OSOSOi50OSOf090SOOSOSOeOSO50SOSCi9050OOSOOSO0 OSOTOOOC090050e03030OQ09090SOeOQOSOS09090eO0 Soorlo d Ghcpin Lunitcr Go. 1 The Little Gold Dust J. V. HALL, Proprietor 125 North Eleventh Street i LINCOLN, NEBRASKA ALL KINDS OF BUILDING HATEniAL ALJUJNS WORLD i LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. I I Telephones: Bell 29; Auto 2929 Tr 13 R. C. SCHNEIDER! 8 DEALER IN Fresh and Salt Meats Butter, Poultry and Eggs. Game In Season. Home Dressed Meats a Soecialty. Phones: Bell 433; Auto 1443 309 SOUTH NINTH STREET LINCOLN, NEB. S THE FLACE TO FU V JT JLjl. 1 Jl $ Ready Made and Made to measure & 8 ElllO nilEH n A RIT4? a0 A 8 LLItd BAULK TAN 1 5 LU. I 118 Souh 1 1th Street i&0&&SO3O2OSO3C&OSO&O2O&O3O&G8G$O8O2O8Q03OS03030&9& Ithe buffet I Chas. Newbrandt, Proprietor V - I Tony Faust's Celebrated Beer on Drught. Domestic and Imported Uines, Liquors and Cigars. I 115-117 South 12th St., LINCOLN, NEBRASKA TRY THE I EXTRA FINA CIGAR s $ It is now Sold at Almost Every Stand. Always a Fine BLUE LABEL Smoke. I 128 So. Ilth. P. J. WOHLEMBERG Kl. L. McPHERSON Choico IVinos and Liquors dick: bros; beer Don't Go Too Far, But Inquire Here. 847 O Street. Auto 3372 Lincoln, Neb. 00'3030iKSO'i'X50iSO0&0$&3C 9 Bell Telephone 112 Auto Telephone 2816 J 1 1 Q. A. JUQENHEIMER Fine IVines. Liquors, Cigars Agent Willow Springs Brewing Co. 1119 P Street 8. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. I 0SOi80SOSOfOOSOSOSOSOSOSOSOOSOSOC-0$00-SO0OSOOd $OOSOSO050OSOCO00S090SOSOiSO000OSOSOSO PILSENER BUFFET ELEVENTH AND M STREETS WALTER ANDERSON, PROP. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA I HERMAN WOLTEMADE MANUFACTURER OF I FINE CIGARS 1 $ 114 South 9th St. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. 1 A 0 5 oJoxeK-o-:-ox:xox o a Detroit, Mich. Daniel J. Tobin, of Cambridge, Mass., was re-elected pres ident of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, in convention here. Oth er o Ulcers were elected as follows: Vice-presidents, E. J. Mullin, Chicago; George Golden, Chicago; A. A. Silva, Chicago; Peter Burke, Boston; John J. Jennings, Jersey City; Lawrence J. Grau, Providence, R. I.; secretary- treasurer, Thomas L. Hughes; general Auditor, George W. Briggs, Chicago; board of trustees, Michael J. Staehan, Boston; James Welch, New Orleans; Thomas Connolly, Chicago; delegates to the American Federation of Labor, Thomas Barry and Edward Coleman, Chicago; Henry McCormick, New York; Patrick D. Daley, Boston, and John E. Longstreet, Cincinnati. Peoria,- 111., was selected for the next convention in 1910, after Mayor O'Con- ner of that city had made an address to the convention. Seattle. Federal Judge Hanford granted an injunction asked for by the ship owners and steamship companies against the various longshoremen's unions ' of the Pacific coast. Judge Hanford restrained the Puget council of longshoremen and the local union from Interfering with non-union men in loading and unloading ships at Se attle. The judge held he had juris diction in a case where interstate traf fic was held affected and that the la bor unions were responsible for the acts of violence committed. Winnipeg, Man. Twelve thousand jnechanics of the Canadian Pacific rail road struck, closing down every shop on the system. The tieup is complete and the action of the men is taken as their decision to put labor unionism in Canada to the supreme test. The walkout was well planned and no dis order occurred, the men simply laying down their tools at the preconcerted signal from the shop whistles. The cause of the strike lies in a dispute over the new schedule handed down by an arbitration board. Detroit, Mich. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters rejected the overtures of the United Teamsters of America to amalgamate the two organ izations. The brotherhood held to the position taken by the Boston conven tion of the brotherhood last year, that the United Teamsters could enter the brotherhood as individuals or as a body if they submitted to the laws of the brotherhood. The conditions de manded by the United Teamsters failed to meet approval. Sioux Falls,- S. D. The problem of securing sufficient harvest hands is be ing simplified by the Cincinnati Toung Men's Christian association, which has sent 200 laboring men to South Dako ta and other western states. The or ganization exercised great care in the selection of men who are said by the farmers to "be sober and industrious. With scarcely an exception the vnen went to work as soon as they arrived. Scranton, Pa. Grand Master F. T. Hawley of the Switchmen's Union of America said that he had received word that Commissioners Neill and Knapp would act as mediators be tween the switchmen and President Truesdale of the Lackawanna road, but he could not say when. Kenosha, Wis. The Chicago Brass Company started on a ten-hour shift after running eight hours for nearly a year. Two months ago there were over 1,000 Idle men in Kenosha, but now nearly all are employed. Milwaukee, Wis. Milwaukee manu facturing companies are beginning to work with full quotas of men. The following concerns report necessity of putting on more men: National Brake and Electric, Filer & Stowell, Nordberg manufacturing, Wisconsin Wire, Prinz & Rau, Vilter. Pawling & Harnischfeger, Worden-Allen. The Allis-Chalmers company reports a steady increase in business. Paris. The contractors for city works, such as street making and sew ers, began a lockout. Five thousahd men are affected. A signer of the name of Mansnelle has sued General Secre tary Pataud of the Electrical Workers' union for the amount lost through fail ure to fill a concert engagement, which failure was due to the strike of the electrical workers the other night. . Boston. Favorable action on the ap pointment of a committee to investi gate, report and remedy, if possible, the ravages of tuberculosis in so far as It vitally affected the members of the organization, and the defeat of the proposition for a convention every five years instead of annually, were the features of the meeting of the Interna tional Typographical union. Milwuakee, Wis. As a preliminary .to the national convention in Milwau kee on September 8, Milwaukee Ce ment Workers' union will have a rally at labor headquarters, 318 Seate street. on August 29. Plans for entertainment of guests will be made and organizers will speak. International President Alfred Tracy will be present. The question of molders who recently lost .their strike coming into the field of 'cement workers and working for lower jwages will be considered. The cement workers resent intrusion of the mold ,ers because all unions helped the moid- J .era financially during the strike. New Orleans, La. Several hundred operatives 'at the . Lane-Maggins Cot ton mills in this city have gone on a strike, leaving only a small working force In the mills. The company-' re cently announced that on account of stagnant condition in the cotton goods market it would be necessary to close down unless the operatives would ac cept a cut in wages. It was under stood that a large majority of the op eratives agreed to the reduction, bnt when it went into effect only a small proportion of tttem remained at work. Copenhagen. With the exception of a few Social - Democratic papers the publication of all newspapers in Den mark was suspended indefinitely in consequence of the strike of printers and its resultant lock-out. The com positors declare they will hold out for an eight-hour dayv The bookbinders also have been locked out. The Em ployers union notified the United Trade Federations that it intends to clare a lock-out of all workmen In the shipbuilding, metal, cement, textile, brick-making, leather and other trades unless the present dispute is speedily settled. Birmingham, Ala. At a largely at tended meeting of the coal operators, both furnace, commercial and inde pendent, held here, an organization was perfected. The objects of the or ganizations are to promote stable, just, harmonious and business-like relations between the coal operators of Alabama, their employes and the public; to aid in seeing that suspension of operations in violation of contract is visited with adequate penalties; to see that any member of this association suffering from strikes in violation of contract is sustained and supported. Milwaukee, Wis. Armed with invi tations from the Citizens Business league, James McGuire, delegate from this city, has secured for Milwaukee the 1909 convention of the Glass Blow ers' association of the United States and Canada. It will be held the first Monday in July and will bring several hundred delegates. This will be the first time the glass blowers have met in Milwaukee, the center of large op erations in bottle manufacturing. Indianapolis, Ind. The Central La bor union of this city adopted a res olution commending Samuel Gompers for his attitude towards the anti-injunction law. The resolution also condemns the "unjust attitude of cer tain judges and courts in decisions rendered against members of organ ized labor." Washington. Average hourly wages in the United States in 1907 were higher than in any other year of the period, 1890 to 1907, and more than 20 per cent, higher than the average in any year from 1890. to 1900. San Francisco. The French laun dries have reported that the Japanese laundries are seriously affecting their business and have promised to sup port the Anti-Japanese League morally and financially. London, England. Owing to the great dearth of work in the Fairfield shipyard. Go van, the employes are to have three weeks' holiday, and thereafter only eight hours a day for five days a week. Pittsburg, Pa. A vage agreement for the ensuing year was adopted re cently at a conference between repre sentatives of the steel interests and of the Amalgamated Iron, Steel and Tin Workers. London, Eng. The last of the Clyde shipbuilding strikes came to an end only recently when the tinsmiths re sumed work on the employers' terms of reduced wages. The men had been on strike since the first of the year. The wage dispute is therefore at an end in Glasgow and the shipbuilding centers along the Clyde. New Bedford, Mass. Weavers" union has laid over the proposed amendment making it obligatory for members to have their families en rolled in their respective craft organ izations before becoming eligible to hold any office in the union or to rep resent the union in any labor conven tion or central labor body. London, Eng. Serious mining ca tastrophes recorded in the United Kingdom last year have resulted In an increase in the death rate from 1.29 in 1906 to 1.32 in 1907, but freedom from accidents is greater in the col lieries of the United Kingdom than in those of other countries, except Aus tria and Belgium. Pittsburg, Pa. Negro firemen will be organized and enrolled in the ranks of the International Brotherhood of Stationary Firemen. Reading, Pa. The Reading railway issued orders that its locomotive shops in this city should go on four days a week until further notice. It employs 1,800 men. Recently the shops were in operation five days, and before that were closed several weeks. At the company's carshops the employes make 50 hours a week. Fall River, Mass. A heavy curtail ment went into effect in the majority of the large mills in this city. Many of the mills shut down for a week, including the Border City, Mechanics, Seaconnet and American Linen company. I GULF COAST LAND AT TACT, TEXAS Winter Vegetables ripen earlier than any other point in the U. S. Land grows Oranges, Lemons. Figs. Dates. Etc.. Easy terms' of payment. NEXT LOW RATE EXCURSION SEP TEMBER FIRST. SPECIAL CARS. 716 p st. WHITE & LEVI P0000SOSO0030QO300009OS0SO5 Lincoln O OSO0&OSO00000SO00$0OS030&00003 MIKE'S PLACE We Treat You Right 925 O STREET 090000000009009000200050Q09090C 000OSOOSOOS030OS030SOSOSOSO09000030090 5 a D. J. HARTNETT, Prop. CAPITAL BAR Wines, Liquors and Ggars g ELEVENTH & P STREETS BeH Telephone Automatic I 6 256 1256 SOL KSENSKY IMPORTER AND DEALER IN WINES AND LIQUORS Agent King Brewing Co. Omaha, Neb. 227 North lOth St. LINCOLN 00OSOO00000O300030SOSOr-O30QO3O30O4 00C0OSO00200030SO$OSOSOH3S050SO0 HAVE YOUR SUIT MADE BY UNION TAILORS Backstrom Company HIGH-GRADE UNION TAILORS $ 1320 N STBEET LINCOLN, NEC3ASSA 50OSOOSOSOOSO000OK50SOC'0OSOS03090 000900OeO0OKSO020030SO)OSOS Posto This In Vow 3g! i ' You can't beat "Ideal" Flour at any g price, no matter what you pay. Sim- ply telephone. Only $1.25 a sack, delivered free. Lincoln Steam Paste Co. BOTH PUOmES 315 Serf CS Sfrest $O9OSOSO3000909OeOS00O03OSOe09OSO-? ffi O 00OaOeOeO0050eO050?OS05)KKVi050000 J. V, MASULLY UP-TO-DATE T0NS0RIAL ARTIST We hire onlq Unions Hen ' Your Trade Solicited. . . SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL 1014 IS Street f)0OSO0OSO0OSOSOS030CSOOOSOSOQO0K3000- C. A. Tucker Dr. S. S. Shear. Jeweler Optician 1123 O Street : Yellow Front fINE REPAIRING A SPECIALTY All WOSX WAKSANTED