RB9fB one Vaa a Seirvlcoi Dm advance by selecting the very best clothes made for you to choose from. Surely this is the best place to buy your new Spring Suit we'll show you more models and patterns than you can see in all the other stores combined and well show you clothes you'll like, that fit you, that are becoming to you, and well sell them at prices that will be as profitable to you as to us. We don't believe any other Lin coln store sells clothes anywhere near as good as ours at anywhere near the prices. Oooir Hiiglhiesti QoaaDDoes priced at $25, $30, $35 and $40 are as fine garments as the best tailors in the big Eastern cities make to measure and get $75 and more for. 1 ' ft omrSpiTflinigSaDDfts FVocedl $15. $18, $20 and $22.50 possess a distinction of high-toned style; there's new de signs in models, smart patterns, rich colorings, fine fabrics at any one of these prices we'll show you ten suits to any other store's one and at any price of these prices will save you at least $5 on the purchase price. - We SeDD (Sodl Sooote srit $10 and $12.50 they're so good that if they were in other Lincoln stores they might be priced $5 more. Singers Delicate Task in Closing Contracts . with Them By OSCAR HAMMERSTELN. irinnisftircDinig DdDftDnSinig GdDinnioDaiini 1 GOOD CLOTHES MERCHANT Si ; i Union Made Clothing "EVERWEAR" Guaranteed Hosiery for Men and Women Union Made Hats and Caps Securing contracts with singer i nw of the- r-al worrits of the ilirectof of grand pwra. am! it i h-nr that his personality ami hi musical temperament count. If a Morgan or a Frk-k. with boumlIe w-a!f h. were to try to vngasr a linger anl he Ia-kerl th traits his money would count for naught. It may I" hypnotism with me, though I hare mmir running all through me. I can play the piano, violin and flute, and I stmlieil harmony at the Conservatory of Music in JJcpzig. Great artists are great lailie anl gentlemen. ami are able to associate with the finest peoprle in the world. They demand, that recognition of their wr its which rightfully Jwlongs to them, and it i the display of adequate appreciation of their -rYice in tlic cause of art that enable n to bring them to sing for yon. There is no such thing as best voices coming from any partictiJar country, race or climate. In America there are as good voices as abroad. Why. in my chorus at the present time are seven young women who hae it in them to become great singers, but they must get out and study, ami I fcave told them so. 1 would endeavor to secure for- them that proper tuition here, but this" country is not Europe. There yon can really develop a sing er with perfect confidence that when the work is finished yon will enjoy the benefits thereof, for contracts made there are binding. Some of ilwrn are so severe that an artist under contract cannot get married without the consent of the director. Here contracts are too ea.-Hy broken. Think what it wouli mean to me to take a young woman and. after years of trouble and expense, bring her up to that point of perffi ri n at which she would be classed as a great artist and her' services would be in demand. She, forgetting or disregarding the fact that the small salary she would then be receiving was due to the preliminary expenses which I had undergone in her behalf might become dissatisfied and greedy for higher pay, and if a rival of mine were to offer her more, some exen would be found to break the contract with me, and then all that I hl done would have been thrown away. I suppose the popular belief that the singers with the best voice come from Europe i3 due to their first being heard of in Europe. This i occa sioned, by the fact that while in this country there are good vocal ni musical instructors, it is only too true that the real masters are in Europe. HOW ABOUT THIS? A Puzzle .That Bothers Men Who Seek After Knowledge. "The Assocfoteal Hat Manufacturers have asked foi an injunction in the United States circuit court in Boston to restrain Lanison 4b Hubbard from using the union label. "Lamson & Hubbard recently re organized to make peace with the striking hat milkers. Here is a case where a firm of manufacturers, differing in Judgment with the manufacturers' association, desire to use the union label on their produce; regardless of the fact that both employer nnd employe are will ing and anxious to so use the label, the manufacturers' association prays an injunction, because of the asso ciation decision to ignore the label. The union msn "strikes. and in terferes with the employers business by persuasion ir intimidation. The manufacturers' association "strikes' against the use of the label and in terferes with another manufacturer's business by injunction. . ' One says "jroi can't work; the tther. -You cau't use a label." Will some one kindly define to us the dif ference? Iow Unionist. rublican party at that time Mr. Brake withdrew his affiliation from that organization and cast his political for tunes with the democratic party. As a result of the republicans attitude, which was not in line with Brake's report on the labor situation, the secretary of state refused to have the febor commissioner's biennial docu ment printed and it has since slept the sleep of the undisclosed and un- revealed. Colorado Springs Labor News. MINERS AGAINST COLOR LINE. Three hundred miners at Provident, Bolmont county, , Ohio, are to be ex pelled from the United Mine Workers because they refused to return to work by orders of their officials after a fctrike caused by the men refusing to work with colored men charged with carrying tales to officials. BRAKE PLAYS EVEN. Colorado's Labor Commissioner Will Publish Long Suppressed Report. Edwin V. Brake, the newly ap pointed deputy state labor commis sioner, who assumes office in April. will bare published his report of four ears ago. wten he held the same office. For political reasons his biennial report during iiis former term in that office was never printed by the state. because of the objection by the then lepublican administration to the man ner in which Brake treated the labor war in Colorado. It did not then square with the it publican conception of the "law and order" issue upou which Peabody was running for r-- t lection as governor. Because of the position of the re- THE CARPENTERS. TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION. Start Labor Exchange Idea by Ap pointing an Agent Pro Tern. The Carpenters have decided to in augurate the labor exchange idea and push it along as best they can until other unions join in. C. H. Chase has been put on the job and is succeeding in getting the thing well started. He will not confine himself to finding jobs and furnishing men. but will en gage in educational work on the side not among workingmen but among the general public, a majority of of whom are prejudiced against unions because they are ignorant of what the unions are really doing and try ing to do. Mr. Chase is well fitted for the work in hand and the carpenters deserve the hearty co-operation of their fellow unionists. The town is full of non-union car penters, many of whom were once members of the organization. Many of them secured short hours and better wages by reason of the union, and then refused to longer pay dues. Oth ers are afraid to assert their independ ence, preferring to let the employer fix hours, wages and conditions. Work is picking up at a lively rate. There is every indication " that there will be more nouses erected in Lincoln this year than in any other year in the city's history. The wage outlook is uot so good, however, owing to the lack of organization. Scores of country carpenters have come in to take ad vantage of better conditions and then absolutely refuse to join with those who have secured those conditions. April Meeting Will Be Held Tomorrow Afternoon, Fraternity Hall. The April meeting of Lincoln Typo graphical union will be held at Fra ternity hall tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. So far as known only routine matters will come up. Union politics is beginning to sprout Here and there one sees signs of delegate candidacies. The interna tional meets in St- Joseph next Aug ust, and several have indicated that they would not indignantly decline the honor of representing Xo. 209. It will soon be time to talk about officers for the coming year, but up to date names have been infrequently mentioned. To be an official of the union means some honor, lots of hard work and mighty little of thanks or emolument. Financial Secretary Hebbard re fused to allow the nse of his name as a possible candidate for city clerk. Can it be possible he did not think he could hold down two such import ant jobs as the clerkship of the city and the treasurership of the union? President Ingraham has returned from a western visit and is again at work at the Star. Wednesday," March 31, was the birth day anniversary of Mrs. Orville Young and the ladies of the Auxiliary remem bered It. They worked a little sur prise on Mrs. Young and presented her with an Auxiliary pin. Mr. and Mrs Young were invited to spend the eve ning with Mr. and Mrs. Bustard, and later a bunch of jolly ones broke in and insisted on having a part in the festivities. The evening was pleasant ly spent and Mrs. Young will remem ber the date every time she dons the pin. DO NT SAY A WORD. The Bucks company has not denied to date that it is a "scab" concern, but the officials of the company and the courts don't want the public to know the facts, so don't you go and tell any of your friends that the Bucks stoves !re made by "scabs." Black Hills Register. BE A BOOSTER. If you're not a label booster You're a good-for-nothing rooster; You're an agent for the sweatshop. Just promoting want and crime. Don't be aiding Post and Parry; Get a move on. do not tarry; But just keep this in your noodle- Boost the label all the time. Label Leader. uses Larkin's soap to cleanse himself, allows his wife to have her clothes made by Butterick patterns, gets shaved for five cents if a nnion man does all these things or any part of them, just how much benefit is that man to organized labor? The trades union is of vast benefit to him, but what benefit is he to the trades union? Trades Union Advocate. Judge Willis Vandevanter deserves ina recognition in connection with the discussion of the new Taft cabinet. For Judge Van Dsraa ter undoubtedly came nearer to being a member of the new cabinet than did any other man who did not actually land in the job. It bad bee definitely settled by pretty nearly everybody in the United States except Mr. Taft himself that Judge Van Devacter was to be made secre tary of the treasury. Failing that, he was to be secretary of tbe interior. And in ease that slipped, almost anything equally as good was to be his portion. Something like 87 veracious public journals gave this information in a bosky stage-whisper, audible as far as the back sea's of the auditorium. Then somebody seems to have sneaked up and moved the cabinet away without first notifying the western judge. When the gas was Hu Mr. Van De vanter was discovered to be quite outside the jurisdiction, so to speak. How ever, as he has a pretty fair job as a United States circuit judge for the Eighth circuit, he will probably be able to pull through, judge Van Devaater is an Indiana man by birth, and a Wyoming man by force of circumstances. H was chief justice of the supreme court of Wyoming in the territorial days, and after statehood came he was elected to the sanSe place. WHAT GOOD IS HE? If a union man wears a Stetson hat, smokes non-union cigars, subscribes for the Ladies' Home Journal for his wife and the Saturday Evening Post for himself, has his meals cooked with a Buck range, eats Egg-O-See, or Grape Nuts at his meals and drinks Postum, COMING EVENTS The Great Shoe SaleThe entire stock of the Amer ican Shoe Co. bought at 70c on the dollar com mencing Monday. The Sale of Geo. Borgefeldt's Line of Fancy China will be ready soon. Great Sacrifice Sale Now on of Foulards and AtfJr Fancy Silks, worth $1.25, now going at, yd, V-V Special Sale Corset A new shipment 50 dozen you know the goods, for you no doubt examined them during our big March sale. We sold the entire ship mentOne Hundred Dozen in Seven Days. OIN SALE SATURDAY Seven different style models for all figures. These corsets are especially adapted for the warmer weather. They are made of fine Batiste Lace and Ribbon trimmed, steel boned and have four good supporters. You'll buy these goods later on. BUY NOW. They are absolutely ' COr 75 cent goodsSPECAL J Uertii'iit 59c 59e THE J DAYLIGHT STORE THE STORE THAT SATISFIES 59c