Patronize oat . Ad vertisers and Boost! Established I go 3 and Still Growing VOL,. G LINCOLN, NEBRASKA,! DECEMBER 11, 1909 8 PAGES NO. 36 Some Curt Comment on Things in General Councilman Bauer's suggestion that the city establish a market house on what has so long been known as "Hayniarket Square" sounds good. Any old thing that might be done to "Haymarket Square" would improve it, tor it is about the' mat unsightly thing within a thousand miles of Lin coln. Dilapidated wagons, piles of old Junk, scattered hay, offal everything to displease the eye and offend the nostrils may be found on "Haymarket Square." Until something is done to cure existing conditions there all talk of making Lincoln a "city beautiful" will be bosh. And the market house proposition strikes us as a good one. Establish it, then let the market gar deners confine their energies to the market place and not be continually annoying housewives by their back door perlgrinations. If Councilman Bauer will push his scheme to a suc cessful conclusion, future generations if Liucolniteg will rise up and call him blessed. The American Federation of Labor has its Jurisdiction divided up into dis tricts. "District No. o Northwest ern," comprises the states of Minne sota, lowh- orth Dakota, South Da kota, Nebraska and Manitoba. That is quite a sizeable territory, and con tains thousands of organized wage earners. But district No. 5 has no or ganizer, and has not had since the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. Other districts of less area but not of greater union population have from two to four organizers, but despite every effort the workers of . District No. 5 have never been able to secure an organizer. The union men cf District No. 5 ought to begin mak ing a "holler," and keep it. up until it receives just and proper recognition from the Executive Council of the American Federation of Labor. wrapped up in the success of the Reid- Murphy Electrical Workers' faction. To me that was the most important thing about the convention not even excepting well, excepting nothing at all. The only thing I . regret about the whole thing is that I didn't know from the start that it was Frey John P. Frey instead of "a man named Fry from New Jersey," who. had been selected by Uncle Sam. I repeat it, I know John P. Frey, and I'm glad of It. To know his is a pleas ure; to commune with him is a source of profit. To listen to him is a liberal education in trades unionism. Is this explanation enough? Am I absolved from the charge of being a dad-binged ignoramus? I repeat it I know Frey, John P. Frey. But does anybody know "a man named Fry of New Jersey"? But, say! Did you notice that they didn't throw the Reld-Murphy fellows over the transom like a lot of would be leaders said they were going to do? Under all thp circumstances, don't I you think we fellows from the wild and woolly west cut some ice down there in old Toronto? Do we know John P. Frey! ! Say, we may not look it, but, honest Injun, we do know a thing or two. It is with a feeling of humbleness and contrition that we publish the following from the Worsecter, Mass., Labor News, but we print it more for the purpose of using it as a basis for explanation than as a basis for apol ogy: To Will M. Maupin, Editor of The .Lincoln Wageworker: Is It possible that you don't know that man Frey, that you refer to as having been ap pointed as a member of the committee to settle the Electrical Workers' con' troversyT Have you never seen a copy of the Iron Molders' Journal, one of the neatest and ablest edited inter national publications in the country. and which is edited by that man Frey? And didn't you know that Frey was the fraternal delegate elected, by the Denver convention of the A. F. of L, to this year's British Trades and La bor Congress? Your lack of acquaintance with men of such prominence is surprising to us up here in Massachusetts, who know and regard John P. Frey, editor of the Iron Molders' Journal, as one of the ablest trade unionists in the country, Where were you, Mr. Maupin, when Mr. Frey delivered his excellent re port on the proceedings of the Eng lish Trades Union Congress? Is it pos sible that your interest In the Reid faction of the Electrical Workers was so strong as to put every thing else connected with the convention in the background? You say you don't know Frey. If ever you have occasion to go to Cin cinnati make him a call and get ac quainted. We are certain you will es teem him as much, as we who know him. The sooner the managers of the Lincoln Y. M. C. A. Dack away from that "Plumbing School" proposition the better it will be for the Y. M. C A. We absolve President Sefleck and Secretary Mayne from any intent to Injure the cause of organized labor in framing up that deal with J. E. Mur ray, but we rather incline to the be lief that they might have exercised a little more caution, especially in the matter of looking up Murray's record as a manager of "plumbing schools." their best recruiting grounds are the alleged trade schools operated by men like Moler, Coyne, Murray and others. Secretary Mayne knows that a compe tent Y. M. C. A. secretary can not be made out of raw material in six months' time. Why, then, should he be so easily duped into believing that a "competent journeyman plumber" can be fashioned out of raw material in six months by J. E. Murray? Mr. Selleck, who is at the head of the Y. M. C. A. organization, knows that he couldn't for the life of him in jthe city is the employer. And it j must provide that after the charter is enacted by the legislature the voters of ,the city may have ah opportunity to jsay whether or not they want it. Failure to provide that is what killed the proposed charter last winter. We don't care a continental what others say defeated the charter we happen to ; know that if the proposed charter had contained a submission clause it would have passed the legislature. And tiniess the charter now under way provides lor it there will be enough opposition to it to at least make the f The Young Men's Christian Associa tion announces a new feature of their educational work. At a recent meet ing of the educational work, of which Mr. - W. A. Selleck is chairman, it was decided to start a class in practical plumbing and heating. The committee feels that it is very fortunate in se curing J. E. Murray as a . teacher as well as a plumber. The course will embrace all the fundamentals as well as sanitary engineering, estimating and draughting. Practice work will constitute a great portion of the in struction. The shop in which the work will be done is so arranged that it will be possible to put in the plumbing for a four-story house. The "time re quired to complete the course will be about six months and the tuition will be $100. Every man who completes the course will be a competent journeyman plumber. Lincoln Daily Journal. , CHRISTMAS SHOPPING ... Christmas is almost here bud the postman reminds ycu of it every trip when he leaves at your door an al luring catalogue from the Mail Order House. The best use to which a mail order catalogue can be put is to kindle the breakfast fire. The mail order catalogue presents to you hand some pictures of attractive looking Christmas presents quoted at fabulouly low prices. You are invited to send your money quick. You send -it. and are STUNG. But you don't get your money back. - . Now is the time to take a look in the splendidly i decorated windows of Lincoln's progressive stores. There you see goods not pictures. You can go inside and feel of them; turn them over; examine them and get the salesman's guarantee that they are just as rep resented or your money is refunded. You can't get stung nere. - j Chasing the Ambulance Wagon in Lincoln 1 Of course I know John P. Frey. Perhaps you will recall that I said that "a man named Fry from New Jeisey" had been appointed by Presi dent Gompers. I wrote my conven tion story before the names of the ar biters had been officially announced, and ray informant said that "a man named Fry, from New Jersey," had been determined upon by Uncle Sam. Had my informant said "Frey of Ohio," I would have instantly recognized the man. I said "Fry," not "Frey." Dod gast It., can t you see where I was misled? Frey of Ohio! Editor of the Iron Molders' oJurnal! Why, gosh hang It, Mr. Labor News Man, I've know him for years, and when I learned that he was the Frey, not the Fry, appointed by Uncle Sam, my heart was full of rejoicing. Urlck Duffy and Frey that makes a bully board of arbitration and conciliation, Couldn't be better. Sure thing, I was Just consider that for a minute or two. Rigging up a plumbing shop in the Y. M. C. A. and guaranteeing to turn out competent journeymen plumb ers in six months at $100 per head! Messrs. Selleck and Mayne may have believed that the school would be a good thing, but it is hard to believe that men of their common sense could be duped into endorsing a scheme to turn , out "competent journeymen plumbers" in ix months. And if the Lincoln Y. M. C. A, is going into the business of manufacturing mechanics by rote, why not secure the services of Mr. Moler and start a school to turn out "competent journeymen barbers" in thirty days? Moler says he can do it, and he can come as near it as Mur ray can to turning out competent jour neymen plumbers in six months. And If plumbers and barbers, why not write to Coyne of St. Louis, and get him to start a school to teach the trade of bricklaying in sixty days? Coyne says he can make a competent Journeyman bricklayer in sixty days. And if Murray to teach plumbing in six months, and Moler to teach bar- bering in thirty days, and Coyne to teach bricklaying in sixty days, why not get some employer of "rat" print ers who has a shirt-tail full of type and an old army press to open a typo graphical school and turn out compe tent journeymen printers in thirty sixty or ninety days? The field that the Y. M. CV A. purposes cultivating, according to its arrangements with Murray, offers unlimited possibilities We know a lot of people who will gladly donate Jiandsome sums to help the Y. M. C. A. push that sort of "schooling." They are not philan thropists, however. They are men who are always looking for strike breaking material, and they know that i You owe it to your hom merchant to spend your money with him. He gives j you value received full weight full measure. He helps to make your town what it is, he spends much of his money for your as well as his own benefit. He keeps it all in 'circulation where you can reach it again. The mail order house don't. Patronize Wageworker advertisers. They are your friends; they don't deceive you. They support the town which supports you. They have proved their friendship by their ads. They show that they want your trade by asking you for it through the columns of the. paper that is trying to help you fight your battles. take a man who had no knowledge of business methods and in the short space of six months make him compe tent to manage the affairs of the West ern Supply Co. Why, then, should he be so easily led to believe that J. E. Murray can take the raw material and make a skilled mechanic in six months? The idea is absurd, but there will be a lot of dupes who will give up their little old hundred dollars un der the impression that they can learn the plumbing trade in a "school" in side of six months, although it takes from three to five years under shop conditions to make a skilled mechanic in that trade. Messrs. Selleck and Mayne, and any others who may have been associated with them in the deal with J .E, Murray, owe it to them selves and to the journeymen plumb ers of Lincoln to back up from that proposition and back up quick. legislators hesitate about enacting it into law. The gentlemen who are framing up the commission charter should not take too much for granted. There are others than politicians ' and business men who are interested in the matter. A whole lot of idealistic rot is not what the workers of the city want in that charter. They want something practical. They want the eliminative process of selecting the officials pro vided for by the charter. In other words, they want it so fixed that any body who can get a reasonable num ber of petitioners may be a candidate for any office, and then proceed to eliminate the low men until only two are left. In other words, every man elected must be elected by a majority vote. The charter must provide for the initiative and referendum, and for the recall. It must provide adequate provisions for a park and boulevard system. It must provide for an eight hour day on all municipal work, and it must provide that the "union scale of wage" shall prevail in all cases where in making up the list of business men who had generously aided the unionists to secure the Labor .Temple property, it was not strange that there should have been some omissions. The directors who hustled the money were worked to a frazzle, the editor among them, and the result was that in the haste to make speedy recognition of kindly assistance some were over looked not intentionally, but because of too much rush. We therefore hasten to acknowleSge the following additional stock subscriptions: FRED SCMIDT & BRO ....$100 JACOB NORTH & CO ... 100 H. K. BURKETT 15 And we further apologize to these good friends for the oversight. Mrs. Harriet Pitt man alleges that she has been made the victim of what is known in big industrial centers as the ambulance chaser." In other words, while she was overwhelmed with grief at the death of her hus band, who was killed in a street car accident, she was deluded into sign ing a release of all claims for dam ages, thinking when she signed the paper that she was merely signing a receipt for a paltry $200 "on account." Mrs. Pittman's story is told in plain and simple language, and if she can substantiate her claims there should be some remedy at law. According to Mrs. Pittman, she was duped by General Manager Humpe into signing a release of the Traction company. She says that while still ; racked with anguish over the bereave ment, Humpe appeared at the stricken home and told her of the close friend ship that had existed between himself and her dead husband, and of his anxiety to "do something" for the widow of his deceased friend. She asserts without equivocation that at no time did Humpe tell her she was being offered a release, but on the con trary had every reason to believe from his line of conversation that his ac tion was prompted by sympathy and friendship. She continues by alleging that the $200 was tucked under her pillow, and she was asked to sign what she thought was merely a re ceipt for that amount of money. It was her understanding that at a later date she could take up the matter of adequate damages with the Traction company officials. . When she recov ered somewhat from the shock of her bereavement she went to the Traction company- office and started to submit her case. Immediately her "release" was flashed upon her and she was told that the company was under no legal obligations to her. She then of fered to return the $200, in exchange for the "release," but the offer was refused. Mrs.1 Pittman has instituted suit in district court for damages, and in an swer to the Traction company's claim that it has a release of damages she files the above explanation of how the company secured it. - Whether or not Mrs. Pittman's con tention is well founded in this partic ular case,, it is a well known fact that transportation . corporations . have . a habit of working just that kind of a deal. Let an accident occur which results fatally and the company be convinced that it is to blame, and im mediately it has its most wily agents set-to work to secure a "release" of damages. Especially easy is this lit tle scheme when women are dealt with. What woman is able to trans act business when her husband , lies cold in death in . the room, the victim of an accident, and she is left deso late,, unprovided for and with no cer tainty of future support for herself and little ones? It is at such a time that the wily, unctuous "friend of the family" appears and says he wants to help. , He represents the corporation, it is true, but he was such a close friend of the dead man, and he is will ing to strain a point-in this case and help the stricken wife. "Here is a lit tle bit of money to tide you over un til you can get settled down a little bit. Just sign this receipt for it, my jured, though none fatally. It was four hours before the passengers were r taken from the scene of the wreck, but it wasn't two hours ere the road's "claim agent" was on the ground try ing to "fix things" without delay. He had a wad of one and two dollar bills, and the sight of a roll of that money was very convincing. He secured sev- -eral "releases" on the spot, and for sums that were, ridiculously small. His line of argument was that a little money now without legal trouble was better than a larger sum after a long legal fight, with the very great possi bility that the road would win in the courts. Perhaps you can imagine what condition a woman would be in to talkbusiness at such a time if she ' saw her dead husband pinned under a burning car, or sat by his side in a hospital, hundreds of miles from home and possibly without funds. That's the time that the "smooth man" of the claims department gets in his work. They always promise to see ' that the company "does the right thing." but Just at the present they want to prove their friendship by doing some thing at -once. "Just take this little piece of money and sign the receipt. Later e'll take it up with the com pany and get- an adjustment." But with a signed waiver of all claims for damages in his pocket, the representa tive of the corporation hurries back to the office, chuckling to himself. If there is any way to stop this sort of ghoulish enterprise it is high time it was put into operation. CAPITAL AUXILIARY. iirs. Will C. Norton, of Humboldt, Neb., was visiting with friends in Lin coln the first of the week. Beginning next Monday The Wage worker's business office will be in the Labor Temple, and there will be some one there every afternoon to receive subscriptions, news items, advertising, etc. It will be a cosy little office, and trades unionists and their wives will be just as welcome as the flowers in spring or the union teamster with a load of coal this winter. Brief News Notes of the Busy Help mates of the Printermen. At Wednesday afternoon's meeting of Capital Auxiliary No. 11 the follow ing officers were elected: . President, Mrs. C. B. Righter. , Vice President, Mrs. G. N. Wathan. Secretary -Treasurer, Mrs. Will Bustard.-" .." . . v Chaplain, Mrs. Geo. Freeman. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Turner, formerly of Lincoln, are rejoicing over a fine baby boy at their home in Springfield, 111. - Mrs. G. H. Freeman, who has been visiting friends, and relatives in I1J nois for the past six weeks has re turned. Mrs. W S. Bustard's 'phone num ber has been changed to 6249. Mrs. O. F. Young was the victim of a badly scalded hand last week. Be sides being very painful, It was a great hindrance to her household du ties. Mrs. C. B. Righter, chairman of the auxiliary apron committee, is now ready to receive orders for all kinds of aprons, clothes pin bags, etc. This also includes men's work aprons. . . The Labor Temple committee has asked the ladies of Capital Auxiliary to furnish a room in the new Labor Temple. What do the ladies think of it? Be prepared to answer at the next meeting. . - , ,Mrs. W. C. Norton of Humboldt, for merly of Lincoln, came up to shop and say hello to friends the first of the week. . Capital Auxiliary met with Mrs. F. W. Mickel on Wednesday. GIVEN APPEAL. good woman. It will help pay funeral expenses. Really I have no right to Supreme Court Grants Plea of Con do this, and the company would be) v,cted Labor Leader8 justly indignant if it knew I did it; but j The supreme court of the United I was such a friend to your husband ; States on December 6 granted the pe- A UNION MADE CHURCH. The Rev. James S. Meyers of Kan sas City, Kan., who is so well and favorably known to the trades union ists of this city, asks every workman employed on the construction of his new church if he is a union man. He states that when the structure is com pleted he hopes to make it a church where union men can attend and know that the work they see about them was all done by members of organized labor. Kansas City Labor Herald. and I want to help you in your great trouble." Nine times out of ten the grief stricken and almost crazed widow will grasp at the assistance so kindly of fered, sign a "receipt" for it and then find, when too late, that she has signed a release in full of all damages; that for a paltry $100 or $200 she has given up all legal claim for what should be rightfully hers, two or three thousand dollars. This sort of a shell game is being worked every hour in the day in this land of the free. Im Mrs. Pittman's charges are true, and we have no rea son to doubt her, a, little investiga tion would doubtless disclose that she is not the first one in Lincoln to be duped into signing away her rights. The "ambulance chaser" exists in Lin coln just the same as elsewhere. A little more than a year ago the editor of The Wageworker was in a railroad wreck near St. Louis. The engineer of the train was killed, and a number of the passengers were In- tition for a writ of certiorari in the contempt cases of Samuel- Gompers, Frank Morrison and John Mitchell, of ficers of the American Federation of Labor. The effect of the decision will be to bring the entire record in the. Buck Stove & Range company case. against these men to the supreme court for review. , Messrs. Gompers, Morrison and Mitchell were present when Chief Jus tice Fuller indicated the willingness of the court to review their case. They did not at first seem to' en tirely comprehend the annouoncement, but when explained- to them their faces were wreathed in smiles. SERIOUS INJURY. Wednesday afternoon the aged mother of Erstine King fell on an icy walk and sustained fractures of an arm and a leg. Mrs. King was imme diately taken to a hospital and the fractures reduced. Owing to her ad vanced age it is feared that she will not survive her injuries.