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The Orchard Homes Co. t 139 North Uth LINCOLN, NEB. WHAT WOMEN STRIKERS WON (Miriam Firin Scott in The Outlook.) Any day last winter, from early morn ing till late at night, in rain or snow or sleet, in the district west of Fifth Avenue and south of Thirty-third street, in New York, you could have seen hundreds of thin, pale-faced, ill clad girls marching like sentinels up and down the sidewalk in front of cer tain doorways. And every day, had you watched, you could huve seen scores of these half -starved girls beaten up by thugs and policemen, arrested, fined by magistrates, and even sent to the workhouse. These young girls, ever marching to and fro if they stopped they were liable to arrest were the pickets of the Ladies' Waist -Makers Union, which was a strike forty thou sand strong the biggest strike of wo men this country has known. The contest was a bitter one; the odds seem ed aJl against the girls. But, despite the menace and brutality of the police, despite cold and hunger, you would not have seen the number of these young sentinels decrease. Some fell out, but there were volunteers in plenty to take their places; and for a hundred days this desperate marching to and fro went on unbroken. Had you stood on Fifth Avenue in this same region on May Day, the in ternational holiday of workers, you would have seen a strangely different procession. Past you there would have tramped, as part of the May Day Parade, an army of girls uniformed in white shirt-waists and red neckties an army three miles long. These were the girls who had desperately paced this same neighborhood half starved only a few months before; but now, as they marched, they sang the workers' "Mar seillaise," and on thousands of faces was the look of victory, for they had won their striks. This contest is an equitome of what these girl strikers have achieved. To show more definitely the extent and full significance of their victory it will be necessary to recall briefly the working conditions that existed prior to the strike, and also to recall the girl's equipment for a struggle. "While in many shops the conditions were good, in the majority the girls worked ami'd most pernicious sanitary surroundings; they were the victims of a system of fines (for being late or damaging goods) that were vastly ' disproportionate to any loss suffered by the employer; there was in existence a subcontracting sys tem which enabled the employer to pay as low as two dollars a week of sixty hours; they worked ten, twelve, and even more hours a day; in the busy season they did not get even one day's rest a week; and at the best the ma jority of these girls could count on nothing better than a four month's season of tense overwork, and eight months in which they would be more or less idle. As to the preparedness of these girls for a great strike, perhaps I can suggest that by saying that when I went to the office of the union a few days before the strike was called, I found that the headquarters of the Ladies' WaistMakers Union of New York was a corner, mere "deskroom, " in one very small office, and that the general organizer, scretary, trasurer, and walking delegate were all combined in one not very large man. This hard working Pooh-Bah informed me that his union had an irregular, unenthusiastic membership of about eight hundred, scattered throughout Greater New York, that ninety per cent were of foreign birth, more than half did not speak English, and that practically none of them had any knowledge or experience in union organization. Such was the fighting condition of the union when the long struggle with the four hundred manufacturers began. With the struggle that followed, with the girls' sacrifice, suffering, and heroic spirit, I have already acquainted the readers of The Outlook in a previous article. Though the union was so weak, the girls were ripe for revolt and un yielding revolt and for fourteen weeks amid the greatest hardships, they car ried on the fight, and at length carried it on to complete victory. At the time the strike was declared off, 354 employ ers had signed the union's contract, and with a very few exceptions all had agreed to a closed shop, to a fifty-two-hour week, to a raise of wages from twelve to fifteen per cent, to do away with the sub-contracting system and many other abuses, to limit night-work to two hours per day and not more than twice a week, to pay week-workers for legal holidays, and in the slack sea son to divide the work among all work ers, instead of giving it to a favored few. Important as are the direct economic results of the victory, there is another result of even greater significance, and that is the existence of a real union where before there had been bu.t the shadow of one. Very recently I had occasion to view the new headquarters of the union, and the contrast with the headquarters before the fight' was enough in itself to tell what a dif ferent thing the Ladies' Waist-Makers Union now is from the union of six months ago. Instead of a corner in one room, the union has a suit of two rooms, which it already finds too small for its purpose; instead of a few hundred scattered members, there are now twenty thousand girls in good stand ing, with new ones coming in daily, instead of the entire staff of officers being incorporated in one man, the union now has two organizers, two recording secretaries, two financial secretaries, nine walking delegates, one bookkeeper, and three stenographers. Besides, each organized shop lids a voluntary chairman, and once a week all the chairmen meet with the walking delegates to report the conditions of the shops. In this way the union is kept in constant touch with each individual shop. Instead of an income of but little better than nothing a week, the average weekly income from dues and initiation fees is $3,400. The union has also established an employment bureau in its offices. When any girl is out of work, instead of tramping from shop to shop, she need only come to the bureau at the union's offices. And, besides, the strike has had an other result. There has been a tradition that women cannot strike. These young inexperienced girls have proved that women can strike, and strike sucess-fully. Il I PI A FD TnTFv A 1 1 1 1 VUJL.JJ11MJ!J' 1 1 LITTLE LABOR NOTES. Gleaned From the Field Where Labor Is Exploited. Samuel Gompera, President of the American Federation of Labor, has not ified the San Francisco Labor Counail that i will be impossible for him to ac cept the invitations of that body to deliver the Labor Day address at San Francisco. Appeals to their brethren of the American railroad employes' orders reached Douglas. Ariz., on August 5, from Conductors Parish, Haley, Chat lin and Englehart of the Southern Pa cific lin'3s in Mexico, who have been im prisoned at Guaymas for nearly a month. A permanent arbitration board com posed oif twelve representatives each of . labor and capital was formed at San Francisco on August 4. The board is organized under the auspices of ithe Chamber of Commerce and the Labor Council and Building Trades Council. The eight-hour day for freight con ductors and trainmen and the mileage basis for passenger crews are the .most important propositions that wiill ibe sub mitted to the Orlder of Railway Con ductors and the Brotherhood of Rail way Trainmen in Ithe next ten or fifteen days. Charles H. Moyor was re-elected Pres ident oif the Western Federation of Miners by a large majority at the convention held at Denver on August 1, and it was voted to hold the next convention at Butte. A committee iwas appointed to confer iwith the Ameri can Federation of Labor with a view to affiliation. STRIKES AND BENEFITS. Greatest Battles of Labor Have Been Waged Without Funds. John :. Lennon. treasurer of the Amei'ic;:n Federation of Labor and general secretary of the Journeymen Tailors' Union of America, has placed before the members of the latter or ganization some interesting opinions on the question of strikes and bene fits. Mr. Lenuon has been secretary treasurer of the Tailors' union for twenty-five years, mid his opportuni ties for observation at close range have beeu unlimited. In cases of strikes or lockouts in volving only a few journeymen. Mr. Lennon says, it is a mistake to permit the displaced workmen to take em ployment in other tailor shops in the town or to go to other towns. Where a union has had the power and cour age to say, "No, 3-011 cannot leave our city, nor can yon accept work in any other. shop until this contest is set tled." they have lu nearly all cases won, according to Mr. Lennon. But If the strikers leave town or accept work in other shops the result is almost as bad as if they went "scabbing," he says, and under such circumstances success is practically impossible. Mr. Lennon also thinks it is a mis take for local unions to pay or attempt to pay strike benefits. He holds that the benefit paid by the national union is sufficient. He says that the mem bers who strike because they are guar anteed the combined benefits of na tional and local organizations do not make good strikers. When the local treasuries are exhausted, which some times is an enrly result of the special demands made upon them, such strik ers become disgruntled And weak kneed. To clinch the point under both these beads Mr. Lennon suggests tbat if any one doubts bis assertions he should study the history of the world's labor struggles. He declares "they will dis cover that the greatest battles of labor have beeu made by those who bad scarcely enough from day to day t keep them alive." R OYAL OCK MADE FROM PURE PASTEURIZED CREAM FANCY CREAMERY BUTTER TTT THIS BUTTER is the finest that skill and the LJ modern methods can produce from pure cream, and is guaranteed to give satisfaction if kept in a cool place and not exposed to fruit, meat or any vegetables. PAPER FOLDED, AND KEPT WET UNTIL USED PLEASE LEAVE BUTTER IN THE PARCHMENT Guaranteed Pure Creamery Butter. U. S. Grant .. Proprietor The Hayden Studio The only first-class Studio in Lincoln making Cabinet Photos at $3.00perdoz. Why pay more W E. UNLAND & CO. UP-TO-THE-MINUTE Tailors and Haberdashers Our clothes are strictly tailor-made by the best journeyman tailors, in our own shop. llth and O Little Block WESTERN SUPPLY COMPANY WHOLESALE DEALERS IN UP-TO-DATE Steam, Water and Plumbing Supplies State Agents for Tharen Pump Company State Agents for Perkins Windmill Co. PHONES: BELL 150 AUTO 1150 Lincoln Nebraska H. MARX Tailor Up-to-the-minute Suits made to order. Extra good qualities at extra low prices. Perfect fit guaranteed. Clothes cleaned, pressed and repaired Auto 5353 122 North 12th Sreet Lincoln, Nebraska mi