r By Wageworker Publishing Co. Will M. Maupin - - Editor W. P. Hogard - - Manager EnMrad second-class matter April 2 1 .' 1 904, at th postoflke t Lincoln. Neb., under the Act of ConaraM of Merck 3rd. 1879. POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS Frank M. Tyrrell. I hereby aunonnce myself a candi date for the nomination. for the office of county attorney on the republican ticket, subject to the decision of the voters at the coming primaries. In so, doing I request the support of all persona who approve my official acts. FRANK M. TYRRELL. Willis E. Reed. I hereby announce myself a candi date for the United States senate un der the provisions of the "Oregon plan." I am for tariff for revenue only, against ship subsidy, for elec tion of senators by the people and for general legislation that will advance fhe common good as against the fur ther encroachments of "the interests." WILLIS K. REED. Madison Neb. J.. B. Bennett. I hereby announce my candidacy for nomination as County Commissioner from the Second Commisssioner District subject to tho republican primaries on August 10. My platform is my offi cial record for the past two years. J. R. BENNETT. THE PARTY PLATFORMS. Last Tuesday tho four political par ties of the state democrat, republican, populist aud socialist met in state con ventions and built the platforms upon which they elect to stand. These con ventions had nothing to do but to frame platforms. ' There were no nomi nations to make, no logrolling for fa vorites to perform. The framers of the primary law evidently felt that plat form conventions, such as provided for, free from the jockeying of candidates, would enable the parties to frame plat forms worthy of the name. But it seems to have been a vain hope. It would seem that, the two b'.g onven tions were wrought up over what many consider a non-political issue to a point never reached in the old convention days. VThc prohibitionists could afford to sit quiet while the two old parties took eognixance of an issue that they had long ignored, and the socialist con vention refused to be sidetracked from the main issues the issues that appeal directly to producing masses of the country. ,N This little newspaper has never thought very much of the county option question, believing it a question wholly apart from politics. But if it in to be mudo the subject of platform discussion we oro of the firm belief that tho socialists have come nearer to reaching the core of the controversy than any other political organization. The '.'liquor plank" of the socialist party reads as follows: "Regarding the liquor question now agitating Hie public mind in Nebraska we take -the same position taken by the socialist party in its national con vention of l'JOS, which is us follows; " 'Wo recognize the serious evils in cident to the manufacture and sale for profit of alcoholic and adulterated liquors. We hold taut any excessive use of liquor by members of the work ing class is a serious obstacle to the . triumph of our class since it impairs the vigor of the fighters in the politi cal and economic struggle and we urge the members of the working class to avoid any indulgence that might hin der the progress of the movement for their emancipation. " 'On the other hand we do not be lieve that tho evils of alcoholism can be cured by any extension of the pub lic powers of the capitalistic state. Alcoholism is a disease of which cap italism is the chief cause and the cure lies rather in doing away with under feeding, overwork and overworry re sulting from a wage system.' "Believing ' there are phases of the question of eoutity option that justify the county optioniats in their fight for the right to vote on ell questions for which they are taxed; that, on the other hand, the eounty option program does invado tle right of municipal ities to control their own affairs, therefore we contend that the solution of this question is possibly only through the initiative and referendum." For twenty yeaTS the republicans were in undisputed control of the state, yet they never gave any attention to tho liquor question. The democratic party, always denounced as tho "wliis- took the first forward step' taken in twenty ' years. Now comes the repub lican party as a sudden convert, and with all the zeal of a new conversion, seizes upon county option as a "good enough morgan" to again secure con trol of the state. The democratic con vention spent practically all of its time disputing over this non-essential, to tho exclusion of questions that reach dowu to the very existence of the workers. The populist party was the ouly one, aside from the socialists, that mentioned the cause of labor. The republicans lauded the Aldrich Cannon tariff; the democrats denounced it. The republicans said that the Taft administration was little short of per fection; the democrats said it was a dismal failure so far as conserving the interests of the people is concerned. The republicans declared for county option after twenty years of vociferous silence on the liquor question; the democrats stood by the Slocum law and local self government. But what about the real questions that front every wage earner? What about the sweat shops, the black list, government by injunction, contract prison labor, imported pauper labor and a thousand other questions that are knocking for a hearing? Is it not about time that the produc ers of the country took a hand in the political game? Not as partisans, but as patriots. Not as the bliud followers of a political fetich, but, as thinking men who nre willing to sacrifice the now in order to make secure the future? THE LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES. Some good men have been nominated for tho legislature in Lancaster county that is, they have filed for nomina tion. But you will search the list of filing in vain if you search them to find the names of wage earners men who toil for wage. The socialists have filed real wage earners, but no one im agines for a minute that a single one of them stands the ghost of a show of election. There are lawyers galore, insurance agents in profusion, mer chants, a farmer or two but not a single mechanic; not a single man who toils for wage in mill, shop er factory. The state university will be taken care of, to be sure; but what about the toiling men and women who can scarce ly hope .under present conditions to save their children from the mill and shop and factory long enough to give them a university education? The in surance business will receive attention and the wants of the insurance com bine given respectful consideration. But what about the toilers who are be ing crushed between the upper mill stone of necessity and the nether mill stone of injunction and blacklist? Property will receive the usual protec tion, but what will be done for the pro tection of the man who grinds his life amidst the whirring wheels of the fac tory or the dust laden air of the shop? Who will be in the legislature to give thoughtful consideration to such vital questions as assumption of risks, in dustrial insurance, employer's liability and others of equally important nature? There will not be a single one. And why? Simply and solely because the workers huve not yet been able to emancipate themselves from the slav ery to party. They have not been able to free themselves from the petty and menn jealousies that impel them to "knock" every comrade who tries to forge to the front, and accuse every man of "graft" who tries to blaze the way. There are enough republican un ion men in Lancaster county to abso lutely control the primaries on August 10. There are enough democratic un ion men in the county to control the democratic primaries. There are enough of the two together to elect seven union men to the legislature if they would vote together. But there is not a single union man not a single genuine wage earner filed for nomination on either of the old party tickets, and next election day we will either have to vote for the same old list of partisan candidates or re main nt home. And when tho legislat ure shall have adjourned without giving the wage earners any measure of pro tection and relief we will get together in smnll groups and "chew the rag" and whine about "having no show." Isn't it God's truth? The Oklahoma Labor Unit has en tered upon its third year. It is a splen did force in the war for the industrial uplift, and grows stronger each day be cause the wage earnrs of Oklahoma City are standing loyally by it. The Labor Unit is a splendid labor newspa per and wo wish it continued success. Let's make Labor Day the biggest day of the year in Lincoln. Everybody get busy and boost! By the way, did you ever hear of the militia being called out to secure for labor the protection of its product? Let tho men who make the wars do the fighting. Muzzle some of the owners and not the dogs. Mr. French, the former union musi- A Good CIMies It is now drawing to a close. This Sale Extraordinary will end Saturday Evening, July 30, and it hate been the great est sale in our history. There are lots of good things left and you should supply yourselves while the opportunity re- Hot mains. NOW IS A GOOD TIME TO GET EXTRA TROUS ERS. YOU NEED THEM- 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT SATU1RDAY Lot 1 All Suits that sold for 30, 35 and $40 $23.60 July Sale on J Boys Clothing and 5 Furnishings cian who "scabbed" on his fellows and gathered the non-union band that ac companied the Ad Club to Omaha, says The Wageworker was mistaken in say ing that his band was the one that tried to play ' America" in the Boyd theatre. The Wageworker gladly makes the correction and admits that it was misled by the results of the attempt to play the national air. . Noting the fact that a non-union bar ber shop is conducted in the Missouri penitentiary at Jefferson City, the Okla homa Labor Unit says "there are more kinds of skin games in the Missouri penitentiary than in any similar insti tutition in the country." Well, what else but a "skin game' would you ex pect in a "scab" barber shop? . The grocery stores are closed on Thursday afternoon in order to give tho proprietors and clerks a mid-week rest. If the grocers, why not the dry goods, clothing, shoe and notion stores? The indications are that Labor Day this year will be celebrated with great er enthusinm thatn ever before. Will Lincoln be in the list? The Grand Trunk railroad says it can operate all right if given police pro tection. Correct! That's the way a lot of grafters manage to prosper in some of the big cities. John Kirby, jr., will please take note of the fact that Uncle Sam Gompers and the American Federation of La bor didn't have to "come back." The Duluth Labor World calls Pres ident Taft ' ' Willowy Will. ' ' Wouldn 't "Billowy Bill" come closer to the truth? The deputy labor commissioner lately visited a Lincoln industrial institution i weather wearables in great profusion. Lot 2 All Suits that sold for 25 and $27.50 $18.60 Lot 3 Ail Suits that sold for 20 and $22.50 $14.60 8 V AM CLOTHING GOOD CLOTHES MERCHANTS and compelled fifty-four girls under sixteen years of age to quit work until, they had. secured, legal permits. Secre . tary Clark of. the Business Men's League should take cognizance of this outrage and protest against further in terference with the right of employers to manage their own business. We have been asked to print what John Kirby, jr., said when he heard about the settlement of the Buck stove case. We refuse. The Wageworker never has, nor will it ever have if it can avoid it, trouble about getting through the mails. The Buck Stove and Range Co.'s ac tion is calculated to make Charley Post throw another fit in front of the sten ographer. The best way to bring about union conditions is to keep boosting the label. In Jefferson City, Mo., the state peni tentiary runs a non-union barber shop. Citizens pay fifty cents a month to the state and what they please to the "con barber." There is said to be more kinds of graft and skin games going on in the Missouri penitentiary than in any similar institution in the world. A counterfeit label has been traced to it more than once. Even counterfeit money has been made there. . The ordinary primary in states where it is the only way to have a voice in naming the ticket is not attended by more than 13 per cent of the voters of a party. The Republican "assembly" plan of holding a secondary primary in Oregon is evidently not being attended by two per cent of the party voters. In one county six delegates to the eoun ty assembly were elected by five men. In another precinct three men elected 11 delegates. LAST Lot 4 All Suits that sold for 15, 16.50, $18 $10.60 STROIG 1 ... i. .r. :m fr J 'tit ;-,&o ' 2lk :ni.'-i8 .a GO Clothes Cleaned, Pressed 1 Repaired - t Gentlemen and - Ladies HATS Worked Over New or Cleaned and Hocked. Fixed under our Guaran- ,' tee are O. K. . We have a Dressing: Room and can ' ' sponge and press your clothes while you wait - ' ' TED MARRINER, 235 NORTH 11th STREET r ' . .:-,-'). I -i . . First Two Doors North of Labor Temple;" Auto 4875; Bell Fl 509 ;w Practical Hatter, Expert Cleaner and Dyer, I 1 Workers whom ff All Shoes Without the Union Stamp are Non-Union Do not accept any excuse for absence of the UNION STAMP Boot and Shoe Workers Union 246 Sumner JOHN F. TOBIN, Pres. Sal DAY Lot 5 All Suits that sold for 10, 12.50, $13.50 $7.60 Mens Odd pants 1-5 off Superior Union suits 1-3 of or e Named Shoes' are Of ten Made' in; Non-Union 'Factories Do Not Buy Any Shoe no matter what the name unless it bears a plain and readable impression of this Union Stamp. St., Boston, Mass. CHAS. L. BAINE, Sec-Tree. c : it ?i - vKAi fuStf nil 5i h XI 1 7 t OtCfOJl '(! 'J ' 3 Y.U SST I'M HOW 'tswtirWfisrf ni: ,t,'?)Jft,fSWrP? 'OT 1 t-5