Cars Sunday-Delight-fui, Refreshing, Invigorating UNION MADE SHOES I carry nothing but union made shoes, and have a. full line of them. I manufacture shoes and shoe uppers. A share of union patronage is respectfully solic-, ited. S: L. McCOY 1529 OStreet Best Values for The Best Monev Cash or easy terms are found at the Star Turniture Zb Waqt'Earmr's Turniture Supply douse 208 South Ehvtnfl) Street. 1 Liucoln, Hebraska