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64 00

16 00

Alfred Davies, $16....

32 00

Minneapolis No. 42-J. F. Davis, $16; W. F. Mirick, $8.

Charleston No. 43-J. H. Wincey.. Leavenworth No. 45-Ernest Leissler... Sacramento No. 46-Nathaniel Earhart,

$32; M. M. Glenn, $32; George C.
Crowell, $32; J. S. McMahon, $32; L.
M. Potter, $12; L. B. Littlefield, $8...
New Haven No. 47-E. Louise Bryant..
Atlanta No. 48-Joseph Cohron..
Denver No. 49-H. P. Macloon, $16; E.
F. Russell, $16; Samuel Woodman,
$16; George H. Marsh, $16....

Troy No. 52-John Quinn...
Cleveland No. 53-H. St. V. Hickey,

$16; James Steven, $16; W. H. El-
well, $16; G. M. Strobridge, $16....
Raleigh No. 54-J. J. Lewis, $16; J. C.
King, $16....
Syracuse No. 55-A. L. Cherrie, $32; M.
M. Foote, $32; J. J. Hyatt, $32;
Charles M. S. Millard, $32...
Dayton No. 57-J. W. Connor, $16; G.
B. Denny, $16; A. G. Long, $16; L.
C. Peacock, $16..

Quincy No. 59-J. A. Bamber. Cambridge No. 61-Paul Macphail, $16;

$24 00 32 00 16 00

148 00 16 00 16 00

64 00 16 00

64 00 32 00

128 00

Hartford No. 127-E. P. Miller, $16; J.
S. Ryan, $16; C. E. Crittenden, $16...
Halifax No. 130-J. G. Brunt, $16; Alex-
ander West, $16...

Duluth No. 136-Charles Archer.....
Stratford No. 139-J. P. Conway.....
Jacques-Cartier No. 145-Isidore Lussier
Charleston No. 146-J. T. S. Perry...
Elizabeth No. 150-E. K. Drake.
Ann Arbor No. 154-John A. Snyder...
Schenectady No. 167-Augustine Martin,

....

$12; G. R. Dutcher, $16.. San Antonio No. 172-John McHugo, sr. Dallas No. 173-John Č. Jones.. Los Angeles No. 174-H. S. Walters, $16; F. B. Colver, $16; J. W. Ballard, $16; J. H. Wood, $16..

Montreal No. 176-John Bradley.

Springfield No. 177-T.

$16; J. H. Alley, $12.. Sioux City No. 180-Samuel Wilson. Meadville No. 181-Jacob T. McCoy.. Bradford No. 185-N. W. Buckley. Omaha No. 190-William Fowler, $16;

W. C. Ellis, $16....

Cedar Rapids No. 192-T. J. Metcalf.. Logansport No. 196-J. R. Moore. Zanesville No. 199-R. J. Russell.

$48 00

32 00 16 00 16 00 16.00

32 00

16 00

12 00

28 00

32 00

16 00

64 00

16 00

S. Pinckard,

28 00

16 00

16 00

24 00

32.00

12 00

16 00

16 00

Utica No. 62-J. E. De Forest. $16;

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Clark E. Johnson, $16; A. Z. Warner, $16

48 00

16 00

Council Bluffs No. 203-J. M. Holaday..
Richmond No. 301-John Grant...
Cairo No. 461-J. R. Nickerson, $8; J.

16 00

12 00

R. Nickerson, $8...

16 00

Yonkers No. 468-H. S. Bilyeu.

16 00

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Toledo No. 63-Harvey Wells.
Lafayette No. 64-Paul Conner, $16;
James Davidson, $16; W. B. Dobel-
bower, $16; J. Q. Hoover, $16..
Lockport No. 67-G. F. Kittredge, $16;
Olin Strong, $16; A. S. Gooding, $16;
George McDonald, $8...

Trenton No. 71-Peter P. Packer, $16;
Elwood Kitchin, $16...

Lansing No. 72-A. N. Brown, $16; C. T. Smith, $16.

Terre Haute No. 76-Lawrence Connelly Fort Wayne No. 78-E. B. Smith.... Wheeling No. 79-Thomas Carnahan.. Kansas City No. 80-J. J. Mulcare, $16; G. K. Rundle, $16; J. S. P. Rodgers, $16

Colorado Springs No. 82-J. A. J. Birdsall

Houston No. 87-J. S. Swope, $16; G. F.
Tucker, $16..

Hannibal No. 88-Theodore Waelder.
Richmond No. 90-Henry Meyer, $16;
August Meyer, $16; J. T. Pulling, $12
Toronto No. 91-M. H. Perkins, $32;
William Clark, $16; George Cloutier,
$16; Isaac Ginn, $16; T. F. Walker,
$16; J. W. Melross, $16..
Helena No. 95-M. H. Rupley.
Norwich No. 100-A. S. Curtis, $16; A.
L. Moore, $16..
Washington, D. C., No. 101-E. H.
Laws, $16; H. C. Tarlton, $16; T. A.
Mitchell, $16; N. C. Stoops, $16; G.
W. Duvall, $8; J. A. Griffin, $16; W.
D. Thornton, $12; Eugene Conner, $8;
L. V. Taft, $16; T. W. Howard, $16;
W. H. Hutchinson, $16; H. B. Mahon,
$16; H. T. McGowan, $16; Stanley
Snodgrass, $16; E. D. McKenna, $16..
Ottawa No. 102-Joseph Des Roches..
Newark No. 103-J. T. McGuigan, $16;
J. M. Reuck, $16; J. S. Smith, $16; J.
H. Reeve, $16..
Birmingham No. 104-J. W. Callahan,
$16; J. M. Dean, $16; J. McN. Har-
rison, $16....

16 00 16.00 16 00

48 00

Cleveland German-American No. 6-Mat Babrian

New York German-American No. 7-G. E. Arbor, $16; Otto Delle, $16; F. J. Hradecky, $16; Siegfried Oestreich, $16; Amandus Pfundt, $16; Ignatz Regen, $16.....

Chicago German-American No. 9-Robert Freund

Milwaukee German-American No. 10Valentine Burkhard...

96 00

16 00 32 00 12 00

16.00

16 00

Belleville German-American No. 18Charles Stieler..

16 00

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8148. Boston No. 13-C. Y. Knight.. 8149. Lincoln No. 209-A. E. Starr. 8150. Pontiac No. 512-E. B. Eaton. 8151. Boston No. 13-F. H. Vincent.. 8152. El Paso No. 370-J. F. Hynes.. 8153. Denver No. 49-S. C. Hanlon. 8154. Denver No. 49-G. W. Latham.. 8155. Albany No. 4-W. S. Mahan. 8156. Boston No. 13-R. F. Mitchell. 8157. Tallahassee No. 660-F. E. Gib

8164. Hoboken No. 323-J. C. Meighan.. 8165. Santa Fe No. 405-Melquides Lopez

8166. Du Bois No. 374-W. C. Anderson 8167. Columbia No. 101-W. A. Ball. 8168. Chicago No. 16-John Alexander.. 8169. Chicago No. 16-Pierre Comeford. 8170. Chicago No. 16-W. F. Glenn..... 8171. Chicago No. 16-W. R. Selden.. 8172. Chicago No. 16-J. E. Finegan. 8173. Chicago No. 16-H. R. Thomas.... 8174. Pittsburg No. 7-W. A. Kirk.....

Total

SUMMARY OF RECEIPTS.

$75 00

75 00 75 00

75 00 75 00 75 00

75 00

75 00

75 00

75 00

75 00

.$33,102 10

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. $241,781 45

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40,607 34

$282,388 79 33,102 10

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Balance on hand, March 20, 1909, reg.ular funds, $104,598.41; old age pen

sion fund, $137,183.04..

Receipts to April 20, 1909..

Total

Expenditures

*Balance on hand.

$249,286 69

*Of the balance on hand $147,443.16 is in the old age pension fund.

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1,407 40

3 37

Charles Deacon-March salaries for Home employes

Mrs. J. F. McCabe-Cash possession of J. F. McCabe, deceased.. Hollenbeck Press-2,000 letterheads for the secretary, 250 two-cent envelops and printing for Trustee Shepard..... Charles Deacon-Yeast, $7.50; knit caps, $1.25; freight on shirts, $3.34; freight on sputum cups, $41.99; typewriter repairs, $1.75; brads, bolts, wall paper, $3.50; pensions to inmates, $291; seeds and tobacco stems, $2.25; work grounds, $1.25; rental grazing land, $10; transportation Messrs. Sullivan, Barbier, Blair, Gay, Davidson, Wallin, Beyer and Boyd, $296.80; freight on books, 86c; carriage hire, $1.50; stamped envelops and postoffice box rent, $12.42; want ads., $1.55; expressage on booklets, $9.38; car tickets, $12.90; balance March salaries Home employes, $48.29

on

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10. Pike's Peak Floral Co.-Tobacco

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12. Transportation C. S. Davidson. 12. Transportation J. H. Wallin.. 13. I. T. U. pensions.

40 10

25 60

73 50

10 92

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22 67

73 00

3 37

24. Transportation R. A. Beyer.. 24. Postoffice box rent..

40 55

I 50

25. A. E. Ford, Agent-Freight on shirts and sputum cups..

18 78

26. Transportation A. J. Blair.

32 50

747 53

27. I. T. U. pensions..

73 00

28 10

40 00

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86

RECAPITULATION.

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I.T.U. Students Moving

to the Front

S

OME well-wishers of the International Union, who know the

I.T.U. Course, express disappointment at the apathy shown by

members. Aware of the value of the lessons, they think members should enroll by thousands instead of hundreds. Maybe so. However, those who are students are coming into the limelight. Employers, foremen and superintendents are getting wise. The New York World of March 21 contained this ad:

COMPOSITOR, good jobber. I. T. U. Course
graduate preferred; no guesser considered.
Address Advancement. Box 5. 153 6th av.

A thirty-year-old student, who was a straight-matter man in one of Chicago's largest offices, after taking twelve lessons was given display work for the first time in his life. Now on lesson twenty, he says the foreman frequently asks him to criticise and make suggestions on the work of other compositors. The markings of this student show him to be about the average. Yet to graduate from a straight-matter man to doing display work and having his opinion sought is progress with a cap P.

Secretary La Fleur, of Milwaukee Union, said in the April Journal; "Most of the calls we get for men are like this: 'Send us a good man; we are not so particular about the amount of wages." You can become a "GOOD MAN” by taking the I. T. U. Course. To learn how, drop a postal today to

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The I.T.U. Commission

120 Sherman Street, Chicago, Illinois

The price-$20.00; $5.00 down and $5.00 a month till paid-is merely the cost of instruction, postage, etc. On and after September 1 the price will be $25.00, with easy payments.

WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE MENTION THE TYPOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL.

The Typographical Journal

J. W. HAYS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA

ENTERED AT THE POSTOFFICE, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, AS SECOND CLASS MATTER
ISSUED ON THE FIFTH OF EACH MONTH

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Note and Comment

COMPLETE organization is one-half the battle in demanding our rights. No printer who is eligible to membership should be outside the ranks of the International Typographical Union.

SECRETARY GAHAN, of Woonsocket (R. I.) Union No. 245, writes: "We are pleased to say that for the first time in the history of our union the city printing will bear the label, as one of our members beat out the bookkeeper of a large printing concern, and got the work."

SOME time ago the Freeport Fishhook Company, of Freeport, Ill., had 20,000 advertising circulars printed minus the label. Evidently some of them fell into the hands of members of our organization, as the sticker was used quite liberally and the circulars returned to the sender. The Freeport concern has learned its lesson, as circulars subsequently ordered bore the emblem of the typographical union.

ACCORDING to advices received from Homer Sheridan, secretary of the label committee of Cincinnati Union No. 3, recent label agitation has resulted in a large real estate firm of the Queen City taking a vast amount of work out of a non-union shop and placing it with a union concern. The work was so well done by the union house that the firm was favorably impressed, and No. 3's committee is now working with the real estate people to use the label on their printing. They send out thousands of pieces of printed matter each day.

NUMBER SIX

ELBERT HUBBARD, the notoriety-seeking hawker of East Aurora, N. Y., devotes a leading article of the May issue of his freak publication to a controversy he has had with Humphrey O'Sullivan, of Lowell, Mass. The latter had advertised in Hubbard's paper until his attention had been called to the fact that it was non-union. Mr. O'Sullivan, being a member of the typographical union, very naturally withdrew his patronage, and this action brought forth the malicious and vituperative attack from the individual whose admirers are principally noted for their long hair and low brows. The Lowell manufacturer declares that "we are always glad to serve people with whom we agree and from whom we differ; but we are never unwilling to lose the trade of people who take their law, gospel and morals from Elbert Hubbard."

DETERMINATION is the first essential to the accomplishment of any purpose, and, with this motto in mind, success is bound to come from the organizing crusade instituted by the International Typographical Union. Our organization must not rest content until every man eligible is enrolled in its membership.

THE last report of the London and Provincial Society of Compositors indicates that the printing trade in its jurisdiction is still in a sluggish condition, with an extremely gloomy outlook. While the year 1908 was one of the dullest years experienced in the history of the society, the

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