The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-????, December 07, 1906, Image 8

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    GENERAL MENTION.
Interesting Items Mostly Swiped from
Bright Labor Papers,
Temand the label.
The union label that's aU.
jook for tho union label.
.If It Is not labeled, refuse It.
. Union made shoes are sold, by Rog
ers & Perkins. . 1
Teamsters of Sacramento have won
a small strike.
Electrical workers have organized
al Clinton, Iowa.
California State Federation of Isa
bel will meet January 7.
Prens feeders and assistants have
otganfaed at Sacramento.
Paturnon, N. J., silk workers are
on strike against a reduction in wages.
Shoe cutters won a strike t in St.
Jxuis, after which the strikers organ
ized. San Kruucisco unionists demand
that tho building trades recognize the
steam fitters.
Fifteen Cleveland, O., (inns were
arrested for violation of the child la
bor law. i
Watoibury, Conn., carpenters won
their; fight with the employers for a
closed shop.
lloston. Mass., commercial teleg
raphers report a 50 per cent Increase
inimemberbhip.
"Blue . Ribbon" cigars are union
made, Lincoln made and well made
Sold by all dealers.
Iron workers of Lancaster, Pa., after
a strike lasting five months, went back
on their own terms. ,
Portland, Ore., longshoremen have
struck In sympathy with the gram
handlers at that place.
Raeino, Wis., plow works employes
600 in number, are on strike against
a 25 per. cent reduction in wages.
One thousand coopers struck at Chi
cago, 111., on November 8, for an in
crease in their pay of 3 cents a barrel.
Detroit, Mich., Ice wagon drivers,
after submitting their differences to ar
bitration, gained the concessions
sought.
Plasterers and bricklayers have ar
rived at an understanding over the
jurisdiction trouble that was on be
tween them, '
San Diego carpenters have adwpteii
a new scale, which calls for 50 cents
an hour, eight hours' a day five days
in the week and four hours on Satur
day. ' .
Within one week the blacksmiths
of Sacramento obligated 150 members.
All the men employed at this trade on
the southern Pacific are now organ
ized. !
The St. Paul, Minn.; Harve, Mont
and P-poi.nne. Wash., telegraphers
on the Croat Northern have been
g i an ted an increase of Ja.00 per
month.
Four members of the United Gar
ment Workers of America must serve
sentences of four months each in the
county Jail, according to a decision of
the Branch Appellate Cotirt rendered,
Complaint is made by the building
trades of San Francisco that the town
la being flooded with workmen, and
that It will be a problem of housing
them, to say nofhing of finding em
ploy men t.
The Penn Tlr!dge company a:id the
Charles McCaul company were fined,
, In police court at Washington, D. C,
October 17 for violating the eight-hour
law In construction work for the gov
, eminent.
The United Railroads of San Fran
cluco, ln Its statement to the board of
arbitration, has rejected all demands
for increased wages and shorter hours
made by the employes in its various
departments.
The next Pennsylvania legislature
ill be requested to so amend the
chd . labor, law .as to permit any of
ficer of the law empowered to admin
ister ouths to issue certificates. The
present act compels all children who
desire employment to get a certificate
from a teacher or a school superin
tendent.
Representatives of 200,000 organized
i workmen In the niteal industry of the
country met in congress in Chicago
recently to discuss the question of
setting a date for the inauguration of
the eight-hour day. The convention
was held under the auspices of the
Metal Trades' Federation of North
America, and represented machinists,
Patent Medicines
And Drugs
Still Lower
Don t let a druggist hold yon up on
- patent medicines and your winter drug
Hnppliea.
There is a- tremendous discount on
everything in oiir store. SPECIAL
SALKS every day, together with the
regular Clearance Sale. Call, write or
phone for our price sheut.
Delivering is our specialty.
RECTOR'S, 12th & 0
iron molders, blacksmiths, boilermak-
ers,- electrical workers, pattern mak
ers, metal polishers, engineers and
firemen.
The United Mine Workers have
elected fifteen members of the next
Pennsylvania legislature.
About 400 manufacturers are now
using the union stamp of the Boot and
Shoe Workers' Union.
Molders report progress with their
fight at Springfield, Mo., and the
plants at a standstill.
Denver cigarmakers have asked for
in increase cf $1 a thousand, and will
start a co-operative factory if it is not
granted.
Printers employed on Springfield,
Mo., newspapers have secured an ad
vance 1 n wages o f from $1.50 to
$2.50 per week. ' , '
Harnessmakers in New York City
are seeking a method to eliminate har
uessmaking in prisons, reformatories
and such institutions.
All the ''common" laborers employ
ed by the United States Steel corpor
ation will receive an advance of 10
cents a day on New Year's day.
Five hundred employes of the Penn
sylvania railroad employed in the re
pair shops at Altoona, Pa., have been
laid off on account of a scarcity of
work.
The United Brotherhood of Carpen
ters and Joiners last month issued
charters to twenty-three new subord
inate unions, two of them in Porto
Rico.
The National India Rubber Co., of
Bristol, R. I., has increased the wages
of its employes. The half a cent on
a pair which it granted was brought
forth by a strike of 400 employes.
All but one of the building contrac
tors of Mobile, Ala., have put their
establishments on the "open-shop"
basis. As a result, about 1,500 men in
the building trades have struck.
The Pennsylvania railroad has or
dered an advance of 10 per cent in
the wages of all employes receiving
less than $200 a month. Th increase
goes into effect December 1. It affects
about 123,000 men. '
Union men! please your wife and
your pocketbook by purchasing a Riv
eiside Uise Burner. There is abso
lutely no stove on the market that
will furnish as much heat for the
amount of coal consumed as will the
Riverside. Sold exclusively by Hoppe
ar. 10S North Tenth street.
The miners locked out at the Heb-
burn colliery in New South Wales
have decided to appeal to ail indus
trial unions in the commonwealth for
financial support.
Emigration companies of Japan are
prepared to send 20,000 laborers to the
Hawaiian Islands by next June. Six
thousand young men are in Yokohorn
ready to embark. I
The clerical force of the Mare Is
tend navy yard sent a signed petition
to secretary lionapart recently re
questing an increase of 25 per cent in
salaries.
.Las vegas, N. M., sheen aud cow
herders have organized a union. The
scale of pay is $40 per month and
board. Sheep herders have secured
eight-hour shifts and two out of three
Sundays off.
Vallejo, Cal., was treated last week
to the spectacle of three carloads of
strikebreakers deserting their employ
ers. The men claim they, were lured
under false representations.
Krutaleff, who was president of the
executive committee of . the Russian
Workmen's Council, and fourteen
leaders of the council have been sen
tenced to exile in Siberia and the loss
of all civil rights. '
Tbe Southern Pacific Railroad com
pany has announced a raise of 2
cents an hour to its employes in the
Sacramento, Cal., . blacksmith shops.
The men had threatened to go on
strike.
At a meeting of the firemen of the
Erie railroad at Cleveland, Ohi, on
November 14, it was unanimously
voted to strike, to enforce their de
mands for increase of pay and shoi tei'
hours.
At a conference between the repre
sentatives of the Switchmen's Union
aud the Chicago railroad managers,
the men agreed to accept the advance
of 3 cents an hour offered by the roads
and to submit the question of a
further 3 cent to arbitration.
The coroner's jury at Ottawa, On
tario, which has been investigating the
death of strikers killed in the recent
riots al Maclaren's mills, has announc
ed a verdict. Ciiminal prosecution of
Albert and Alexander Maclaren, the
millionaire lumbermen, is recommend
ed.
The Standard Oil company has an
nounced a voluntary increase of wages
to employes in the Galena Signal Oil
and Eclipse refinery, located at Frank
lin, Pa. The percentage of increase
is not stated. About 800 men will be
benefitted.
A machine that will hurl coal into
the firebox of a locomotive at the rate
ot 220 shovelfuls a minute, if neces
sary, will dispense with the labor of
firemen on many of the engines on
the Chicago and Northwestern road.
HartSchafTncr
V Marx
Hand Tailored
RELIABLE
i
Reliable as to the Clothing we sell, means thoroughly
satisfying style, as well as thoroughly, good fabric and tailor
ing. The three are interdependent. Good cloth fails to make
good clothes if not skillfully and carefully handled from begin
ning to end Our Clothing must be correctly cut and tailored
so as to insure lasting shapeliness. The steady growth of
this store proves the satisfactory quality of the Clothing.
Best for the money is our rule, from the sturdy Business Suit
or Overcoat to the finest that can be made.
PRACTICAL
That is the word that most thoroughly characterizes this
store. The v Armstrong store is a practical store, free of all
pretense or sham, employing no methods that smack of the "make belief." The
public is its friend, sharing its confidence, and profiting by its unusual facilities for
disposing of quantities of merchandise. ( -.
Style and Fit
' Whose Clothes are best?" ; Where can I get most satisfaction? When can
I do the best with the money I have to spend?"
These are the questions of high importance when considering a Winter
Suit or Overcoat. ' . . -
In planning for this winter we made up our minds that not a man who came
to us with a fixed idea about a Suit or Overcoat that he wanted, would fail to find
in size, style or fabric, exactly what he had a "hankering" for. ' , 1
This meant immense variety we have it. 1 1
It meant endless styles of fabrics we have them.
'Suits
From $10 to $30
O'coats
From $10 to $40
AIIS1
Hm CLOTHING Ci
GOOD CLOTHES MERCHANTS
LABOR'S NATIONAL PLATFORM.
What
the American Federation f
, Labor Stands For. -
1. The abolition of all forms of in
voluntary servitude except as a ' pun
ishment for crime. j ,
. Free schools, free text books and
compulsory education. . :
!. Unrelentng protest against the
issuance and abuse of injunction pro
cess in labor disputes.
4. A work day of not more than
eight hours in the twenty-four thour
day.
5. A strict recognition of not over-
eight hours a day on all federal, state
or municipal work and at not less than
the prevailing per diem wage rate of
the class of employment in the, vici
nity where the work is performed.
6. Release from employment; one
daj in seven.
7. The abolition of the contract sys
tem on public work.
8. The municipal ownership of pub
lic utilities.
9. The abolition of the sweat , shop
system.
10. Sanitary inspection of factory,
workshop, mine and home.
11. Liability of employers for in
jury to body or loss of life. ' .
12. The nationalization of telegraph
and telephone.
13. The passage of anti-child labor
laws in states where they do not exist
and rigid defense of them where they
have been enacted Into law. 1
14. Woman suffrage co-equal :with
man suffrage, the initiatve and refer
endum ; and the imperative mandate
and right of recall.
15. Suitable and plentiful play
grounds for children in all cities.
16. Continued agitation for the pub
lic bath system in all cities.
17. Qualifications in permits to build
of all cities and towns, that there shall
be bathroom and bathroom attach
ments in all houses or compartments,
used for habitation.
18. We favor a system of finance
whereby money shall be issued ex
clusively by the government, with
such regulations and restrictions . as
will protect it from manipulation by
the banking interests for . their own
private gain. '
wa cast for governor two years, ago
and ' this was an off year. The total
vote was a great surprise to all the
politicians, as it was not expected that
the total would be over 250,000. Hoch's
plurality is 2,123. He received 152,147
votes and Harris received 150,024. j
UNION CONTRACTORS.
AMUSEMEMTS AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS
The .Total Vote in Kansas. .
The Kansas state canvessing board
has tabulated the vote for all state
officers. Thek total vote cast, for gov
iernor was 315,379, only 6,928 less than
If You Want Building Done, Here Is a
List to Patronize.
The following employers and con
tractors have been declared fair by
Carpenters' Union, Local 1055, and we
request ' all parties contemplating
building or repairs ' of any kind per- J
taining to our trade to please take
notice and consider the following rep
utable contractors and builders before
letting your-work:
S. W. Baker, 22S7 R street.
H. E. Chappell, 1624 O street.
L. Drybbra, Lindell Hotel.
S. R. Copeland, 110 North Twenty
seventh street.
H. Dobbs, 329 South Twenty-seventh
street.
T. P. Harrison, Brwnell block,
room 13.
W. B. Hester, 820 North Twenty
seventh street.
Howe & Atterbury, 2025 Vine street.
Hammond & Burford, S136 Dudley
street.
Alex Hutton, 1436 N street. ,
Jewell & Marsh, 2331 South Tenth
street.
A. Kiewit, 1620 N street.
A. L. Myers. 223 North Twenty
eighth street.
Mitchner. ' .
Chas. Mellor, 2149 South Fifteenth
street. '
F. G. Odell, 1335 North Twenty
fourth street. -
J. W. Russell, 1527 North Twenty
fourth street.
C. W. Ryman, 1112 Pine street.
D. A. Rush, Normal. , ' .
T. K. Townsend, 1328 South Fif
teenth street. '
Turner Bros., 1401 Rose street.
O. W. Vanderveer, 154 'South Eigh
teenth street. ' .
S. A. Webb, 2743 W street.
Lincoln Sash and Door company for
mill work.
This bulletin is Issued by authority
of Carpenters' Union, and is subject
to revision at their order. Firms and
contractors can have names and place
of business inserted by applying to
Carpenters' business agent, at 130
South Eleventh street, or by phone.
Auto 3824, Bell L-1154. -
"THE THEATRE
BEAUTIFUL"
THE NEW LYRIC
HI6H- CLASS
VAUOYLE
PROGRAM CHANGED WEEKLY
THE . PEST ATTRACTIONS ODTAIMACLE
MATINEE AT 3:00 EVENING AT 7:30 AND O'CLOCK ADMISSION 10 AND IS CTS
15 th
and
OSts.
HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE
THE BDJJU
PROGRAM WEEK OF NOVEMBER- 26th
2V
15
a;
OSts.
- Five Metropolitan Favorites,
WELCH, FRANCIS & CO.,
One of the Vaudeville Hits.
' ' The Latest Vaudeville. Novelty, .
LAURA HOWE and HER DRESDEN DOLLS.
MR. WILL H. SMYTHE,
J Illustrated Vocalist. , , - i '
, A European Feature, 1 ' J ;
WAHLUND, TEKLA & WAHLUND,
Novelty Acrobats. . 1
MR. CHAS, H. DUNCAN,
Character Vocal Comedian. 1 .
THE GREAT WHITE TERROR
, . On the Biograph.
3-Shows-3
Daily
3:00. 7:4.5,
9:00 P. M.
MATINEE, ALL SEATS 10c
ADMISSION 10 CENTS
Evenings, Reserved Seats 5 Cents Extra
Grand Prize
Matinee
Every Tues. .
and Thura.
Best Values for 4
The Best Money
Cash or easy terms are found at the
Star Turniture Z
Zh Waqt'Garmr's Turniture Supply Bouse ; '
08 Sautb eitvtntb Strttt. Elmcoln, Btbrask