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LABOR NOTES. Baltimi The Iftbo]r BOnuDMions > men of Baltizcore ina> ) for oit 7 oouncil fhereisaattike In the oleomargarii factor] fcot of West f'ortielh street, Nt At Kew Bedford, Mass., the apinoe in the Potomska mill, nineteen u nui bw, have strock. succeeded m inducing tl use imported bottles. i makers have The boTcott nas been lifted on tb SteubenvDIe G»zett« by the Jeffersoi Conntj Trades .Assembly. The labor conventitm at Bichmond, Va., nominated Mr. W. H. Mullen as labor candidate for Congrees. Nearl;^ the entire plumbing of Mil waukee is in the bands of co.operatiTe shops which are most successfuL town, Peunsylvaaia. has ended satisfact orily. The preasers receive an advance of 82 per week. The Baltimore canmakers have char- 1 andnd advertisedvertise to takeke tered a steamboat a a to ta Knights of L abor to Kichmond, October 4, a t the low fare of 85, inclnding board for four days on the steamer. Bnrrett, Whitney & Co., of Little Falls, N. Y., proprietors of the Sedgwick Machine Works, have purchased a tract of laud in Poughkeepsie and will erect bnildings thereon at a cost of $11,000 lor machine and moulding worka er 20, when the Union is to be presented with a banner. The Union at Itsts lastast meetingeeting rtt solve I l m r solved to make the third Monday in September an annual holiday. The printers of the Mining Uerald Shenandoah, Pa., are now on a strike mberber off girtsirts haviiaving ■yedyt num o g h been emplo in the office with the avowed intention on the part ot the firm of introdneiug cheap labor. The apprentsce system is also violated, having eight learners lo five journeymen. Another grievance of, the typos is the failure of the foreman to ‘‘hook\ (ffi tegular copy, the “tat” or easy matter being called lor the apprentices, and the “lean” or difficult giveu to Ihe jonmeymen. The strikers are to be sop- ported and the Herald boycotted. The International Union of Cigarmak. ers of Barnesville, O., has received anihorityority l'V y thehe Nationalational officers to iissue I t N officers to i a local union label for tobies and stogies, irrespective of pnoes paid to labor. The diScrence between the standard prices received by the K of L. Assemblies of •togiemakers aaing the bine seal and the International Local at Barnesville, O., is from 60 cents to $1.60 a thonsand. The Exec: live Board of Interuational Cigai makers thus allow a local union to issue a seal with their upp.oval><oval andnd anthority,nthority, and, place______yUn them upon stogies which are a a ___ ___ stogies which are undermining the standard of prices fixed by the K. of L. in the Ohio Valley. O pinions of the P ress . The difierence between a socialist and a monopolist is: The sucialisl wants a division of property and the monopolist wants It all.—Cedar Kapids New Era. When the press occasioned by unsuccessrni strikes, wc itt notot bee justst as well to mention :s aboQt the losses isfnl strikes, would well to mention the iccessful ouee? It it n b ju gains made by successful ouee? were done the balance sheet would prov be largely in favor of the latter.—M( irgely in favor < lanics Journal. The Philadelphia Press cal's such workmen as typeoetters,carpenters, brick layers and pla'feiers an absolutely pro tected class, because the product of tneir indns'.ry oaunot be imporied. On the contrary they term purl of the absolutely unprotected class, because there is noth- ig to prevent the admission to •ry ' ............. . ......... Umi count of competitors without limit. Bufialo Courier. Workiugmtn don't throw your v away; go in for success if you hi- work 20 houis a day end live <n Stick to your party, und dem n who leaches indepeudeuit o a crust, nouncs uny dependen political I mecly for your evils. This ir plan, and if y iu like it murmurinj ac'ion, as has been your pmn, keep at it, but quit murmuriug a condition you help to perpetuate by a cowardly vote.—Our Country. If every woikingman in the United States will take a good labor paper f .r id smdy the piinciples of give us mote equiiable Jaws. Thewoik- ingmen of this land cau only heneht themselves by education and orgai tion, and by u ui higher intelligence com- The other day in Kansas City, Marlin Irons Was fined tor aiunkenucss, and the matter was d-tmed of sufficient im- poitanceto telegraph all eever the coun try. It was recently discovered that u Wtalthy business man in a New Jersey city hnd debauched a number of youn« girls, and about the only account the world receivtd of 1 - was through the la bor press. Had Marlin Irons been guilty of such a d e tdthe monopoly press would be clamoring for his blood.— In dianapolis Labor Signal tnapolis ts in a mysterious way his wonders to perform,” but there is noth ing more mysttrious than the ways snd means by which public men, on an an nual salary of from $5,000 to $10,000 be come millionaires in a few ye.rs. There is no God in this mystery, but a little ex- from the potentate of sbeol planation I n might clear up that mysteriousysterious m ways ar< to the deity, but are found be ingtOD and sheoL No wondt k r depression, ' lystery, fhowiug 3 not all confined staggers under depression, when c Hon reigns in high places. Were its wonderful resources, iced by publii he men to wilderniss make the country a howling wilderntae and the masses abject paupers. How long shall we endure it, how^OD( tbs ballot serve only those '' long shall lallot serve only those who rob the people! Let the industrial masses an swer.—Our Counti reason ex- m should The Essex County Commissioners have let the men in the Lawrence prison for thirteen cents a davto a shoe manufset rer o t HaveihiU. If there la a ret istins why honest laboring men feel indignant, this is one. Tei for thirteen cents! Has the honest t of man depreciated so low that it mi compete with sneb an ontra^eous piu as thief There is sorely a limit to huma latlence. The CommissionerB, no matti it party they belong to, deserve to I polls. Such a contra' a the rights of free Amer ican labor, and should not be permitted to stand.—Lowell (M beatei 3 out of all they make be yond a meagre living, and reduce them by a carefuliy-devUed system to a condi tion of a ' ject slavery, are yet very anx ious ubout theirspinti alwaysways readyeady too su]upply r t s them with tickets >r entertainmentsirtainments giveniven byy thehe Y. M. g b t 0. A True, they religiously charge the prices of the tickets to the miners, hut it willill bee admitteddmitted thathat itt iss consideratensiderab w b a t i i co and thoughtful on the part ot tbes' Christianm capitalistsapitalists too giveive theirheir slave c t g t slaves e of a heaven in the next world, m fOT the hell they ha’ The question is often asked “how are get rid of scab manufacturers?” It is DO difficult thing for ns to answer. Stop buying scab goods. Ninety per accept starvation less than six monlhi forced to 'ages to produce, in is’ time there would be a scab manufacturer in the coun try, for he would have no market for bis ■ f-w.w richich peopleeople whoho mig'ght 'ith him inis bis straggle goods. The f r p w mi ............................ h struggle to I conotry down lupcr labor of 1 goods, as scab aferior quality, lUe taste of the aria to- let alone all sympathize wi bringtg thehe jab'borers t la of this conotry down a level with the pauper labor of ope would not buy his goods, as sc [oods are alnays of an inferior qoalu lod not suited to the taste of the arisf flod iwctfully I •ed and tt e tyranny against tl .—Dayton Workmi m the busy the honest A narchical U tterances . A little etrychninein their cold viclui rooid appease their hunger.—Tnbui: Men must be content for less wages. I d this way, the workingman will be nearer to that station of life to which God has called him.—New York World. A Luge dried beef cutter to slice them up in very thin slices, with salt and pep per between each slice, Ibe slicing to commi nee at tl e feet and work upwards would be good to suppress tbe freedom of speech.—Inter Ocean. Hand grenades should be thrown among those who are striving to obtain higher wages, as by sneh treatment they would be taught a valuable lesson, and other strikers conid take warning by their fate.—Chic^o Times. K nights of L abor California has takeo steps towards tbe urination of a State Assembly. The boycott agunst (be B t Louis beer has been a p p rov^ by the Knights of L i- Thc Knights of Milwaukee are adopt- ]g tbe open assembly plan with great The Des Moines Indepeodeut has been pure seed by the Des Moines Knights of Labor daily. Several hundred Kuigbts of Libor in the Bath, Me., ship yards struck thi week against a reduction ot wages. The boycott is removed from .-.w . 3a>b W;re C mpany of D ts M aine, ow.i, that company having yielded to he demands of the Knights of Labor. The Rev. Jesse Jones, Congregationil- its, is master workman of a local assem- 1 I t , K. of L., in North Abiugton, Mass. Rev. Willard &p»ulding of Peabody, M'iss., is also a Knight. Twe.ve assemblies cf the Knights of Labor in Chattanooga, Tenn., have nom inated candidaies for Legislatuie und for city aldermen. This is said to be tbe first separate party action ever taken in e Sauih by the ordi At a mass meeting cf the K. of L. held in Charleston, 8. C., the following rate of wages tor mtefianics and laborers was agreed lo, a raise of fifty c.mts having been made in each class: Bricklayers, first-class, 83.50; sccond-cla-s, car penters, fitst-clas.c, S3; second, ^.5U; third, 2; painters, $2, $2 50 and $3; piasu-rets, $2 50 and 83; tiuners, $2.50 and $3; laborers, $1.5uaQd$2. The district executive board of na- tionul district No. 126 of the Knights of Labor,— carpet workers, heldeld a meetingeeting .. o a m Monday in Yonkers. It was reported wilhin the laitait twoo weekseeks thatat thee Bmilhmiih l tw w th th B rpot company had dirchurged 1,200 iployts, most of them when they shut iwn the moquette mills Tbe nominal reaion fur shutting d>-<vn was over-pro duction, but the real reason is thought to be the boycott on the goods of the com pany which was imposed early in Janu- A Detroit tramp, who for ten days had been driven from place to place by the police saw a little boy fall into the river, j the river, and a t once plunged in and saved him, although not u ntil tbe boy in his struggle bad neurly drowned both. The tramp — 1 assured by the policeman that he oldn’t be molested any mure, the by- iders praised him, and the boy nked him. He looked hungry as he to dry bis clothes.—Ex- INTEMPERANCE. Intemperance is a curse that is becom ing alarmingly prevalent in our fair city. One cannot pass through an entire street vnthoni seemg tbe glaring signs adver tising the fact, that within is to be found that which robs a man of health, strength and happiness, and deprives bis family of tbe comforts of life. A mao wbo has a large family to provide for, and wbo spends his hard earned wages in those sinks of polution, does not deserve tbe name of man. He is nothing more than a thief; wby? because he robs those de pendent upon bis exertions for the neces saries of life—of their just rights; he robe himself of that which is bis all—his manhood and self respect Not long since 1 heard a saloon keep er tell how he obtained a business footing in a new locality. He said when a man would come in and ask him for a drink, after bring on a spree, be would let him have,it so when be bad money he would come and spend it with him. I thonght that if it was my case, I would have kept such information to mysell. However, men wbo do not care for their fellowmen, only to get their hard earned wages away irom them, have no shame about Let ns go to the home of the drunkard. We find bis wife in tears and bia child ren in rags. We find his honse bare ot comforts. Tbe cupboard is empty, und the little ones are crying for bread. Where is the father ? In some beer saloon with boon companioos spending his week's earniugs, in drunkennese, and riontous living. What follows? In many cases whifre the father should be at home or at his work on Monday morning be is found in the police court, undergoing trial for some act, committed while under tbe influence of strong drink. Now we will visit the home of the tem perate man. We knock, and are admit ted into a cosy sitting room, with comfort and plenty visible on hand; the wife and mother in tidy evening dress, with all her little ones around her knee all taste fully dressed, and their little faces beam ing with gladness and happiness. The father sits reading aloud the evening paper, or some instructive book. Kind words and loving looks ate the order of the evening, and in fact of all time. No larking fear of temptation darkens their home. All is brightness, bappiuesB and plenty. Now workingmen which of these two pictures pleases you best? Are yon go ing to sell your manhood, murder your wife by unkindness, beggar your child ren, by giving your earnings for drink, help fiL the police courts, probably spend a term in tbe penitentiary, and come back to find your family scattered, and yourself watched by tbe authorities? Or are you prepared to save your mouey, make your families happy, and prep>ire the way for comfort and plenty in your decilning years I Every man makes bisfuture to a great er or lees degree. Some men are more easily led than others. To these I would say, avoid temptation; go to your wife, and if she is a tr je woman, she will en courage you in well doing by loving words and acts of affection. Keep tbe company of men who are above reproach and your associates will lend you a help ing hand. 1 am strongly inclined to think that some of our Knights could take this article home to themselves with profit. The order does not believe in drunken ness, and our General Master Workmaa has so often given his views upon this subject, that it seems to me the Knights should be loth to inflict upon him the knowledge that his admonilions have been disregarded. We should try to cheer and encourage him in ins labor of love for his fellow men. Knights look to it that in tbe future you are found on the side of temperance, sobriety and happiness. See to it that those near and dear are bountifully pro vided for before spending your hard earned money, and you will forever make a friend of the R ambler . was assured by tbe policeman that he wouldn’t be molested any mure, the b y standers praised him, and the boy Iked away change. PROTECTION. Mr. Ralph Beaumont addressed alarge gatliering of Knights at Portland, Maine, on libor day. We make the following extract from his address : I Lave the right to quebtiou the words of Mr. Blaine, for he has cited the eigh- teen planks of our platform as Knights of Labor, and he has called the is-ues cited by those eighteen planks “ri le issues.” He has acknowledged that he has no remedy to offer for the existing troubles. What an acknowledgment for this statesman of thirty years’ experience to make! It is a confession of perfect imbecility. He has no new ideas. He has what he calls an old nostrum, one that has been hundreds of times offered to the laboring men and women of tbe country, one that has been hurled at them trom bnndiedsof platforms; the old nostrum of protection, Mr. Blaine who is protected? Two years ago, passing along one of your great drives, I saw the smoke curl up from one of your great eaw mills at 5 o’clock in tbe morning. That evening I met some of tbe men wbo worked in tbe milL I said: “ When do yougo to work?” and one said, “ We’re there at 5 o’clock to the morning.” Said 1: “When do you get your breakfast?” An old man somewhat roughly replied: “It’s in our bellies when we get there.” Said I: “When do you get your dinner, and how bow moch time is allowed you?” Said they; “At 12 o’clock, and we have twenty minutes.” S a idI: “What time do you stop working?” They replied, “At 6:30.” That was upward of twelve hours a day. I next said: “And what pay do you get?” Mark the reply: ‘TVe get from 90 cents to $1.25 a day.” Said I. “Don’t you know that tbe very Inmbei of your employer is protected $2 a thousand?” They said: “Yes.” “Then why do you stand it?” ‘Tf we don’t do it they will go across the line and get Blue Noses wbo will.” And this was in Maine. Mr. Blaine who was protected!’’ I went to a farm-house and asked for a drink of milk; while the woman was after i t I looked around and saw a pile of woolen pants on tbe chrirs. I asked her when she returned what she got for mak ing them, and she smd 13 cents a pair. I said: “ T hatisn’t enough.” She said: “It’s better than nothing.’’ Perhaps it was, but I didn’t think so. There was then 50 ptr cent, advalurem duty on wool at that time. Mr. Elaine, who was pro tected? I recently examined tbe pay roll of tbe mines of the Hocking Valley, and there was an average of from $12 to $18 per month, and Hocking Valley is in a cer tain sense historic Knights of Labor ground, for there were but a little time ago poor Knights of Labor gathered there, asking for b ut little more pay, and there was a smaU army of Pinkerton thugs going about with a whole arsenal of weapons strapped upon them, who were watching those mints, and yet the miners were supposed to be protected by a duty of 50 cents a ton upon tbe coal they risked their lives to mine. Perhaps more protection:sneed;d. Per* haps n o t For twenty-five years we’ve had this protection Mr. Blaine offers us, and we’ve made more millionaires and more paupers under that system than were ever made in a civilized country on tbe earth in the same time before. Sen ator Howard is the authority for the state ment that while profits have increased 40 per cent, in twenty-five years, wages have fallen, all things considered, 40 per cent. Where does the protection come Mr. Beaumont here traced the history of the Union Pacific railroad down through tbe successive grants of land, and right to tbe moment when something was actually done toward building the road, and then said: Mr. Blaine, wbo built the road! White labor at $2.50 per day? No. They imported Chinese labor. They brought 15,000 Chinamen to tbe plains, who would work for $15 per month, the company agreeing to send their bones home if they died. Mr. Blaine, tariff or protection—which? We have paid 848,000,000 interest, and slaud responsible for 868,000,000, and there were millions of acres of land sever earned, tbe restoration of which Republicans aod Democrats had alike demaudC']. The Genera! Assembly of the Knights of Labor considered ths sit uation. Tbe order of Kninghts of Labor had apent more than $100,000 on strikes it had no band in originating. Why? Because of just such laws, and the Na tional Assembly appointed a committee on legislation. And that committee weut to Washingtou and obtained a transcript —a transcript, mind you—of the report of Ihe land commisrioner, showing that there were one hundred and eight mil lions of acres o f l>nd that the railroads hadn't earned, and which ought lo be forfeited to the people. Mr. Beamout traced the work of that committee down to the time when almost ninety miilicm of acres was forfeited, add- iug and for all that the people have nobody to thank but tbe Knights of Jay Gould once said that in a Republi can di^tnct he was a Republican; in a Democratic district a Democrat, but an Erie man all tbe time; and I say to yon as members of this order be uemoctats or be Republic ins but be anti-corpora- men all the time. Once the corpatations were a part of tbe state but that is alt changed; now the state is a part of the corporations. A particularly contemptible species of boycott on Ibe part of capitalists was promptly crushed in Maryland recently. Mrs. Shaffer of Texas, Baltimore connty, was left considerable properly by tbe death of her husband two years ago. It was, however, mostly barren and unpro ductive, save for tbe stone it contained, and she thrrerore resolved to start a lime kiln. The owners oi lime-kilns in the neighborhood determined to work against her in every way, and did so. When the county commissioners gave her permission some time ago to have a side track laid to ht r property, they annoyed her with iujunction proceedings. Bat she triumphed. As a last resort they notified Baltimore dealers that any one pnrchasiDg lime from Mrs. Shaffer would get none from them. The dealers Im mediately write to Mrs. Shaffer that they would take all her output, and, if she could not supply them with all they needed, they would get the balance elsewhere. \THE POOR TREASURY.” In discassing tbe Morrison resolution to compel the payment of some of the national debt, Congressman Hewitt gives ns the cheering information that the “treasury is now in a comfortable state.” How glad we ought to be to know that the poor sufferer is easy at last! Rejoice, oh y e farmers, who have to perform sll the labors of raising a bushel of com for fiTeceDh! “The treisury is now in a comfortable slate.” And ye toilers in our factories and mills who h are been hoping and hoping for better times, complain of tbe hard times no morel “The treasury is now in a comfortable state.” And ye miners, who are Down in tbe coal mines Uuderneatb the g u m Digging dusky diamonds’ All the season round;” light up with smiles the gloomy comers in which you are shut away fiom God’s glorious sunlight until you almost forgot lod; for “ the treasury is now there is a God; for “ the treasury is now in a comfortable state.” “'What difference does that make to us?” do you ask. Why, my friend, yon surprise me. Is it possible that you do not know that you exist to keep the trtasury in a comfortable state? and that you should thank God that with toil and Bslf-denial yon arc enabled to do this? Has anybody been filling your head with the idea that tbe treasury exists fur the good of the people and not tbe people for the good of the treasury? That is a general mistake, my friends, and shows how dangerous it is for tbe masses to meddle with the financial question. The treasury is the place in which taxes are stored up for capitalists to draw inter est from. I t is no matter that you are overworked while many of your brethren have come to crime and want through enforced idle ness. This is not a matter with which oar statesmen (?) have to do. Their business is to see that “ the treasury is in a comfortable state.” But these people wno see with alarm le gulf betweeul tbe rich and the poor rowing ig wider with each year, who the homes of tbe people mote and more passing into a few bands will not be sat isfied with being told that “the treasury is now in a comfortable state.” We want to see the people in a comfortable 'When all nations are gathered before the Son of Man—as they are now—those nations that do nut feed tbe hungry, clothe clothe tbe naked, minister to those who are sick and in prison, will be sen tenced to everlasting destruction; and as there is a God of justice that will be the fate of this nation, and that right speed ily, if we do n ot turn away from tbe rob ber financial systum we are now blindly devoted to. Mr. Hewitt, I don’t pretend to be a statesmin, and the more I see of what statesmen do the more I don’t want to be a Btausman. I would not have on my soul tbe g uilt of statesmanship that keeps men and womeu starving in a laud of plenty for all the honor that ever came to a statesman. But I want to tell you something that I know is true: If the treosnry bad a heart and brain it would not be comfcrtahle one minute till It had poured out bia surplus into the dwindling, sbrnnken channel of trade swelling it to a full fiowing stream car rying on its bosom the business ventures that lie stranded all along its banks waiting bclplessly—must it be hopelesriy? —for our statesmen to open tbe gates ot our treasury and bid the tide of prosper- ity to fiow in. Broken hearts, broken lives, broken fortunes lie all along these shores. Shall we still further drain this channel and then congratulate our selves that “ tbe treasury is now in a comfortable slate ?”—Ceslia B. White- head in Pioneer Co-operator. A Ban Francisco correspondent of the Craftsman says: ‘*1 w ant to mention one matter of a striking character for place in the Craftsman, that i t may find its way into other labor papers east. The Cali fornia Theatre in ihis city wss cioeed about a week ago. McKee Hauken, fa mous in “40,” “ IheD a n iU s,” and other plays was its manager. The federated trades decided to give a benefit on the n t h of May last for tbe strikers on Gould's Southwestern System, and Rankeu was approached for talent A popular mm. k i l signified his wiilinguess to go. Rankin refused lo let him go, and in the most emphatic manner uuso- Ucited, abused the committee in the lol- lowing language; “I do not sympathize with the Eastern strikers against the Gould system conducted by the Koights of Labor, and I will not permit auy one p my employ to appear at the working- men's entertainment The Pacific Coast Boycottet got after him, and the feder ated trades blacklisted the theatre. Tbe individual unions and the Kuigbts of La bor weut to work among themselves m the matter, and s quiet non-intercourse continued. About three weeks ago the federal trades was begged to raise tbe boycott, as Innocent parties were unable to make a living m the theatre; but Mc Kee Rankin was there, and it was de cided to keep it on while he remained. In three days the house closed, and Ran kin has gone to other quariera in search of fame and fodder.” CLOTHING DOM THEY GO! W. & M. Gross’ SPECIAL SALE CHILDfiEN’S WAISTS. Low er than parents can buy the goods. See Display o f iwime in the W indow a t 119, 119X, 121 <& 123 CONGRESS S t . COR. F IF IH S t ., TROY, N. Y. Largest Clothing House In Troy, ADVERTISE IN i CLARION ! T H E ONLY LABOR I’A P E R IN T H E COUNTY. We w a n t only a lim ited num ber of advertisers, and those the b eet friends ol labor. We want only six columns of ad vertisements. We want the remainder of our taper filled with good solid eduea- ional matter. THE CLARION TROY, N. Y. E. H. LISK, P r in ter^ 312 RIVER STREET. TROY, N. Y. Potiera, Dodgerf, sto., lorricnicsaEd Excunions AMBROSE KELLY'S BARGAINS. Best Goods at Rock Bottom Prices, 299 River Street, cor. Fulton. SPECIAL NOTICES. In Selecting—Tonr pictures see onr oil paintings for $3. Those eogravings for 82 cannot be beaten in Troy. We are selling our stock of cabinets below cost elegant ones for 50 cents. Twenty cents buys a French brass frame—something new. See F. W. Sanlsbory & Co.’s stock, 13 Congress street. SAMPLES FREE. very prodnecr in the land should patronize and read the labor preae. The I ndubtbial N ews is published every Sat- fhe co-of^rarive plan, by the ■\'oledo Ohio. ’ ' Knignts of Labor, of Toledoj O h io .'lt is devoted to the organization, education, liberation and elevation of the toiling Euasses. Subscription price, 60 cents a year. Address, “THE NEWS,” junel2;3m Toledo, O. $6-WASHBURN FL0UR-$6 At^m brose Kelly’s, 299 River Street, YC T n meoae The one To then Th«rUJ Reioicei Bejctesj Tneirk A 1 pi m I t * The 0 AMdi faced I \O refhM “H s e t t 18 him ' iuMl