The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-????, July 04, 1908, Image 4

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LABOR UNION DIRECTORY.
l
Following Is a directory of the Trades
and Labor Unions of Lincoln and vicinity.
Lccal secretaries are respectfully asked
to report any changes or corrections
herein, to the end that an accurate and
convenient directory be maintained.
CENTRAL LABOR UNION Meets sec
ond and fourth Tuesday evenings.
Prime's hall. President. O. M. Rudy.
1036 O. Secretary. F. A. Kates. 1020 K.
Treasurer T. W. Evans, 128 South
Eleventh.
LABOR TSMPLE DIRECTORY Meets
nrv Xlonrlnv evening. 127 INortn
Tnirth alnwr President. J. W. Dick
son. University Place. Secretary. Fred
lhringer. Sixteenth and D streets, Lin
coln.
uiiftir.iANS PROTECTIVE UNION, No.
463 Meets first and third Sunday morn
ings, Bruse's Hall. President. m.
Plnnev. 125 South Sixteenth. Reeord-
Inir Secretary. W. C. Norton, 1533 North
Twenty-fifth. Financial Secretary,
A. Otis, 2234 Q.
N,
jaiidmivmEN - BARBERS. No.
Meets first and third Wednesday even
im Rnhnnnn's hall. President. R. L,
McBride. 164S Q. Recording Secretary.
Jlov Ward. 1210 O. Financial Secre-
' tary, Roy Swlnker, 1010 O.
BARTENDERS' LEAGUE, No. 399
Meets third Sunday, 10 a. m.. Carpen-
t.n' hull. President. William Brandt,
1225 R. Recording Secretary, Henry
Killers. Financial Secretary, H. !.
Sundean, 1844 P.
LEATHERWORKERS ON HO R S E
GOODS, No. 29 Meets first and third
Tuesdays, Bruse's hall. President,
ri i 21fi South Sixteenth. Sec-
rotnrv-Trensurer. Peter Smith, 226
South Eleventh.
CIGARM AKERS, No. 143 Meets every
Monday evening, 1036 O. President,
t w TCvana 128 South Eleventh.
Secratarv. John Steiner, 122 South
Tenth.
BOILERMAKERS' BROTHERHOOD, No,
497 Meets secona anu iwurm hcuhcb
narnenters' hall. Presl
dent. J. C. Orant, Ninth and U streets.
Recording Secretnry, P. 8. Sherman,
422 P street. Financial Secretary, J.
Bockoven.
m ll-KCMITHfi AND HELPERS. No
163 Meets first and third Tuesday
evenings, Campbell h hall, HavelocK,
President. R. O. Wagner. Havelock,
Secretary, E. B. Bilson. Havelock.
BUILDING TRADES SECTION.
BROTHERHOOD OF ELECTRICAL
WORKERS, No. 265 Meets every
Thursday evening. 1036 O street.
President. C. M. Anderson, 2028 Q
Recording Secretary. U. K. Vennum,
1410 P. Financial Secretary, W. L.
Mayer, 2225 Q.
PLUMBERS AND GASFITTERS, No,
83 Meets every Monday evening. Car
renters' hall. President. Ed English
1933 U. Recording Secretary, George
Chfnmnn. S-9 INortn Hieventn. nnan
clal Secretary, Charles Burns, 846
North Twenty-sixth.
PAINTERS AND DECORATORS, No.
18 Meets every Thursday evening
Carpenters' hnll. President, Charles
Jennings. 1938 8. Recording Secretary,
Wm. Wilkinson. 2100 N. Financial
Secretary, Perry Jennings, 1936 S.
CARPENTERS AND JOINERS, No
1055 Meets every Tuesday evening.
aroenters nail. 130 jNortn Tenth,
President. F. B. Naracong. 130 South
Twenty-eightn street. Recording Sec
retary, C. H. Chase, 2005 North Thir-
t eth. Financial Secretary. J. W. Dick
son, 31? West St. Paul street. University
"iace.
BRICKLAYERS AND MASONS No. 2
Meets every Friday evening. Carpen
ters' hall. President. E. L. Simon. 2245
E. Recording Secretary. P. W. Smith,
R. F. D. 14. Flnnnclnl Secretary, C. H.
Meyers, 320 North Eleventh.
RAILROAD BROTHERHOODS.
BROTHERHOOD OF LOCOMOTIVE EN
GINEERS, Division No. 98 Meets sec
ona and fourth Sunday. Chief En
Ktneer. J. S. McCov. 1203 II strsp.t
First Assistant Engineer, F. D. Palmer,
izo onuin lento street, secona Assist
ant Engineer, H. Wiggcnjost, Court
House.
BOILERMAKERS' BROTHERHOOD. No,
119 Meets second and fourth Friday
vvemnKH, . u. u. w. nail, 1007 o,
resident, unarles Peterson. 1402 Jack
son. Havelock. Secretary, Tom Duffy,
jiiuituit una luuxaun avenues, nave'
OCK.
MACHINISTS' ASSOCIATION, No. 698
jvieeis nrsi mriaay in Havelock. third
rrmay at a. u. u. w. hall, Lincoln,
President, J. A. Malstend, Havelock,
ciecreiary, n. single, 829 North Sev.
enieentn.
BROTHERHOOD OF RAILWAY CAR
MEN Meets first and third Saturday
vvviniiKB. a. yj. u. w. nan. president,
n. l. eexson. 1631 worth Twenty.
rourth. Recording Secretary, C. E,
Cox. 2729 W. Financial Secretary, G,
x-. J.UUWIH, im eoutn seventh.
BROTHERHOOD OF LOCOMOTIVE
FIREMEN AND ENGINEERS, No. 179
Meets second and fourth Sunday
1 1.7, mi.. un, v. u. vv. nan. Master,
n. tvurti. 2i ivorth Twelfth. Secre
ittty, i. iv. KODinson, zyii y.
BROTHERHOOD OF RAILWAY TRAIN
MEN, No. 170 Meets second and fourth
punaay afternoons, Bohanan's hall,
jnitBicr, j. u. Andrews, ns o. Secre
uiry, mj. j. cooper, Z12B South Ninth,
BROTHERHOOD OF SWITCHMEN, No.
120 Meets first Sunday at 8 p. m., sec
, ond Sunday at 2 p. m.. Carpenters'
hall. President. U. S. Swinhr -in:
Sumner. Recording Secretary. George
raiy. iii rvnox. financial secretary,
PRINTING TRADES SECTION.
. . I
ALLIED PRINTING 'TRADES COUN
CIL Meets third Wednesday evening,
. tirufn ier nan. -resident, G.
lacker, 1209 Soutli street. Secretary-
Treasurer. J, H. Brooks, 700 North
mntn street.
TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION, No. 209
Meets first Sunday, 2 p. m.. Fraternity
mm. f-ruBltlvni, J. I, cam, 13U MOUtn
i riiriietn. fiocoraing secretary. H. W.
Blngnman, 2201 Holdrege. Flnnnclal
secretary, r. ti. MoObaid, 1527 Wash
insTtun.
BOOKBINDERS' RBI-ITU Court itr.
120 Meets third Monday evening.' Car
No,
vfntrra nan. rresiaent, u. C Jerome,
mm noutn nixteentn. Mecretary-Treas
umr, r reu ncsa, isut a.
8TEREOTYPERS AND ELECTRO
TYPERS, No. 62 Met8 third Wednes
day evening. Carpenters' hall. Presi
dent. A. E. Small, 2044 South Nine
teenth. Secretary-Treasurer, Sam
Asaen, 22 3 j-iuaiey.
CAPITAL AUXILIARY, No. 11 Meets
second ana rourth Tlday afternoons at
nomes or members. President, Mrs.
i-rea w. mk-koi, 1945 South Sixteenth.
Secretary. Mrs. C. B. Rlghter, 2308
jnidiey. Treasurer, Mrs. Charles Barn
grover, zsio Starr.
PRESSMEN AND ASSISTANTS. No.
106 Meets first Wednesday. C.iroentnrs'
hall. President, J. H. Brooks, 728
North Eleventh. Recording Secretary,
E. C. Werger. 1626 N. Financial Secre
tary, W. D. King, 2030 M.
WAGEWORKER
WILL M. MAUPIN, EDITOR
Published Weekly at 137 No. 14th
St., Lincoln, Neb. One Dollar a Year.
Entered as second-class matter April
21, 1904, at the postoffice at Lincoln,
Neb., under the Act of Congress ol
March 3rd, 1879.
jl "Printer' Ink," the recog-
jl nlzed authority on advert!-
j Ing, after a thorough investi
gation on this subject, says:
"A labor paper Is a far bet
ter advertising medium than
an ordinary newspaper In
comparison with circulation.
A labor paper, for example,
having 2,000 subscribers Is of
more value to the business
man who advertises In It
thJi an ordinary paper with
12,000 subscribers."
RAYMOND ROBINS MAN.
Come again, Raymond Robins!
Your stay was all to brief, but brief
as it was you walked right into the
hearts of the men and women who
heard you. Many of them had heard
of you; none of them had heard you.
But now that they have sat under the
spell of your voice, have listened to
your impassioned plea for the down
trodden and the oppressed, felt the
inspiration of your presence and been
aroused by your eloquence to step for
ward and insist upon having their
own, they are proud to know you as
one of them.
There are a thousand homes in Lin
coln, Raymond Robins, where you
can walk in, throw down your grip,
shove your feet under the table and
stay just as long as you like. There
are a thousand homes that are
brighter today than they were a week
ago, because you have been in Lin
coln and aroused us to a fuller realiza
tion of our responsibilities as men and
as citizens. You brought us a message
of hope and of cheer. You brought
us a message of goodwill. You
brought us encouragement to aspire
to better things, to demand more of
the fruits of our toil, and to make the
demand intelligently and justly.
It's good to meet a man likeryou
a man who is of us and with us and
for us. It's good, because your elo
quent tongue has framed our hopes
and aspirations in such language as
do do not possess and which is
needed to make clear to the under
standing of others that we are not
demanding any more than is our due
as the great element in society that
feeds all, clothes all and houses all,
It 8 good to have a man like you
come among us and tell the public
that persists in misunderstanding us
just what we mean; to explain that
we, in our blind, stumbling way, are
trying to do something for our fel
lows and for ourselves; trying ' to
dynamite the hovels, not the palaces;
trying to live up to righteous laws,
not to oppose them; trying to build
a better citizenship by giving our
children a better opportunity than we
have had.
You are doing a magnificent work,
Raymond Robins the work of a mes
senger of good cheer and of hope
You come as one crying in the-wilder
ness and saying unto those who have
walked upon the necks of the toilers
for a thousand years, "Repent ye, for
the kingdom of heaven is at hand-!
Organized labor is wonderfully bene
fitted by your all too brief visit. Men
and women who have been prejudiced
against us by a lying press, know
now that we are striving to lift up, not
to tear down; that we are trying to
help, not to hinder.
God was good to you, Raymond
Robins, when he gave you an elo
quent tongue to voice the feelings
born in your big heart a heart that
beats in warm sympathy with op
pressed humanity. "But God was
good to us when he sent you to be
our champion. Would that there were
more like you.
Come again, friend. A thousand
doors are open to you, a thousand
good right hands ready to be extended
in friendly greeting, a thousand hearts
beating with love for you and your'
splendid work. And when next you
come we'll turn out in greater num
bers to hear you. We know you bet
ter now than we did.
THE SHOEMAKER AND HIS LAST.
Col. John J. Ryder, deputy labor
commissioner of Nebraska, is a royal
good fellow, a staunch union man and
a man of parts. Time was when we
grossly misunderstood Col- Ryder be
cause, unknown to us then, we were
misinformed concerning him by those
who bore false witness. - Then we said
things for which we were sorry af
terwards, and for which we humbly
apologized.
As deputy commissioner of the la
bor bureau of Nebraska Col. Ryder is
doing a splendid work. But when
Col. Ryder deems it his bounden duty
to speak with the voice of the public
official in defence of the powers that
be he rather weakens the force he
might better be expending in further
broadening the scope of the bureau
under his charge. On several occasions
Col. Ryder has rushed into print ' in
the columns of the local republican or
gans for the purpose of defending poli
tical action. That is all right. But
it is all wrong for Col. Ryder to make
it appear that because of his official
position he speaks as one having
authority. It is then that he speaks
as Col. Ryder, the politician, not as
Col. Ryder, the chief of the labor
bureau.
Early in the week Col. Ryder rushed
into print to denounce the oft-re
peated statement that William
Howard Taft is the "father of the in
junction." But that pronouncement
was the pronouncement of the politi
cian, not, the student of industrial his
tory. True it is that Mr. Taft was
not the first judge to issue an injunc
tion in a labor dispute, but his -, in
junction orders were of such a nature
that they became precedents in that
sort of thing, and today we see the
result in supreme court decisions that
make it illegal for a union man to do
that which it would be perfectly legal
for him to do were he not a union
man. To such a pass has labor come
through the precedent set by, the
amiable and doubtless honest and ca
pable Mr. Taft!
It is because Wililam Howard Taft
embodies the injunction idea as it to
day applies to industrial disputes! that
this humble little paper opposes him.
He is the embodiment of an idea that
spells industrial slavery if acquiesced
in by the toilers of the country, and
all the rounded peridds, all the politi
cal palever, of even such a silver
tongued orator and ready letter writer
as our good friend Ryder cannot
change the fact. . The decision of the
supreme court in the Danbury hatters'
case is a natural result of the Taft
decision in the Ann Arbor railroad
case. And unless that supreme court
decision is reversed reversed peace'
ably by the great thinking public a
natural consequence will be a de
cision that the men who strike against
intolerable conditions in an industry
doing an interstate business will be
subject to fine and imprisonment.
Facts are stubborn things, and or
ganized labor is faced by some very
stubborn facts these days. And or
ganized labor , is doing a pqwerf ul lot
of thinking, too.
As chief of the labor bureau Col.
Ryder is doing a good work. In that
capacity we are proud of him. But
as a friend we would advise him to
stick to that last and not undertake
the job of convincing his labor
friends that Judge Taft is a friend of
the workingman.
How would-you like to forfeit your
little home and go to jail for the hein
ous offens of -refusing to work under
intolerable conditions? Unless re
versed the. supreme court decision in
the Danbury hatters' case will lead to
just that. Think a bit.
Mr. Taft's supporters should offer as
a campaign document a picture of the
Cincinnati jail that housed the locomo
tive engineer he sentenced to impris
onment for daring to assert bis right to
refuse to injure his fellow workers.
Ever notice that the man who op
poses organized labor is either the
man who finds his opportunity for ex
ploitation curtailed or the man whose
opposition is based on a false basis?'
For president, William Howard Taft,
the father of the injunction." For
vice president, James Schoolcraft
Sherman, "ice trust magnate." Plat
form: Workingmen, get off.
'There may be some question about
the constitution follyin' th' flag, but
divil a bit o' doubt about the supreme
court decisions follyin' the eliction re
turns." Mr. Dooley.
And. the injunction plank of the Chi
cago platform lacks a whole lot of
"voicing the views expressed by Mr.
Taft when he was hunting for dele
gates. In trying to sit on the two stools of
anti-injunction and satisfaction for the
union buster, the republican national
convention fell to the floor. ,
"American Industries," the organ of
the National Manufacturers' Associa
tion, James VanCleave, president, is
warmly supporting William H. Taft
The Square Deal," edited by Charles
W. Post, is warmly advocating the
election of William H. Taft. Remind
you of anything, Mr. Workingman?
Mr. Gompers was allowed ten min
utes before the committee on resolu
tions at Chicago. He ought to be glad
that he was allowed even a look-in.
Now wouldn't it be bully if we had
as nice a Labor Temple as the building
Mr. Rockefeller gets credit for having
built, but which we built for him?
"O, to hell with the labor vote we
can whip tnem into liner 'mats
the way the machine politicians have
it figured out. Are they right?
Sounds good to hear one of labor's
greatest advocates preaching union
doctrine from the pulpits of our big
city churches, doesn't it? ;
Organized labor is not asking that it
be accorded special privileges. It is
merely asking that it be accorded a
common privilege.
The writ of injunction is a necessary
legal remedy but we want the kind of
an injunction that offers redress, not
injury. ' ,
They haven't made a demand for the
label illegal yet. But it is illegal
to ask your friends to demand the
label.
God made the coal for everybody.
We have merely been idiots enough
to let a few men grab it all.
The supreme court has reversed
itself and that's a precedent for the
people to reverse the court. ,
What's the use of paying dues and
then voting to make trades unions il
legal? Think it over.
Ballots, not bombs! But justice
will be secured by one or the other
' The tariff law protects everybody
but the man who does the labor.
Gray of Deleware would look good
on the Denver-made ticket.
Gosh, how they love the laboring
man these campaign days.
That labor orange held out by the
politicians is a lemon.
Wade Ellis -of Ohio is protesting too
much.
Waiting for the result in Denver
UNION PRINT SHOPS.
Printeries That Are Entitled to
the Allied Trades Label.
Use
Following is a list of the printing
offices in Lincoln that' are entitled
to tne use of the Allied Printing
Trades label, together with the num
ber of the label used by each shop:
Jacob North & Co., No. 1.
C. S. Simmons, Nq. 2.
Freie Presse, No. 3.
Woodruff -Collins, No. 4.
Graves '& Mulligan, No. 5.
, State Printing Co., No. 6.
Star Publishing Co., No. 7.
Western Newspaper Jnion, No. 8.
Wood Printing Co., No. 9. ,
George Bros., No 11.
McVey Printing Co., No. 12.
Union Advertising Co.1, No. 14.
Ford Printing Co., No. 16.
Gillespie & Phillips, No. 18.
VanTine & Young, No. 24.
The shop having label No. 15 Is re
quested to report the fact to the sec
retary of the Allied Printing Trades
Council.
NO MEETING.
Labor Temple Directors Adjourn to
Hear Raymond Robins.
The board of directors of the Lin
coln Labor Temple Building Associa
tion did not hold a meeting Monday
evening. Every director wanted to
hear Raymond Robins at the Universi
ty Temple. The board will meet next
Monday evening at the usual place,
but after that, . until further notice
will meet at the Commercial Club
rooms. Secretary Whitten of the Com
mercial Club has kindly arranged
so the board can meet there.
Chairman Dickson expects to get
busy as the board'fc representative
just as soon as the echoes of the
Fourth of July celebration .have fled
away, and will devote his whole time
to boosting the Temple project.
A PENNSYLVANIA VIEW.
The attitude shown by a republican
congress and republican judges to
wards the organized workers of the
country during the last six months,
the responsibility of the present panic
on the shoulders of the party, and
with Bryan and Mitchell as candi
dates on the democratic ticket, the
Taft-Sherman-Van Cleave aggregation
will not get a look in. Philadelphia
Trades Union News.
UoSqII
At Low
Hoppe's Hardware, 108 North 10th
EL & II
are truely wonderful stones nothing at all like the
ordinary immitation diamonds as brilliant as the real
diamonds. See them, you'll be surprised and delighted.
Henderson & Heild,
iotn street, oppoi
Burlington Routo Gigar Factory
. N
Trade Mark Registered.
. , (o-uencBize; .
One thing that distinguishes our Cigars is the superior workmanship
and the uniform high quality of stock used in their iPtafacture,
We invite you to patronize this home concernjl guarantee you
Cigars as finely made and of as good quality as any gvoHr turned out at
a similar price by an Eastern concern. We sell to retailers and jobbers
only. If you are not now handling our goods, send, us a trial order.
Burlington Routo Cigar Factory
205 North Ninth Street, LINCOLN, NEB.
Gastronomy
"The Science of Good Living.'9
Gas Economy
"Usini for Fuel."
The good housetoife tcho is broiled and toasted
by working ooer a red-hot coal range in summer can
not keep sweet temperedand an ill-tempared cook
like too many of them spoils the dinner. The
good housetoife, whose kitchen is fitted with modern
utensils like the workshop of her husband feels
like working and, therefore, turns out good work. A
Gas Range is the fnllest expression of modern labor
saoing machinery for the kitchen.
- "Means Woman Saving."
Time Saving
"Means Home Comfort." ; 1
A Gas Range in the kitchen saoes the housewife
many steps and much heaoy labor. That means
health saoing which makes for better wifehood,
better womanhood and better homes. Time saoing
means pleasure that is barred by the toil increasing
coal range. Buy a Gas Range and make home happier.
We sell Gas Ranges of eoery description cash
or payments.
Gas is cheaper than coal and we can prooe it.
LINCOLN GAS AND
ELECTRIC LIGHT CO.
DEMAND The
Vageworkers, Attention
We have Money to Loan
on Chattels. Plenty of it,
too. Utmost secrecy.
KELLY &NORRIS
139 So. Ilth St.
HARDWARE, STOVES, SPOUT
ING GOODS, RAZORS, RAZOR
STROPS AND CUTLERY -
Prices
it
Post Office
MLMJS
. H. CI N BERG, Prop.
MANUFACTURERS OF !
HIGH GRADE CIGARS ONLY
LEADING BRANDS, 10-CENT:
Senator Burkett, Burlington Route .
LEADING BRANDS, 5-CENT:
' Havana Fives, Burlington Route
UNION LABEL
LINCOLN SKIRT CO.
ETHEL E. ANDERSON, Proprietor. :
Exclusive Retailers. Manufacturers of
High-Grade, Made-tD-Measure Petticoats
1235 N Street. Lincoln, Hebr. ',
v