The Oklahoma Labor Unit (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 3, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
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OKLAHOMA LABOR UNIT
A ii. in •M nnervailvf, Independent,
noii-puriinuii nfwnpap«r for
the homr
|'ublUh*-«l tvtrv Satur<lav by tlif
I Allolt I MT PI 111.1*111 « 0. (Iw.
4.1MSV IIhmi-ii HUlx.
Phone Black 3617
(Addr«N« all ooinmunlc«llon to The
Oklahoma l.abor Unit.)
Kntered it the Oklahoma City. Okla-
homa. postoffloe «• n.'cond class mall.
'•nd«-r th« act of March 3. 1879.
In Wednesday morning'* Okhthoman
('. W. Post has it not her column h<-?« *d
attacking what h« terms th« "labor
trust," because organized labor « v«*r
the country has dehlKDalwl on« day
the year as l^ahor Sunday ami 1h using
its bcHt efforts toward having minis
LET'S MAKE THE LABOR
DAY PARADE A HUMMER.
Nothing will prove of great* r henetir
in th* campaign of organization in
oklahoma City than n rattling good
Labor Day parade This has be**n
and can b*'
What the Boys Are
Doing and Saying
Official That* i
other / T U Lot
8UB8CUIPTION
jfie year ....
1H\ months
Three month*
<nayable In advanre.)
|t «)0
r.o
.25
IN'Kulitr contract and flat r;it«-s for ad-
verting* on application.
icth of the gospel deliver one sermon j demonstrated in last y
«.ii i hat da\ tor the cause f>f labor. For1 < ounted oil to do the trick this y«'ar.
M veral vear* I at has been publishing Nearly ever■> organii/.ation in tins
paid advertisements attacking organ- city has benefited in one way or an
isrd labor. The} weer insane dia- oilier this year and members should
tribes for the most part, but they were show their aj preciation by turninj* out
irritating and now the reaction upon with their full membership I hey owe
from which they emanated this little sacrifice, if i' may be called
|tattle Creek, Mich., is such, to their leaders who have made
the town
is beiug telt
(By The Little Fellow in White.")
The Vmeri« un Federation of labor-
ers ai« tast becoming one of the
strongest organisation*; in tin- city.j
Thirty new members each week seems
to b« .i rather common occurrence.,
the I'nit wishes them me best of I
SUCCCKS.
Leon Ensign Derr
: Commercial Photos :
Dr. ALBERT G.DENNIS
CHIROPRACTIC
Treats all Acute an.l Chronic Disorders
With''lit Medicine.
Calls Answered Promptly. w
group, and /Wolf. of Lake, Organization*
and Officers, Fraternal Organization* and
Secret Societies
Phone 6425
Continental
504 W. 6th St. Casualty Company
WW
<0-
m
.. possible to gain these conditions
without 'ven the sign of n struggle.
organizations will parade this year
that have never paraded before for the
reason that they have been organized
within the past year. This should be
uu Incentive for those organizations
that have been organized for several
years and have always been in tjie
uaradi to strengthen their numbers
— ,i_ .i— i,ig
quietly and generally being let alone.
(irgunized labor will uot buy anything
I rum there, for fear that the stuff may
be manufactured by some of the I'ost
allaJMML The people of llattle ('reek
are lluilltiK that whereas the ravings
| III their fellow-citizen in print through
out the country once made tin town a
familiar name, It is now beginning to
I inane It a detestable name. Tlx' ad
( u rtlslng of llattle Creek by such an(j thereby make the parade the
I means is acting as all such long contln und best ever before held.
Lied abuses of labor organizations act. Don't Tor Heaven's sake let anything;
I he lluck's stoves have felt it; the gtand in the way of your taking part
! Douglas shoe people found it working | ln tho Labor Day parade. Remember [[" [
The International CnioD ol Steam
Engineers. No :l^a. afttlllated with the!
Stall' Federation ot Labor at their Fri-
day night meeting Another engl-1
nrers' ordinance will In' drafted and
everything possible will b*- done to
have It |iii«s the ciiy council. C J.
Keifer was elected a delegate to the
lV'iiver eonveution
PHONES—Rm. 190 .nd 306!. UmdmiM M
All Dtlicacie* ii* 3ea*on
CHICAGO
H. C M Alr>«ndr>. IVwdrnt
< T RADESfmq CQUNCTL >
with increasing intensity,
peice with labor, llattle
ULI.IK H. WIL*0*
IIOWAIil) M. IMNI.KII
. . . editor
. Maaaser
THE EIGHTH WONDER.
The eighth wonder of the world
the most mysterious human being
alive is the wage worker who will not
join the union of his craft.
He can offer no good reason for not
joining.
In most instances he doesn't pretend j
to have a reason for remaining outside
of the ranks.
He is a mule who refuses to eat at
meal time.
breeching and declines to Join the pro
gressive movement of his fellow work
era, is utterly beyond the understand
Ing of ordinary mortals
There are, of course, rare instances
of men who are too cussed mean to get
into line—but such men are not worth
discussing; we should not trouble
ourselves with them.
Then again there are those who
pinch pennies so hard thai they
brazenly announce
ment the union may secure ...r, f.,n,,u. ,i(1 0 «ii while
share, without the cost They. too. o V1 .; ' J" - -
contemptible that we shall not ,k 'in<l '"<lk
day
and made : Labor Day only comes once each
Creek is ajvear; that through great sacrifice 011,
nice little town, but its chief spokes | jhP part nr those who h" e ' our great |
man has cursed it with a nameless un 5 movement years ngi the day was set j
organized boycott that Is just getting ilB|d,. for hireling ;n"ii, ami fiat w<
in Its work. should snpteelnie their eftorts by be ,
. ( : Ing propent In as Inge tiiiniberr as pos
Already all Investigation of those re sible. not onlv In the pir-ii.e in the
sponsible for the ballot box stuffing is morning bin at the exercises at tho
meeting with opposition, hut that is to; state Fair Iirounds in the afternoon. \
be expected. One public official in an
Impasloned speech stated that the ac-
iinpassiolK-d spiwih stated that the ac-
and that no man should he considered
C K Perkins or Hod Carriers No. i
901 lias given his support to the Cult's
club offer and we may add thirty or
subscribers to our list. Ed |
I Williams was the delegate to the con-1
A. F. RUEB
Rueb's
No. 111 N.
The GREA TEST
AL RUEI Health and Accident Insurance Company
Cafe in the World
Only One Operating in Every State
and Territory
Okl*
veil (ton of the S. 1. of L. and succeed-1
ed in having a colored organizer |
placed in the field.
And Subscribe for The I'nit.
And now we have a l.abor Sunday, |
on which we ask the ministers of the!
gospel to preach a sermon on Labor, j
T
Cooks and Walters claim they,
vidence to prove that union
guiltv until so proven. Great joke,
that sort of talk Ami in the face ol
the fact that the recount in many pre-
j clncts shows a difference of over a
hundred votes over the original re
(urns. Those perpetrating the frauds
and the higher-ups w ho are responsible
should be prosecuted 10 the fullest ex
ti nt of the law. While the law Is not
stringent enough to give the guilty
parties what they justly deserve they
should forever be discredited ill the
eyes of all honest people of Oklahoma
Union labor Is as desirous of honest
interest in this
The
Chink restaurants." Can
Words cannot express [
the contmpt that is held by members j
or organized labor for those who vlo-1
late their sacred obligations.
No more opportune time was ever
presented for union labor to show its
strength. Extraordinary efforts will
be made this fall to organize crafts1 men eat in
that are unorganized, also to slrenjctli-1'his be trui
en those crafts that need assistance.
lx-t every union man In Oklahoma
City get in line and make this year's
the parade of all parades. ; ~
And by the way, don't forget the Sin.-e signing with tin- Laundry
speaking and entertainment at the j Workers the Model Laundry is report-
Slate Fair lirounds in the afternoon.;ed as doing 30 per cent more business,
No admission fee will be charged toj'lhe Laundry
the grounds and only a small fee to
the grand stand. Some of the very
best speakers obtainable have been
secured and their addresses, ft Is cer-
tain. will be most pleasing and in-
Sports of all kinds an
?
FIITl _
STANDARD ENO.GO
CTT
•EVERY TIME the CLOCK. TICKS
Every Working; Hour
IT PAYS
\ Dime to Somebody, Somewhere
Who is Sick or Hurt"
MORE THAN $1,000.01X1 A YF AK
MOVCD TO
5 W.GRAND AVE.
best Equipped Plar\t
ir\ the (SovjtKuieat
OKLAHOMA CITY
Its Policies Protect
Your Income When Sick or Hjrt. AA
I. C. STOLP, City Mgr.
222 Bauett Building. 115 1-2 North Broad* y
Phone 562
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Workers ask all union ,
men to support them by patronizing j
the following laundries: Crystal.
.Model, Acme and the Wetwash. It
appears that the other laundries that '
ire unfair to organized labor do not | an(j _x,j I j 111'.
UNION HORSESHOEING SHOPS.
8 Hours—8 a. m. to 5 p. m.
J. A. Murlin, 204 W. California.
.1. .1. Bradley, 115 West First St.
Larry W. Reedy & Co., rear 307 W
California.
Schuler & Euliss, 302 W. Cal.
Broadway Shoeing Shop, Broadway
-
elections as any Interest in this structivc. Sports of all kinds are on j take kindly tcthe action taken by the
rilv and will he round in the forerront the program and a most pleasant af- Model Laundry and it is rumored that
the future looking to that end .ernooi, can be had at a very small ^^^11^
if the 1 abor Day parade and enter- llv all means, attend if possible, and izations lake a stand for better condl-
TUTSTS,
its ,wsjSjyr af r;:,,N'"'" ss?s?W sas'-asf:
cost. They, too. other fellow do it all, while tnn« in this city. rompetitor in line because lie signs the
that we shall not >' Jn' ^ut '!,„r "e.houlder to The best friend of the non-union man j union scale?
discuss them. ' ,, ,ww. , , . mntro the eelebra- is not the employer who howls against — ■
So the question resolves Itself in,*> 1 1 \ l.iucest event of its kind ever organization, but the union man who (By the Little Fellow in White.)
pointing out to non-members the ail , the Southwest seeks the organization of all labor. If any ol the boys need an eye-,
vantages to be gained by supporting pulled on in South .... ,on (loe8 s,., k to com opener on Sunday morning on account
' p with the non-unionist. He has of drinking too much "coca eola (?)
desire to lower his standard, but to on Saturday night why visit the La-j
him up to a higher one. But the bor Temple Association at the weekly
. i .t <i.k.u in f'wt nntpr into n meetinu uf 1 •* A> South llobinson. \\v
^e^lor'o/'Uor I^ica "" th" unloiilsi. don't mean that they serve li.piid re-
labor bodies hav e recently , The man w ho is w illing to ■w.ork for > r«.hmem. th. wi make your op-
, afflllate the llrotherhooil what is ofTered, regardless of his best tics sparklt buf your tyes will u
Carmen and the Western i interests, and thos his fellow work- opened to he fact hat before the
Of the "or. 1<> crs Is over a menace to labor. His birth of another >eai UKianoma liy b
* / I 1 111 **' ,w • . . , 1 ........ I . I li.lwm nrir'ill Wlltlrinu II
are so
W. F. Eisenbeis, <10 West Second.
Wm. McRee, 815 West Main.
SCOTCH-TONE COLD TABLETS
WILL CURE A COLD IN ONB DAY
All Dni&lits, or by Mtil Pestpild, 39 CcnU
SCOTCH TONE REMEDY CO., Oklahoma City, Okla.
1
the general union body
Many unions have nearly doubled
the wanes of their members during the
past fifteen years.
The printers have increased their
wages some forty per cent and Im-
mensely Improved working conditions
in printing offices of all descriptions
during the past
They're coming into the fold and
sooner or Inter then1 will be lew in
ternational organizations « l any con-
sequence that are not affiliated with
the America
Two large
decided to
twenty years, by the | Hallway
rnciency of the interna,Iona. Typo- j Ration ^nly''tlve I "1 WlntSf
graphical Union.
voted against the proposition.
Inevitably result In
standard of labor.
hour Is whether i
Today the coal miners of many dis
tricts are returning to work at in-1 „r ,u
creased wages and better conditions I he question (>f th
They went on strike for these things . Senator Gore shove Sherman to
about four months ago. I the sea.-Jamestow n (N
The railroad trainmen and engine- *o ocate. t n„.
men are obtaining increases all over He has him ' . ' |
the country. The section hands are 1 now- At the present time hi is in
not obtaining increases in wages. The Oklahoma making speeilies.
trainmen and englnemen are ^rgan- The ^ |)a). ,.()lnniiUcoli (le8erve
much praise for the prompt and earn-
l est manner in which they have tack
work in hand
blow !are now complete for one of the great
, est Labor I)av celebrations ever pulled u;olng still farther.
up an engine or damage a mine when | oklahoma City one through the personage of W 11
paying your dues. "n *. Hlulu.iii.i in>. „aIn HowtSl Taft, but the big fellow
The best workmen in all crafts are Many a man thinks it real charily to me. a chilly reception. We're still
"" •"I whai in Heaven's name are you j ^ j^t ^'some ^
j of* the election olllcials feel about Ok
! lahoma county offices.
ized. The
ganized.
To belong to the union Is not to light ; J
the employers. You do not swear that |t,ie
you will ruin a printing office,
mine .. , .
off in Oklahoma ( ity.
So long as we have Colonel Roose-
Unlon I velt and the state of Oklahoma with
us the country will not suffer with
ennui.—Lancaster (Pa.) Labor Lead-
er. Right you are, so far as Okla-
homa is concerned, anyway. We have
gained the title as the most forward
and advanced state in the union in
the way of legislation and even the
w Colonel won't be able to make us re-
Arrangements; llnqulsh our hold, or to place impedi-
ments In the way to keep us from
He tried the game
tion of the organization to send two
young ladies of the Garment Workers,
Laundry Workers or Waitresses to
Tulsa on Labor Day to sell buttons,
the proceeds of which will be used to
defray the building expenses. All
union men should take an active in-
terest In this progressive movement
as it will bring us all under one head
and help >o strengthen our cause. And
we suggest to the knocaers that they
just knock and knock because it will
tit. a i< t of good for the labor Temple
Association in the way of advertising.
It has been truthfully said that "He
who boosfetn not for the Temple of
Labor shall have Ms reward, for verily
be is as bad as he who buyetli necess-
ities that beareth not the label."
Corjdelr Shoe Co.
Honest and Reliable Shoes
For the Whole Family
V
122 Main Street
OKLAHOMA CITY
J
going to do if you don't join the union
of your craft? Beefsteak is out of,nr 1
sight now and still going up in price.
Your wages remain stationery or go
down.
How else are you to keep up with
the general tendency to higher prices
for food and clothing anil labor—ex
eept by organizing as all men of com-
mon sense have done and are doing.'
Until the millenium comes—or until
the trusts push us so hard that we
adopt Socialism, which seems lo the
writer at this time entirely within the
range of possibility, and which Presi-
dent Taft sayB he looks for, the only
recourse for the man who works for
wages is to join his uniott.
Never fear, the employer will think
none the less of you because you have
a card. He must respect those who
convince him that they are lonking
out for themselves. The world is as
jet rather materialistic, you know.
It Is inconceivable that the employ-
er will "have it In" for the worker
merely because he happens to carry a
card it there are employers so pin-
headed that !hey appreciate the
necessity and the rights of th® citizens
of a republic to organize, then you may
as well dispense with their friendship
ARGUES HIMSELF INTO
BELIEVING BOTH SIDES.
Are you going to stay at home on
l.abor bay or are you going out to the |
fair grounds and help swell the fund ,
for the oklahoma City Labor Temple
Association?
One of the Interesting features of
the Labor Day program at the State
Fair (.rounds will be the wedding of
two union members.
Some men don't retire until they
have made a fortune but it's up to
Oklahoma City election crooks to re-
tire right now.
The recount is a convincing argu-
ment to members of organized labor
that they always fare better when
elections are on the square.
The cars of fortune of some of the
precinct inspectors have flat wheels.
"A few years ago, while I was doing
the 'federal run' in the Omaha Her-
ald," says \V. M. Maupin in the Lin-
j coin, Neb., Wageworker, "1 saw a law-
yer step forward as a case was called
and slate that he represented the de-
fendant. .lust as he was well started
I love my big majority
recount.
but oh! you power,
Would the Oklahoma ("ity Times
have its readers believe that the Gore
charges were trumped up and that the
whitewash applied was other than the
usual coat that is and has been ap-
plied before in such cases? Al least
one member of the investigating com-
mittee says that Senator (lore hail
the dope, and the great majority of
flic people of Oklahoma believe so too. ....
N„ man with *3,000,000 to rut up lias m the presentation or his case Judge
ever vet lacked for allies, as that Dundy asked: Have you been admlt-
amount of money will not tail to 'ed to practice in this cour ? The
of influential assistance lawyer blushingly admitted that he
had forgotten that little matter.
Whereupon Judge Dundy made him sit
At Chickasha,"Okla., this week the down, and the defendant would have!
Oklahoma State Federation of Labor Jieen forced to secure another^ law ye,
is ill session. This is the country had not a well known member of the
where unionism really means entering Omaha bar moved to admit the forget-
into the life of true citizenship. The! fu' la">'er' testifying to his legal abil
people of this state started out right, i ity. Whereupon 'he ri .
but it will require eternal vigilance 1 sworn in and B'^en his union caid. ,
to keep public affairs out or the hands Every lawyer in 'the country will in-
of the system. Oklahoma is the only1 stst that tins is all right, and yet n i-
state where organized labor has real- ty-nine per cent of them will denounce
ized that it is not only the balance of 'he 'closed shop idea in trades union-
but the power itself. Even the! ism It beats thunder how easy it is
bring plenty
on any proposition.
Ma rsha 11 - Ha rper Co.
Successors lo ]. ll.\Marshall Co.
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
Private Ambulance
120 North !T$roadwa\)
'Phones 900 and 1836
into
villages have their trades unions. The' for a lawyer to argue himself
earnestness of, believing both sides of almost an>
THEY'VE GIVEN PA A RAISE
secret of success is
purpose and lack of
Harrisburg (1
immediately. They, like the wage-
worker too stingy to pay their small Say. you ought to hear ma sing...
dues, are not worth discussing. , shes as happ> as n laij . j gressman will try and si.;
At the present moment times may And herm k st aj« ot from morn in ^ (,o (h red lndia
irnn mnv ho working a loiiK linn anei intin. . u
self-seekers.
Labor Journal.
Just why
be fat with you; you may be working till a long time aftei daik. . ^ ^ ^ ^ peopl(> v
yourselves to death by long hours or at j She s been buyin nigs and M.ttIn . ^ ^ nine-tentlis of w
ihe bonus game: you are making all new costly switch to wrar. hl, ,onu,nl with < ie fifth
the money that you need- providing And she lakes a cab vvhenevei sh ^ ^ ,mliau Rot
that your needs are simple and few. I Roes callin a y«here 0S8 „ wl„ be more
But the lean time may come soon— j She has bought herself a diamond
and your pay envelope will grow thin' you ought to see It blaze,
unless you have some sort of an or-i Ma's cheerful
gatiization which is respected (and not j given pa a raise,
necessarily feared or hated) by the, ,
employers. I sl8"'r s busy getin dresses that II
a robin'—they have
ost
white senator or con-
and steal the very
owns is
clear to the people who elected
hotn would
of the sal-
got into Con-
gress it win ne more difficult for the
"smooth" white man to "get" the red
man's property. The only way to win
in Congress Is to send your own people
there--regardless of race or politics —
Dubuque (la.I Leader.
question.
Indications point to a bigger and bet
| ter Labor Day than ever before in the
history of Oklahoma.
Looks like the recount or Okla-
homa City votes has almost paralyzed |
' somebody's machine.
Contribute your mite toward the
Labor Temple. Buy a button.
This paper was a subject for dis
cussion at a meeting of the Socialist
local last Sunday evening. While no
official action was taken in regard to
our policy, it might be well to state
right here that the Socialist party no
more controls this paper, nor will It
control our editorial utterances, than
will any other politician or political
party. The Unit is a labor paper,
strictly, and reserves tho right to say
what it pleases, when It pleases, and
if anything it might say pinches the
foes of any politician he has the free
American right to yelp. Every time a
yelp is forthcoming the Unit gets that
much free advertising.
The office should seek the man, yet
in Oklahoma City it seems that tin-
man has been seeking the office, not
through the suffrage of the voters,
however, but by the permission and
able counting of the election officials.
an awful pile.
And the hats that she's been buyin'
arc the very latest style,
She'B to go abroad this summer with
some people named the Cooks.
Is she happy
can see it by lier looks.
She goes humniin' songs and dancin'
and til forty thousand ways
I^'ts us know that she is cheerful
since they've given pa a raise.
Another judge, one Hitchcock op
Boston, has attempted to conduct the
affairs of the photo engravers' union I
Of that city by issuing an injunction 01'?• d< 11101 rat
Well 1 gues so!"you prohibiting the members from continu
Ing the strike or paying strike bene
Ills. Next thing we know some judge uemoirai.
will be telling us that he is king and
lhat we must kneel at his shrine.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
PAID ADVERTISING.
Governor— Liee ('nice, Democrat.
Labor Commissioner—Clias. Daugh-
State Treasurer Robert Dunlop,
Secretary of State-
son. Democrat.
Uen F. Harri-
Let's have a recount of the entire
county vote for all offices. The people
want to know who's who in the elec-
tion steal.
Offices worth having are worth go-
Pa still works the same as ever, and
he's smokin' stogies yet:
Wears the suit he got last summer,
and 1 guess he's still in debt.
Anyway he starts off early and comes ,
home fagged out at night, ing after even if the padded returns
And his forehead's gettin* wrinkled I have to be paid for by real coin of the
and his hair is turning white. , realm.
Can't somehow, help faelln' sorry, ;>s
1 Bit and watch him gaze, The "Weather Man" ran make many
With a vacant look at nothin'. Yes thousands of friends by providing the
they've given pa a raise. proper brand of weather for Labor
—Iowa Unionist. ' Day.
1
President State Board Agriculture-
O. T. Bryan, Democrat.
Union Printing Offices
ENTITLED TO USE OF THIS LABEL.
^TRADES COUNCIL ^
Judge Superior Court
Dewes Oldfield, Republican.
Edward
State
Democrat
Senator—Tom Me.Median, ■
Sheriff—M. C. Binion, Democrat.
County
Democrat.
-H. C. Adams,
Fair List Allied Printing Trades Council
•(98) Dally Times, 117-119 West 2nd.
•(97) Times-Journal Printing Co., (Job printing) 21S-220 W. Grand.
*(96) Western Newspaper Union, tPublishers) Cor. 2nd & Haryev.
*(95) Warden Printing Co., (Job printing), Lee avenue, between
Main and Grand.
*(94) The Daily News, (Newspaper) 328 West Grand.
(93) Okahoman Job Office, (Job printing) 16 South Robinson.
(92) Manley Office Supply Co., (Job printing) 20-22 So. Robinson.
*(91) Daily Pointer, (Newspaper) 218 West Grand.
(90) Bridgers Printing Co., (Job printing) Basement Majestic Bldg.
(89) Wand & Son, (Printing, rubber stamps, etc.) 304^ W. Main
(88) Bays-Burnett, (Job printing) 10 N1. Broadway.
(87) A. S. Ferguson, (Job printing) 111% W. Main.
(86) Dunn & Sons, (Job printing) Room 15, W. N. U. Bldg.
(S5) Baer Printing Co., (Job printing) 200% W. Main.
•(84) Francis Typesetting Co., (Linotype) Basement Majestic Bldg
(83) Farm Journal, (Newspaper) Western Newspaper Union Bldg.
!(82) The Peerless Press, (Job printing) 20 W. 1st.
! (811 Engraving & Printing Co., (Job printing) 1-3 W. Main.
(SO) Union Printing Co., (Job printing) 304 W. California.
*(79) Oklahoma Typesetting Co., (Linotype).
(78) A. K. Samples, (Job printing,
(771 McLean Printing Co., (Job printing) Indiana Bldg.
(76) Okla. Specialty Co., (Novelties) 118 W. Second.
(75) Western Bank Note oo., (Job printing).
(74) Buck McMaster. (Job printing) 1230 W. 13th.
(73) Thomas Print Shop, (Job printing) 127% W. Grand.
(72) Hommas & Wilson, (Job printing) 21214 W. First.
(71) Advocate-Review, (Job printing) Cor. Robinson & Reno.
(70) Truth Printing Co., Capitol Hill.
(69) Iska Publishing Co., (Newspaper) 225 W. Reno.
(68) Markwell Printing Co., (Job printing) 129% W. Main.
(67) Printers Publishing Co., (Publishers, Masement Majeotlc.
UNION OFFICES BUT NOT ENTITLED TO USE OF LABEL,
! *(99) Dally Oklahoman, 502 North Broadway.
•Offices having Linotype machines.
!Offices having Monotype machines.
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Wilson, Ollie S. The Oklahoma Labor Unit (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 3, 1910, newspaper, September 3, 1910; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc106913/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.