VOL.. ti LINCOLN, XE15RASKA, SEPTEMBER 11, 1909 8 PAGES What the Church Owes Labor's Great Army -I understand thai the street rail way men of Liaeoin work eleven to thirteen hours a day, seven days a meek. That Is neither humane. Chris tian or Americas, and the church peo ple of this city owe it to themselves and to the street car mea to help them get one day off ia seven." Miss Mary McDowell made this statement in the cost emphatic man ner from the pulpit of the First Bap tist church last Sunday mOrning, and she repeated it from the pulpit of St Paul's M. E. church In the evening. "Until the Christian people of this city help the trades unions secure a Saturday half-holiday they have no right to object to Sunday sports and amusements." When Miss McDowell made that statement shs spoke from the experi ence of one who has studied the labor problem from the Inside, and she I,xkd straight at the great congrega tion that fronted her in the First Bap tist church. Miss McDowell was to have spoken at the Labor Day celebration In Lin coln, but the weather man interfered and tho celebration was called Off. But the committee in charge of the cele bration had planned wisely, and Miss McDowell d.d spealt in Lincoln, and to the very people that the commit tee most desired to reach the church goers, the employers and the profes sional men. Sunday mornins she spoke at the First Baptist church, tak ing tor her subject. "A Human View of the Law Problem," and for forty uunu'e she held the close attention of her hearers with her simple yet forceful plea for humanity. Miss Mc Dowell Indulges in no oratorical pro technics. She clothes her Ideas in simple language, but what she says comes direct from a heart that beats In sympathy with the weak and the oppressed. She pointed out that the "a Vr problem meant something more thaa mere hours and wages. It means more for the future of the republic than any other problem. Unless it is solved rightly it means that America Is to become brutalized ; that the American home life is to be lowered; that our republican institutions are to disappear before an aristocracy of wealth and leisure. She declared that the solution of this problem demanded more cttention from real womanhood than did the affairs of the Daughters of the Revolution or the Colonial Damea. In plain and simple language she detailed the conditions under which thousands of girls are working and living. She told of the hopeless strug gle men and women are making against conditions not of their own choosing and she urged Christian men and women to arouse themselves to the necessity of assisting In correcting the evils. The fact that little chil dren are being robbed of the playtime of youth and made old before their time by forced labor in mills and mines is an indictment of humanity of the American people. Men who are touched by the spectacle of individual suffering are Indifferent to the suffer- ins caused by a perverted industrial system. The hitching of steam to machinery has forced a huge problem upon the people, and the problem must be solved or the republic is doomed. A century ago the weaving and spinning and sewing was done in the home; today it is done in the great factories and women have fol lowed the work from the home to the f u tory. Today six million women and girls are In the Industrial world, earning their own livre. What this teans to the home life of the nation time alone will tell, but Miss McDow el! believes that tt must mean even tual good or God would not allow it to be. Miss McDowell did not attempt play upon human sympathy; she content ed herself with an appeal to justice and patriotism. She wleaded for jus lice to the children, for justice to the young women, for justice to the over worked and underpaid men. She asked that they be given such wages and conditions and hours that they could make homes for themselves and their families, educate their children aad make provision for old age. After Mis McDowell had concluded Rev. Mr. Batten gave hearty endorse ment o what she had said. He went further in speaking of the railway sit uation and declared that every de mand of the men was based on jus tice and deserved to be granted. Sunday evening St. Paul's church was almost filled when Miss McDow ell was introduced by the pastor. Rev. Dr. Roach. "The Helpless in Indus try," was her subject, and she spoke along similar lines to the address of the morning, making a plea for organ ization among workers and demand ing that the Church of Jesus Christ awaken to its duty and its opportuni ty. "It's not easy to interest a starv ing man in religion, said Miss McDowell. Although the weather did not per mit Miss McDowell to deliver her La bor Day address, the subject of which was to have bsen "Woman in Indus try," The W'ageworker is permitted to give a synopsis of the address she had prepared. It is as follows. "The last census tells us that there are 5.319,397 women in the gainful oc cupations in the United States. Over 3.000.000 are wage earners working In factories, shops and mercantile estab lishments. Between 1S90 and 1900 their number increased more rapidly than the total number of women or the total number of men, or the to tal population gainfully employed. Forty-nine and three-tenths per cent were under twenty-five years of age. Fourteen and one-half per cent were married. Women are found in every occupation except the army, navy and railroading. 'These girls do the weaving, spin ning, sewing and canning: they make shoes, exeept the soles; they are in the Iron mills making screws and bolts for the railroads, horse shoes and horse nails, are core girls in the foun dries, are buffers in the metal works. they make the machines a dangerous industry are in twine and wire mills, wind all our telephone wire and make age are thrown out into the world of industry unprotected by the mother and unsheltered by the home. A revo lutionary situation what will be the result to the borne and the future gen eration? In Chicago the protective league investigated three department stores on State street and arrested eleven men in the act of urging girls to go with them to questionable places. The coming of the foreign girls in groups to such neighborhoods as the stock yards causes another problem. The girls often room in crowded houses with unmarried men. This summer when trained nurses vis ited the sick babies back of the stock yards in a few blocks thirteen illegiti mate babies were found, born to the ignorant girls in the yards. And most of them were supporting the babies as the man in the case had disappeared. This is the natural result of an indus try that needs and bids only for cheap and unskilled labor that does not want or need intelligence and feels no responsiility for its thousands of work ers. It can only result in a social con dition that endangers the family and neighborhood life of a whole communi ty. Wages Too Low. "Thousands of girl clerks in the down town districts elf our great cities are working for a wage that no self respecting girl can live on if she must provide her own board and lodg ing, her clothes and dress like a lady, her own recreation and keep it whole some. The newspapers tell us of two good ladies who visited girls in a house of ill repute. They talked to the girls about their sinful lives and the girls responded: 'It is too late now; don't trouble about us, but go down and raise the wages of the girls that can't keep decent on what they get unless they live at home.' No one has made an investigation to show the ghastly business. "In the large department stores in a great city so little are the the girls protected that in two weeks fifteen men were arrested by one protective electric light and telephone appli-( league officer for insulting girls in ances. They work m the packing , three department stores. houses; they make kodak films work ing in titter darkness, working under red light for ten hours a day, and they work in breweries and tanneries. Girls of sixteen and eighteen years of "The individual girl in industry is a temporary worker as well as a sup plementary wage earner. She ex pects to marry, bnt she is in the world laor market to stay when she is dragging down the standard of wages and the standard of living be cause she is unorganized and inex perienced and undisciplined and will take any' wages given her. Girl in Railroad Shops. "I saw a bright young Hungarian girl in Cleveland. O., feeding a giant machine making screws and bolls for the railroads and she was so graceful in every movement that the superin tendent told me she had doubled the capacity of the machine, and turned cut twice the product her father did who ran the machine before she took it. , I asked about the difference in wages. "Oh, he said, 'we paid the father twice what we pay the girl. During a discussion over the merit of ' giving cheap lunches to the girls employed in one factory, one of the head men explained that it was not charity, because they paid the girls so much less than the men who had to pay full prices for their lunches. A girl IS years of age who received 7 cents an hour was asked how she lived on that amount and she respond ed with eternal feminine resignation, "Why, I have to. Another girl who re ceived 75 cents a day in the sausage room of the packing house, said, It was pretty good for a girl,' yet that very girl had taken the place of a young man who had made $1.75 a day. "More and not less women will be self-supporting and whether we like it or not they are in the industrial world to stay. It is for those of us who care for the future generation to see to it that pur coming mothers are earning their livlihood under condi tions that are upbuilding and not de grading. "We must protect the men's wages and the American standard of living by organizing the women so that they may- be disciplined and not a hysteri cal element in the industrial struggle. They must be helpmates in industry, not competitors. They must have the ballot for their .education in responsi bility and because of the power it gives them .to change their condition. Fall River Figures. "William Hard, in his article on The Woman's Invasion, says that tvfcoty-one women out of. every hun dred are working. In twenty years 1,000.000 have been added to the ranks (Continued on Pag Five.) Miss McDowell Talked Frankly to Star Reporter The unionists of Lincoln and Have-1 lock, and especially those connected with the Labor Day committee, are un der obligations to the three daily pa pers of Lincoln the Star, the Xews and the Journal for their liberality in the matter of advertising the star at traction of the Labor Day celebration, Miss Mary McDowell of Chicago. All th-ee of the papers gave all the space asked, and, indeed, asked for more than the committee could find time to prepare. Sunday mornin's Star contained the following interesting interview with Miss McDowell: "If the employer without sympathy for the oppressed who work for him, and without kindness or charity for the men who have spent the best days of their life in his service, can be de picted to a people of the m iddle west where poverty is almost unknown and where no problem of the working peo ple exists, Mis3 Mary McDowell, the "angel or the stock yards,' and the head worker of the Chicago settlement society, can draw the picture. "Miss McDowell arrived in Lincoln shortly after noon Saturday. She will give two lectures in this city Sunday snd uill speak at the Labor Day meet ing at Capital Beach Monday. In the par'or of her hotel Saturday evening sbe, discussed the conditions of the working girls in the Chicago packing house district. She paints a picture of the treament accorded the girls by their employers that would put to shame many of the nasueating scenes depicted by Upton Sinclair. However, Miss McDowell is not an admirer of the author of "The Jungle," and she alleges that he exaggerated conditions of the packing house district when he told some of the tales which she says were the emanations if a fecund im agination. -For twenty years Miss McDowell has worked among the working girls in the stock yards district of Chicago and she has an intimate acquaintance with the majority of the three thousand girls who work day afer day in the sausage rooms and in the canning fac- SOME GENERAL NOTES FROM THE FIELD OF LABOR Sicilian bakers have organized in New York City. . Over a hundred carpenters in Ft. Dodge, la., formed a union. Brewers are organizing the weiss beer men in Milwaukee. Laundry workers in Jackson, Mich., have received their charter. The custom vest makers have organized a union in New .York City. The Chicago Tribune declares the new tariff law is about as popular as the ear- acne. "Inside" electrical workers have ef fected a good organization in Des Moines, Iowa. , .Journeyman barbers in St. Paul, Minn., have been granted an increase of $2 a week in wages. The Cloakmakers' strike in Cleveland for an increase in wages of 10 per cent is proving successful. The Garment "Workers in San Francisco have decided to affiliate with the National Women's Trade Union League. Kansas City, Mo., city council has passed an ordinance barring out the Barnum & Bailey circus from that city on Labor Day. A settlement has been made between the Mississippi Valley Telephone company and the Electrical Workers' Union in Keokuk, Iowa. ' What the union does: A little eontra down in Florida Organized machinists cot $3.50 for eight hours; unorganized get 2.."0 for nine hours. The straw hat workers have entered into the industrial "field, and, like all progres sive unions, have adopted a ttniou label to designate their product. All of the tents used by Cole Bros., cir cus were made by union workmen. Each tent bears the stamp of A. F. of Lu Tent Makers' Union. No. 1257 of Chicago. The Dallas, Texas, strike or lockout in reality a lockout is settled and settled in the interest of the union plumbers. It lasted a little more than a week. The Hatters' fight is still on- don't be misled in this matter. To be sure you r on the right side insist on the Hatters' label when buying a hat. The entire force of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company in East Pittsburg, Pa., have been placed on full time. About 2,000 men are affected. The journeymen tailors at their conven tion in Buffalo passed resolutions declaring for government ownership and democratic vertising rates. Not a job printer in the town would print handbills. Not a hall could be secured. But the Wheeling union ists went over by the score and adver:;:rd the meeting by word of mouth. They hired a vacant lot, and Raymond Robins ad dressed 3,000 toilers, janorganized and hope- management of the means of production , less, and left them organized and fullof and distribution. ! determination to stand up for their rights. An increase of 50 cents per day was won by 120 marble workers in Cleveland through a strike which began July 1 and ended Saturday. Setters will receive $5 and helpers $2 per day. " The strike of the carpenters in Fargo, N. D., has been settled and building opera tions have been resumed. The contractors agreed to concede the nine-hour day and time and a half rates for overtime. The Barbers' International Union at its convention in Milwaukee next Oetober, will discuss the founding of a home for old and disabled members after printers' pattern at Colorado Springs. At St. Paul, Minn., the letter carriers who will be holding their national conven tion in that city have been invited to march and the Labor Day committee hope to have a detachment of the fire depart ment in line. A plan was advocated in the meetings of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi neers and Grand International Auxiliary in Savannah, Ga., to let the annual gather ings rotate among four Georgia eities At lanta, Savannah, Augusta and Maeon. This would bring them together permanently in Georsria. The day God made' Raymond Robins He laid off when He had finished and called it a good day's work. Would He would get busy s and make another one for each in dustrial center in this great republic. THANK YOU, KIND SIB! W. M. Maupin, editor and publisher of the Wageworker of Lincoln, Neb., who" was recently appointed labor commissioner of Nebraska, has also been elected president of the Nebraska State Federation of Labor. We wish Brother Maupin all kinds of suc cess and from reading his paper we know that he is capable of filling any place that may be imposed upon him, and especially when it comes to anything connected with the labor cause. The Times extends a hand of congratulation to Brother Will, and may he live to do much good in his new fields of labor. Council Bluffs Times. RAYMOND ROBINS BACK EAST. Raymond Robins has been stirring up the animals in the east. He is now in the big industrial storm centers, and he is carry ing hope and cheer to the toilers. The union-hating corporation tools have ordered him out of town, but he laughed in their face$. They told him he should not make public speeches, but he made them. Arid every time he spoke he put another nail in the coffin of oppression. He arranged to speak at Appollo, W. Va., and the news papers refused to announce the meeting, although offered treble their regular ad- SOME LABOR DAY MOTTOES. All laws are subordinate to the Law of Equivalents. Nothing short of absolute freedom will make us eontented. The workers' motto: "Come up higher." We are all creators, and mould our own destiny. We have a perfect right to change our minds also our votes. The master is as mueh. in bondage to the slave as the slave to the master. . We respect, only the Laws of God and those that represent the will of the people. Laws affect only the weak. The strong overcome them. The injunction judge heeds not the in junction, "Judge not, lest ye be judged." No man ean be absolutely free as long as there is one in bondage. George Tyler, Machinists' Union No. 720, Toledo, Ohio. tones of the great packing booses. A a strong advocate of unionism Miss McDowell thinks that the conditio of the working classes is the packing plants as we!! a the other large fac tories, can only be -aUeviated by ta close organization of the worth? peo ple. "The average waxes paid to tie girl m the stock yards, M : says, is aVrel Z a week. Oat of this allowance they have to pay for their board as well as lodging and eiota--Xearly all of the girls who are ia th packing houses are foreigners; many of whom are unable to speak the Engllsa language, and most of thetn living ia the tenements without the protectioa of a home and without the gaiding to flaence of parents. The most miserable conditions. Kiss McDowell believes, are not in the packing plants bat fa the eating aad sleeping quarters of the girls. Dozens of them are huddled to gether night after night In a sisgle room, she declared, where there is Ift Ue ventilation and where the air fs made more acrid by the fool odors of the near-by fertilizer plants aad glae factories. "More thaa one man, said Hjjs Me Doweil has spenS, twenty or thirty years is the packing nooses working for wages that were barely encash to ' keep poverty from snapping at his heels "only to be refused a Job acd farmed away from the labor gate when he had parsed the years of Esefalisess The places are thea taken by yosrager men who are better able to do the ar duous labor. Ia suea cases It has often been necessary for the wives and mothers of these men to do menial labor to furnish bread for toe famSy There is no pension system, or eves a system of protection in most of the houses. One of the packing plant has a mutual benefit' society, bat tt has been a current manor that evea that, instead of being for the benefit of the men has been made a money producer lor the oa aers of Uie plaat. There are no tabor anions ia the Chicago packing plants. There were strong trades organizations previous to 1&04, but the defeat of "Mike" Don ally and his 30.000 worker at that time was sa thorough that unionists has not regained Its feet. For years. Miss McDowell said, attempts have been made to organize the women, tot the foreign girls are difficult to coo- i.-&t, and even if the anions were fo-Tned "they wonld be Ineffective oe account of the necessity for the girl working whether or not they might desire. The American girls, she says, do not work in the plants, bat may be found in the uptown offices or ia the factories where more money 1 paid. In many factories the American bora women hare formed strong union which have been a means of getting higher wages and better working con ditions, and Miss McDowell believes that the same condition will exist ia the packing house district as soon as the foreign girls can be made to under stand what they would gala by union ism. "A. great deal of good has been done in Chicago by the American Associa tion of Labor Legislation. Miss Mc Dowell said, in discussing the working hours of men in the packing plants. This organization has succeeded ia securing a ten hour working dy for womea and it attempting to get the limit reuueed to eight hours. This or ganization was formed ia 19X to ' serve as the American section of the International Association for Labor legislation. The International Associa tion was established at the Paris ex- -position ia 1&00, and the permanent bureau was opened ia Basel, Switzer land, in 1901. This bureau, which t strictly scientific ia character, has a its special function the examination of labor measures and the investigatios of actual conditions underlying labor legislation. It is semi-private ia char acter inasmuch as it is a voluntary or ganization composed of experts aa4 officials as well as pubHe-spirfted cit zens. It is, however, quasi-official as it receives subventions freaa sut civilized governments, ineiodiag ooe from our own federal guaawat Strictly non-partisan ia character, as well is scientific, it aids governments by its iavestigafioes conducted ty men trained la econoaies. It has di rected special atentioa to iadasirsa" , poisons, night work of van aa4 yodng persons, aad uniformity of Tta-(Continue-! a Pssw