business. - But they are still doing business. The accused iron workers have been charged with the crime of hav ing destroyed the Times Building and the, lives of twenty-one people Months after the tragedy, with a gro tesque and sensational setting, ar rests have been made, and tle col umns of the press have ben bulging with assertions of what is to follow, with the evident intent and studied purpose of inflaming the public mind to the point where the reprehensible acts of detectives and their allies may be lost sight of. No good citzen, be he a member of a labor organization or nof desires crime to go unpunished. If the men charged with this terrible catastro phe be proven guilty then punish ment should be inflicted. To the minds of labor men experi enced in the struggle for the right there is a conspiracy interminable in its ramifications, and mora danger ous than is generally believed Or ganized labor's sphere of influence has rapidly and potentially increased in the past half decade, and in this land or dollars the captains of in dustry realize that the men of labor are becoming an ever increasing force for the amelioration of all forms of abuses against humanity. With the steady advance of this humanizing in fluence greed and avarice must re cede and more equitable relations established. Organized labor is in nured to hardship, the justice of its creed is unquestionable and its cour age undaunted. The men of labor protest that special innovations be inaugurated in an effort to cast odium upon it, but it is willing and every ready to meet in the open every antagonist, with hope and faith firmly imbedded that justice will eventually prevail. . RAILWAY MAIL CARS. First Law for the Protection of Mail Clerks Will Become Effective in About Sixty Days. Two legislative acts relating to the mail cars in use by the railways will become operative next July and on July 1, 1916. The first law going into effect provides that after July 1. this year, the government will not accept or pay ior the use of wooden railway mail cads used between steel cars, or between a locomotive and a steeJ car. The other act, which in effect will compel the use of steel mail cars on all main lines, provides that after July 1, 1916, the railway companies shall not be allowed to use wooden mail cars in trains in which a major ity of the cars is composed of steel. The railway mail clerks have for years made vigorous protests to the government against the use of woods. en cars. They have insisted that the wooden cars were the most dangerous in the trains, the balance of the train usually being made up of steel cars, the result being that in any wreck the mail cars were splintered and their occupants almost inevitably killed or wounded. ,f - None to Do the Chorea. More than four million people are estimated to attend moving picture Bhows in the United States every day. No wonder it is getting so hard to find somebody willing to do the chores. i t V UNION RECOGNITION. The demand for recognition is H one which a union cannot com- J J promise if it is to be anything I more than a society for the ex- change of Individual commisera- . 1' tion. Concessions made to indi- ' ; viduals are easily withdrawn . I after strikers return to work and I J are restored to a pacific mood. ' . . Gradually the men find them- II selves being discharged, always . for "cause," but actually as a I' punishment for having struck - and as means of substituting . I other men willing to work for wages and under conditions . I which provoked the strike. Thus J i the price offered for the sacri- j flee of the union principle often, j if not in a majority of cases, i turns out to be Dead sea fruit. jj Dallas News. LIABILITY PROBLEM. Provisions of tho Law Enacted In New Jersey. In the course of a lecture on "New Liability Laws' In New York city Edgar M. Atkin declared that such laws were antiquated and unjust in every state of the Union except one. Then he said: v It is possible that the solution of the difficulty may be found In the sen ate act of the state New Jersey which recently became a law. This law is in three sections. The first part of the law states that the employee can recover compensation for Injuries un less he was guilty of willful negligence and definitely abolishes the defenses that the accident was caused by a fel low servant or that the employee as sumed the risk of bis employment. Section 2 of this law Is based upon the draft, of the late New York com pensation act. It seeks to avoid the barrier of the constitution by provid ing that it shall be presumed that the law of compensation as therein set forth is a part of every contract of employment entered Into after July 4. 1911 truly, a good day upon which to declare independence of antiquated theories of government unless either employer or employee states In writing that he does not wish to abide by its liberal provisions. Men employed prior to that date may affirmatively signify their desire to avail themselves of its definite provisions rather than to remain subject to the uncertainties of litigation under section 1. The at titude of the employer cannot as yet be determined. He must abide by the most stringent liability law heretofore enacted, or he must pay to his in jured employee varying amounts in proportion to the seriousness 4 of the Injury. Common sense will show the employee that the compensation act is the better for him to work under. The schedule of payments is complete and ranges to 50 per cent of his wages during fifteen weeks, but not to more than $10 a week. In case of death from injury pay ments to dependents run for a period of 300 weeks. The percentage of his entire wages to be paid range from 25 per cent to a widow to GO per cent where a widow is left with five chil dren. These payments are to be made without regard to question of negli gence and can only be defeated by proof that deliberate failure to act. intoxication or recklessness caused the accident. . Strictly Union. The Bricklayers' union of Sacra mento has adopted a law by which any member who neglects or fails to at tend the regular weekly meetings will be fined 25 cents, and if not paid this win be charged up as dues. WORK WITH DEATH! Child Labor Near to Tragedy In Cotton Mills. PERIL OF THE BACK BOYS. i Compelled to Clean Spinning Mules ; While Machines Are In Motion, i Shop Rules That Are Meant to Be Broken. The work of a boy in a cotton mill can't be as pleasant as a fishing trip, but it might be made just as human. There are a few laws regulatiug the toil of minors which are aimed toward the safety of child laborers. In "Through the Mill," in the Outlook, Al Priddy, who worked when a "child in a southern manufactory, gives the fol lowing peep into child life among the spinning mules: For the protection of minors like my self two notices were posted in the mule room and in every room in the mill. They are rules which if obeyed would have reduced the dangers of my mill work. The notices read: The cleaning of machinery while it is in motion is positively forbidden. All minors are hereby prohibited from working during the regular stopping hours. If I had made any effort to obey the first law I should not have retained my position. The mule spinners were working by the piece and would stop their mules only under exceptional stress. The back boy who demanded that the machinery be stopped while he oiled the spindles was deemed in capable. It was even expected of me that I should with a hand brush clean pulleys whirling hundreds of revolu tions a minute at the risk of having my hand drawn over the belt. I had to clean fallers, which if taken at the wrong minute on the change was like putting one's hands between the clos ing teeth of some wild creature. In cleaning the front spindles or oiling them I was in constant danger of be ing crushed between the carriage and the iron posts, which when they met left hardly an inch of space. Alfred Skinner, a close friend of mine, did get caught one day, and his body was pinned close and was crushed badly, but not too severely to keep bim from his work at his own expense for more than four days. The most dangerous cleaning I had to do was the cleaning of the back wheels of the mule carriage. The car riage runs forward for about three yards on tracks. It starts from the frame and spins the cotton thread as It moves ahead at a slow paci Then when the thread is spun the carriage darts back swiftly and gathers the thread up on the spindles. This back motion is a swift rebound, just like a rubber ball which we throw and draw back by an elastic cord. The wheels are about ten inches In diameter, and the tracks on which they run are sharp, like knives. It was dangerous enough to try to creep after these wheels while they were in motion, for the waste was always wrapping around the axles or being lumped under the wheels, and there was the added danger of not crawling back swiftly enough ahead of the rebounding carriage. I had to creep, almost at full length, under the frame and a long steel $ haf t. and crawl back out of the way of the returning carriage. I had to estimate Just how low to duck and be careful not to back Into a post or a box which would block my retreat Yet that was the process, and no spinner would stop his mule for me. If I let the waste lump under the wheels it-"would lift the carriage out of gear and break a thousandfrxeafls. When t h a t o cc u rri xl There" were oaths from the spinner, a lecture from the second hand and'all sorts of disagree able criticisms from the hands who were called upon to piece the broken threads together. One day I had my little finger dragged on the track and the end nipped. Almost every back boy of my acquaintance had had one of his fingers either nipped or cut off altogether. Once in awhile one of them would be caught as he backed and be severely maimed. The only consolation we got in case of these accidents was a few days' "layoff," always delightful; free treat ment by the "company's butcher," as we called the surgeon, and a loss of so many days' wages. If a boy was absolutely bent on keeping that rule in regard to the cleaning of machinery he bad to leave that part of his work until the mill was stopped for dinner or do it be fore the mill started in the morning. This, however, was Jumping from the frying pan into the fire, for It led to nn Infraction of the second rule. "All minors are hereby prohibited from working during the regular stopping hours." It was absolutely impossible for me to do all my day's work in the ten and a half hours of the regular working day. I did not shirk my work nor was I lazy, i Neither was I undertaking more than would bring me an average wage. My weekly pay' for the foul mules was $4.50. Not only was much of the dangerous cleaning left till the noon hour or the hour-before starting ir the mornings, but there Was always some unfinished chore ahead to be done before the mules started. In ad dition to all this, the spinners hired me to work for them during the stop ping hours. They gave me a quartei for cleaning a mule head and so mucfc a week for keeping their rollers in or der, for helping -them in piecing ut whatever broken threads "ere found and for work at many other details which they could leave until the nooi hour. LABOR IN HISTORY. 8ecial Progress of America Traceable to Trade Unions. A. M. Simons, editor of the Coming Nation and author of several treatises on American history, lectured before the Socialist Literary society in Phila delphia recently. His subject was "The Workers In American History." He said: "Progress in America has come al most entirely as a result of the strug gle of the working class. To the working class movement of the thir ties we owe more than to any other cause our common schools, our right of trial by jury, universal suffrage, abolition of imprisonment for debt and a large number of other things that are commonly supposed to have been obtained by the Revolutionary fathers, but which these fathers were quite generally opposed to. : "Since the civil war social progress has been even more distinctly trace able to working class organizations. ' Take any one of the things that are said to mark the advance toward de mocracy in government or greater en joyment for the masses of the people and you will find that long before it was created into law or incorporated In the platforms of any of-the old par tie?? it was announced and defended for years in the 'councils of the work ers. "There is no power on earth that can stop this conscious movement- ex cept labor itself. Labor has fought all the battles of the past, but a i ways fought them for some one else. Now that it is fighting for itself it is cer tain of victory." -. j