The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 13, 1912 Page: 3 of 4
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direction of the)
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UJtBBL Oti tm REBEL
great many of'our friends
asked why it is that
everything ill on and
d The Rebeloffice breathes
it spirit of unionism that the pa-
does not carry the label of the
ternational Typographical Un-
ion at its mast head just as does
u Appeal .and J&:^er.iwge So-
0. F. Branstetter, of Oklahoma papers.
Oitv, b organising in South C!am | When our friends ask ua the
0lina until April 15. under the di- J <i«estion, they are not aware of
Iction of the provisional state Hh« the typographical un-
L\wtaJy. ion, which provides that there
' • • • [must be a certain number of mem-
The comrades in Wharton Co. J"™ in f " lab"' wil1
- „„*♦{.« to„ fl be granted or a union can be or-
S. They havf bough?ia>"";z\d '°.MmBck "'I*1'
people, it lias been impossible to
organise a Union until, with the
growth of the Rebel, enough prin-
ters have been employed to or-
ganize tl|e tinion.
■ _... t . Even when we had secured
j. T. Cumbie, former candi- enough printers we found there
date for governor of Oklahoma, |Was a family row on in the I, T U.;
is tearing^peopj^loose from.old!the centralized national executive
party affiliations in that state. He board has not gotten rotation in
baa been routed eagt of Pittsburg; [office, with the result that the
THE LABOR WAR 09
JK.W.
COAST.
I wide and 12 inches deep to an-
Inotmce their platform.
• • •
The Call to Action i* a new
I Socialist paper published at Para-1
I gould, Ark.
"ins" Wiunt to { stay u
The Social Democrat, publish- land keep out the "outs." In oth-
|ed at Sayre Okla., announces I er words, Jim Lynch, and his as-
this week that its cfrcu- sociateg aire hanging on desper-
[jatiori tate ^aiwd the one thous-lately to their-jobs. The South
and mark and7remember, the pa- land west are anti-administration
[per is only , three months old. Und the powers-thv.-he do not
Boost it to *5,000 as quick as poa- wish any new'unions to be organ-
Igible, for/lt w surely there with wed in this hostile territory,
[the gobds. The result is that, although we
<r * • t [are in no way implicated in the
The Sooialists'selected the May- and everybody associated
lor at Hartford, Ark., last week. \mth m «nion * the core, we
[He iris coal miner. G. E. Mikel/I?*™ ***" from the
of Jenny Lind, another coal dig-|label «P to date through the na-
[ger haa been'nominated by the J tional powers. After months o
Socialists of Arkansas for gover- negotiation, we can now report
nor. The coal miners are com- Pro r«8- The printers of {lalletta
mencing to get into the Socialist 1*®® and Y<*knm organized with
movement in great numbers and fourteen members lastweek and we
will be a big factor in beating jf™ confident that within the next
| the donk to death in the Soul||3ifMM|flH
MILWAUKEE.
ELECTION NOTES
Ji condition approximating civil
wir ia raging from San Diego
along the eOaat to Washingt
nd down the slope to British Co^
umbia. The business grafters in can
San Diego, a Wwn that is domin-[of
ated by th« SWteckels land and
sugar interests! has been the cen-
er of freaspeech fight for months. [ the
()n the advice of the infamous
Otis, wail* ha* been declared onjoni
union labor, free speech and the [sit
press. Women have been beaten
up, men have been deported in
^uibipobiles; children have been [el
rampled on; newspapers have thi:
>een suppressed; an editor has Po:
been kidnapped. In short, red e;
handed anarchy has been practis- th^
ed by the business upholders ofjwh*
law and order
Those
into which J |PR| m JRRPI ,,
whirl themselves, beaten and el
damned and shorn of their power [ti°U
to curse the earth. Incidentally,
they are all democrats and repub-
licana and will soon be, just as in
Milwaukee, "non-partisan."
rVoio one end of the state of
California to the other, and
through Oregon and Washington,
the federated shopmen are strik-
ing onthe Harriman railroad. A
of the wisest Socialist
per publishers in America
said:
re are all kinds of methods
ting circulation. You
ve away pianos, automo-
iaujonds and trips to Hu-
nt after all, there is only
method and tbat is teyvut
class in the paper.
Kebs, on the first week of
ond 40 weeks, I ask you 10
jury and with the evi-
in front of you, please reiv
hVerilict as to whether the
iu our paper or not. 1
.you will all vote "Yes."
| instance, this edition is
tnaking. Not a paper iu
nth, North or West, over
the great* Harriman lines
ith all their great batteries
the Socialists two years ago, but at
that time th#y could not afford to
drop the mask; they had to fight a
sham tattle. The Dems and Reps
pretend that they were at
inam iv
iaa to
devils are digging a ditch I linotypes and $100,000jflresses
ich they wilTWrntually have told the story that The Reb-
ts al)out the railroad situa-
is week.
A #her thing, did you ever see
a paeer go down the road, the ad-
miration of all on-lookers, as he
liita f ,2:40 clip and yet was tug-
mt the bit trying to pet
to 2:201 That's exactly
ye The Rebelis in. We are
a 2:40 rate now and want
to get -down M 2&K but
They Uniii—They Dm. 1 The Socialista elected one al-
All eyes wefe turned last week ^enian at Peoria, Illinois.
on the city the Socialists mads fa-1 • •'One alderman was elected on
mous—Milwaukee. The'elMion | the red ticket at Quiney, HL
was undoubtedly the most peculiar The Socialists lost at Flint,
municipal fight that has ever tak-1 Mich., through a combining of
en place in the United Statea Two (the two old pirties. They won the-
years ago with three parties in the council.
field, the SociiKsts, won a plurall- Kalamaroo, Mich., the Socialist
ty victory; The combined votes of elected two aldermen, O. H. Lock-
both old pwrties would have beaten wood' and Yan Balarcum.
ialists two years ago, but at The Socialist gained 50 per cent
in their vote at Battle Oeek,
Mich., the towirmade famous by
peanut hull Post.
One alderman waa gained at
Butte, Mont., making six in all.
At Billings the rods elected two
out of five aldermenr -
At Pearl, Illinois, the Socialists
elected Thomas Blair supervisor,
against the combined efforts of
the two old parties. #
At Eau Claire, Wis,,.the So-
cialists succeeded in electing a
mayor by a handsome majority.
This is a city of 26,000 people.
At Krebs, Oklahoma^ tie So-
cialists elected two alderinpa and
i^McAlester they increased their
me about 400 per cent over the
vote polled one year ago.
At Dbwigfa^ Mich., the Socia-
lists elected nx out of ten*ward of-
dagger's point, but the Socialista
walked in.
Then followed two years of effi-
cient municipal administration,
i the like of which has never been
seen in America. In all the heat,
)assion and bitterness of this ti-
anic campaign from which our
comrades have so" .triumphantly
emerged, there did not creep into
;he slanderous throat of one Old
partyite the charge that the So-
cialists were dishonest. It was a
working class administration from
op to bottom and consequently re-
lected the pure Uvea of the work
era who produce the wealth oT tbe
world.
free speech fight hw brokea'out ,0 * world' F"0"5 ,Ild
h. Oakland. The Soeialiat hall " • « « " I",n « bOT"n" mA
haa been invaded by the. police "0* w® ^av® ,^e.
and innoeem people lirteniij to ""V*® • h ™« "
a peaceful lecture have been club ' I*"- y™.*1" h«'P I"
bed unconscioua: at the Gray'. «•« ' lhe P°,nt wher" "OT'd •
harbor i dirtrict of WaAiogtonJ'W"^" comraeno« w
the ria« of the lumber trun Thb «wk we commence our t.rrt
have .truck, Tbuge of all de- «"g J1""''the "of^ ' MV.
Bcription. are beating up men and I'raH b'm'lr'd h.ve been dropned
women in a moat savage manner. I tlie list; although we put on
Word, fail to tell the frightful H"3' hundred^ «.!. , our
brutalities practised by the djmo-10"8 80 we ^
cratic and republican officials on
labor in Hoaquiam and Aberdeen.
The Rebel visited Aberdeen and
two weeks, unless thi autocracy .• • 10no ^ a ,
«. extra-leffaj mdtaKh, the unite ZZ2*
Ida Hayman Callery, State Sec.
of Arkansas, writes: "If a gener-
al election were to take place
now I think the Socialists would
poll j20,000 votes in this state. In
ed 75 behind This must be offset
at once. Our circulation will triple
if you follow the advice of the
comrade who sends the following
letUBP-: V
Montague, Tex., Apr. 9, 1012
label will fly at our mast head. To ^° " from f'« hand eipeneuee
give our readers a. idea of how buaineM men of T1]e Hallttsville, lesas.
straight the Rebel stands, the I.T. thMe T'"' " 1"- """
local of Houston has ordered ?w?^.b'!e .' ■ ">«-
mg their fortunes by the
U.
100 oopies of this railroad edition.
very
yun^iA/.vw vuica iu mn sww;, mi, . .. . .. f. . ^ iboldest robbery of Uncle Sam's
three or four counties the Social- ,. , , ,1T T, , . , timber domain. We shall publish
iits feel they will elect th< ir ean- J"gJ^S ^ the story in next weeks's issue
didates to the legislature. At Les- ., , , , . . .. ,m:nn and unless law has completely
lie the Socialists will undoubtedly * In AorMbe tmon f '
elect their ticket. ST^Ti.1"* W«l straight for
. ... ... .. •. • the Kebel is sound in unionism to L. .•
This will be jbe fourth eity in [^ ^ ♦ limit penitentiary.
• • •
RENTER'S UNION: | In British Columbia, the Indus-
trial Workers of the World that
which Socialists have elected of-
ficials."
• •. •
The Bennington Trjbune, Bry .
an Co^ Oklfc, m its issue of|4
March 22, said: "For 50 years the
democracy has had no opportun-
ity to make or unmake the lawa
that have brought on these con-
ditions." And yet methinks Clev-
eland was elected in 1892 and
the democrats secured both branch-
es of congress. What a donkety-
donk kid of a donk this derned
donk is anyhow.
' ■ • * /•
Thomas Wood row, of Hobart,
Okla., sec. of the Christian Social-
ist Fellowship for Oklahoma and
New Mexico has just closed a re-
markably successful series of lec-
tures in the opera house at Mar-
low, Okla. Rev. Woodrow went
to Marlow to dividp time with ope
W. P. Lemmons of Tyler, Texas,
but Lemmons refused to ipeet
him. Both men spoke in separate
buildings. 500 people heard Wood-
row; Lemmons had 4r7 by actual
count.—It was ever thus.
• •
Winfirid, La.—The Democrats
of this county ard beginning to re-
gard the fast growing Socialist
movement with alarm, as there
are more Socialists here than in
any other part of'the state.
The democrats recently held their
convention, at which tlfey passed
the following resolution, and
planned to center their efforts
against the Socialists:
"Whereas, strange doctrines of
government, designed to destroy
i the family and striking at the
very root of reHgion and aiming
at the abolishment of private
property and ail incentive to hu
man effort, resulting in the de-
j structiori of aU law and order and
j bringing about chaoa, are being
| preached in our parish; therefore
be itr resolved etc. ,
What an ignojant bourbon
crowd these devotees of the donk
ate, anyhow.
• • •
Comrade Dan Hogan of Arkan
sas, editor of the Huntington
Herald and national i committee-
man for that state, will speak a
Muldrow Saturday, April 20, 7 p
; at SalHsaw, Sunday afternoon
the 2tst, at 2^:30 and at Vian the
same day at 7:30 p. m,
i '
il§ !
"Dear Comrades Find encloset
money order for four 40-week
subijj One is my own, renewal
and three new subs Now, if ev
try reader of The Rebel woiilt
renew and send in three new ones
there would be something doing in
Texaa This is my motion IIow
many will second it Let's see
that woqld run the list up to Bix
ty or. seventy thousand. Wouldn't
that*ook like a good Socialist
move?
"Come on comrades with your
To win out this timfr, the mask fieialsr TIh Socialists -polled 347
"H. L. Cook."
Now, let us hear from every
I Rebel who renews with a list, and
don't stop at 4, make it 1 i of 41
or as much as you possibly can
tue, Troas BgH~ Ua^onduetuig, a great railroad eon-
UOmHtk, Tom? ■« • the Jraha I
Orgauizer J. C. Rhodes write.: the «"««' di^'plm^-
Came home from a suecesaful f thf e^ t '
speaking trip Sunday and will re- 'et,ter °rd" ■ m,L°""n«d
> the work of orgwiiring tbe 1^'°" tbe "trike. The Houston
tenter's Union; will get two lo-[ sa^*:
cahatartedxbthk< mrty#Fraight- "Yale is the seat of a minia-
ened out and some more built up Socialistic republic and the|Thi«js the one way to apread So-
and push the work to the limit." atrike committee rules A score
Organizer W.. W. Beeee, of Fleet- °t* social Industrial Workers
wood, Okla has not l>een able to do constables have been appointed
much work because of sickness, but these men -distinguished from
is now able to go to work. He |'city coustables by red and green
writes: "'Have been solicited to badges, parade the streets.
organize in several places nere. "Several constables are sta-
If you will eonjffliasion me t® organ- tianed. in the hotel bfir and any
ize here in-Oklahoma, I can do man who attempts to take more
mueh work. The renters are ready than two drinks -at a bar,-or who
for organization as they never have comes back too often is promptly
>een before." I arrested aiid taken to fro union
J. F. Dwight has started on an headquarters. There he is search-
organmng tour through Jack,led and the amount of money in
Parker''and other counties. He or- Ihis possession is reported to the
janized a local' at Joplm with W.T strike <cammittee. A fine is im-
Meador, Secretary. ' posed by the committee based on
Every person wl)o realizes that the state of bis finances."
the Working class of farm and fae- The above will show how labor
tory must be industrially organized maintains order. What" a delight-
before they can achieve industrial I ful comparison with the capitalist
freedom, should get in behind the [disorder in San Diego, Oakland,
Renter's Union and push it in ev- Hoaquiam and Aberdeen.
ery way possible. It is just as nee I latER: The latest reports are
essary that the rentrs be taught that: from the middle western
to strike right as to vote right. 'coast 70,000 men are marching on
San Diego. The business graft-
BVNDLE ORDERS. I era who are trailing the stars and
Our-readers will notice in the stripes in thfe mud and damaging
left hand box on the first page of woi^en and children, and think
the Rebel that we print 30,000 this that they can peonize labor and
week. This is just our first run; establish Diaz conditions this
We have sent an advance proof of side of the Rio Grande, have an
the first page to the big rajlroad other great big guess eoming to
leaders in the South and to com- them, The Rebjel believes. Be-
rades at all strike points. We have fore they can destroy freedom of
already gotten orders from the assemblage and the press, a eivil
Houston strikers and the Houston war will be provoked in America
Typographical Union. We hhve that will make the late unpleas
instructed our friends to telegraph antheSs lodk like a dutch picnic,
orders as we cannot hold the press |Thpy had better back off.
longer than next Monday,
cialism
Some suh getters this week: __
W. E. Hayes, 4; L. C Smith. 4;
W. P. Lackey, 4; C. H. Welding.
0; J. C. Winter, 5; O. W. M.
Taylor, 4; no. McCann, 4* Jack
Billlirigsly, 8; S. H. Nance, 4; T.
Sanders, 4 J. F Hunt, 4$ L.
Williams, 4; S. L. Moore, 8;
J. T. Monk, 5; A. T Beaehj 8,^S.
H. Baker, 4; E. E. Cochran, 4;
arrested aiud taken to fro union|johti H. Pope, 6; T. M. Wallis. 4;
S. II. Henderson, 6; W. H. Fair-
cloth,^; Dana Warren, 4; J. D.
Evans, 4; Tom Turner, 4; F. M.
Dickhard, 5; S. B. Kilgore, 5;
K. Finch, 6; J. R. Tommie, 4;
Ross Crain,-4; J. W. Puckett, 7;
A. Stephens, 4; F. Thompson,
4; W. R. Mahan, 4; W. M. Camp-
bell, 4; T. J. Alexander, 4; A. J.
Smith, 4; Frank Turner, 5; L. O.
Lawless, 4; W. W. Barrett, 4; G.
H. Oliver, 4; J. A. Parsons, 4; C
Williford, 4; R. D. Miller, 4 ; R. F,
Saner, 4; C. S. Leuderman, 6;
Peter Fritzpatrick, 4; John Over-
ton, 4; W. W. Williams, «; A. E.
SatteinJWe, 5; W. L. Anderson,
5; L. P^Fore, 7; H. E. Johnson,
4; J. D. Walker; 5; R. F. Dun-
can. 5; H. L. ^Cook, 4; L. B. Lip-
pard, 4; B. T. Tackett, 6; E. M.
Smith, 4; H. A. Rickaway, 6; W.
B. Driver, 4.
April 15. W« h<>P« to print from
30,000 to 50,000 extra copies and
thus exceed <ur 40,000 issue of last
January, that beautiful piece of
irony, the scab's prayer,, is richer
than anything that Dean Swift 6v-
mcKEY'S LECTURES.
The comrades at the few points
where I was compelled to cancel
dates will have a chance to meet
er got off. At a half a cent a copy °n my way to the national cqp^
thecomrades should see the advis- venUon.
ability of flooding thus" country ™188^ m ^ ^efore May
with them. „ We may have several J2- J?"® ^ ^ g'v'® 1???®
thousand copies over and
suggest that onr Rebels nre in or-
ders at c-ac®, 50 eta. a hundred,
$5.00 a thousand.
lad to be dropped and so the sham
battle ended. Into one another 's
arms fell the Dems and the Reps,
he elephant and the donk, and they
stood befdTe the multitude pro-
claiming that which the Socialists
have always contended to be the
truth, namely, that they were one
in spirit, one in exploitation, one
in graft.
Nine daily newspapers, as many
million dollars, most of the chur-
ches, all the big capitalists, all the
pimps, parvenues, procurers, in
short all hosts of vice and graft
lined up for their last grand stanfl,
to keip their black flag of mis-rule
flying in the sky.
The combined grafters agreed
upon a plan of campaign that
would put the American flag in
the foreground as an issue. Every
grafter and white-slaver decorated
himself with the stars and stripes,
Every ballot box stuffer and thug,
private detective and protected
thief, yelled for old glory. Money
was poured out like water, yet
when the smoke of battle cleared
away, the Socialist ranks stood un-
broken, yea and more, they in
creased several thousand and it is
freely predicted that the next el
ection will bury the elephant and
donk forever.
How fraudulent were the claims
of the Dems and Reps about devo-
tion of the flag can he seen from
this act, recorded in the Milwaukee
Daily Leader, that after the polls
closed on election night, the bro
thels that had been closed under the
Seidel administration, threw their
doors wide open, red light real es-
tate tbat was worth $50 a foot when
Seidel was in power, went over
high.t to $1000 a foot.
The patriotic Christian business
men of Milwaukee ar£ securing a
wide open town and propone to pay
more straight votes than both, old
parties combined and four times as
many votes than they had polled at
any previous election.
REBEL YELLS
E. F. Staiiton, Hamlin Tex.: "I
am a primitive Baptist. I like your
answer to the primitive Baptist last
week. It is foolish to think that f
the people are economical1 they will
be better off. If all workers should
aave on buying goo<ls, all men
would be seriously injured. If tho
farmers should cease buying cotton
goods, could the retail merchants
eontinue to buy cotton t Could
manufacturers of cotton goods buy
cotton t These imply nothing but
negative answers. Neither econo
my nor extravagance is the remedy
under the present system based on
the private ownership of eollectivc-
ly used tools. The collective owner-
ship and democratic manage-
ment of all collectively used toojs
for production and the abolition
of speculation in land is the rem-
edy for our evils.''
£ • • •
Jim Davidson, Dumont, Tex.:
"Whoever say6 today that aught
make right, performs an act of the
middle ages, and so our masters
who depend on might will find
themselves behind the times and
right, which is Socialism personi-
fied, will triumph."
• • •
W D. Boydston, St Jo, Tex.
"Help Tho Rebel. If you can get
them to reading, it's all off wiA
the donk."
• • •
Geo. .1, Benson, Lampasas, Tex:
"Here is my fourth bunch of the
Rebel since it "started. It Vron't
be the last by any means, for you
are running the greatest paper in
their taxes through the bodies of
the poor prostitutes of Milwaukee.' the South."
Tn e^cli one of these brothels the j " • •
stars Mid stripes were waved; more' D. A. Tucker, Tyler, Tex..writes :
flags were seen in the hands* of |N Please send me-cards. The Reb-
el is the right stuff. It is awak-
ening the sleeping South."
• « •
A. L. Stafford,.Rosebud, Tex:
"Five years ago I was as much
opposed to Socialism as any man
in the South, but I waa open to
conviction and changed. Thank
God I didn't have to get my brains
knocked out to get my eyes open.
The Rel>el is surely opening a lot
of eyes." ' -
• • •
J. O. Williams, Evant, Tex; "I
am an old confederate Rebel 81
years. I- love to read your paper
because it pivfes me the truth.
The people around here arfeget-
ting pessimistic because Ithe old
party has lied so much that they
fear that the truth cannot be
found anywhere."
, ~ STATE NOTES.
E. 4} Green, State Sec., Rockdale.
The final connt of the referen-
dum for delegates to the national
convention show the following
comrades elected : A
T< >A. Hickey, W. S. Noble, E.
A. Green, J. C. Rhodes, M. A.
Smith, Reddin Andrews, L. L.
Rhodes, Belle Williams, E. R.
Meitzen, C. A. Byrd, Richey An-
drews, J. C. Thompson;
" Alternates: Minnie King, M.
A. Anderson, G. XL-Edwards, N.
L. Hardy, Wilford B. Smith, W.
J. Bell, C. Nugent, Dan Gandy,
B. H. Lauderdale, Alice McFad-
den, p. <3. Grider, Morgan Gra-
ham.' • ■
white slavers, pimps and procurers
with their capitalist visitors on el-
ection night than was ever seen on
Grand Ave. when the morning sun*
beamed on the 4th of July.
This flag faker is about played
out. Already the people are dis
gusted, the old politicians struggl-
ing to get at the pie counter are
fighting savegely among themsel-
ves and it is freely admitted that
were an election to take place ucxt
week, the Socialists would again
capture the city hall. On all sides
it is admitted that the vote two
yeftrs ago was not a Socialist vote,
it was a vote against corruption
and graft but this time the issue is
scfuarejy joined : ' Socialism " vs.
Capitalism, and ^2,000 stalwart
men lined up under the banner of
red that signifies the ml blood in
the veins of common humanity for
which the gentle Christ was cruci-
fied. Now the old parties will have
to combine in the Fall, if possible,
otherwise Berger will be elected
and another congressman Will ac-
company him to Washington. The
capitalist press of the nation is ntot
jubilant over the outlook ; that
Socialist vote 32,000 strong has
stunned them; 'tis the handwriting
on the wall that foretells the speedy
dissolution of tfie capitalist system.
Milwaukee is but one evidence
of the coining together of the old
parties aU over the nation- Mark
Banna was right when he made
the prediction in 1900, that the
great political battles of America
W. L. Lennon, Point, Texas:
"Let this profit system tumble
Lower, lower let it fall1 4
Let the shades of darkness hover
Over it, it curses all.
Let it tumble on tlie donkey,
With its weak and drSAry bray
It's so tired, worn and weary
Living on such weedy hay."
Our poet tells ua he is going to
help carry Rains county and
bury the donk.
ed Capitalism and the Socialist
party representing the .masses of
the people. Between these two
great parties the «pinefcts, issue-
in the early years 6f the 20th cen-1 characterless, democratic
tuiy would be between the repub- i party will be ground to powder.
Iican party representing organiz- Go<J speed the day.
1 .
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hickey, T. A. The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 13, 1912, newspaper, April 13, 1912; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth394813/m1/3/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.