rui jJ I jCrjy VOL. 5 LINCOLN, NEBBASKA, OCTOBEB 17, 1908 NO. 29 Y To What Brotherhood Does This Man Belong Walter Wellman. the Chicago Record-Herald's political corespondent, is traveling about the country with a view to ascertaining Just how wide spread is the labor revolt against Taft. Writing from Cincinnati Wellman, among other things, says: "One brotherhood official, a man of high rank and soMd judgment, said to me: 'I am myself a Republican. I am for Judge Taft for President. There is nothing in his record which deters me from voting for him, and I think It would be better for the coun try it he were elected. But I must say to you that I am afraid he is in dancer of being beaten. I believe Ohio. Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin are all doubtful states. My opinion is based upon infromation as to the trend of the railway Vote and the votes of labor men in genera", through out this part of the country. I wish It were otherwise, but such are the tacts as I see them." " A Brotherhood official of high rank." eh? Why not tell us what Brotherhood it is? Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers, the organization that Judge Taft called a "band of conspirators' and whose grand chief. (1S!3) Peter M. Arthur, now deceased, said, speak lug of Taft: "W cannot acept Judge Tart's de cision in any other light than treason to Republican institutions and the liberties of the people. It is. will be and ought to be. denounced and re pudiated by all liberty loving men. If ' the decision stands . as the decision of the highest tribunal of the land, it will be defied and violated by the highest earthly tribunalthe people." Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, another organization that udge Taft called a "band of con spiractors, and whose grand chief (1833) Frank P. Sargent, said, speak ing of Taft: "The strike on the Toledo, Ann Arbor A North Michigan railroad had no extraordinary features, but' the In terferenc of the United States judges have given it national prominence, and if the dictum of these judges (Taft and Ricks) is to stand as the law, the dearest rights of the citizen are swept away and an autocracy established." We beg of Walter Wellman that he give us the name of this "Brotherhood official, a man of high rank and solid judgment," who says that "there is nothing in Taft's record to deter mt from voting for him." What Is needed to deter-a man from voting for Taft? He called this "Brotherhood offlicial's" grand chief a "conspirator,' his organization a band of conspirators, usurped the functions o fthe officials themselves and used the machinery of the organ tat Ion to work injury to its members Yet this "Brotherhood official" says says there is nothing in Taft's record to deter him from voting for Taft. This "Brotherhood official of high rank" quoted by Mr. Wellman says "there Is nothing in Judge Taft's rec ord to deter me from voting for him." Is he a member of the Brotherhood so long and so successtuly presided over by Peter M. Arthur? Grand Chief Arthur said: "JUDGE TAFT'S DECISION PUB LICLY PROCLAIMS THE MEMBERS OF THE B. OF L. E. A BAND OF CONSPIRATORS." This "Brotherhood official of high rank" will find that exact language in the Journal of the Brotherhood of Lo comotive Engineers, issue . of May, 18? 3. Or. perhaps this "Brotherhood of ficial of high rank" is a member of the Brotherhood so long presided over by Frank P. Sargent Grand Chief Sar feat said of Judge Taft's decision In the Toledo, Ann Arbor & North Mlcht gaa railroad case: "IF A JUDGE OF THE UNITED STATES COURT MAY ABOLISH THIS RIGHT (the right of the em ploy to quit work) OF AN EM PLOYE. HE REMANDS HIM. UN EQUIVOCALLY, TO A SERVITUDE AS DEGRADING AS THE 8PARTANS IMPOSEO UPON THEIR HELOTS." This Brotherhood official of high rank" will find that exact language in the North American Review, issue of May. 1893, over the signature of Frank P. Sargent. In heaven's name what would deter this "Brotherhood official of high rank?" But it may be that this "Brother hood official of high raak" belongs to neither of the Brotherhoods above mentioned. He may belong to the Brotherhood in which Frank Phelan held membership. Phelan is the man Judge Taft sentenced to imprisonment for six months on the testimony of a hired spy a man known by Judge aft to be a spy furnished to the re ceiver of the Cincinnati Southern rail road by the Field Detective Agency of St. Louis. If this "Brotherhood of ficial of high rank" belongs to this Brotherhood and can not see in Taft's treatment of Phelan a reason that would deter him from supporting Taft well, in that case he is hopeless. put an end to that sort of thing for a long time to come, and do labor far more good in the long run than suc cess could possibly do for it. In my i tour this week I am going to say this to the workingmen whom I address, that their worst enemies are the few of their own number who would moid them into a sort of bludgeon with which to strike down any and every one who dares disagree with them." There is a lot of food for thought in that interview. It isn't just what Judge Taft thought it was, however. Judge Taft says his election will put an end to labor's efforts to secure the righting of wrongs at the ballot box He doesn't say it just that way, but that is exactly what his language means. And he is about right. . If organized labor does not take ad vantage of its present golden oppor- X. atle ' as The Wageworker hopes it will be, Mr. and Mrs. Fulton will havs to get a nay wagon to haul their money home. THE BARTENDERS. Follow a Brother to His Last Long Resting . Place. Onj Friday, October 9, the members of the Bartenders' League of Lincoln consigned to their last resting place the mortal remains of Samuel Landis a member of the League. The fun eral services were conducted by the Eagles. The story of the sad ending of Mr. Landis' life was told in last weeK's issue. , Herman Sundean returned last week fiom his trip to Dallas, S. D., where he took a chance in Uncle Sam's land Gompers Makes Plain Statement to Judge Taft Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor has dealt nominee Taft some telling blows squarely from the shoulder. He is sued a statement last week in which William H. Taft, Republican candi date for the Presidency, is bitterly ar rainged because of the laters charge in a speech at Denver last night that the labor leader was "lying to his fol lowers." "It is quite evident that Candidate Taft is losing his temper as well as his manners and his dignity," asserts Mr. Gompers. "He cannot meet the truth and the justice of labor's con- FOOLISH MEL Senator Albert Jeremiah Beveridge of Indiana is stumping the country for "William II. Taft. Senator Beveridge is a lawyer and therefore feels competent to inform laboring men how they should vote in order to . protect their own interests. As proof of his competency he can exhibit callouses worn upon his jaw try' his hercu lean task of working for the workingman. At Pueblo, Colo., the seat of big iron and steel industries, Senator Beveridge recently spoke on "Labor." He asked: "Is there bread for laborers to eat in a single line of Mr. Bryai's platform? "Are there clothes and shoes for his wife and chil dren in a single proposition Mr. Bryan makes in his speeches!" , Before answering Albert Jeremiah Beveridge 's ques tions let us ask him a couple: "Are the tides influenced by the moon or by the Dingley tariff law?" "How can a workingman. sentenced to jail for ex ercising his rights as a citizen, earn money to buy food and -clothing for hm wife-find little ones?"" ' " -Platforms do not supply food and clothing. The principles enunciated in platforms may or may not, if framed into laws, afford a worker an opportunity to en joy the fruits of his labor. A principle that affords equal opportunity is better than a principle that de prives a portion of the people of their opportunities. A law that will prevent a worker from being sentenced to jail without a trial by jury certainly affords the worker a better opportunity to provide for his wife and little one than a judicially enacted law that prevents him from exercising his rights under penalty of jail for contempt without a trial. "All the rights labor has, or will have, we have given and will give," declares Albert Jeremiah Beveridge. Either Senator Beveridge is knowingly talking non sense or he takes the workers to be t pack of fools. The right to work is not a privilege granted by any party. The inalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness was acknowledged while Albert Jeremiah Beveridge and his party were eventualities of future time. The Carpenter of Nazareth plied his trade two thousand years before Judge Taft forged the shackles of the injunction that were to be placed upon the wrists of honest toil. Paul the Tentmaker plied his trade nineteen hundred years before Albert Jeremiah Beveridge 's party turned a deaf ear to the just demands BEVERIDGE reiterates much which he has pre viously said in editorials and on the p' at form about the failure of the Chi cago convention to grant the demands of labor, and also the attitude of con gress toward the labor movement. "In so stating have I been lying or have I told the truth T inquires Mr. Gompers. "Did not Candidate Taft read. 02 did not some one tell him, that neither by word or action have we assumed that we had the right to the power to deliver the labor vote to any candidate? Does he not know that upon every occasion in the campaign I have emphatically declared that I did not presume either to dictate to, or de liver the vote of, any citizen of the entire country, and having known this fact, is it fair for Mr. Taft to declare and reiterate so palpable an untruth?" of ! honest toilers at Chicago and listened to the siren voices of Post, Parry and VanCleave. Senator Beveridge talks like a ninny' when he says "his party" has given labor all the rights it has, and will give them all the rights it can ever hope to have. "We also have given to the laborer food for his table and a roof for his head. - '. For downright silliness this takes the premium.' Labor asks no man for food ; it asks no political- party fop a roof over its head. Lebor simply demands an equal opportunity to earn these things. Men earned and ate and slept under roofs before "political parties were orga- nixed. Equal opportunity is not a gift to be bestowed it is a right to be exercised. The republican candidate has given, and Ms party convention has endorsed, a principle that deprives the worker of a constitutional right that is never denied the commonest thief a trial by jury. His party has.; degraded the trades union, made up of men with brains and souls, to the level of corporations that deal in mat ted and merchandise.. Under the plea of "protecting American labor"- it has set the palaces of millionaires on the hills, and the hovels of the workers in the miasma tie hollows. The only weapon by which the worker can protect his rights as a worker the union has been decided by his party to be an unlawful trust.' The worker's right of self-defense has been taken from him by the injunction writ. "We have also given the laborer food for his table" and fifteen thousand school children in Chicago going to school hungry every morning. '.'We have also given to the laborer a roof for his head" and thousands of homeless men tramping in a vain search for work while wives and children swam like flies and die like flies in the noisome tenemtnts of every large city. The sublime assurance, the unparalleled cheek, of Albert Jeremiah Beveridge is a spectacle' calculated to make men and angels weep. "I want the workingman to consider the answers to my questions before he votes," declares Albert Jere miah Beveridge. The workingman who has to take time to consider the answers to those fool questions is certainly the only kind of a worker who believes that any political party grants the "right to work' or that any political party "puts food upon the worker's table" or a "roof over the worker's head." CENTRAL LABOR UNION. at Takes Steps to Be Represented Federation's Convention. President Rudy was not present iX the meeting of the Central Labor Union Tuesday evening, so Vice Presi dent Quick presided and wielded the gavel in an artistic manner. It was the unanimous sentiment of the delegates that the central body ought to be represented at the Denver convention of the American Federa tion of Labor, so T. C. Keisey was elected delegate and George Locker alternate. The matter of financing the matter will be taken up at the next meeting. Label Booster Peate of the Typo graphical Union was . present, and called attention to the fact that the Majestic theatre programs were minus the label. The delegates were in structed to report the fact to their locals and see to it that the locals get busy. i, ,. ... . ... ,. . . The Musicians delegate reported negotiations under way to straighten out the Elite theatre difficulty. The Bartenders" League delegates were asked to take notice of the fact tiat the printing of the "Model Li cense League," with headquarters iu Louisville, was being done in an un fair oflBce. The License' League's of ficials will be notified that until such time as their printing is done in a fair office it will be a waste of time and money to send their literature to union men in Lincoln. A delegate from the Plumbers com plained that a lot of defective plumb ing was being put in, despite the pro tests of the plumbers. The local will be asked to furnish the central boJy with specific cases, and the central body will undertake to prosecute un der the ordinances. We can not imagine anything that Taft could do that would alienate the support of such a "Brotherhood of ficial of high rank." Mr. Wellman, in adition to giving us the above valuable information also gives us the following Interview with Judge Taft: "If I am elected president, as I have no doubt I shall be," he said to me today, "I shall treat all organized labor with exact justice, precisely as if a part of it were not opposing me. But 1 feel very keenly that the best thing that can happen to the labor cause in this campaign is that it meet with defeat in its efforts to prevent my election. Only a small part of organized labor is against me, and if that part and its spokesmen fail of their purpose I believe that will be the end of efforts to have labor swing the big stick and beat every one who refuses to meet all its demands. The American people do not want to be tyrannized in their political activity by a class or an organization, and it doesn't matter what the class or or ganization is. I believe my election, despite the opposition of a few who would like to exercise a sort of veto power over men and measures, will tunity it need not waste time trying it again. THE FULTONS. Popular Artist Return to Lincoln for Another- Long Season. Tne always popular Fultons JesB and his talented wife are again in Lincoln, again surrounded by a ca pable company, and again booked fo. a long season in standard plays. This is welcome news to Lincoln people. Beginning Monday the Fulton Stock company will open the winter season at the Lyric, the first offering being "The Devil," a play that has taken New York by storm. This will be followed by other high class offerings presented by a company selected wit'n a view to giving the theatre-goers .( Lincoln the best possible entertain ment. As usual, the Fultons will play at popular prices but the admission price will be the only cheap feature of the season. Everything else will be "way up." Union men and women reed 'not be told that "Jess" is on c.f them. If the season is a-s profit- lottery. He reports enough fun on the trip to repay him, even if he doesn't get a look-in on a piece of land. The regular monthly meeting of the Bartenders' League will be held tomorrow (Sunday) and it is es pecially important that there be a full attendance. Matters of importance will be brought up for consideration. THE BUSINESS BRIBE. The promise of plutocratic manufac turers to raise the wages of their em ployes, if Taft carries the election. Is toth criminal and mean. .It is as clearly a bribe as was ever a two collar bill at the poiis. It is besides as certainly a fraud as was ever a three-card monte game at a county fair. If manufacturers can be sure c raising wages after election they chn raise wages now. If they can not raise wages now, they can not be certain of raising them after election. What they are at is trying to Influ ence hard-working and poorly paid voters to vote against labor interests by offering them bribes that are never to be paid. Chicago Public. tention as regards bis injunctions, his party's refusal in congress to accord the relief from discrimination in de cision against the workers in the in junction abuse and from the Sher man anti-trust law under which the voluntary organization of the working people are now held as trusts. I as sert he cannot meet these issues and he therefore undertakes to resort to the well known ' policy of the petti fogger who has a bad case, that is, by abusing the other side. "The working people,of the coun try know that 31r. Taft's . 'ridicule and rasping sarcasm.: are not aimed at me but at them, for there is not one thought I have expressed or one step which I have taken but had their initiative in the rank and file of the American masses, unorganized as well as organized. "But Mr. Taft, departing from his lighter vein of attack, accuses me of lying. In what have I lied in regard to any matter, at least in regard to judge Tatty mose who Know me will attest my dependability and my veracity. Judge Taft is the first re spectable man to question it." In language as vigorous as that used by Mr. Taft, the labor leader PRINTERS' MODEL TENT tea to Tu- Highly Praised by Delegate berculoaia Congress. At the international tuberculosis congress in wasnington ine exnimi of the International Typographical union from the printers home at Col orado Springs, Co., attracted much at tention and received great praise from visiting delegates and the medical fra ternity in generaL Dr. Livingston Farand of New York, executive secretary of the National Association for the Prevention of Tu berculosis, asked SnpL Deacon to pre sent the model tent of the printers exhibit to his association, so. that it may. be added to the traveling exhibit shown by the national association in the various cities of the country In connection with illustrated lectures designed to educate the people to the necessity of engaging' in a crusade against tuberculosis. fi KILLED BY THE CARS. 1 ; Brakeman Ware of the Burlington Met Death at Pleasantdale. W. E. Ware, a Burlington brake man, was killed at Pleasantdale. Neb., last Monday evening while trying to board the train when it was going at a high.- rate ,.of - speed. His foot slipped on the rods and he was thrown under the wheels.. Mr. Ware came to Lin&ffc from Dallas, Tex., some months :ao. and ' roomed at 1422 O street, lfc'hd bo relatives In this city, and ili identi fication card named Mrs. EL Stover of 'Dallas as his next of kln - V