GENERAL MENTION. Interesting Items Mostly Swiped from Bright Labor Papers. Demand the label. The union label that's alt. Look for the union label. If It is not labeled, refuse It. Union made shoes are sold by Rog ers & Perkins. ' Mrs.' Charley Barngrover Is visiting with relatives in Humboldt, Neb. ', Canton, O.,' car repairers are on strike for an increase of two cents an hour. 1 Fifteen Cleveland, O., firms were arrested for violation of the child la bor law. San Francisco unionists demand that the building trades recognize the steamfitters. Boston, Mass., commercial teleg raphers report a 50 per cent increase In membership. "Blue i 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. grain handlers at that place. Racine, Wis.-, plow works employes, COO 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. The little son of Mr. and Mrs. At Walker' was quite ill last week, but If once more able to indulge in his usual play. Detroit, Mich., ice wagon, drivers, after- submitting their differences to arbitration,- gained the concessions sought. W. T. Burkhalter returned to his liome in Needles, Cal.,' last Saturday after a visit with his cousin, Louis Maupln. It does not cost you any more to have a union made telephone in your home than to have the other. Use the Automatic. Marie, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mickel, has been suffering from a severe attack of rheumatism for sev eral weeks. Denver clgarmakers have asked for an - Increase of $1 a thousand, and will start a co-operative factory if it In not granted. T. W. Evana wants all of his friends to "stop him on the street and asV him what time it is by his handsome new gold watch. Pullman palace car porters have de cided to ask for a uniform rate of $40 a month and will no longer rely upon tips from passengers. Mrs. J. E. Mickel and children re turned to their home in Harvard last Sunday, after a week's visit with rel atives and friends in Lincoln. San Deigo carpenters have adopted 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. Indianapolis Plasterers Union ere working eight hours per day and four and one-half hours on Saturday. The present scale is 55 cents per hou Men scarce, ' Pittsl'Urg material will be r-iaJ. In the construction and equipment of a ivc-w iron and bieel plant to be oui't at Welland, Out., by the Ontario Iron ii-Steel Co. ' Do your Christmas shopping right away, and be sure that you do it with the enterprising merchants who invite your patronage through the columns of The Wageworker. The Cleveland Directory Co. ha reached an agreement with the Typo jrraphlcal Tlnlpri which provido thnt .the-city directory for 1907 will be printed in a i nion shop. The Phelps Confectionery company of Buffalo, of course an "open" shop was convicted Monday because of the working of five 13-year-old childrsn titer 7 o'clock at nleht. The Journeymen Plasterers' Union, one of the "dual" unions organized in New York city by the building trades employers after the lockout of 1904, has Joined Plasterers' Union No. 35. C. M. Crott, who had charge of the cream car on Burlington train No. 39 last Monday, suffered a severe acci aent. A DroKen Drake beam caused Patent Medicines And Drugs Still Lower . Don't let a druggist hold yon up on patent medicines and your winter drug applies. There is a tremendous discount on everything in our store. 'SPECIAL SALES every day, together with the regular Clearance Sale. Call, write or phone for onr price sheet.. Delivering is our specialty. RECTOR'S, 12th & 0 him to swerve and he was thrown vio lently to the floor, sustaining a .frac ture of a leg. The man who uses the Automatic gets .a rich man's phone at a poor man's price. Use the Automatic. Members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters have been conceded 35 cents an hour for all over time after 6 p. m. by the American Sugar Refining company in Jersey City. , Step into the Lincoln Telephone company's booth at the Labor Fair and call up your friends free over a union made telephone. Use the Auto matic. The recent Sydney, Australia, eight- hour demonstration was a decided suc cess. Thirty-five thousand people at tended the sports during the day, while 10,000 were present at the bi cycle events which were run off at night. Jay Worley returned from Weeping Water last Saturday, where he was called by the illness of his sister. The sister died shortly after Mr. Worley eached there. He will have the sym pathy of a host of friends ' in his bereavement. The display of union banners at the fair attracted a great deal of attention. That of the Leatherworkers was con ceded to be the handsomest and most nique. The Typographical Union's was the oldest, and in its day probably cost more than any other. 1 The Chicago Consumers' League has requested an opinion from the cor Iicration counsel-on the feasibility of having a city ordinance which will abolish the practice among clothing merchants of sending garments to the homes of the poor to be finished. Sheet metal workers in Cleveland are hustlers. They have signed up the McFarlan Co. of Chicago, who have the contract for the new postofflce, and the Cleveland Faucet Co., which em- t ploys thirty men. At the last meet ing . 150 new applications were re ceived. Union men! please your wife and your pocketbook by purchasing a Riv et side Base 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 ac 108 North Tenth street. In the election held in East Ham ilton, Ont., on Tuesday, Allan Strud- holme, labor candidate, was elected to the Ontario legislature over J. J. Scott, conservative candidate, by 844 major ity. The result was a big surprise to the government party, who thought Scott would have a big majority. The way in which the deputy in spectors of workshops and factories are enforcing the laws against the employment in the "open'' shops in Cincinnati is causing consternation among the Postums. Pleas of guilty were entered in twenty-one cases on Monday. More arrests will follow in a day or two. The publishers of the New York Tribune had 85,000 copies of an eight page folder' in two colors adyertislng that the Tribune Farmer and two other publications would .be sent to any address for one year for $3. The officers of No. 6 called the publishers' attention to the fact that they . were products of scab labor. The 85,000 cir culars were .destroyed and two other publications, both printed in union offices, were substituted for the scab publications. ' LABOR'S NATIONAL PLATFORM. What the American Federation, of Labor Stands For. 1. The abolition of all forms of in voluntary servitude except as a pun ishment for crime. 2. Free schools, free text books and compulsory education. 3. 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 hour 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 day 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. 14. Woman suffrage co-equal with man suffrage, the initiatve and refer endum and the imperative mandate ar.d 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 e 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 sain. eat. Take thou not alms from the unrighteous, lest it bemean thee. ... ". vin. -. ,..; Honor the female sex, for on this rock rests the welfare of man. IX. , Waste not thy life in the chase after the etheral, lest the substance be filched from thee. The Lord helps those who help themselves. Thou helpest thyself best by helping thy brother workers in the nnion of labor. X. Thy brother's welfare - is thy ' con cern; therefore shalt thou have a care for him and his. Associate thyself with thy brother worker, that thy pay may bo heightened, thy hours of labor shortened and the days of thy life and the lives of all may be lengthened and brightened. Iowa Unionist. J. W. Russeil, 1527 North Twenty- fourth street. ' , j C. W. Ryn.?.n, 1112 Pine street. .. D. A. Rush, Normal. T. K. Townsend, 1328 South Fif teenth street. Turner Bros., 1401 Rose street. O. Vanderveer, 154 South Eigh teenth street. I V ... , S. A. Webb, 2743 W street. KILLED UNDER PILE DRIVER. Fatal Accident at Northwestern Bridge Near Blair, Neb. Reno Morrison, 'a young man of eighteen years, was killed while at work on a pile driver on some rip-rapping work intended to protect the Northwestern bridge across the Mis souri river at Blair. A gang of ten men was employed on the work, the pile driver being some distance from the bank. Without any warning whatever the structure gave way and the heavy machinery plunged into water forty feet deep. Morrison was caught under the timbers and car ried down. O. Merica, employed in the engine cab of the pile driver, crawled out of the window when the structure was sinking and barely saved his life. Eight men who were working on the plat form, threw themselves into the -vrater and were picked up alive. Morrison is the son of Mrs. Jacob Keppel of Blair, a widow. The store of . Sewell Bros., at Ar lington, was entered and burglarized of a little money, some pocketknlves and cutlery, etc. UNION CONTRACTORS. LABOR DECALOGUE. ' I. Thou shalt join a union of thy craft, and have no other unions before it. II. . The meetings thereof shalt thou at tend and pay thy tithes with regular ity. Thou shalt not attribute unholy purposes to thy brother in union. Be ware of the fact that, though thou be honest, "there are others." III. "Thou shalt not take thy neighbor's job." , IV. Thou shalt not labor more than eight hours for one day's work, nor on the Sabbath nor on any of the holy days (holidays). v. -: Thou shalt not hire out thy off spring of tender years. "Poverty and shame shall be on him that refuseth Instruction to his children." . . VI. Clothe not the wife of thy ' bosom in mean apparel, lest it be a testimony against thee.. VII. , Thou shalt not live in a hovel, nor feed on the husk that the swine doth If You Want Building Done, Here Is 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 taining to our trade to please take notice and consider the following rep utable contractors and builders before letting your work: . S. W. Baker, 2237 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, Brownell block, room 12. W. B. Hester, 820 North Twenty seventh street. Howe & Atterbury, 2025 Vine street. Hammond & Burford, 3136 Dudley street. - ' .. , Alex Hutton, 1436 N street. Jewell & Marsh, 2331 South Tentn street. A. Kiewit, 1620 N street. A. L. Myers. 223 North .TwenV? eighth street, Mitchner. Chas. Mellor, 2149 South rt'teenth street. ' F. G. Odell, 1335 North' "Twenty fourth street. Lincoln Sash and Door comp&nv 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. . . . m id II y rui ji M have assembled for our Holiday ' buyers the biggest brightest and cheapest gathering of 3ood Clothes for men and boys ever before si Overcoats worth from $15 to $22 wn in our store. Come in and see our Suits and going at our Holiday prices from $7.50 to $12.50 F ur Overcoats We don't intend to handle Pur Overcoats another year. We are therefore offer ing every thing in stock at absolute cost. We have a large and choice stock to select from and you can buy them Here at about one half of what you will be asked to pay elsewhere. See us for useVul Christmas presents, the kind father and brother would appreciate. What you save on one purchase here helps you buy another. Let us show you. ."' . . ' -' '. UN(DQILB1. IjjOTHOMG C. NORTHUEST CORNER tENTH AND F STREETS Frool'Jith Evory Wow Piano FOR a short time we will give a health and accident insurance policy in a reliable company, with premium paid for one year to every purchaser of a new piano. This will entitle yon to' from $20 to $50 per month in case of sickness or accident, and thus enable yon to keep np easily your payments if yon bny a piano of us. Terms f 10 down and $5 per month and up. Call or write for further particulars. GRAND HOLIDAY PIANO SALE Never before have we had on display such a grand array of , Pianos. The stock is the largest in Lincoln, and the finest, comprising the pro ducts of the World's Greatest Piano Factories, snch as the ' Steinway, Steger & Sons, A. B. Chase, Emerson, Reed & Sons, Hardman, McPhail, and many others. Prices on used pianos from $25.00 np. . Prices on new pianos $175.00 up. .'Every' piano is fully guaranteed. - - . . , t We operate five stores and a factory and are therefore in position to give you positively the lowest prices and best terms. V '' ; .. g? Now is your golden opportunity to secure a high grade piano by paying a few dollars- down and a few dollars' each month and we guarantee your payments when you ? are sick or disabled. Schmollor &J.1ucllcr Piano Go. 135 So. lift St., Linscb. CARDIFF C AUTO 1610 BELL 334 Lump and 5 ) The best Coal in the city A7 Aft VrV , ? f or Heater, Range or , , X ff 1 1 1 1 Washed Egg j Furnace; per ton . . . . . O I U U LUttlD and ) A splendid Coal for the r y price.: Screened Coarse Nut ) Nut, per ton......... - A FULL LINE OF COAL. COKE. WOOD AND MATERIAL. Whitebreast Coal & Lumber Co., 11 OG O LEVELAND S5.00 AMUSEMEMTS AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS "1HE THEwTftE ' BEAUTIFUL" THE NEW LYRIC HI6H-CLASS VAUDVILU PROGRAM CHANGED WEEKLY THE ; D EST ATTRACTIONS OBTAIN AC LE MATINEE AT 3:00 EVENINU AT 7:30 AND 9 O'CLOCK ADMISSION 10 AND is CTS 1 HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE " tT" H. THE BHJQU t PROGRAM WEEK OF NOVEMBER g6tr i . '. ANDY LEWIS & COMPANY 1 '.Present the One-Act Comedy, Entitled, "WON AT THE WIRE" The European Novelty Act 1 THE GLISSANDOS " Comedy Acrobatic Musical Artists. - Melancholy Destroyers, i McFARLAND and MURRAY Eccentric Singing: and Talking Comedians. . '- A Laughing Success, . . -.: -. v GRANVILLE and MACK In a Nonsensical Absurdity, '. ' 1 ; v For Laughing Purposes Only, AL. LEONHARDT Grotesque Juggling Comedian. ' ( The Twentieth Century Sensation, ; ( THE TRAGIC WEDDING . On the Biograph. ' .! - . 3- Shows- 3 Daily 3:00, 7:45, 9:00 P. M. MATINEE, ALL SEATS lOe ADMISSION 10 CENTS Evening;, Reserved Seats 8 Cents Extia Grand Prize Matinse Every Tues. and Thurs. Best Values for The Best Money Cash or easy terms are found at the 4 Star Turniture (& Zbe Wagt'Garntr's Turniture Supply Bouse 2 Stutb eitvtnth Street. , LlunJa, ttebraii