X GENERAL MENTION. Bits of Labor News Gathered Chiefly With the Scissor. The union label that's all. Look for the union label. If it is not labeled, refuse it. Union made shoes are sold by Rog ers & PerkinB. No. St. Paul carpenters are Idle and out-of-town calls can't be filled from there. State branches of the A. F. of L. will be organized in Nebraska and South Carolina. Station agents and telegraph oper ators on the Long Island railroad have been granted an Increase in wages. One hundred stone wagon drivers at Buffalo have organized. They are the men who drive for the quarries. The Woodworkers' Union has passed out of existence in Toledo and the men have formed a new Carpenters' Union. Miss Hazel Armstead has returned to her home in North Bend after a week's visit with her sister, Mrs. W. M. Maupln. Woodmen of the World and all of the union labor organizations held a Joint reunion September 13 in Ottum wa, Iowa. Fifte3n new members were added to the Bricklayers' Union in Jackson, Mich., during the past month and ev ery member is now at work. Steamfitters Union in Hartford, Conn., has received a wage increase from $3.50 to $4 for an eight-hour day and Saturday half-holiday. Representatives of the mill men it Fall River, Mass., and the Weavers' Association. have reached an agree ment and peace is now assured. Mayor Taylor, of San Francisco, has appointed Michael Casey, presi dent of the Teamsters Union, presi dent of the board of public works. Painters and decorators in Roches ter, N. Y., have, organized four of the largest non-union firms in the last six months and secured an increase in wages from $2.75 to $3 without any trouble or strike. About forty electrical workers in the employ of the Bell Telephone com pany in Cleveland have succeeded in securing an increase of 25 cents a day, making the minimum $3 per day of nine hours. The HIckey-Tobin controversy over the general presidency of the Boot and Shoe Workers' Union will be set tled at a special election Thursday, September 12, at the same time the regular election takes place. The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy hfs been found guilty at ChiUicothe, Mo , of violating the eight-hour law as applied to telegraphers. A fine of $200 was imposed. This represents the first conviction under the new Mis souri statute. Carr, Ryder & Adams Co. and the Farley, Loetscher Manufacturing Co., of Dubuque, Iowa, the two largest sash, blind and door milling companies in the world, pleaded guilty of Wring child labor when hauled into court, and were fined. The American Society of Equity hat net on foot a movement to have laws passed by the legislature of Kentucky. Ohio, Tennessee and West Virginia compelling tobacco companies to label their wares, showing the percentage of licorice and other ingredients. During the past few months a corps of organizers has instituted over forty locals of the International Brother hood of Malntenance-of-Way Employes on the. Vanderbilt system. These men receive the princely sum of $1.50 per day. United Housesmiths and Structural DISEASE BREEDING PLAGES IN AND AROUND YOUR HOME Cm m nil simltn by nplar MliitcttaU. Wi tan mry ctssity. Chloride of Lime, lb 15c Solution of Chlorides, bottle, . .60c Formalhdehyde, per pint 35c Sulfur, per lb. 10c Sulfur and Formaldehyde Can dles 25c Sulfur Candles 5c Formaldehyde Fumigators ... 15c Hydrauapthal Pastillis. box.. 25c Carbolic Crystals, per lb 45c PHONE YOUR WANTS. RECTOR'S PHARMACY TWELFTH AND O ST. Iron Workers' Union of Boston an nounces that all members of the union are at work and that the demands being made on the union craftsmen from Worcester, Springfield, Lowell, Bridgewater, and other cities of the state cannot be supplied. The strike of tinsmiths and plpe- men on the Missouri Pacific and Iron Mountain railroad systems has been declared off. The men will receive an increase of 1 cents per hour, and the company has consented to sign to agreement for a year, covering all the technical points in the trade. . The organization of the Amalga mated Association of Street and Elec tric Railway Employes In Waterbury, Conn., marks the principal step toward unionizing this division of the trolley men, the last of the entire division of - the Connecticut railway Jine In control of the New Haven road. Steve Poyle, the miner who was Indicted at Washington, Pa., for em ploying a woman to work in a mine, pleaded guilty and was fined $10 and sent ' to jail for thirty days. Poyle employed bis wife as his helper in the Creedmore mine at Cecil, in male attire, for three days before her iden tity was disclosed. Division No. 85. Amalgamated Asso ciation of Street and Electric Railway Employes, has started an active cam paign to organize all the men on lines in the Allegheny valley. Executive Board Member McMorrow will make his headquarters in Pittsburg for some time, and has already instituted a new lodge at Tarentum. In Albany, N. Y., a vegetable ven dors' "union has existed for several years. The cards of the union are displayed on the wagons prominently, and the claim is that the members guarantee to purchasers full weight and measure on all vegetables bought of them. Also, that purchasers may rely on a uniform price being charged. THAT HUGE "WAR FUND." It Make Trade Unionist Laugh Al most Fit to KIM. The "$1,500,000 war fund" that Sec retary VanCleave of the National As sociation of Manufacturers purposes raising to "educate the public to a realization of the tyranny of trades unionism," is still unralsed. He wants to raise it at the rate of $500,000 a year, but up to date he has not made much of a start.. If VanCleave, or any of the rest of the union-hating bunch, imagines for a minute that talk of a million and a half war fund" is frightening the trades unionists, they ought to take something for the imagination. A little matter of $500, 000 a year Is only pocket change for the trades unionists of America. The Typographical Union alone raised three times that much in twelve months, and eight times that much in less than two years. The money that trades unions expend in fraternal work so far exceeds the amount asked for by VanCleave, and educates the people, so rapidly along trades union lines, that the VanCleave "war fund" looks like an old-fashioned musket cap alongside a 12-inch gun on the battle ship Nebraska. During the year preceding the con vention of the American. Federation of Labor, held at Minneapolis, Minn., No vember 12-24, 1906 Three international unions paid out in tool insur ance $5,771.09 The American Federation of Labor paid out to lo cal unions directly affil iated as strike benefits. 14,732.00 Six internationals paid benefits on account of death of members' wives Eight internationals paid on account of traveling members Seven internationals paid out of work benefits to their members Forty-five internationals donated to other unions 147,208.43 The American Federation of Labor's expenses for that fiscal year were... 218,540.04 Twenty-three Internation als paid out in sick ben efits 663,436.61 Sixty internationals paid out in death benefits... 994,974.79 Sixty-four internationals ipald out in strike bene fits 3,968,133.66 37,900.00 57,340.93 79,582.70 Union afo j 1418 O ST. 1 OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Making a total of $ 6,187,620.25 for ten items for one fis cal year. Now don't that make VanCleave's paltry $500,000 a year look like coun terfeit money? 000000000000 O0000000000000000000000000 0OSO0000000OffiO000 I ' ' ' ' . - ' . . Your Friends May Know and Appreciate Your Many Good Qualities But strangers must judge from your general appear ance. No matter whether you are at or away from home, your clothes should argue for rather than against you. There are plenty of the right sort of clothes to be had, so there is no real excuse for a man not appearing as well as he should. We sell fine clothes; they are all wool to the last fibre, tailored right and full, of. good looks and. style. They -are- the kind of clothes that will help yod to make the right sort of impresion among strangers; besides, pleasing your friends. What these clothes cost is less than what they are worth. High-Grade Suits and Overcoats $15.00, $18.00, $20.00, $22.50, $25.00 and vp to $40.00 This Week We are Featuringf-Some -Special Values in Men's Suits and Overcoats Strictly First-Class and High-Grade, at $7.50, $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00 No Such Values Were Ever Offered the Men of Nebraska Before Armstrong Clothing Company Good Clothes Merchants SHIRTS AND OVERALLS. Stand By the Manufacturers Who Stand By Organized Labor. For some time The.Wageworker has carried an advertisement for the R. L. McDonald Co. St. Joseph, Mo., ad vertising "Red Seal" overalls and shirts union made. Whether or not this advertising will be continued at some future time depends upon whether the unionists of Lincoln have stood by a firm that has always stood squarely for organized labor. This the R. L. McDonald Co. has always done. Its two huge factories in St. Joseph are union' throughout, and the scale paid is fully in keeping with the sani tary conditions of the splendid factory buildings. The Wageworker is not asking its readers to buy "Red Seal" overalls and shirts solely because they bear the label. It asks them to buy "Red Seal" overalls and shirts because they are equal to the best made, and the price asked is only fair consider ing the material and workmanship. It also asks its readers to buy "red Seal" overalls and shirts because they are labelled and are made by a firm that is as "square as a die" towards or ganized labor. When all these things are taken into consideration it Is only , fair that or ganized labor should show its appre ciation of fair treatment by patron izing a firm that is not only "square," but which is so near home that it is almost entitled to rank as a "home institution." St. Joseph is not so aw fully far away from Lincoln. parade and was roughly handled for the contemptible insult the Express has nothing but condemnation for the "unwhipped mob." Of course, the scab was entirely within his province iu running through a line of marching union men. Buffalo Progress. A PALPABLE HIT. Suggestion That It Might Be Well to Follow Up a Bit. A Lincoln minister who is heading the movement to stop Sunday base ball there says that $10,000 could be readily raised from among the churches to employ legal measures against the Sunday athletes. If the churches are so flush, they would do well to raise the jackpot proposed and spend it among the widows and or phans, where it will do some good. That would sound a little more like Christianity. Fremont Daily Tribune. THE UNWHIPPED MOB. Because a strike-breaking motorman iu San Francisco ran his car through the line of marchers in the Labor Day HERE IS THE REASON. - With the example of the union shop continually before them, no set of men will contentedly work long hours for low wages without strenuous pro test. That protest naturally takes shape in strikes and boycotts. Hence, the union shop must go, according to Van Cleave and his school. Washing ton Trades Unionist. THIS IS ONLY FAIR. "The labor union is judged by its worst. All other branches of industry are judged by their best. I ask not that we be judged by our best, but by vhat we have done and what we aspire to do." Samuel Gompers. SOLOMON A GOOD BOSS. Old King Solomon was a wise em ployer. He not only organized his em ployes into a labor union, but he gave them an eight-hour day and establish ed a warden at the west gate of the temple to see that all men received their wages and that none went away dissatisfied. The teachings of this wisest of grand masters are in strik ing contrast with the practice of some of his latter day followers who pretend to believe in and obey his teachings. Potters' Herald. The Western Union and Postal Tele graph companies are "open shops" now, so they claim. We'll admit that the wires that are not "grounded" are "cpen" most of the time by "scabs" who have to keep "breaking." WITH A POLICY IN THE Western Firo Insuranco Company Purely a Nebraska Ceisjsany Its Stockholders are among the Best Business Men of Lincoln and Nebraska Capital Stock Cash Loans and Securities $1,000,000.00 $102,330.25 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Allen W. Field, President, P. F. Zimmer, Secretary. E. A. Becker, V. P. and Manager, W. H. England, Vice President, Jno. T. Zimmer, Treasnrer, C. W. Sanford, J. A. Frawley. Patronize This Worthy Home Company Home Office No. 201 So. 11 Street. CASH AS BOTH PHONES S O O N A S LOSS I S A D J U S T E. D OOOOCOCOCXXKlOCOCOOOOOOCOCOO The Dr. Benj. F. Bally Sanatorium Lincoln, Nebraska For non-contagious chronic diseases. Largest, best equipped, most beautifully furnished. Subscribe Now, $ 1 o o o o o o o o o