? 5 1 Fifty Thousand Dollars in Premiums To be divided among exhibitors from the different States at The National CORN EXPOSITION OMAHA, NEB. DECEMBER 9-19, 1908 See especially Union Pacific exhibit of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Old Mexico products. Yon cannot afford to miss this interesting and instructive Exposition. Come to Omaha via GModd Pacotfoc , Eleetrie Blook Signal Protection.' The Safe Road to Travel. E. B. SLOSSON, General Agent, Lincoln, Neb. lA Cheerful Home oTWaketh for Creature Comfort And the home illuminated by gas is always bright and cheerful. And, too, the economy adds to the smiles of content. If your house is not piped for illuminating gas, let us show you some figures that will convince you that it should be. Taking Off the Chill Little early foe the furnace but not too early for chilly mornings and evenings. A gas radiator will take the chill off and save coal bills. Mighty fine for the bath" room about thi3 time o' year. Pretty Fixtures For Modest Homes If you haven't already investigated you will be sur prised to find how cheaply you can install some modern and pretty gas fixtures fixtures that will add a whole i lot to the cheer and brightness of the little cottage. We arc showing a fine line of these new and up-to-date fixtures. Using Gas Better get over the unfounded notion that gas is expensive for lighting or heating. It is the cheapest illuminant adn the cheapest fuel. We will prove this if you will let us. Brightest and 'cheapest light Hottest and cheapest heat. Here are two facts susceptible of easy demonstration. How About Coke? Ever use it in the furnace or baseburnerf It is "fine business." Cheaper and better than hard coal or semi anthracite. We sell the coke. Lincoln Gas and Electric Light Company. Open Evenings &0000C00Cl0000000C0000Qe03000Q By Insisting Upon Pur- I chasing Union Stamp Shoes You help better shoemaRing conditions. You get better shoes for the moneu. Yju Labor Proposition. You abolish Labor. DO NOT BE MISLED By Retailers who say: "This shoe does not bear the stamp, but it is made under Union Conditions." THIS IS FALSE. No shoe is union mads unless it bears the Union Stamp. BOOT AND SHOE WORKERS' UNION 246 Sumner St., Boston, Mass: John F. Tobin, Pres. Ghas. L. Baine, See.-Treas. )09eOSltOi?0SO00Q0S00eO0S000000Q000 I UNIONISTIMP : & raeforvNo. help your otcn a Child AMONG THE LIVE ONE8. (Continued from page 1) last Sunday, and also the further Incisure of receiving a handsome en dorsement from that bully 'bunch , in his candidacy for appointment to the position of deputy labor commissioner. The report of the machine scale com mittee sounded good. It revealed an advance of 25 cents a day for the ensuing year, and 25 cents per day additional thereafter two years on the World-Herald, three years on the Newg and five years on the Bee. The total expense of securing the increase was $6. The new strike committee up there is getting busy, and harmony seems to be the watchword all along the line.' The meeting was one of the largest in many months. Orga nizer Bert Brady is in Omaha and looking after things. Lincoln Typographical Union No 209 will meet next Sunday afternoon several important committees are slated to report The news from Omaha gives encouragement to the boys down here. H S H DlflCMMfflS 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 & Hald, lOth Street. Opposite Post Office The muddle in the affairs of the International Brotherhood of Electri cal Workers bids fair, to be settled amicably. The Denver convention de voted considerable time to unraveling the tangle, and the results promise to be good. A committee was ap pointed to investigate and held five long sessions. It decided to seat as delegates McNulty and Fay, elected ty the Louisville convention in 1905. asserting that it could find nothing in the Brotherhood's laws to empower the president to appoint delegates. The committee further reported as follows: "Tour committee further recom mends that all officers, members and local unions of the Brotherhood make every effort possible to pro mote the holding of a special conven tion in St. Loui3, Mo., on January 1S( 1909, and that under existing cir cumstances every local should be re resented. We recommend that Presi dent McNulty and Secretary Collins issue, jointly, without delay, a circu lar, urging the holding of said special convention and every local to be rep resented therein. We also recom mend that Brothers J. J. Read and F. Sullivan, representing the protest ing delegation, ir-sue a similar circu lar, urging the holding of the special convention in January, 1909, at St. Louis. Mo., and that all locals be there represented. "Your committee also recommends that President Rompers be directed to issue a circular to all local unions of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers urging that the special convention be held, that all local unions send delegates, and to embody in such circular the action of this convention. "Your committee finds thai the funds of the Brotherhood are not available for the necessary payment of benefits, and the general work of the Brotherhood, because of injunc tion suits, attachments, etc., leaving the organization in a condition that threatens the life and necessary work of the Brotherhood. "Your committee, in order to re lieve this unfortunate and perilous situation, recommends that all suits at law tieing up the funds be with drawn; that all funds now on han4 or on deposit, or hereafter received, by either side of the controversy, be made a special trust fund in charge of a bank in Springfield, 111., to be designated by President Gompers, to be paid out by said bank on orders or checks signed by Secretary P. W. Collins and Treasurer F. J. Sullivan, in accord with the laws of the Inter national Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. "Your committee further recom mends that the action of the special convention to be held in St. Louis, Mo., in January next, be binding and final in accord with the constitution of the Brotherhood, upon all ques tions submitted thereto, and that all moneys In the trust fund be at the close of the convention turned over to the proper officers of the Brother hood, as designated by said special convention." All this seems to meet with favor, and there will be another convention in St. Louis earlv in the year this time a Vhannony convention." Lin coln will be represented, of course. The Lincoln bunch of Electrical Workers is made .up of "live ones." HEN OVERCOATS And CRAVEN ETTES The Price of Men's Overcoats at Speier & Simon's starts at $15 and runs along with frequent stops up to $22.50. If you pay more you -pay too much. SEE THE BIG WIN DOW DISPLAY. We save you money. The Price of Men's Cravenettes at Speier & Simon's starts at $7.75 and jogs along with frequent stops till you get to $20.00. If you pay more you pay too much. These prices get the best. We save you money. Remember, men, that our clothing is priced so low that we can't afford to have cut-price sales. If we marked our goods up now 25 per cent and 30 per cent and made every man pay this high price till January first, then we .could afford to "cut" the price and "holler" about it as loud as anybody; In that case if you bought now and your neighbor bought in January, you would not be getting a square deal1) having paid 25 per cent more for the same goods. THIS IS OUR POLICY One low price to all, every day in the year. We welcome all men who appreciate this method of doing business, to our store. peier N. E. Corner 10th and O Out of the High-Rent District uracil We Save You Money 3 George Bros, have branched out a bit in the printing line, having added a German printing department. Fore man Fred Brenner knows the Ger man end of the printing business as well as he does the English end of it, which means that he is an artist at both. Last 'season Lew Dockstader prom ised that as soon ase he got rid of hia bunch of non-union printing he would use onlv labeled stuff. But Lew's promise doesn't seem to be worth much. He is using the same old "rat" printing this year. Mr. Alex Weckesser and Miss Min nie M. Kleinschmidt were married on November 26 at the home of the groom in this city., The Wageworker joins with the many friends of this young couple in wishing them a happy and prosperous life. They are now at home to friends at 904 B street. Mir. Wecklesser is foreman of tht press room at George Bros.' printery, and is one of tho real "live ones" in Lincoln trades union circles. The Building Trades department of the American Federation of Labor, which met in session immediately af ter the adjournment of the Denver convention, elected the following offi cers: i President, James Kirwin of Chicago. First vice-president, G. E. Hedrick of New York. Second vice-president, James G. Hannahan of Chicago. Third vice-president, Frank M. Ryan of Chicago. Fourth' vice-president, W. J. Me Sorley of Philadelphia. v ' " Fifth vice-president, M. O'Sullivan of Pittsburg. . Secretary, William J. Spencer of Dayton, Ohio. The convention adjourned to meet at Tampa, Fla., the second Monday In. October, 1909. RAYMOND ROBINS' GREAT SPEECH. 1 (Continued from page 1) that the stone which the builders have 'rejected has become the head' Btone of the corner; and the stone which the builders of empire have rejected in the history of men has been the great group of toil. That stone" was rejected when in the great council of the people of Great Britain, th?re was present the members of that despised group the group of toil who stand there in parliament for great human values, the greatest values for the empire that had ever been advocated in that great house of parliament in the history of man kind. Jt was said by that brave man and follower of the simple -carpenter of Nazareth, Charles Stelzle, on this platform this afternoon, that the leis ure class did not make good. My friends, 1 want to add to that, just UqSoII HARDWARE, STOVES; SPOTT ING GOODS, RAZORS, RAZOR 21KUP2 AND CUTLERY At Low Prices Hoppe's Hardware. 100 North 101b ;his: The leisure class in the history of mankind never did make good; it never . will make good, because it never can. Whenever a boy or girl is raised under conditions where he does not have to work for what he gets, whenever he is surrounded by I.rivilege and opportunity, he becomes careless and indifferent, and his mind and body are not capable of the service that the working child, if he has good food and good air and decent condi tions, is capable of giving to the world. The battle Is In better shape today than ever before More men of labor understand what their great work Is to be. More men outside of Tabor's rank are in tympathy with the ulti mate purpose, the citizenship rights of the manhood and womanhood of labor than ever before. Let us gather courage, let us dare to believe in each. other, let us dare to believe in our leaders. My friends, the other fel lows don't dicker and divide their forces in the face of the enemy on the day of battle. God grant that the day will come in the history of orga nized labor when, after we have de cided what is best, we will stand to gether, submitting and surrendering, if need be, our personal choice in the interest of the common good. , 1 want - to say that I look forward to the unity of organized labor, not be hind any party thank God, I dare to be free! I have voted the repub lican ticket and the democratic ticket, and I thought I was doing right each time, and I will vote any old ticket that looks to me as being best for the human values of this country any time it comes to the front. But, men, we have no power worth considering on the political field for any party or any principle until we get together. I don't know what the future holds. Even such a wise man as this olfl leader of labor, Samuel Gompers, knows not what the future hnMa i do know that' there is no future of any kind for us until we have sense enough to lay aside personal differ ences, agree on a program and then stick to the bitter end.' THE BARBERS. Little News Notes That May Interest Men of That Craft. The barbers of Minneapolis hav-s employed a business agent who will devote Mb entire time to working for the organization. A special effort will be made to unionize every shop In the Flour City. . , . . V 'Men who follow the barber trade in Omaha hereafter will have to stand a stiff examination. They must show' that they are good workmen, and in addition must know something about skin diseases and their remedies. A board of examiners has been ap pointed by Mayor Dahlman, acting under an old ordinance that has re cently, been revived. Mr. Till Hardy, in a talk before the Lincoln Ad Club the other evening, told some interesting facts about thf barber " uninees abroad. " He said bar be shops in Eng!and were travesties on American' shops both In fitting and In workmen Most Englishmen shave themselves, and those who pa tronize a barber do so at their own risk. The best shops are in the swell hotels and are patronied almost exclusively by Americans. J- AIM OF UNIONISM. The trades union is not an agency of antagonism, but of sympathy and charitableness. f It does not aim to array man against man, but to unite them in the bonds of truest brother hood. Duluth Labor World.