The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [5], No. 210, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 31, 1915 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.
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1
I:
V \
ft
I
. I
C.:-. .
'r''V •. • :kM&
Rescue.
!'^*!" "f; - ■ fp "
taining employment,This ordin-
ance ia unfair to them." Rodi^
fcue* replied: "It ia intended to
do just that. We waat to make it
impossible if we can, by city or-
dinance, for any peraon to get a
job running a street car in thia
town while the strike is on." The
finance passed 57 to 10, which
shows that aldermen listen to the
labor vote daring strike times.
Alderman John C. Kennedy dis
cussed the ordinance and referred
to Chief Healey* s call for 1,000 re-
the second city in the
Country, was completely without
street car facilities for two entire
days. Wfeat happened! Two So-
cialiat aldermen, won the fight for
the,Union men. Don't believe itt
Bead the following aeoount of it,
taken from the International So-
cialist Review which lives in Chi*
cago, and then send in your sub
and keep posted each month on the
leading Socialist Movements in
each country of the globe. Bebel
and Int. Review, $1.00j Rebel,Int.
Review and Pearson's, $1.76 per I volvei* and 50,000 cartridge. One
year. Ileniy D. Capitain, known as. a
a a # {street railway alderman, said Ken-
WMtS CHICAGO WALKED.
On the morning of June 14 no-1plied in even and poaitive voice:
body among all the two and one "1 tell you we don't want to see
half million people who live in the I workingmen shot down in the
city of Chicago could get a ror- treeta of Chicago." When Capi-
face street car or an elevated rail- [ 'ain started to defend himself of
road train down town or crow *',c implied charge that he wa« ac
town. The car men were on strike. ''essory to the intended shooting of
The 14,000 members of Division I workers, he was hiaked by the gal
241 of the Amalgamated Associa- jleries so that he could not be
tion of Street and Electric Railcard
way Employes of America failed Another ordinance of Rodri-
to come around and work for their guez wa framed to give the may-
wages that morning. |or power to seize and operate the
In the polite note to the street *rcet railways, pay the ear men
railway president* they said it was f*1®1''demands; on wages and work-
neceaaary to have "a cessation of ,n« houn,< aund *> th«
work," they were "aick and di«- comP,in,(* nhould make an agree-
gusted" of the kind of arbitration w.th the striking carman,
offered them, and they would keep You may call this confiscation
on with the "cessation of work* .you l,ke' T1
until the street railway companies] Bodnigues, thi® in a time when
would agree to a real a^itrat!on Pnhhc convenience and necessity
instead of a "hideand-aeek" arbi-ldwMnd and operation
%
' jM
*
^0,4,3
1- .-.'-4
■ ■■ ®3P,1■ • fa;ivj--'<*}• .
*''it£ - •'-'S <)£ :-i'
BUM.
The Weekly News Letter, U. 8.
Dept. of Agriculture, VoL 11, No.
47, of date June 80th; name to our
brim foil of the latest dope
on Meat in Hot Weather'. It
tella
a*
that
fcfe it She i
of yrar fwmwait. Dent
like it! You must, for you keep vot- .writes MM
ing for more of it , J "Deer Comrades:
• « • Comrade R. D. Shields, Dickeat thinking gams time we would, write
And the pirates that run your Co., write* for more cards "so I to the Bebel and -tell yon how
Texas government are not ope ean keep these poor Jack-Dbnks much we think of your little pa-
whit behind the tricksters at Wash- reading, something worthwhile." P«r, but have been toe busy in our
how to dean out your refri-jington. In the "Extenrion Service. • • • erop. We have both^ad to s«tk %>
gerator — if y«* have one. It's a [News Letter", which is issued byl "I enclose you this sub card'tord this year, and as I am sick
pretty decent affair however for ,the A. k M. College at College which some one has carried around this morning, and not able to work,
it admits For many families s Station, Texas, "One of the best a long while. It jfjpaliy too dirty thought I would write a little for
refrigerator ie obviously out of the rations that can be 'used for a sow to send to a eleanpaper like The husbend and myself. We think th*
question. 'If they were out for the sucking pigs," "All milk ves- Rsbel, but never let my paper
ruth in full, they would have sels should be kept absolutely stop," is the way Comrade R. A,
eaid, "For many families, meat is clean", "Many instances of mild Spoonta. Bell Co., comes back. ifor
liej^j Ammt (n 1 I- an/| I mi Aan * '
J
paper of its
.wait
also obviously out of the
tion.'
its coming.
que*; dew in rosebuds and leaves can be* • • • gets late dinner on Rebel
Under their directions the prevented". On meh bunc are the "Three of these sub* go to I am bound to read the five minute
tamers wife, or the industrial Texaa Democrats fed and their North Carolina and one to Pana-'fcrmon w| n the Rebel arrives.
W0SeiV ™* ^dd * pwro •Pent- their wives ma. I sm hoping the Rebel will We are ast Bed Card members;
T they would just manage have no suggestions made as to the wake them up to a study of ceo there is not a Local dose by We
to GET a refrigerator, and also food they need whetf nursing BA- nomics and cause them to vote and «e by ourselvqi in this comrauni-
nuuiage to OBT some meet, and BIES, their families have no bat|- act ascsrdingly," writes Comrade ty, as they do not understand and
also manage to GET some ice, they !rooms nor sanitary connections by R. A. Patrick, Panola Co. .... , -they don't want to read. They wiU
could put iu some o* tin?ir tinio which tiny cm keep THEMSEL- • • # torn looie milffi ft Imw 8o~
cleaning the refrigerator and keep ,VES clean, and "mild-dew eats up. "Tliese 'Times' are the cialist talk/not knowing that what
out of the field and away from th* their wives and children because Dubbs look down their noses. Per they say is Socialism, and the mo
wuhtub. SUFFICIENT TO ^ the wUl g«. . «TZL fey prfl
Then it tells about TO WEAR AND TO "USE. fjerce that, they ean see the beau- right out because they have been
. You have 17,000,000 But — they are "democrats" and ^ of Socialism, b " "
f IMA tirlt ab4 a u ta> n <■ miAit JamU imamS . .
of
tration.
these prot>erties. If the Common-
- _ , A ,, wealth Edison Company, our loc*
Four houra after the strike or-1, |ifrhtil|R trust( ,'hould havc ,
dor was issued Charles C. strike of its employes, what would
superintendent of police, toUU doT Would wp &]ong ^
newspaper men he would go before ^ an(j no u hts jn our
the city council finance committee L f No we would toke tho
that morning and ask for money J an(j run Ht1(| city
to pay 1,000 extra policemen. Not I ntjl the (.ompany mR(lp term8
a newspaper report or a town ru- with einploye8 When an ice
tnor had whispered of violence. L,gnt in Cincinftati waH ti(Kl up
Nonetheless Chief Healey went bo- j a Ktrike in the hot weather of
fore the- finance committee and H||(J the p(,op)(1 were m{.
laid out these figures on wiat^he fPring for want of ice, Mayor
wanted: 1,000 revolvers, 50,000 , the ice plant and op.
cartridges, 1,000 clubs and >elts, |era|^ ^ with the strikers until
>uilarie8 for 1,000 special police- the company tnatU, ^ with thc
men money for two meals ^perLtrikew." The ordinance was
day for 6,000 men. Total $450,* I ^Aton (52 t0 4, which shows that
confiscation isn't strong with the
Never in any American city has poi^ciaiis. From the galleries,
there been a clearer exhibition of J however, came a straight three
police desire for violence. All 1 minutes of tumultuous applause
squads of newspaper men land cheers. The "mob" was almost
corporation spotters searching the L unjt for a forcible seizure of the
city of Chicago that day were uotLtroet railways.
able to cite one instance of viol-1
ence. The 4,000 regular piHcemcn Now noticc how street railway
and detectivcg were under strict presidents "respect the law."
orders from Chief Healey to ar-|Though the city council went on
rest and hurry to the lock-up any record by 57 to 10 against import
union man who was apparentlylation of strikebreakers, the next
violating the law, but were- un-W I^conard A. Busby, the $65,-
able to find one union man worth 1000 a-year president of the Chica.
even trumping a charge against go City Railways Company, and
him A few cars run by policemen Henry A. Blair, the $50,000-a-year
and elevated railway officials J president of the Chicago Railway#
were not touched by the strikors. Co., went personally to Passenger
And on the basis of this showing,- Agent Hartigan of thc Lake Shore
Chicago's police chief asked for 1,- Railway and paid $15,000 in cash
000 clubs, 1,000 revolvers and,50,-[for 500 tickets at $H0 each for
000 cartridges. I transportation of strikebreakers
Do you wonder why the police [from New York and Philadelphia,
are accused of btood-thirsty man- Two train-loads of strike break
handling and a joy in mauling Urn were reported on^the way to
heads laying open scalps , and Chicago. At least $60,000 merely
plugging'innocent citizens with for transportation of strikebreak-
bullets during striket timesT Isjors was paid even though the
there some reason for the theory assembled aldermen of Chicago
that the average police chief in an Ihad voted 57 to 10 against such
American city has an iteh to knock action. Which shows that rcpro*
heads and order cops to shoot into sentative government is a piece of
crowdst I monkey-work so far as street rail
One item in Chief Healey's way president* are concerned.
budget called for J When the strike had been on
day for 60 days, $252,000 . There forty-eight hours, it was
has been no public or private ex-j^jj^ 0ff The companies agreed
plantation of what this was to be|that in arbitration they would pro-
for. The only way the street car J du(Je thPjr jiuijde office account
men could guesg was that the city books, which were withheld in the
of Chicago out of public arbitration of three years ago.
was to pay for the meals of 6,000 This left 2,000 stranded and
imported gunmen and sluggers. I hungry strikebreakers in Chicago
What did the finance committee l^itlwut any strike to break. What
do with this amazing request o [happened to them? Well, for one
the police chieft On a viv-A voceIthing, the newspapers didn't wel-
, vote, they passed it. Then Alder-1com< them. The Daily News front
man Charles E. Mernana demand-lpft^p called them plug uglies,
ed roll call. And it wa« beaten by | thievon. and thugs, and applauded
11 to 3, which means that^in the I p0]ie^ {or running them down
present era of politics and Amer the Indiana state line. On an
ican democracy, some so-called I inside page, however, the Daily
ward aldermen favor secretly NeWR ha(] gn editorial. It said the
slugging and shooting the work- tWo Socialist aldermen in the
ing class, but hold back, if theyJgQnncil meeting two days before
must go on rccord about it before!had played to the galleries, were
the voters. I"demagogues," and were "piv
Alderman William E. Rodri- p08ter0U8« their behavior. Yet
guez brought an ordinance into the tho cold fact is that the main ae
city couqcil that night. It saidmon of the two So<'ialists was aim-
that- no person could run as mot- at keeping strikebreakers, plug
orman on an elevated railway uglies and thugs from coming to
train unless he had twenty-one Chicago. Wliich shows that a
days of training under a eompc-1 strikebreaker is a good elean fel-
tent instructor; nor act as motor-how „nti Ithe strike is over and
man on a surface street car unless then he's a plug uglv and a thug
he had fourteen days training. A1 and a thief in the eyes of a capi-
derman DePriest, colored, pro-|talist newspaper playing fcfr cir-
tested: "I come from a peculiar J culation with a public standing by
people who have difficulty in ob the strikers.
done
tion"
before we are told so often it will break up their
with this Donk administra homes. But are there no homes
, is theeomment of Comrade around-here already destroyed by
E. W. Burke, as he sends in suba Capitalism} But aa husband and I
• • • say, there are some brains you
"My time will soon be out and might work on always with Social-
wheat crop
acres of as fine wheat as was ever don't want such things.
grown, so quit worrying. There is a • • • a
pretty map showing just where the t "A Wider Use for Berry Grow-
wheat is and you only need to fol- era" with over three pages of in-
low the map and get your winter.structione aboht ''handling rasp- ^ wiuo
supply. 16,000,000 acres is Hard .berries", also came to all the pa- j ^n't want to miss a single copy, ism and they wouUI never sest But
Spring wheat, the other smal pers m Texas lately and the Bebel ^ ta)ce this fifty cento and renew just as soon as capitalism dealt
f.eld being . durum (maearoni)anxiousto get a report from^thc ^ The R^bei b the best the firet blow, last Fall —
,iTa - y°Ur i BASPBERKY-grtrwers in TEX- . ,.nlai medicase and puts one in in their stomachs — their ey«* be-
^Tn aJ ffe t01J°;LA8 ' • • • fine ,nettle for the fi^ht for Pree" P1" °P«a- Some of them are on
ern Ha. . The| N('ws Letter r I dom", writes Comrade J. X. the Mercy Beat now, and I ihink
ns you have $17,626,000.00 each. The Immigration Bureau; Di- Hmitbu Clay Co. by the last of this year they wUl
year. Some of the people who n^d! vision of Laboi^ eomes J^'tb 10 . . • be ready to accept Sbcialism, ss
mattresswi, might take some- of this pages to tefT tag there is just one job -Herp j8 the money for the that is the only true remedy to help
in le*as, and that it requires an cardg yOU sent and list to cover the poor. Oh! How I pray far So-
englwhspeaking Bohemian woman ujj of theIU They have been plac- cialism to be re-estaWishedr Then,
01 e 1 • ♦ • where they will do the most and not until then, can we live a
„ ... good. No. 2D!l ia an eye-opener to consecrated Christian life for our
The same urean put i s very any one who will read it and just blessed Master. Under the present
■ < k "" to .how I „ .till on* the lirin, Syrtem «e hoyo to hard
act* ( ) and " f .' mn^ line you may anid mo some more to keen the wolf from the door we
no n - p " l !.«.•(?' e °IL ° carda," writes Comrade A. J. AI- can't read our Bible*aa wewwuld,
"Sanitary Dairy Parma, and how th,, time it waa a German woman ,, Tta^hnorto, Co. and can't talk to our dear htUo
to keep them "sanitary.' The .who was wanted at $2.50 per week ™ • . ,Jr. .JT. r
cow. mnat Jyy. be well cared for |oat in Brewer county It again Com„ae 0. w. Whitfield. hTe "three prec'toua U*. I loyc
and Co., orderiuR anb... report., "We „ dearly art want t nSU them
capable veterinarian at least once to tell the new« to Texas. -r«urn t i.
a year and, if diseased animals ar.f
On July 10 the A. & M.
sweet hay (1,305,000 tons) of
"ours", and make out on if. Then
it tells on the same page of the
Chinese wood-oil tree' ''we" are
growing in Florida, which is good
for fruit and ornamentaioti.
Then the News Letter uses a
little over two pages to tell of the
found the herd, should be tested
are gaining ground — the crown right. 1 mean to always ttach them
vr is in sight — and every issue of thc never to marry a man or girl un '
Rebel is better than the last. Take Jess he or she is a Socialist. I have
twice a year." Then again, "The Letter" again comes to the bat to rm L
bedding should be clean, dry, andjhelp the hard working citizens of frJm ^ ^ foot ^ the prake.Wn in ing 1 W0U ^ UI> a
club, but money is so scarce. I
want to suggest that at each Lo-
maT,"especially where thc floor i.'ing how the soft pork and lard of "J™ "T «A d Jtyh EH^mpment,there
of concrete. • • • The feed for pinut fed ho„ may be harden- ° ~ 8 "y.Tff
u«d m aufficient quajrtiMe. tojTtaa. and announce, a "very im- sh||| ^ of ^ abo„in>
promote the. comfort of the am-portant piece of information .how- t-|0M h/or j D WMr, the M,
OI concreie. - - |l co ui icu uu«n iuo,r w uoiut-u- w"x.«
cow® should be palatable and nut- ^d". ft took a page of first class
ncious. * • # Cows should be milk
ed in clean, well lighted stables. *
• • Soap, clean water, andj. towels,
must be readily accessible" Be
sure and ask oil your fnentls to
join you in a request to the pas-
tor's association that they pray
you may be changed into a <jow.and
you can have your government
iook after your well-being. If they
have not faith enough to bring it
about, vote men in charge of your
govern men t_ who believe that
man, made in the image of God
„ worth at least as much as a
cow and who will organize a de-
partment of humanity, a« well as
of agriculture. Try both plans and
see which helps most.
"Lawn and Garden Ants
"Hog Cholera" ; and various oth
er animals and diseases are capab*
ly covered, but in not one line of
the whole eight pages is there one
word said of benefit to the workers
in field, mill, mine or factory.
Don't you wish you were an ani-
mal with a price in the market
placet A hop;, a cow, a dog, a chick-
en or anything else that the loaf
ere can make a profit out bf. has
skilled intelligence to forestall its
simplest or most serious disorders;
but your babies and mine, all your
loved ones and mine, may sicken,
die and rot, without one murmur
from the animals who have charge
From Iowa.
paper 9x14 to tell it. Wonderful!
But the children of the fanners , • .. ..
who raise a large portion of the *n**:
Comrade F. B.
"Find enclosed,
££ tor Constitution and By-law. of ^ Vwift cver ke*> tf
, , , , I, ,, the Socialist Party of Texas. I with a he4Hy hsndshsl
because they have had all the fat J, a,neari-y
fried off of them by 80 per cent
Two points atx.ut the Chicago
car strike are worth notice. Every
street oar motorman and conduct-
or in Chicago was in on it. The so-
lidarity of it amazed the city and
the tie-up was complete. The el
evated men's union joined hands
with the surface car men's union.
Their journal pointed to the join-
ed capitalists who own l>oth elev-
ated and surface lines and said:
"They are one; so arc we."
Then, too, it showed the pass to
which arbitration has come. .Labor
now must strike in order to get a
real arbitration. Corporations hide
their account books, insist on dic-
tating who shall be the umpire, the
"neutral," on arbitration boards,
and bv other acts make arbitra-
tion a pame of bunk instead of an
actual judicial decision. So fa*
have they developed the aift of
winning through arbitration that
the Illinois Manufacturer's Asso-
ciation and other business organ-
izations are callisg for a compuls-
ory arbitration law. The street car
men say they know a trick about
"cessation of work" that will give
them the kin^ of arbitration they
want, even if it's compulsory.
usurers like the Governor of Tex-
as and have been hardened in that
way.
Great
ment.
is this Christian govern-
have just finished reading your
article in American Socialist and
it is good. The National Office
needs a good house cleaning. I ex-
pect I am the only suliscriber to
the Bebel in this town, but one
eopy ig worth the price of a year's
subscription.'4
one get up and tell why they are
Socialists. Oh! imagine it would
soon be a great revival! So with
good \jriahcs to the Bebel and hop
'; wiu ever keep growing, and
handshake to all thc
Comrades, we are still, faithful
Comrades, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Gatlin." Ah. if the street-walker
brains of the daily press could
once see the dirty, contemptible
work they are doing in lying to
the people and suppressing the
truth, tbey would "sin no more"
as Jesus told their kind.
CLARK DATES.
GIDEON'S BAND.
Comrade T. H. Beggs, Tarrant
Co., sends in his renewal with thc
mi n r , . following bouquet:"'Dear fellow-
The Bebel requests the Com- worW Comrade: Enclosed
rades at all points where there pjease find sub. card for renewal (Written for The Bebel.)
are Rebel-Clark date, to send us to thc best paper in the movement Socialism demands
what money they can at once. The { surely appreciate the efforts you Mental and moral
hard times have hit the Bebel as an(j those associated with you, are Athletes, '
well as others, and we are badly making to get the facts relative to I Not cripples
in need of such funds as you have economic conditions before your And Camp-followers.
on hand. Instead of letting the many ^dem, in classy form. You Protesters,
banks draw interest on this money, certainly have put Texas on thc Not apologists.
send it to us and we can choke off map an(j put the reactionary shys- Crusaders,
some of the interest we are paying. terfl'aud preachers on the blink. I Not Speak-Easys
hope soon to havc the privilege of And Tread-Softlys.
subscribing to the Daily Rebel; No!
published, preferably, here in Fort But that Kind
Worth. If not in the Fort, then Who make a noise
some other point in North Texas (When they walk ,
which the general judgment may And who
decide best for the movement • • • Make a noise
(En* With best wishes ,to the Rebel When they talk.
Bunch, I am Yours for the Revo- This is why
Weatherford, July 31.
Winnsboro, August 2.
Point, (Encamp) August 3.
Glen Rose (Encamp) August 5.
O'Brien, (Encamp) Aug. 6
and 7.
Mountain Park, Okla.,
STATE TICKET FOR 1916.
camp) Aug 9.
Hollis, Okla., Encamp) August lotion". And his suggestion of a Socialism
10 and 11. n Daily Rebel is not as far fetched Has the
Duncan, Okla., Aug. 13. )ls many might think. Every mail Pick of the World;
Stidham, Okla., (Encamp) Aug. brings to the Rebel assurances The best that the
that the people, at times non So- Earth can Bend
cialists, are sick and tired of the Prom its remotest bounds,
stunts that the street-walker brains Because they who
of the daily sheets are pulling off Think for themselves
for their brain-whore-masters. And stand forth,
The referendum for selection Shove the list up and Ahe Daily Jf needs be,
of candidates for state offices who Rebel will come promptly^ I Alone.
are to be legally nominated at the • • • Are the pick of
state convention in August 1916, "Don't you ever quit work." The World.
has been completed. The nominees "j don't see how you fellow^ ean They are^the best
are as follows:
For Governor:
E. R. Meit-zen, of Hallettsville.
Lieutenant Governor:
W. S. Noble, of Rockdale.
Attorney General:
Clarence Nugent, Stephenville
Comptroller:
W. T. Flowers, of Wellington.
Land Commissioner;
G. A. Lambreth, of Ira.
State Treasurer:
W. J. Bell, of Tyler.
Commissioner of Agriculture:
Jas. B. Qoode, of Roby.
Railway Commissioner:
E. Bellinger, of San Antonio.
Superintendent of Schools:
J. A. Freeland.
Associate Justice Supreme Court: this is not a member of the party,
B. H. Gibson. but her children are to be taught
work dhy and night, and hold up". That the Earth
"You are going to kill your fool Can send.
selves working like you do." |^
"You're crwy to work the hours1^,,, LAnL~aioAltBT.
you do, you 11 never get anything i
A # ' . m 1 ' vn/\«-va n V /\/\| > « ill.i/l ' _
out of it, unless some fool demo- made of the beat selected tobaccor by
crat gives vou a bullet", etc., etc. Union workers. Superior quality ab-
This is what the Rebel bunch gets •olute1/ fn™te«i. Tbey win pleasa
many many times from persona! loYAL TO THJ LABKL1 lB^bex!^
friends and acquaintances who seeWpaid, Turkish or Egyptian, 41.80.
' ,1 11 * r * ' n♦ nil Iriti/lo avP TTm T *1.1 3 A- XI- _ A
them
hours.
'drilling1
At times
at all kinds of
it grates on the
Union Label Products Trading Associa-
tion, Dept 473, P. O. Box 184 New
nerves badly and some of us think n ®ndor^?d..b/
• . _j . * „i„ -ii Leaders. Catalog all kinds union label
it ig hard, but along will come a merchandise, PBBB
letter like Ihe^folloWing ;uid a man
would *>e fa brute indeed if his
soul did ndt Jpcpand and his deter-
mination straighten after reading
WANTED — by an experienced
teacher with first grade certificate,
a position in high school prefer
it. Note that the woman who wrote Ubly in west Texas or New Mexico.
Can furnish best of references.
J. P. Pottg, Roby, Fisher Co., Tex.
\
JL
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Hickey, T. A. The Rebel (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. [5], No. 210, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 31, 1915, newspaper, July 31, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth395031/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.