The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-????, October 25, 1907, Image 7

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FALL AND WINTER
Looking for Good Clothes at a moderate price? Tbaft the kind
we sell. Neat, dressy, well-fitting and serviceable clothing at prices
that appeal to the careful and economical wage earner.
Ten to Eighteen Dollars
You'd pay more for the same good's at other places. But even at
this price we make a reasonable profit. The profit we make, how
ever, is not nearly as great as the saving to you. We can demon
these facts if you come in.
Union-Made Goods
Lots of them. Work Clothes, Hats, Shoes, Shirts, Overalls, etc.
WE CHALLENGE , COMPARISON IN THESE LINES.
INVEST YOUR MONEY
IN THE NEW BREWING AND ICE PLANT
LIHCOLH BREWING & I(E (0.
The shares are $50 each, payable
in 10 months at $5.00 per month on each share purchased.
It is confidently expected that this stock will increase in value
rapidly and also pay large dividends. The most conservative
business men of Lincoln are buying this stock, and we want
YOU to have at least one share, as it is intended to secure the
co-operation of many hundreds of stockholders with small in
vestments, rather than a few with large investments.
Every dollar subscribed will be put into the company's
property; no cash is paid out for promotion.
EVERY DOLLAR OF COST WILL BE UNION MA
TERIAL AND LABOR.
It seems unnecessary to argue the profit in the busi
ness. Ice, alone, will pay good dividends. The most conser
vative estimate would be at least ten per cent annually,
riany other concerns pay four or five times this.
Write to any address below and say how many shares
you want. No money will be asked for until enough is sub
scribed to make it safe to call the money. It will be thirty or
sixty days before any money will be asked for, and then you
will be notified where to pay the first payment.
DIRECTORS
M0RBIS FBIEND, T. J. DOYLE, Attorney, ZVLIVS REVSCH,
Cor. 7th and P Sts. FunKe Building 225 So. 1 lth St.
' W. L LEDI0YT, E. . BATHBICK. .
Many Kansas Bonds Registered.
In the state auditor's office last
week a quarter of a million dollars in
bonds were registered. All of the
bonds have been sold, some of them to
the school fund commission. The
bonds registered October 14 were
Pittsburg , $120.000 ; Salina, $32,500;
Kansas City, West Side, $62,500;
Isbelle township, Scott county, $9,500.
A Kansas Merchant a Suicide.
J. L. Dollins, a merchant of Milford,
Kaa., shot and killed himself. He left
a note saving that ill health was the
cause of his suicide.
A PRINTER "DOPE SHEET"
THE PIONEER
BARBER SHOP
UNION SHOP CHrsopmEK
Shave, 10c; Hair Cut, 25c;
Neck Shave, 5c.
101 South 11th Street, Lincoln
! PREWITT'S
PHOTO GALLERY
1214 O STREET
When yon -want a
soos photograph
sail and see my
-vork. Satiafactioa
guaranteed ....
rTIIITHIITTTTTin
w are exprt cleaners, dyers
aad laUhers ol Ladies' and Gen
tlemen's Clothing of all kinds.
The finest dresses a specialty.
THIS NEW FIRM
J. C. WOOD & CO.
AoiC FOR PRICELIST.
jj 'PHONES: Bell, 147. Auto, 1292.
1320 N St - - Lincoln, Neb.
M
XXXXXXXXXXSXXXXXXXXXXTVXX
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXOOOCOOOOOOO
PROTECT YOUR ROUE
WITH A POLICY
IN THE
Vostorn Firo Insurance Company
Purely a Nebraska Company
Its Stockholders are among the Best
Business Men off Lincoln and Nebraska
Capital Stock
Cash Loans and Securities
$1,000,000.00
$10.2,330.25
, 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,
Treasurer, C. W. Sanford, J. A. FrawLey.
Patronize This Worthy Home Company
Home Office No. 201 So. 11 Street.
CASH AS
BOTH PHONES
SOON AS LOSS IS ADJUSTED
OOOOOOOOOOCXCXXX9000000000000
Bell Phone F3008
Auto Phone 6334
Henderson & Hald
Jewelers and Opticians
132 North loth St. - LINCOLN, NEB.
Workers uniomj
UNlONjJ STAMP '
iTactory Na
UNERSTAN BROTHER
UNIONIST
That the best made shoes uboes made under
the best manufacturing condition the shoes that
best stand the wear bear the Union Stamp as
shown herewith. Ask your dealer for Union
Stamp Shoes, and If he cannot supply you write
Boot and Shoe Werkers Union
246 Summer Street. Boston, Mass.
Wage workers, Attention
We have Money to Loan
on Chattels. Plenty of it,
too. Utmost secrecy.
KELLY & INORRIS
7O-7I BROWNELL BLK.
MYDEN'S ART STUDIO
New Location, 1127 O
Fin wrk a Specialty.
Auto 3336
Lincoln Typographical Nnlon No. j
209 held an election last Monday but
the chances are that less than half of
the membership was aware of the
fact until the polls closed. The ballot
wa3 had on it several propositions.
among them releasing jurisdiction ov
er the newspaper writers, increasing
the president's salary, increasing the
secretary-treasurer's salary, and the
age pension plan. Owing to the fail
uer to post the notices of election a
majority of the membership over
looked the election and less than thirty
votes out of a total of over a hundred
were cast. The salary propositions
were badly beaten. The pension plan
was adopted.
Lincoln Dental College
CLINIC
Open for Patients Every
Afternoon -
10th od O Kt. F. A M. Building
Henry Pfeifi
DEALER IN
Fresh and Salt Meats
Sausage, Poultry, Etc
Staple and Fancy Groceries.
Tafephoam 888-477. 314 So. 11th Strt
Phones:
John H. Graham, D. 0- S-
Lincoln, Nebraska
DENTAL 0EFICES Holm & McDonald Elk
OFFICE OF
Dr. R. L. BENTLEY
SPECIALIST CHILDREN
Office Hours 1 to 4 d. m.
Otfve 2118 O St. Both Phones
LINCOLN. NEBRASKA
fits. Because of his membership he
was enabled to draw good wages and
enjoy steady work and in due time
he accumulated some dollars all a
result of unionism.
In due time this printer became an
Employer and very soon a Change
came over him. The conditions he in
sisted on when he was an employe
he refused to grant as an employer,
and he 'Derided the union Bitterly.
And all the while everything he had
about him he owed to the Union which
he derided.
Moral: He lacks any.
The executive . committee, acting
jointly with the executive committee
from the Presmen's Union, has been
planning and executing a lively label
campaign lately. This has not been
confined to publicity in The Wage
worker by any means. The commit
tee has provided each chapel with a
supply of stamps, envelopes and
"stickers", and notified the member
ship to get busy. Good effects have
already been realized from the "stick
er" campaign.' Recently a business
firm flooded the city with handbills
printed in a "rat" shop. For the next
few days that firm's mail was loaded
down with handbills returned having
the "sticker" attached. It did not
take long for the firm's, manages to
get wise. They then hurried to a fair
shop and had the work done all over
again, promising never again to gst
out a bill without the "little joker"
thereon. The two committees are fig
uring on enlisting the aid of other
unions in the city and doing some
"Demand the Union Label" advertis
ing that will make everybody wake up
and take notice.
A printer, who is a delegate from
the Central Labor Union to the Min
isterial Association, was called upon
for a few remarks at the meeting of
ministers last Monday morning. He
responded. After the meeting a min
ister asked: Well Brother , what
are you going to do with non
union man?"
"Do with him just like you do with
the sinner, get him Into the fold," was
the ready reply.
"Billy" Norton, chief fugleman of
the Daily Nebraskan's mechanical de
partment, is going to proudly exhibit
another union x card pretty soon. He
is a charter member of the new Mu
sician's Union.
Coffeyville RailroadPonds.
As the result of the bond election
Coffeyville will get a new railroad' to
the southeast. The proposition to is
sue $30,000 in bonds to the Coffeyville
& Memphis road carried by a large
majority. The road will commence at
once and will be built fiom Coffey
ville to Centralia and Vinita. Both of
these towns have already subscribed
aid to it. It is expected eventually to
extend it Arkansas toward Mem
phis. Another proposition that car
ried was for a new $25,000 school
building. -
When a fellow keps his eyes and
ears open he will see and hear some
funny things in union circles. A few
days ago The Wageworker's famous
sleuth, Padlock House, was a member
of a group of union men on a down
town corner. Every member of the
group was spouting unionism to beat
the band. Finally one of the group;
a union printer, began a bitter denun
ciation of a former member of the
union who is now a proprietor and
running a "rat" shop. After talking
for ten minutes and declaring with
many adjectives that he was a trades
unionist from the ground up, the
speaker extracted a package of "Bull
Durham" tobacco from one pocket
and a roll of papers from the other
and proceeded to roll himself a cigar-
oot.
Wouldn't that jar your . unionism?
A source of valuable information to
the tens of thousands who visited the
Minnesota state fair last month was
the booth of the St. Paul Typographi
cal union. The project was conceived
by Ross Reynolds, chairman of the
executive committee of No. 30. He
and his colleagues distributed thous
ands of circulars and other literature
advertising the label, and brought it
to the attention of many people who
had never given the subject much
thought before. A large picture of the
Printers' Home was on view, as well
as a group photograph of the late Hot
Springs convention. Typographical
Journal.
Bert Hood has drifted in from Fre
mont and will print in Lincoln for a
while. Rood was one of the strikers
at the Fremont Tribune plant, and
the Hammonds could search the coun
try with a fine tooth comb without
finding a "rat" or a non-union printer
who could come within gun shot of
Bert Rood as a printer. The Wage
worker man worked along side of
Rood thirteen or fourteen years ago
and knows him.
Mrs. Harry Ingalls of Omaha, a
member of the Omaha Auxiliary and
delegate from that body to the Hot
Springs convention, has been visiting
in , Lincoln during the past week, the
guest of Mrs. Ira Miller. Mrs. Ingalls
was one of the "bunch" that shook the
convention one afternoon and spent
a delightful half day 'pesticatin'
among the Arkansas hills and watch
ing the colored friend and brother in
his native element.
The Fremont Unionist is a new
weekly labor paper. It is "red hot"
and still a heating, and a lot of poli
ticians are already sitting up and tak
ing notice of it. .
McClure's Magazine is no longer
printed in the McClure shop. That
unfair firm found it a losing game to
fight the Typographical Union, and it
has the job out on contract.
Once there was a 'printer who land
ed in a Western City without any
large number of dollars in his pocket
He became a member of the Union,
and received therefrom many Bene-
If You Wish to Practice Economy
Buying Clothes, Buy the
Better Grades.
Men are fast coming to know that strict clothes econ
omy is not in buying cheap unreliable makes. Al
most invariably such clothes are poorly tailored, ill
fitting and in the end unsatisfactory in every way.
In other words when the dealer can only say for his
clothes that they are low in price, it is safe usually to
conclude that they are equally low in quality, for such
dealers are very likely making profit in excels of the
dealer who emphasizes the best grades. When we
sell a Kensington Suit or O'coat we are sure of a
pleased customer for these garments not only wear
better but look 100 per cent better from beginning to
end. If you haven't already seen them you'd better
come in next week. ' ,
KENSINGTON CLOTHES FIT. i
MAGEE & DEEMER
Are You Satisfied?
With your present Gas
burners, do you ttiinK
they need adjusting?
We have men trained to
look after your needs.
There will be no charge
unless materials are used
The Bright Way
The Gas Way...
OAS CO., 1323 0