THE PIONEER BARBER SHOP UNION SHOP CHV&Ey Shave, 10c; Hair Cut, 25c; Neck Shave, 5c. 101 Sovth 11th Street, Lincoln 1 PREWITT'SS PHOTO GALLERY 121-4 O STREET When you want a good photograph all and - Me my work. Satisfaction guaranteed .... iwiiii We are expert cleaners, dyers M aad finishers of Ladles' and Gen tlemen's Clothing of all kinds. The finest dresses a specialty. THE NEW FIRM J. C. WOOD & CO. AjC for pricelist. PHONES: Bell, 147. Auto, 1292. 1320 N St. - - Lincoln, Neb. TTTTmHlIMHtHTITT VaEeworkers, Attention We have Money to Loan on ChattelB. ' Plenty of it, too. Utmost secrecy. KELLY & NORRIS 7O-7I BH0WNELL BLK. WAGEWORKER WILL M. MAUPIN, EDITOR tiade is organized and the farmers union is a tower of strength. And the result is that the constitution of this new state safeguards labor better than the statutes of any other state. It was accomplished by working unitedly at the polls. Published Weekly at 137 No. 14th St., Lincoln, Neb. One Dollar a Year. Entered as second-class matter April 21, 1904, at the postofflce at Lincoln, Neb., under the Act of Congress of March 3rd, 1879. John D. Rockefeller can dodge a subpoena to appear in court, in which regard he has the best of the union men who are enjoined by a federal judge. The baliffs never fail to locate the union men. J jt "Printer' Ink," the recog- jt j nlzed authority on advertis- Jt jt ing, after a thorough investi- Jt jt gation on this subject, says: Jt jt "A labor paper is a far bet- Jt jt ter advertising medium than Jt jt an ordinary newspaper in J jt comparison with circulation. Jt jl A. labor paper, for example, Jt jt having 2,000 subscribers is of J jl more' value to the business J jt man who advertises in it Jl jt th an ordinary paper with J jt 12,000 subscribers." J jl jtjljtjljtjtjtjtjtjtjtjtjt The cornerstone of the Kansas City Labor Temple was laid with impres sive ceremonies last Thursday the Fourth of July. Will Lincoln equal that record before another Fourth of July? Perhaps the motormen and comlac tors on the Citizen's line would be will ing to organize if the management will pay the charter fee and all dues Tor a few years. The Wageworker hasn't recovered from its celebration of the Glorious Fourth yet. Let that be the excuse. The Pa--k Oomtnin-io:i ought to give us some park band concerts before snow flies TO0060OSO:0S0000 Union Harness & Repair Shop GEORGE H. BUSH Harness repairing, Harness washed and oiled. I use the Union Stamp and solicit Union Trade. All kinds of work fur nished on call. 145 So. 9th. oo MYDEN'S ART STUDIO New Location, 1127 O Fine wrk a Specialty. Auto 3336 Lincoln Dental College CLINIC Open for Patients Every Afternoon lSth nd O St. V. M. Building FUNSTON THE FURIOUS. General Fredrick Funston has been bloviating again About every so often this millitary maggot swells up and blows off at the mouth, thus afford ing merriment for the nation and great satisfaction to the exaggerated ego of Funston. Funston is in command of the troops stationed at the Presidia. San Francis co. The committee of citizens having in charge the matter of celebrating the Fourth of July sent Funston a courte ous note asking him to aid in the cele bration by parading the troops. The shoulder-strapped specimen of a swell- headed simian replied by saying that he would not parade his men before "an unwhipped mob." And that isn't all that Fredrick Fun ston wouldn't do, either. He wouldn't open his mouth to give credit to a com rade who performed the deeds which Funston received credit for. He pre ferred to keep his mouth shut then and profit by the valor of a better man. He wouldn't dare to measure himself alongside the Arab who is too much of a man to betray his host after partak ing of his bread and salt. Funjtonis .aclxeap.-screw nonenity whtf-profited by'the readiness of news paper . "string fiends" to satisfy the cravings of the newspaper reading pub lic by exploiting 'Funston. And after taking to himself credit for things he never did, Funston won his shoulder straps by betraying a man who trusted him and whose only offence was In loving liberty well enough to fight for it. And when Funston was made a brigadier general, jumping over the heads of two hundred better men and soldiers, it swelled his head up so much he had to use a stepladder to put on his chapeau. "Unwhipped mob," indeed! That "mob" contains a thousand better men than Fredrick Funston-better men physically, mentally, morally and every other way men who would scorn to profit at the expense of a comrade and who never would grow so small as to betray a trust in order to personally profit thereby. When such men as this bloviating imbecility are given important com mands In the United States army is it any wonder that djesertations grow in number and the discipline and morale of the troops fall to a low ebb? The Taft presidential boom i3 weighted down by an injunction rec ord. . It is just as easy to demand the la bel as It is to boastfully say, "I am a union man." Henry Pfeifi DEALER IN Fresh and Salt Meats Sausage, Poultry, Etc Staple and Fancy Groceries. Telephones 888-477. 314 . Ills Street OFFICE OF Dr. R. L. BENTLEY SPECIALIST CHILDREN Office Hours 1 to 4 p. m. Office 2118 O St. Both Phones Three , business men have notified The Wageworker that they are ready to contribute handsomely towards Labor Temple just as soon as the t'nlon men of the city show by their actions that they really want such a structure. T he Wageworker will not knowingly advertise an unfair product. If you de tect The Wageworker in the act, notify the editor and he will discontinue the advertisement and apologize to his readers. A lot of clerks who have i't iot san enough to demand a half- holiday i-.r crying for Sunday baseball so they can see an occassional game. The rota clerks are a lot of easy marks. If you have a plau which you think would be a good one for the forward ing of the Labor Temp'e project .write it out and let Thj Wageworker print it. The outfit that would emplov tit he! p of Pinkerton thugs is equal to any crime calculated to forward the! Interests. The state of Okoahoma is the best organized in the country, speaking from the standpoint of labor. Evory Acts prove the union man much more readily than wort! of mouth. The testimony of Harry Orchard has been all shot to pieces. Boosting the label beats backing up a boycot. That Post spasm is a little overdue. Fingers all there? UNION MADE STUFF. Manufactured In The Wageworker Of- . fice During Union Hours. Well Met. By accident the Strange Shades met upon the Plutonian shores and natural ly struck up a conservation. - "What's new . where we came from?'! queried one. t. "I see where they have caught a lot of those union labor fellows with the goods on 'em," said the other. "Is that so? Well, that's good! It will mean the death blow to the at tempts of union labor men to act po litically." "That's what it will. By the way who are you?" O, I'm a republican grafter from Pennsylvania. You ought to have seen the way I skinned 'em on that state house graft. But who are you?" "O, I'm a Tammy democrat from New York, and I guess we about kept up with you Pennsylvania republicans when we came to making the dear peo ple pay the freight." Shaking hands enthusiastically the Shades, strangers no longer, went mer rily arm in arm down the banks of the Styx. Of Course. "I am very fond of the workingman,' remarked DeGouge, the great capital ist. Being somewhat surprised at this we could not help inquiring what reason he had for being fond of the toilers.' "Why," he replied, "I owe everything I have to him." "And how is that?" we queried. "Because he made it all for me, and has been content to take less than one- tenth of it for his trouble. Why shouldn't I be fond of him?" . And we acknowledged that we could see no reason why he should not. "Waggerly is the most consistent union man I know." "Well, what's the answer?" "When the stork brought him tha new baby Waggerly wouldn't receive it until the stork showed the label on its bill." Limerick. There was an old man In Barnstable Who always demanded the label; If he couldn't perceive It He wouldn't receive it. This bully old man in Barnstable. To Be Sure. Having .refused to recognize the unions on his line of road on the ground that unions are un-American, unpatriotic and unclean, the railroad president' called his automobile and started for the meeting of railroad presidents, called by the chairman for the express purpose of making a con certed effort to increase railroad rate, IT IS JUST LIKE FlfJDIfJG WHEN YOU ATTEND THIS SALE Do you need someone to urgo you to pick up a dollar if you find it at your foot? Do you need somoono to urgo you to attend this salo when dollars can bo savod on every purchase ? AT $915 AT MA SUITS WORTH UP TO $15 SUITS WOTH UP TO $20 SUITS WORTH UP TO LI O SUITS WORTH UP TO Tho high quality of tho goods malto thoso pricos ro markabio. Evory suit in tho storo is included in this salo oxcopt plain black and blub suits and unifoms. Prices are Vigorously Cut in Boy's and Young; Men's Dept. "This will be a meeting of gentle men, he murmured. Extremes. "I believe in a union campaign, but Biggsly carries the union business to excess. "What's he been doing now?" "When he starts on a railroad jour ney he will not buy a ticket up town, but insists on buying it at the union station." Located. The phrenologist felt carefully over his victim's head and then exclaimed: "Well, here is one bump I am un acquainted with." "I know what it is," retorted the victim. "That is my bump of knowl edge." "Your what?" "Bumb of know-ledge. Wife gave me that for buying a 'scab' suit of clothes. -'11 know better next time."' A LITTLE STRIKE. Lincoln Calm Disturbed by a Little Industrial Flurry. The first strike in Lincoln in more than two years occured the first of the week. It was a strike of unorgan ized workman, too, and it failed to se cure the desired results. Some eight een laborers employed by the Lincoln Gas Co., after agreeing among them selves, Btruck to enforce a demand for an increase of 25 cents a day. The company refused to come across, and six or eight of the strikers deserted and returned to work. When You Buy Clothos You Consider Three Things: ' PR D E STYLE WE WISH TO PROVE WE ARE "RIGHT" AS REGARDS THESE THREE AND THEN SOME, AND INVITE YOU TO GIVE US THE OPPORTUNITY.: : : : : : : : Lincoln (Slothing (So. Corner 10th and P Streets. ale o o LINCOLN, NEBRASKA