- - , , - . 6 . . ! ' F1 OM ' T iE i Who Didos HIs Time \ \ ti'lmo hides his time , and day hy day laces defeat fall patiently \ . Atilt lifts mirthful ' ' , a roundelay to however poor his fOI'IIIII'H ho ; ' . . :1 lie will not fail III IIIIY qualm ' , Of Ilovcrlr- the paltry t \ lilli' , .ft { tl It will 'IOW : golden III hlH { alum , Who hides his lillie Who hides Ills Iln1l'-lw IUHII' ( ! the sweet Of honey III the ImlleHI tear ; And though he fares with slowest feet Joy rllllH to meet him , drawing near ; The bids are hcrnlllH of his catuse : ; And 11I10 ) ' ' ' ' , , a lIe\'I'I'-clllllll I'hymn The roadsides hloolll In his applause : : , Who bides his tlIIIC. Who hideR his limo , and ) fevers not III the hot race that IHIIIU achieves , Bhull wear cool-wl'l'athcd laurel wrought With crimson berries In the leaves : AIIII ho shall reign II goodly ) < IIIg' . AIIII sway his hllllel 0'1' every clime , With Ieuce"I'lt 1111 his signet ring / , Who bides his time. -James 'hllcomh Itllcy . - - - NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD. - - - Items of Interest Gathered from Many Sources. New Orleans has nineteen labor unions whose membershll are colored men. They have a combined mem- bl\rshlp of 11,000. The general headquarters of the Carriage ! and Wagon \Vorl\Crs' Union are to lJo removed from New York City to Chicago , arlll the entire execu- . tlvo board are to be Chicago mem- ' hers. President Moffatt or the United Bat- tors' union and Vice President James Woods of the Clgarmalccrs' Interna- tional union are the fraternal delegates . gates elected lJy the A. F. of L. to next summer's British trades con. grells. , . . A report ts currant that Andrew .Carnegie Is planning to present to the labor unions of the United States a handsome Hall of Labor , to bo erected In New York mill mode led along the lines of the Palace of Peace recently presented to The IIalIe. { The bollermaleer3 employcd at the elm worles of the American Locomotive . tlvo company , in Scranton , Pa , are on strike In sympathy with the strikers of the Erie Railroad boiler shops at Susquehanna , because the American company Is repairing Eric engines. The 1900 census gives the number wageworlwrs In the United States as 28,285,02 , IBvldel1 as follows : Professional , 1 , 6-1,737 ; trade and transportation , 4,778,2:13 : ; domestic and personal service , ,691.746 ; manufacturing . facturng ! , 7,122.987 ; agricultural pursuits . suits , 10.-138,919. Recent advertisements In Denver , Col. , and other Western papers called for 25,000 skilled men In 100 different trades , applicants to agree to work In open shops. This Is understood to lJe a move on the part of the CItizens' alliance of Colorado In Its campaign against unionism and time closed shop There Is a movement on foot to have the clgarmalters , garment workers , hatter , shirt waist and laundry workers . ers anti hoot and shoe Workers join hands and each subscribe an equal amount and keep ! several label agitators - tors on the mad , visiting trade unions and other organizations advocating these lalJols. An act recently passed by time house of representatives of Rhode Island prescribes a fine of $350 to $500 , or . Imprisonment for three to six mouths , or both , against any employer or corporation . poratlon attempting to prevent working - ins people from belonging to a labor organization as a condition of new or continued omployment. . The Outlook contains an article lJy Slason Thompson on "Violence In La- bor Conflicts , " which presents soma statistics on the loss of life and physical . cal injuries due to this cause. He slve : a table by states showing that during : the period between Jan. 1. 1902 , and June 30 , 904 ] , there were - - . killed In strikes 180 persons , Injured ln51 , antI anestc1\ \ , : t3. At a recent conference of the employing . ploylng IH'lnters and representatives of New York ' ' 'l'nlOgraphlcal Union , a new wage scale for the job branch .was negotiated which gives I\n increase . crease of $1.50 a week and makes the scale $21. Machine operators were advanced to $23. A. proportionate increase . crease In overtime pay was granted to apply also to apprentices In their last : year. Chicago 'l'nwgmphlcal Union , Local . cal No IG , has offered prizes to its apprentices for the best composition and makeup worle. The test consists In printing , without instruction , a business . ness card for a physician , giving m'eat- donce , otIlce hours , telephone number , etc" , and the proofs to ho submitted before .1 an. 1. Three prizes are offered . fcred , as follows : First , $5 ; second , $ :1 : ; third , $2. , Labor organizations which contrib- toed to the Colorado strike fund have been furnished a statement of the receipts - ceipts and disbursements of the I"'IIHI by Secretary W. D. lIal'wood of mho Western Federation of Miners. The donations received from sources outside - side of the local unions of the federn- tlon amounted to $15.1,699.22. The amount disbursed for nine months end- tug Sept. :10 : Is :155,874.72. : The General Federation of Trades , time , financial organization of Great Britain , seem : : to he growing very well despite bad Industrial conditions The federation has a memlJershlp now or 425,000 , with $500.000 In the gen oral l treasury , while the affiliated mma- t10nal unions have a total of $9,000- 000 ) In their individual treasuries. At the recent conference Pete Curran' ' \ \ as I'e-elected president , and Isaac Mitchell : secretary of the federation. Following the lead of the Telluride operators , It Is announced that all the I milling plants In time Ouray ( Cole ) district will adopt an olght-hour lJasls. The O\ll'ay mine managers are now . malting arrangements preparatory to the change. 'fhe adoption oC the tight.hour In the mills of the latter city are hastened lJy the fact that mill nmen were leaving there and goIng to 'l'cllurlde to take advantage of qlC shorter workday now prevailing at that Illace. An assessment of -$1 per man has been laid upon the entire membership of the International Association of 1\1a. chlnlsts to raise a fund In aid of the members of the organization who arc on strike against the Santa Fe Rail. way Company. The Santa Fo strike , though a comparatively quiet affair , has been one : ' of the mot : stubbornly contested of lalJOI"s recent lJnttles. Only members of time maehlnlsts' union arc on strike , the trainmen and engineers not being hl\'olved. Twent ' -tlvo hlllopcndent special or Ilpr clothing firms of Chicago signed an agreement with the Garment \\Torli. OJ's' Union to pay the union scale to their 5,000 enmployes . All the conditions . tions In force the last year will ho ob served lJy the employers until Jan. 1 , 1906 , and they will use the union label 011 their products. Time unions gaining . Ing the agreement have 10,000 other members on strike In fort . .three concerns - corns In the National Wholesale Clothing . Ing Manufacturers' Association. TIme American Sheet and Tin Plate company have started tlmirtyseven tin plate ml1ls. But seven of the 242 mills are now hllo. or time idle mills five are at Sharon Pa. , and two at 1'lnrtln's Ferry Ohio. These likely will be gt l9ibg before the end ot' the week and for the first time in the history . tory of the company 01' its predecessor . ser , the American Tin Plate company , every mill will 11e In full operation. The mills resuming were at Andcl" _ . . - - - - . . . . - , son , Ind : Elwood , Ind ; NcIensing . ton , Pa. , and Conncilsvtlie , Pr. 'I'he joint trade agreem lt fH the only means of preserving ! ittdimstrlal peace and the great , CtlriHH'utions of the country must sit time pace In such matle1'll : " Such was the sentiment voiced ! : hy Francis I. . . . HoblJlns , president . dent of time PlttslJurg Coal company , at a recent banquet In Plttsburg. Time circumstances under which the declaration . atlon was made adds to its significance . cance , because the men to whom It was made were the mine managers , the superintendents and the 01llclal8 of the great company which 1\11' Rob' . bins reprcsents. Presldonts Keller of the City Letter Carrlors' union and Cunningham 01 the Rural Letter Carriers' association have been removed from omcc "for cause" hy Postmaster General 'nne. The dismissal Is the result of an investigation - vestigation of charges of InsulJordlna- t'.on t , of being absent from duty with- tut leave , and oC violation of the Pres- Ident's order of lan. :11 : , 11:102 : , prohib- Iting individual 01' organized attempts of government omployes to influence legislation or to solicit Increase of pay. The matter may finally lJo lJrought to the attention of the Presi- dont. Striking machinists who have been arrested for alleged acts of violence are to sue time Emplo 'ers' Association of Chicago on the charge of false 1\1'- rest. This information was made pub- lic lJy .1. J. Koppler , business agent of the union , who Issued un open letter addressed to the employers and entitled - tled "Who Is time Agitator ? " "Papers are being prepared , " the pamphlet says , "In forty.elght cases to lJe brought shortly In which every member . bel' of the employer8' association will bo joined as defendants for recovery of punitive damages for false Impris- onment. A well.lmown writer on trade union subjects has been I doing some figuring which ho used In the following manner - ner : A conservative estimate of the number of organized wage-earners and time amount they eam n-amend of mmeces- slty spend-shows In a truly startling manner the tremendous : power they could Wield If their wages were al- W'Itys spent after they had given ! due thought to their best intOJ'ests Tal ing ; : the ' 2,250,000 members of trade unions , nr.d basing their wages at $1.50 per ll'1y for 300 days 1'1 the year , we find that this gives them n purchasing . chasing strength of $1,012,500,000 per year . This sum-so great thaI. It ls ciltncult and well . ntglm ImllOf'slble to appreciate its inlluence-If used to par rent for homes built by union labor . her and in purchasing the necesitles : of life , that were manufacturer ! or procured hy organized Workmen , would soon work a revolution In every 1r1llustry In the Inl1d. United States Consul General P. Dillingham , Auckland , New Zealand , has reported to this government a new system of preventing railroad collisions. Ho says : "An interesting change has recently been made In the signaling system In New ealand's railway , which It Is thought will make collisions absolutely Impossible. For a long time , up to a recent date , what Is known as the 'hloclt' system has becr"'generally used , but time 'tahlel' system has now been introduced. The essential point In the new system Is teat no engine driver Is allowed to leave a station without a tablet In his possession , anal the element of safety rests on the fact that the machines are so made that It Is impossible for two of time tablets to lJo out at the sane time. If a driver leaves Aucle- land for Newmarket with a tablet that tablet has to be deposited In the machine at Newmarwt ] before another tablet Is Issued allowing Il return train to leave that station for Auckland land and the electrical connection between the two stations makes It 1m- possible to extract a tablet from the Auckland machine until the tablet has been put Into the machine at New- market. It Is claimed by railroad ex- perts that under the new system two trains cannot be on the same section at once , so that the danger of cOli" Si0\15 Is cnUrel done away with " - . . , . . . BIRTHPLACE OF GREAT MAN. - - Humble Spot Where Mighty Mind Was Given to the World. Humble Is the birthplace of Carlyle . lyle , simple and rugged , yet with little suggestion that It had cradled one oC the world's intellectual giants. The road to achievement Is up a steep hill ; , and that Is the reason why nearly all the world's big men were born amid humble slllTolUllllngs. This Is time working of a fixed law. We would lJe surprised ! : : indeed were wo to he shown n great place as the birthplace oC Car. 'at ' ifs : 1 : v lyle , Shakespeare , or of our own Benjamin . jamln Franldln. New Interest In Carlyle . lyle 1 has been aroused recently hy the publication of Frollde's letters , and during the last rear lJr visitors to the little hOllse The house Is au intellectual . lectual shrine , for here was where a great mind was given to the world.- New York Herald. - - Horse Counts by Watching Eyes Dr. Carl Stumpf , professor of psychology chology at the University of Berlin and a member of the Royal Academy of Science , and two colleagues , Dr. C. yon Hornbostel and Dr. O. Pfungst , ct have ended months of experiments with Von Osten's horse lIans. 'l'hoy find that the secret of the an- Imal's replies Is in Its powers of oh- sen'alion , which enable it to perceive while it looks at its questioner the instant It has reached a correct an- swer. Thus they found the horse was 1 imitable to tap out a correct answer to a question when the person putting It did not know the answer , for exam- pie : "How many persons are in the group behind me ? " The questioner not looking himself did not know the number and Hans was unable to give a correct reply , nor was ho able , when wearing blinders - ers , to calculate or perform the sim- plest counting. Stumpf does not doubt , the good faith of Von Osten and his ° assistants. Broken Vase. & I t . r : . > - , \ \ k it . - The problem consists In putting all the parts of the design together In such a way that they make a vase of . - fiowcrs. Do not cut the paper. Sim. - ply fold it. - - Stranger Than Fiction. Harry Lehr attended a Newport theater one evening wearing a bright red tie with his evening clothes. On Jan. 15 a son was born to 1\11' . and Mrs. William Leroy of Louisville , i Jr. , being their fifth boy born on that day or that month since 1000. 'I Frank Brooking of l\1acomb , III" , \ while tearing out a sparrow's nest . found a $2 bill among the straw. With this as rent money he put back the bll'd's home and they are again living . 4 with him