the labor enquirer. 368 Larimer Street,^ DENVER. - COLORADO. Official Organ of the Miner’s Board of Conciliation* EXECUTIVE BOARD Felix Hughes, Louisville, Boulder county. John L. Lewis, Erie. Weld county. Fred Mitchell, Blossburg, New Mexico. Peter J. O'Brien, arb on, Wyoming. Jonathan Coslette, Coal Creek, Fremont county. , _ Executive Secretary, John L. Lewis, office 868 Larimer street, Denver. The Weekly Report of the Secretary. Coal Misers’ Headquarters of] Colorado, New Mexico, V 7 yo- (■ ming and Utah. J Providence has favored the improve ment of my health to such a decree that lam once more able to attend to Any duties, and give matters my personal consideration and attention. Matters of general interest and of immediate im portance receives my first consideration, and matters of a local character have often to be placed to one side, only until such time as I am able to givfe attention to all. Recording secretaries feeling aggrieved that the wishes of their assemblies have not been met punctually, or on account of their cases not having as yet been brought before the board, will here find my explanation, and please forbear. I had arranged for a meeting of the board'on last Monday, but I wan called away to join my friend Howells in a con ference with Beckwith, Qnian & Co. and Mr. D. 0. Clark at Omaha. I left on Sun day morning and returned on Tuesday evening, having succeeded in effecting terms of settlement for the Carbon, \\ voming, miners that give great satis faction. No sooner had I reached Den ver, than I was called south to a conven tion of delegates from Walsen, Cameron. El Moro and Coal Creek, and upon re turning from that quarter had to leave again for Wyoming. To be kept running about in this man’ ner pretty much nivht and day is a little disagreeable ; but when we have indis putable evidence that our labors are ap preciated, even duty of this hazardous character has the air of pleasure. “On ward” is our motto to-day, and shall be eternally! We will conquer our foes, or convert them into friends. The latter is our desire, but it is pretty much like drawing blood from a rock. Some people apparently have no heart or principle about them. Thev are m;nof no scru ples, but full of hell and devilish pro pensities. Such a character resides at Pueblo, in the person of Mr. A. H. Dan forth, general manager of the Colorado Coal and Iron company. And is there no way of bringing this man to a sense of.justice, and to pav a tribute of regard to the principles of truth and equity ? Will he still persist in degrading his own personal honor and integrity to satisfy tlie cravings of his aggressive soul? Must the employes of this company suffer the abuse of every law, and cry jut as the heathens of old : “Thru great and mighty Dan forth, under thy 'aw and rule we will live and die ?” Does he propose to deal with his men as he would deal with cattle? Are we human beings or brutes? Are we freemen or slaves? From the bowels of the earth that drank the blood of our herein an-estors I hear the voice of multitudes ascending, ‘Ye are freemen ; our lives bought vour liberty 1”' Then it becomes our hounden duty as free and intelligent citizaus to sustain orr liberties at all hazards, or prove unworthy of our forefathers! The men of Walsen, El More and Coal Creek propose to do this, and we propose to sustain them. I know the men of the north too well to sustain any thought but that they will tally to their support. Mr. Danforth will have his in side men at Walsen to work lor 12.50 a lav, and outside labor as low as $1.75 per day, and says he wants no one to work tor him that is not satisfied with his terms and conditions. { venture to >av there is nota man in the entire south hat is satisfied or can possibly be satis fied with such an oppressive ruling. His experience with blaculegs at El More surelv indicates a profitable]?) re am to the company. You may lie able (i judge so from the fact tha t on Monday ast they had in their employ at El Moro hirty-six blacklegs, and by paying them :-_>,75 a day for doing comparatively nothing and keeping a posse of detec tives, each ton of coal produced is esti mated to have cost sl4 1 That is the way to do business for the company, sure! 1 hirsue ttiis policy, Mr. Ifinforth, and you will certainlv “cook your goose.” The men are not scared with your blus tering policy, neither will they trifle with your way of doing business any longer. Your conduct in refusing to grant the men at Walsen and El M aro the terms and conditions agreed upon at Coal Creek, at the time of settlement, nullifies even the Coal Creek arrange ment, and hence the trouble. Your attempt to . buy men Of the Italian nationality at $lO a head will not work, and well did your mining boss at •;i Moro exclaim, after bavi og made this dirtr attempt, “To hell with the Italians they are all alike, I cannot do anything with them !” A good lesson from an ele ment that vou proposed to make use of, in reducing American labor to a level with the Mongolian race. Now, if you take my advice you will cmne to terms immediately, or you will find yourself and the company involved in trouble that will despoil you yf the honor of being a tyrant! See to it, or the heavens shall resound with war! John L. Lewis. Future Legislation in Britain. I think in the future we shall hear a :reat deal about the obligations of pro ■ertv, and we shall not hear quite so nueh about its rights. What are the •igbts of property ? Is it a right of pro ityty which permits a foreign speculator o come to the country and lay waite two hundred miles of territory in Scotland for the gratification of his love of sport' and to chase from the lands which their fathers tilled long before this intruder was ever heard of the wretched peasants who were convicted of the crime of keeping a pet lamb within the sacred precincts of a deer forest ? Are the game laws a right ol property? Is it a right of property sailors should be sent to sea to pursue their dangerous occupa tion without any sufficient regard to their security ? Lastly, is it an essential condition of private ownership in land that the agricultural laborers in this country, alone of civilized countries, should be entirely divorced from the soil they till, that they should be driven into towns to compete with you for work, and to lower the rate of wages, and that alike, in town and country, the laboring population should be huddled into dwellings unfit for man or beast, where the conditions of common de cency are impossible, and where the conditions lead directly to disease, in temperance and crime ? These are questions which I hope you will ask at the next election, and to which you will demstnd an answer. Do not suffer your selves to be turned aside ; do not be di verted. The owners of property—those who are interested in the existing state of things, the men who have privileges to maintain —would be glad to entrap you from the right path by raising the cry of fair trade, under which they cover their demand for protected indus try, and in connection with which they would tax the food of the people in order to raise the rents of the land lord. Protection very likely might— it probably would —have this result; it would increase the incomes of owners of great estates, and it wouid swell the profits of Ae capitaliits who were fortu nate toengage in the best protected in dustries. But it would lessen fhe total production of the country, it wouid di minish the rate of wages, and it would raise the prices of every necessary of life. —Chamberlain, M. P. Boycott Perry’s Stoves. Below is a list of the names of the ranges and stoves made bv Perry & Co., whom organized labor is boycotting, and all are requested to refrain from purchas ing any of them: Ranges—Belmont, HapDy Home, Ber wick, Brigiiton, Domestic, Bristol, Bruns wick, Quincy, Clifton, Avon. Stoves —American, Berlin, Amherst, Windsor, Wyoming, : Cortland, Golden Harvest, Cambridge, Champion, Colum bia, Harvest, Norwood, Hemisphere, Arcadia Parlor, Fernwood Parlor, Century, Argand, Nation, Florence, Fa vorite, Irving Burner, Derby Champion, Hot Blast, Western, Poland, Aurora, Portland, Lynden. Prince, Classic, Frank lyn, Baltic, Triplet Heater, Duplex Heater, Fernwood, Fernwood Cottage, Clarendon, Clinton, Linwood, Longwood, Grecian, Brightwood, Areola, Alpine, Token. Oak wood, Farmers’ Boiler, Stand ard Boiler. Oil Stove —New Economist. ‘ Boycotting their Enemies. Editor Labor Enquirer. Franceville, Colo., Jan. 27. —I am in structed to write vou on th# action our association took in regard to John S. Perry & Co., stove manufacturers: “Whereas, J. S. Perry, & Co., stove manufacturers of Albany, New Y'orn, have refused work to and discharged members of the Knights of Labor with out sufficient cause; it is Resolved, That this assembly boycott said J. S. Perry & Co., and all store keepers dealing with J. S. Perry will lose the. patronage of the members of this assembly. Resolved, That these resolutions be published in the Labor Enquirer of Denver. The State Legislature. “Forsaken by mv friends, killed in committee, and buried beyond resurrec tion in the Senate,” is the epitaph on the tomb-stone of senate bill No. 33. It seems that some of Mr. Carpenter’s friends played a practical joke and fur nished him a small cofiin to lay bis famous bill in. It’s not fair to charge that joke upon the workingmen. Out side of the burying of bill No. 33 nothing has transposed in senate of direct im portance to us since last report. In the house Mr. Ferguson’s bill No. 104 provides that when a justice of the peace renders judgment for wages if the parties sued shall take an appeal and it can be shown that the appeal was taken for the purpose of delay there shall be added to the cost an amount from fifteen to twenty-five per cent according to the amount sued for, to be given to the plain tiflf. House bill No. 107, by Mr. Ferguson, to legalize labor unions for mechanics and others is a Fenn. law, and if it reads like that one its name does not indicate its object. The bill is not printed vet, so we cannot tell just what it is. House bill No. 176 by Mr. Gilmore, makes all corporations__and companies [ responsible for personal injuries their I employes may sustain. House bill No. 137, regulating the em- j ployment of children, was read the sec- j ond time and referred‘to the committee J on education. House bill No. 164 for some reason or j other was printed about thirty bills ahead of its turn and was on the calen-! dar tc be read Tuesday but the House did not get to it. We have been in formed that an extra large number of these bills has been presented. House bill No. 192, by Mr. Kohn, is to amend the lien law and to make it more effective. House bill No. 208, by Mr. Bradlev, to regulate the payment of wages to em ployes kills the “ironclad” end truck system. House bill No. 210, by Mr. Quillan, prohibits the mining of more than 2,000 pounds of coal for a ton. A house bill also by Mr. Quillan re quires that all corporations and com panies shall pay their employes on or before the tenth of each month. The 6th of February is the last day for the presentation of bills, and until that time there will be but little work done bv the committees. Many of the mem bers are hard at work preparing new bills and cannot devote much time to committee work. In the senate 130 and in the house 321 bills is the number introduced up to Tuesday. If as much time will be consumed de bating each one of fhese bills as there is in the discussion of trifling matters the whole of the ninety days will be taken up. The Ball. The first annual ball of Local Assembly 3218, which was given in Lincoln club hall on Tuesday evening, was a supreme success. The hall was literally jammed full of mena'- raakers from 9 o’clock until after midnight, when the crowd was reduced sufficiently to make dancing more comfortable, and conse quently more enjoyable. It was estimated that tli ere were over 250 couples present. The music was furnished by Ralph Warren who did the prompting, and both were excel lent and gave entire satisfaction. So many were present that it is simply impossible to publish the list entire, and The Enquirer nas no favorites among the noble army of workers. While the ball was a grand success, one mistake by the committee of arrangements, which mistake it is not likely will not be re peated at ttie next annual, and that was, the hall they engaged was not large enough, though it is one of the largest in the city. Nothing short of the rink will do them next time. New Torn. {By Associated Labor Press.] New York, Jan. 26. —The echo of the dynamite explosion among the striking hatters of North Norwalk is raising a world of talk in this quarter of the country. The hatters’association is no more responsible for it than the Van derbilt corporation. The South Nor walk strike has been carried on under the most pacific auspices. The man are as peaceful as are the workers in other Connecticut factories. Most of them are family men, living in their own houses, and belonging to the church, and a sug gestion of using dynamite as a means of gaining their strike is the very last thing they would think of. If ever the facts are got at, it may be taken for granted that the Hatters’ Union will stand fully acquitted. The hatters of this city, Brooklyn and Newark are doing good work in the way of raising funds for the relief of their brothers at South Norwalk. Boycotting is taking a lively turn hereabout. A month ago Ehret’s beer was .boycotted, but the boycott was withdrawn when Ehret surrendered. We are now boycotting Chicago dressed beef. We are now boycotting Frank Tousey’s publications— rat printing office. We are now boycotting the hats of the South Norwalk bosses —lockout. We are now boycotting the dry goods store of Garry Brothers. We are now boy cotting the stoves, ranges and pokers of John S. Perry & Co., of Troy,—prison labor contractors. We are boycotting the Tribune. We are boycotting four dry goods stores besides Garry’s. We are boycotting tenement house cigars. There is no doubt that the system of boycotting tells, and it acts as a counter agent to blacklisting. The Central Labor Union and Knights of Labor are taking a hand in these boycotting ope rations. An eight-hour bill has just been in troduced imo the legislature of this state, and many of the trades are adopt ing measures for backing it up with all their power, The boss builders have adopted a res olution that they will pay their men by the hour at the rate of 40 cents an hour, and the wage-working bricklayers have just put out the announcement that the International Union adopts the hour principle throughout the country, and by that means takes a step in enforcing the eight-hour system, The slight improvement in the trades still continues —not, however, in the printing trade. • J. S. P. Haverhill [By Associated Labor Press. | Haverhill, Jan. 26. —Sheldonville, Wrentbam, boat shops are busy again. Business is brisk at the broom shop of G. M. Smith at North Hadley, and the mills are having an unusual run of custom. Business is picking up at the last fac tories of Amherst, the men that have been out of work are now employed, and more girls than ever are at work. The Wesson pistol factory at Spring field, is running full time and turning out 250 firearms a day. A fresh order calls for 800 of the best rjvolvers for the Boston police. A new paper box factory is shortly to begin operations at the corner of B and Second streets, South Boston. The machinery for the new industry is being put ireplace. The Foxborough Manufacturing com pany, for making sewing machines, etc. has been organized with a capital of $150,000. J. E. Abbot, president, R. F Boyden second, treasurer, W. T. Cook and V. S. Pond directors. Work at the Hopkins quarry in Great Barrington, will be begun as soon as spring opens. It is expected that 200 hands will be employed there, night and dav. Steam power will be used, and the quarry lighted by electric light. D. L. The Temperance Union Entertainment. The Temperance Union wili meet at No. 371 Lawrence street, Sunday night, February 1, and render the following programme : Recitation, Miss Edith Behymer; piano solo, Miss Bertha Crites ; recita tion, Master Ivan Wettengel; piano solo, Miss Kate Churchill; speech,- James Light; Duet; Misses Farnsworth and Lewis ; speech, Doctor J. W. Van Zandt; instrumental selection, Prof. Brieglen and Miss Martin. Everybody is invited to attend. THE LABOR ENQUIRER. ANOTHER COFFIN WANTED! ——• i v #■« ■ —p i \ House Bill 164. Introduced by Mr. Carstarpben. A BILL FOR AN ACT TO PROVIDE FOR THE PROTECTION OF PER SONS AND'PROPERTY IN CASE OF “STRIKES” OR CONFLICTS BETWEEN EMPLOYERS AND EMPLOYES, AND TO PRESCRIBE PENALTIES FOR ACTS COMMITTED IN VIOLATION OF SUCH PROVISIONS. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Colorado: Section 1. It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to directly or indirectly prevent, impede or interfere with, or attempt to pre vent, impede or interfere with, any other person or persons by means of threats, menaces, acts of violence, or by words or conduct calculated or designed to inspire fear, from freely contracting to perforin, or entering upon and peaceably continuing in any lawful work, service, business, occupation, duty or employment whatsoever. Sec. 2. Whenever any person or persons shall voluntarily quit the service or employment of any person, company or corporation and engage in what is commonly known as a “ strike,” or shall be dismissed from service by his or their employer, then, and in every such case, it shall be the duty of the said person or persons who may so quit or be so discharged to wholly vacate and depart from the property and prem ises of his or their former employer within twenty-four hours after so quitting or being so discharged, and not thereafter return, or go upon, or remain about said property or premises, except by the permission of said employer. Provided , However, That if the presence of such em ploye or employes upon or about said property or premises, after said twenty-four hours, should become necessary for any lawful purpose or business, then and in s&i fee it shall be lawful for him or them to remain upon and about said property and premises for such reasonable time as may be requisite to complete said purpose and business. Sec. 3. It shall be unlawful for any two or more persons to conspire together to do or commit any or all of the acts prohibited by the fore going sections, or either of them. Sec. 4. Any person or persons who shall be guilty of violating the provisions of either of the foregoing sections shall, upon conviction thereof, be punished by confinement in the Penitentiary, at hard labor, for a term, in the discretion of the Court, of not less than six months nor more than than two years for ehch offense. Sec. 5. It shall be the duty of the Sheriff of each county, whenever complaint shall be made to him by any person, company or corporation, that any person or persons are engaged (within his county) in violating, or have unlawfully assembled, or are about to unlawfully assemble for the purpose of violating any of the provisions of this' Act. to immediatly thereafter summon to his aid a sufficient posse, and forthwith disperse any and all persons who may be assembled together for any such un lawful purpose, and to arrest and bring before any Justice of the Peace of his county, or other examining Judge or Magistrate, to be dealt with according to law, such person or persons he may find engaged in committing or about to commit any of the acts prohibited herein. It shall likewise be the duty of said Sheriff, with the aid of said posse, to protect both persons and property within his county from injury or destruction threatened by, or reasonably anticipated, from any mob or other body of men collected or acting together for purposes forbidden by this Act. And said Sheriff shall furnish said protection whenever he is requested so to do in writing by any person, company or corpora tion whose' property or employes, officers, agents or representatives shall or may be in danger from attack or disturbance by such mob or other unlawful assemblage of persons. Sec. 6. Any sheriff who shall fail, neglect or refuse to discharge in good faith the duties imposed on him by this Act, so far as the same maybe practicable; by the exercise of reasonable skill and diligence, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not less than one hundred nor more than one thousand dollars for each offense and as a part of the judgment of conviction the court may remove said sheriff from office. And the said sheriff, who may be in default as afore said, whether prosecuted criminally or not. shall be civilly liable per sonally as well as upon his official bond to any person, company or cor poration who may sustain or suffer any loss to business or injury to property or person in consequence of said sheriff’s neglect or refusal as aforesaid. Sec. 7. Whenever such sheriff has reasonable grounds to believe that he may be unable to suppress and disperse any mob or body of men acting in concert for any purpose forbidden by this Act, or be unable to afford effectual protection to persons and property as herein provided, it shall be his duty to forthwith notify the Governor of this State of such fact, and it shall thereupon be the duty of said*Governor to cause the whole of the militia force of the State, or so much thereof as he may reasonably deem necessary, to be placed at the disposal of said sheriff, and the latter shall use the same to suppress all unlawful assemblages in contravention of this Act and fully protect persons and ’ property from mob violence. Should such sheriff fail, neglect or refuse to perform any or all of the duties herein imposed upon him, then in such case it shall be the duty of the Coroner of the county to fulfill such duty so omitted upon the part of said sheriff and in such case the Governor shall, upon the requi sition of such Coroner, furnish him such militia forces to be used with like force and effect as though requested by and furnished to said sheriff. In the opinion of the General Assembly an emergency, as contem plated by the Constitution, exists for this Act going into effect forthwith, it shall, therefore, become a law immediately from and after its passage. Front the Barbarisms of 1350 A. D Editor I,abor Enquirer: We will turn back in our minds the wheels of time until the fingers point to the year j 1350. To do this we must forget the history i of 500 years ; with all the progress that has been made in the intelligence of the race! during that long time. We will leave behind us in our journey backward America with all its institutions, for it has not yet been discovered by Colum bus. We will have to blow out the gas, also electricity, for the electric current was only known where it w-as seen as it played in the lightning. The locomotive nor the old stage coach have yet been invented. All travelers must go on foot, for that useful animal the horse has not come into general use. AYe must leave broadcloth and silk also in our travels backward, as the power loom and the spinning gin have not been heard of. The inhabitants of the land were clothed in the roughest material or in the skins of wild beasts, and man almost as ignorant as tire beasts themselves. The greater part of them were the serfs and armed retainers of their feudal lords; "who had already claimed the land and all that therein was. The first book has not yet been printed. There has nothing been beard ef the Puritans in England, for the Reformation has not yet taken place. No protestant church and no missionary society. Even coal and coal mining is only just begin ning to be talked about. The art of weavtng cloth has just been im ported into England from Flanders. But the ! Order of the Gaiter has already been insti tuted to decorate the flunkeys of the court.of King Edward 111, who has just been defeated at the battle of Bannockburn. The civil war has how come to an end and the black plague has carried off one-half the people, and those yet remaining on the land of the living were putting on airs, and thought themselves some body, when the bill known as senate bill No. 33 was introduced into the English legislature in 1350, and that old bill which was wiped off the English statute book in 1524 lias been ound and introduced into the Colorado sen ate by that noble patriot of his state and comitv, M. B. Carpenter, a senator in good standing in the good old republican party. Alas! alas! how are the mighty fallen. Would it'not he a good tiling for the work ingmen to institute an or.‘er to he known as the Honorable Order of the Halter to deco rate all such flunkeys as vote for such hills as No. 33, introduced by the senator from Arap ahoe as the C. C-& I. company’s reform hills. They should also introduce the full picture of that far-off date. There being no men suf ficiently skilled to trace out the guilt of an offender, it was their custom to appeal the case to the decision of heaven; the suspected man was requested to meet his antagonist in single combat, and the right was held to by on his side who was so fortunate as to cleave the Head of Ins antagonist, or pierce him through with-a lance. But probably the sen ator from Arapahoe would hesitate before in troducing such a measure as this lest suspi cion should fall upon himself, and some sturdy member of the Trades Assembly should ask him to come and settle it in ac cordance wi h the aboy-e code. It is devoutly to be desired that all such bills be relegated to the waste paber basket rather than dis grace the statute book of Colorado. It is a great pity that men with minds so small, and hearts so much out of sympathy with human ity and the age in which we live are not also relegated back to private life rather than be ing found in the halls of the legislature. The time is past and gone when such measures as the above can be carried out in a land where the people are free men and all men born equal. 1 hey do not fit in with the spirit lof the age in which we live. A Unionist. January 28, 1885. Personal. John Gray, of Como, was in the city Fri day, and made a pleasant call upon The En quirer. The editor has had evidences of the friendship and good heart of Brother Gray on more than one occasion and, as he brought with him on this visit the funds to pay the subscription 6f sixty-nine subscribers, there is a special reason to feel proud of hi friendship. Long live John Gray, and may sorrow never cross his threshold. Dlffertiiccft. \ For The Enquirer. A, The difference between a State Social ist and an Anarchist is very small, anas is chiefly that each accuses the other of principles which neither holds. For example, Anarchists accnse Socialists of wishing to uphold a despotic state, simi lar to what they now see, while Social ists charge Anarchists with striving for a condition in which all system and or ganization are repudiated. The first is not true ; perhaps the second is not, although the term anarchy fully war rants the charge. I cannot concede the word Socialism to Anarchists. Socialism implies the science of society, but destruction is not aßcience. Socialists have faith in growth while Anarchists, according to “Cato,” desire a general destruction, followed by “ a rejuvenated world,” that is, a world going back to youth for a start, of course with the inexperience of vouth. Anarchists love analogies, but they produce none that fits the case. They can find nothing in nature to show that destruction is necessary to progress. Nature may build the Dew upon the de cay of the 015, but not on destruction. A man dying of ofd age, is an instance of decay, but it startles no one, while death by violence gives an unnecessary shock. “We believe the old system will be overthrown by force, and we have the histor.y of the world to prove no great change was ever brought about inWy other way,” says Cato. A “great change” i« not necessarily a change for the better. All the aggressive force that has ever been applied was simply an attempt to transfer privilege from one partv or nation to another. If history proves anything it is that with all the wars, blood and murder, people still starve. Victims of injustice are as much oppressed as they ever were, for in any past age they could do no more than suffer and die. Our much ap plauded revolt from England wasmereTy a protest) 'by "slaveholders here against sending wealth created* TTy tbeirUaves over to other slave drivers hT"Tingland. It is not enough to prove that force and blood will bring change; it must be shown that they will bring improve ment. Murder is but revenge and re venge can never be reform. Cato remarks: “We cannot prevent the agonv of a new birth; the throes of the Revolution.” No analogy exists between a birth and the improvement of society. As well might we say of a drunkard that to re-' form, he must again become an infant. If to destroy a part of society will reform it, then to destroy the drunkard’s abused stomach will reform him. Society may be compared to a sick man. The old theory that bleeding will cure disease is probably the basis of the Anarchist’s idea that bleeding will cure society. I admire the zeal of the Anarchist but be reverses every.truth. He wants “nat ural selection and natural law,” yet be gins by violating natural law. Man is the unit of society. Natural law says he must have a head, body, limbs and or gans in proper relation. Cato would dis integrate these parts with dynamite ; de stroy the units that the whole may be perfect. He would abolish evil bv force, and thinks a good system will grow up of itself and therefore offers no plan for reconstruction. Against this is the doc trine that if we establish the new svs tem the evil will decay. Plenty of facts support the latter theory. Elias Howe did not demand that all sewingJjj' hand should be stopped so that his sewing machine could succeed "Stage coaches did nothq,ve to be destroyed so that the railroad could be used. Prof. Morse did not ask that the mails be' abolished to make his telegraph a success. Improve -tnent in the healing art wa° not affected bv killing doctors of the old school, nor can a new system of diet be established by killing the old-fashioned cooks. Do you like analogies, you destructionisfcs ? Answer this: If a few improvements have been made without blood, how do vou know a complete reform requires it? What particular features of the new so ciety can be established only by murder? Prove a scientific connection between murder and reform. I do not say Anarchists desire blood shed for itself, nor that force should never be used in an emergency, such as an invasion. But to admit the justice of using force in defense, is rarTromjjsaylpg it can bTTt'ised as a nVefijns of social, ad vgffCFtivfefit', The method would bear no relation to the object sought. To defend what we have is not progress. Troops sent to Hocking Valley would act on the defensive. They would de fend what has always been considered a just system of working the mines. As the matter stands the strikers are the in vaders. Would it remedy the evil to blow up soldiers who are just as willing to defend the equal right of all to the coal should that be made the law? I cannot persuade myself that it would. Take your destruction behind the tools of the law and destroy the law itself. You can do that bv a -majority sooner than yo ran muster a decisive fighting force. The miners do not vet know for what they should fight, and they cannot learn by hurting some one. If their 20 cents per ton is their sole object they had better drop the whole matter. No | object, short of the, ownership of the j mines by the miners or the state, is worth an ounce of dynamite, j Beyond destruction Anarchists have given no plans except in a general wav. They talk about Liberty as though it were something to be caught and tamed. They have not learned that in a perfect system the highest liberty is to recognize their relations to other men. They should | draw up a plan for the future society, or : adopt one already formulated, work for iit and let the old decay. If the people are ready for a new system they can adopt it peaceably. Cato in times past advocated “individ- I ual sovereignty,” but he is now a collect- Twist. Because our welfare depends on unity he denies the right of any man to “hie away to some secluded nook” when -dynamite becomes the popular diversion, even though the prudent person exer cises that precaution at “his own cost,” as an individual sovereign would say. One by one tfie Anarchists fall into the ranks of the State Socialists. In gen eral assertion they are still Anarchistic, but in detail they see their inconsisten cies and become disciplee of order. What they call being “stnng to the qnick by covert sneers” is only being worsted in argument. Those who believe that a sci entific system is practicable have no need for “covert sneers,” “inuendoes," “misrepresentations” nor destruction. The Anarchist programme is, first a grand fight, then the smoke of battle will clear away, after which the Sun of Liberty is to beam on an infant world ; it could not possibly beam without first emerging through smoke. The martyrs are to be hung, then the timid theorists will come out of their nooks, enjoy the benefits and with characteristic modesty claim all the merit of a destruction which they always opposed. "These Socialists who rest their hopes upon a peaceful solution by the ballot, will step in, share in the glories which others created for them, and of course, claim all the praise and reap all the glory.” Any “misrepresentations” visible in the ahpve? Any ‘innuendoes” peeping out? There is nothing “covert” about it at least. To get even I ought to charge that Cato will raise the disturbance, then hide, leaving State Socialists to do the fighting, but will forbear. Here are some Anarchistic harmonies : “The old system will be overthrown by force.” “The Anarchists are doing their share in preparing for the inevitable change.” "We can neither hasten or retard it.” Condense this, and we have: We will furnish our share of the necessary force, hut we can do nothing. Well, then, if von can do nothing, come with me to my secluded nook where we will make an earnest eudeavor to “harmonize” on a plan for the future, while we are waiting for dynamite to cease lacerating the gentle zephyrs. Zeno. THE WORKING WOMEN. They Hold a Public Meeting In the In terest of Orjt&nlxatlon -which is a Grand Success. The meeting announced under the auspices of Hope assembly. Knights of Labor, 3314, was held at Armory hall on Thursday evening. The attendance was greater than even the most saneuine had hoped for, every chair in the hall being filled and nearly every inch of standing room being occupied. A large majority of the audience were women and girls and the interest they manifested and their close attention throughout the evening were noticeableand encouraging. Speeches were made by Dr, De La Matyr, Joe. Murray, of Fort Collins, and others, the first named gentleman being the orator of the occasion. The necessity for and benefits of organization were the principal themes, and a canvass of the audience by a committee resulted in securing a list of sixty candidates for membership in the ladies’ assembly. The meeting was a grand success in every particular, and it is to be hoped similar meetings will be frequently held by the wise and brave sisters of 3314. Minersville. fßy Associated Labor Press.] Minersville, Pa., Jan. 26. —Reductions and suspensions seem to be the order of the day. Pardee & Co. of Hazelton have sus pended a number of their collieries the past week. The Lehigh Coal Co., of Jeddo, are still working, but their employes are compelled to sign an iron-clad agreement which binds them to walk a certain chalk line and endure the worst kind of tyranny. Forty employes at the Coal & Iron Co's, shops at Pottsville, have suspended indefinitely. The Fishbaek rolline mills, at Potts ville, after a month suspension because of lack of orders, have resumed work. About one thousand hands are em ployed at these mills. The Philadelphia A Reading Railroad company, with a floating debt of many millions of dollars, has just been reor ganized and will likely save itself from bankruptcy for a while longer, at least. The plan adopted is favorable to the Vanderbilt interest, which consists of about 300,000 shares of stock. F. P. Cincinnati. | By Associated I>abor Press.] Cincinnati, Jan. ?6 The Interna tional Workingmen’s Association held a meeting last Saturday night and paraded the streets for a short time, but the ex treme cold caused a postponement of the parade until some future time. Short speeches were made in Fountain square. Some of the mottoes carried read as fol lows : “Order and Empty Stomachs Can Never be Allies,” “Bread or Blood,” “No Quarter,” and others that would be food for thought. It was a fine looking body of men and the speeches indicated intel ligence in no small degree. Education Wouldn’t Peed Him. The state papers and the aristocratic population of Frankfort, Kentucky, are terribly agitated over a poor devil who happened to .be a graduate of Harvard, going to the house of correction. He was a tramp, who wanted winter quar ters, and was refused ; he immediately went out and smashed a rock through a plate-glass window. He now has com fortable winter quarters. The fact of his having graduated from a fashTbnable col lege, when young, goes for naught, in mv mind. What is his education to a poor devil, if he is denied the opportunity to use it. —Labor Leaf. More Dynamite News. London, Jan. 29,—The Times’ Paris telegram says that the object of the coming meeting of the dynamite dele gates in Paris is, to propose terms of affiliation with the Fenian associations. Several extremists are anxious to form such a union. They are prepared to abandon the policy of making attacks upon public buildings, if the Fenians will aid the dynamiters in directing their efforts toward the destruction of British war ships, and with that view, it is proposed that ex-Head Center Stephens shall be invited to attend the conference, It is also intended to move for the enactment of a French law against the peree:ution of Irihmen in Paris by the Bourdier-Montequet detec tive agency. It is also intended to discuss McDermott’s conduct in remain ing as a spy in the British service. The leaders of the movement are aware of the whereabouts of McDermott, and it is threatened that they intend to offer a reward for his removal.