- - - - _ . . . . . . _ - - - - - f _ - F ) OM THE Contentment. Oil , tit limey run gittl11 wUIIscr fur or po' 1111111 ell'"y Ilay , All' er fl'lI'r hub III hustle In lIe ha'clest kind of way ; Bill 1 110111I' feel 11I111 cornplnlnln' , fur 1 IInlis ( ran " nil Iln wood I)11t du 1111111I011 trop 11111 lu1ly , all' Ill 'IImll\l1l1 crop /111I good I hub got 1101" ' rllPlIl11l1t1cl UII' or mll'rr III numb ehrst I , A II' Inn II IlIm'IIIIH oil locornoshun dey 1I11111't "I'CIoh " die best : ) /1I\\'slIlIlI'hlllJr. / i I Itrllll't rumlllc ! , un' I wOlllelll't pf 1 ( hold . lour ) tin /1111I11I011 crop cent lubly , nn de 'i Ossum crop nut Hilmi , 111111I1't got IIIIch , wordly flxln'8 , jest cr 111110 lilt oh lilli' nllt IIlIIlIHPlf 1111' 110 ale 'oOlnnn 'tl'l\'C5 to \\'II'k 1'1. best Wit It'III1 ; 'I'll 1 feels 11. rich 'Z must folks \ , cz J wants hit understood , When 1141 1-1111111I011 crop 1111I lubly , /lll' do 'IIOS8UIII crop ant HOOlI -l.'lIIH\'llio Courier-Journal < , - - NEWS OF THE LABOR WOnLD. Items of Interest Gathered from Many Sources I HocheRlol' , N. Y. , labor unions are endeavoring 10 raise ! ! funds 10 erect a labor lellIple in that city. 'I'ho SW ! ( ClIHIon's Union or North Anterlca ! will hold ( Its convention In Illellanapolls May Hi , 1J05. ! Firemen ! ! ! of Chicago have organized thelllwh'C'H Into a hotly for the 111I1'- 111110 of renowlng their light to secure shorter hOllrs The Cal'1logle Steel Company ) and ho I llIel'lclln 'l'In Plate and Sheet Steel COIIIJlanr have ol'dered every furnace and \ plant put In operation , which wlll require ) almost 8,000 additional - tIolIH I mOil. The realization : that lie ( mun of ore galllzcel labor have a defense fund whleh can ho ccncentrnted upon any given IIOlllt 10 protect the rights and interests : 01' our fellow-wol'lwrs hits hall a palpable ntHI heunl1clent effct. -lly Halllllci GOl1illCrS A proclamallon haH been ! issued by GoToole of l\Iqntana ? declaring the 11Illllllon ! of the anWllllments to the I'laiu Constitution relating to child labor and the elghlholllaw voted 011 at the recent election , and these arc 110In Cull force and offect. A call Is out to hold a conference of governments : for the protection ot thc workers against accidents In May , 110fi ! , at Swllcl'land. : The British rued Continental govel'nments wIll bo repre- Hcntecl , and the United States and Hnssla wIll also Call Into IIno Settlements have hoen made with the Jewish II al\C 1'5' union by nine of the thirteen Chicago employers at whose shops strikes have been on In consequence of the settlement the entlloyors failed to prosecute five IInloll mOil , arrested charged with acts of \'Iolence The General Confederation of Labor of France at Its recent congress In Bomges considered the Illleslion of the union lahel. By a hugo majority It was decided that , instead of a label for each trade , there should 1JO a single . gle label for products ) of all sorts mantle by members of at1llIatell IInlons 'I'hoso who join an organization with the expectation of having their I wages immediately increased , or their wrong righted al once , or that they wIll at receive ' once large dividends on the amount invested , are not the desirable members , nor the ones upon whom the order can depend for Its ultimate sllcce'3s-Hallwa Clerl\ At n meeting the New York Central . tl'lll Federated union delegates , representing . senllng more than 150,000 workers III the miscellaneous trades , they have appointed ) ) a committee or ten to fight employers who Insist on tits " 01)011 shop , " In complIance with the sentiments . ments expressed at the recent CItI- zons' Industrial alliance convention. The strike of the miners at the Century Coal Compllnr's : plant at Tower Hill 111 . Invol\'lng aoo men baa been nlUcd by a tomn\lttlO rath slating oC state onIclals , the United l1newOI'I\CrH of America and the coal cOll1panr. The ] settlement Is considered . ered a victory for the miners , the operators agreelllg to- pay the Pilna scalo. The Bulletin of the National ! Metal ' Trades association 18 to ho rechristen- etl and will appear Jiln. 1 as the Open Shop The ] policy , however , will re- lIIalll the saute , which will ho an attack - tack on labor unions for what they have done , and also for 'what they have failed 10 elo. III other words , 11 will continue to give It to them "go- Ing and coming " The child labor law of Illinois Is now enforced In all the coal mines of the stato. Under the interpretation or the law made hy Factory Inspector Edgar I \ 'I ' . iavies ) and sustained hy the courts no boys under 16 years of age will bo Ilermilted 10 work In the mines. It Is estimated the enforcement . ment of the statute will tale 2riOO ho 's away from employment under , .gJ'J\IIIII. g 1 , A , Rysdon , a Chicago contractor , who hits fought the Sheet Metal ! Wc'I en ; ' nation In courts and outside of theta for the past two years , owned imp a few clays ago hat I he had enough of 11 , and ( signed the union scale IIe Is now employing union men exclu- sively Sometimes It costs an employer . er a lot of money 10 find out where his best interests lie , but he usually gets there In time 'allloV. . Valentine , a clerk In the money order department of the New York poslomco ( , has been suspended for lIuH1hordlnallnn , In consequence the postmaster general , It Is under- stood , wIll have a test case before him shortly , as the caim : Is madc ! that Val- enllnc'li refusal to work more titan sight hours a day was : the basis for his suspension atlll the preferring of charges against him , Snit twits flied In he t Colorado Dist , trict Court b I ) ' the Victor Fuel Com- pany against the United ltiueVork . ers of America , John Mitchell and eleven other officers : of the organization - tion for $4tHOOO damages alleged to have been sustained hy the company during the strike of coal miners This snit docs not tale the place of the snit for $85,000 , filed about a year ago and still 11011111ng The scan. on's convention , In session i at San Francisco , adopted resolutions asllng Congress for the passage of a law abolishing the punishment ) hy imprisonment . Jlrlsonment of seamen for desertion In foreign ports : urging upon Congress . gress the passage of the bill to amend the laws relative to seamen , to pre' vent the undermannlng of American vessels , and to encourage the trainIng of boys In tae : merchant marine. The plan of the Illinois Steel cent- pan of South Chicago to equalIze I wagei li nuw in effect , affecting all ' the employes of the plate mill A large reduction has been made In mho wages or the mIll aristocrats , such as rollers Those workmen who formerly received " od $5 , $6 and $ S a dar before the shut- . down , are now getting only $3 , $4 and ; . $ ii and there Is much dissatisfaction among thom This feelIng Is balanced by the rejoicing among the poorly paid laborers and mechanics , who went to work III $1.85 , $2 and $2.15 rates instead . stead of $1.-10 , $1.50 and $ L60. Reports J from the slIIIell trades In England are to the effect that there Is a decreasing demand for labor. October and November conditions compared unfavorably with the cond1- tIons during the same months In 1903. As the demand for workingmen Calls , employers suggest reduct'ons In wages for those who are still at work. A dent tfld : for a reductions of 5 ner cent in the w 'n6ca of bollormlllt'rs blU lJOcl1 ; > uPde br the 'l\1f1lc "rt , but the United Society or boilermakers has made answer that the demand Is pre- mature. At last reports the question waR In abeyancc. Members of the ( International Typographical ' graphical Union are very much pleas' cd at the action taken by the"Ameri- ran Federation of Labor on the subject . ject of the elght.hour tlny for printers Typographical union has set January , 1906 , as Ito time for the inauguration of the elght'hour work day In all establishments - tablIRhments under the jurisdiction of the organizalion. At the convention of the American Federation of Labor In San Francisco , the demand of the printers was Indorsed and a motion was carried pledging the federation to render financIal support by the levy of an assessment upon its two nIil- lIon members should time printers need the help. The Amalgamated association has received word from Denwood , \V. Va" , that the Wheeling Iron and Steel Company had } bell compelled to shut down for lack of Rkllled men to man the furnacps. A similar condition Is reported from cUter secUons There are not enough skilled men offering themselves to fill places and men arc securing higher wages than the scale calls ( or , This Is due to the great reductIon In he I working force made last spring and the closing down of many mills and furnaces. The men do not care to return to work for the same wages and It Is said } that a general advance wlll have to he made to secure enough men to fill positions The Dartcnders' union of Texas has begun a movement to purify ) \ \ and ele- vate the saloon. Organizer Husted , who has been studying conditions In Texas for the last ) month , has reached the conclusion that the low dives and the "joints" are not only a menace to society , but bring ollium and disgrace - grace upon all who are engaged In the saloon huslness. Therefore the Dn 1'- tenelers' union , 8S an organization , wIll give aid and support ) to a bill that wIll suppress all these tough places ) and rid the saloon of gamblIng dens , wlnorooms , etc , According to Mr. Hus- ted , a bill embodying these and other reforms Is now being prepared and wIll be introduced In the next legisla- ture. ture.Tho The National Association of Heat , Frost , General Insulators and Asbestos . bestos Workers of America , organized ! recently under a charter of the International - national BuIlding Trades CouncIl held a ratification convention at Plttsburg , adopted a constitution , made officers permanent for term and filled existing vacancies , besides selecting time and place ) for next convention. Following arc the permanent ) officers : Presi- dent , C. G. Rice , Pittsburg ; first vice president , P. C. Trlggo , Cleve' land ; second vice president , John Grab , Chicago ; third vice president ) . dent , L. E Fassett , Buffalo ; fourth vice president ) , Charles Uhr , Boston ; fifth , vice president , A. C. Newman , ' ' Wa's'hlngton , D. S , ; secretary , J. G. Jesson , Sl. Louis The next conven- tion wIll he held In Boston , Aug 7 , 1905. Au interesting point ) In the question or industrialIsm as against trade autonomy may bo seen In the recent affilIation of the United Order of Box Makers and Sawyers : oC America with the American Labor union. 'rho latter organization stands for industrialIsm first , last and all the time , according to the leaders , and the unions which compose It are supposed ) to he founded on Industrial l1nes The interesting point ) Is that for years the United Order of Boxmalcors kept applying to the American Federation of Labor for a charter and was denied one 011 the ground that the Amalgamated Wood- workors' International union had jurIsdiction - Isdiction over all wood box makers. In other words , the American Federation oC Labor In that particular case stood for Industrialism by reCusing to recog- nlzo the hoxmakers as a separate organization . ganization and yet it Is recognized hy an organization which avowedly stands for industrialism Truly , It would require the proverbial PhIladel- phia lawyhr to recognize just where the Ilna between tndlJstrialie111 and trade aulOnomr beltn and ' 4'berltb ' . . tt--cbiwr tuts Actldac : ' , _ . _ . . , r. . _ _ . . _ . . . . . . . _ , . . . . . , . . ' - . . _ . . . . . . , _ . _ " _ " _ _ . . . , : . . . . DOGS TO FIND WOUNDED. Animals Being Trained for Service on , ' . Battlefield. Major Richardson the other day let loose on Wlmbledon Common the dogs of Will' These were two or his half- bred collIes ( helf-hreds are much bet- tar for the work than any other kind ) , who do Hell Cross work , and either succor the wOIIIIIled or fetch them reo . . .J ( ilef hound the dogs Is strapped a ' sort or harness , bearing the Red Cross badge , and fitted with pockets ) on each side Coil talning triangular bandages , and round the neck hangs a keg of spirits. If the wounded is unable to "help himself , " the dog Is trained to fetch him assistance , The dogs found men supposed to UO wounded lying on the heath , invisible to the spectators , and , having ) found them , gave tongue. Dogs trained for this ptu ) ' pose ) are In use in the German service , many bee lug now In 1Iorrerolond InVest Africa , with the German troops In the , War.Dogs at Wlmbledon. field , \lnd \ there are also many with ! the Russian army In Manchuria It IH Interesting to add that the Central British Red Cross CouncIl , of which the Queen Is president , proposes ) 10 form a Red Cross committee ( which had nothing to do with the dogs ) for . each county , and for towns with a pop- t uhtiou of over 10,000 The object Is so to organize the voluntary aid resources . 1 : sources of the country that should war break out the preparations for dealing , with the wouudod may ue complete- t Liverpool ( Eng ) 1\lercury. . . . Why Hen Turns Eggs 'vcr. "In the country last summer , " said , J a young city man , "I saw a setting hen rise wearily from her eggs one afternoon . I ternoon and turn them over , one by ' 1 one. Then she resumed her scat upon them " 'What made the hen do that ? I I 1 said to the milkmaid beside me. ) " 'Bless you , sir , all setting hens do 't so They do so every clay " said the , mll1mah1. 'Every afternoon at about & this time they turn their eb'gS Thus > > the eggs get the same treatment all I around. One part Isn't overwarmed and another part overchiJIod. The . temperature inside Is kept uniform. . j "If hens dldu't turn their eggs , every day some or the egg would " - . never hatch , while out of others mal- . I formed chickens , monstrosities would come. " A Tender Avowal. , . . 4j rrr..r j r , " to ' f _ r r r j 4 f : \ J To Miss : Chimpanzee said the monk , As cunning ! as a 1108s11m he , "I'\'e got a life pass 011 this road , Come , my chlmpansy blossom ue. The subway trains are very swift , I bear they never bump any , Como , take the limited with me ; , And . be my xtJresl5 company ! " -New York sun