*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE
April 20, 1895.
Smoke-Ho.
Ten
acres of land is considered a large farm in Japan.
THE
latest rendering of an old motto; “Do others and see that they
don't do you.”
“A
STARVING man has a natural right to his neighbour's bread.” -
CARDINAL MANNING.
Peter
White, A.W.U. delegate, was from latest advices, in the hospital at
Hughenden, and not at all well.
THE
director of the Sydney Benevolent Asylum makes a special appeal for
charity so as to save 1000 children from starvation!
MORETON
Frewen, the bimetallism lecturer, now in Melbourne, has such faith in
the prospect of an increase in silver values that he has purchased
the Central Broken Hill Co. for an American syndicate at £1
per share, or £150,000.
THE
Rev. A. C. Hoggins (of St. Barnabas', Ithaca) will deliver another
lecture in the Trades Hall on Saturday evening, the 20th
April, entitled “The Dismal Science and its Transformation.” The
lecturer deserves a large audience.
SINCE
the A.W.U. started a co-operative store at Hughenden, rations are
quite 25 percent, cheaper than before the store was established. If
small co-operative efforts can do this, what might be done by
municipal and State co-operation, in other words by Socialism?
AT
a conference of the Independent Parliamentary labour party of Great
Britain it was decided that a tax on all unearned incomes should be
advocated with a view of providing a State pension for all persons
over 50 years of age, also for disabled workers and widows.
Mr.
George Black, M.P., in a lecture on “Individualism” at Leigh
House, Sydney, quoted the following: “Communism means to every man
according to his need; Socialism means to every man according to his
deed; Individualism means to every man according to his greed.”
W.C.
CURTIS, Secretary A.W.U., says he will be satisfied when the drapery
department of the co-operative store is in full swing – that is, as
near satisfied as he ever intends to be. He bars a man who is
satisfied, as he appears to be only a little removed from a fat
bullock running in a good paddock.
Jack
Hoolan's Mundic Miner
referring
to the Townsville Herald
says;
“During good times it cracked up anything and everything, and when
hard times arrives it sits in the ashes and utters barren curses on
the Labour Party. Well, this portion of the labour party curses back
at it heartily and unmistakably.”
BISHOP Thornton
objected to the performance of a skirt dance at a church bazaar, and
the “dander of the ladies is riz.” The ladies' committee has
forwarded a letter to the Bishop calling attention to his utterances,
and asking him to state definitely wherein they have sinned. Skirts
will be a lot of trouble to that Bishop yet.
A
RAID has been made by the municipal authorities in Brisbane on the
shops of several respectable grocers, and sundry weights and scales
have been seized for not being up to the standard of avoirdupois.
Cheating customers by light weights is not considered robbery in the
ordinary sense by some of the unco
guid. “It
is merely a matter of trade.”
DURING the
festivities held in Longreach on the occasion of Governor Norman's
visit it was remarked that all the eatables and drinkables required
for the various gorges (with the exception of ginger beer and
lemonade – which were not in great demand) were fetched up from the
coast. Even the ladies required as partners at the squatters' ball
were imported for the occasion.
GRANT
Allen's new book entitled “The Women Who Did” is likely to
produce a great sensation in the reading world. It is the story of a
woman who, though pure and spotless, refuses to bind herself by any
marriage ceremony, religious or secular. Stead, in the Review
of Reviews, severely
condemns it, and even hints that it will be the death of Mr. Allen's
literary reputation.
CHAS. R. Wilde was
brought before a St. Kilda (Vic) court for not paying a fine of 17s.
for keeping an unregistered dog. He said that he was only earning 8s.
a week at Gippsland, and his wife hawked goods from door to door. He
had now no worldly possessions, having recently been sold out. A few
years ago, as their worships knew, he was worth £20,000, but the
banks had ruined him completely.
Sir Chas. Lilley and
Sir Bruce Burnside, arbitrators in the great dispute between the New
Zealand Government and the Midland Railway Company, have adjourned
the case owing to the difficulty of finding a suitable umpire of
equal rank with themselves. What is wrong with the women of New
Zealand ? Cannot one of them be selected as umpire? This would get
over the difficulty of rank and establish a precedent as well.
THE fat man
Socialism in our time recently met in combat in the Melbourne City
Council. It was over the question whether the council should
undertake the lighting of private premises with electricity. The fat
persons, with tears in their voices, trotted out all their stale
arguments about private enterprise and competition, but with no
avail. So far as electric lighting in Melbourne is concerned
Socialism in our time has come to stay.
THE attempt on the
part of the Courier to make the Labour party responsible for
the failure (if failure it be) of New Australia is mean and cowardly.
Communism and Socialism have no real connection with each other.
Socialism is already to some extent an established fact, as witness
the post office and other State departments; Communism is a lofty
ideal which can only be realised by perfect men and women. The fact
that men can not fly is not exactly evidence that they cannot walk.
AT a meeting of the
Hughenden Town Council and some of the towns people an effort was
made to get some of the ratepayers' money for drinking purposes for
the Ministerialists visiting town. The mayor and Alderman Curtis
objected, so admirers had to feed the Government party. It was argued
by one alderman that if ratepayers' money were spent in shouting for
the Premier and party, the money would come back threefold. What an
exalted opinion these men must have of the Government when they
declare they could be bought with food and drink?
AT the meeting of
the Wellington (N.Z.) Eight Hours' Demonstration Committee it was
proposed to elect Mr. D. P. Fisher a life member of the committee,
but there being no provision in the rules to meet the case, the
by-law committee was instructed to draft an amendment in the
direction required. This honour is well deserved, for no one has
worked harder in this and other causes pertaining to the betterment
of the condition of workers, organised or unorganised, than Dave, who
has served us well in every office from the lowest to the very
highest. Dave Fisher, of the Typo. Society! Why, it is easily
remembered that he was president of the Maritime Council, of the
Trades Council, the Typo. Society, the Seaman's Union, and other
bodies at one and the same time. A first-class organiser, too. Yes,
this is the least honour that can be paid you, Dave. D.P.F. Holds a
frame in the time-room of the Government Printing Office. His many
friends and acquaintances 'neath the Southern Cross will be
interested in this par.
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