*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE,
JUNE 15, 1895.
The
World of Labour.
At the World's Miners' Congress which lately met in
Paris, a proposal was made to limit the output of coal by miners
refusing to work any more than four days in every week.
SECRETART Brennen has received the following
subscriptions in aid of Joe Short, collected at Boatman station by
Joe Smith, £12.7s.
Collected at Victo and Charlotte vale, by J. D. Smith, £7
13s. 3d.
A CORRESPONDENT
complains that police are employed in carpentering work at a certain
sub-inspector's dwelling up Winton way. He considers this unfair in
view of the number of carpenters out of employment.
MR. Tozer's
attention is directed to the fact that butchers and assistants were
employed killing and boiling down on Sunday, May 26, at a certain
boiling down company's works not a hundred miles from Barcaldine.
THE New Zealand
Workers' Union is asking the Government to accept the names of
unemployed from the secretaries of unions instead of having the men
visiting bureau and police stations day after day.
IN the New Factories
Bill before the English House of Commons John Burns moved that- “On
and after February 1st.
1896, no child under the age of thirteen shall be employed in any
factory in Great Britain.”
ACCORDING to John
Burns 240,000 workers in England have been granted an eight-hour day,
and another half million have secured shorter hours, all through the
eight-hour movement. That's something for unionism to be proud of.
THE Wilcannia branch
of the A.W.U. has passed a resolution that failing the branch
officers being able to get from the Pastoralists' Union local
agreements “they will work solely for unity under any
disadvantages.” There is the proper kind of ring in that
resolution.
THE Railway
Employe's Union of France has decided to purchase out of the funds of
the union shares in the different privately owned railway companies,
so that delegates may be legally empowered to attend the meetings of
shareholders and directors in the interest of the workmen.
ACCORDING
to recent cablegrams from London, the American Plutocracy is
following out the lines laid down in “Caesar's
Column”
in so far as they are organising military regiments from which trades
unionists are excluded, with a view of holding the toiling masses in
slavery.
MR. Edwin Bannister,
an old-time Wellington (N.Z.) comp. has passed over to the great
majority at the age of 68. Australian comps who passed through the
N.Z. Government Printing Office half-a-dozen years ago, will remember
the old man well. He was a conspicuous member of the piece-room in
those days. His son Bob is publisher of the Wellington Evening
Post.
“SHOULD Government
pensioners be allowed to compete in the labour market” is a
question which is receiving a lot of consideration in Melbourne just
now. The Victorian Attorney-General has expressed the view that
Parliament should stipulate that pensioners receiving £200
a year and over should be prohibited from competing with those who
have no pension to fall back on.
THE manager of a
certain boiling-down company in the Longreach district ordered his
men to work the 36 hours intervening between 6 a.m. on Saturday and 6
a.m. on Monday, in two shifts of 18 hours each, thus infringing the
Sunday Observance Act. Being connected with a wealthy company, the
directors of which are well in with the local “justices,” the
manager escapes punishment.
THE Brisbane Civil
Service Co-operative Company should throw open their share list to
the outside public, and no doubt they would immediately have an
acquisition of town shareholders and customers. The public believe in
co-operation. The great difficulty is to get the store or factory
started. The Civil Service Co-operative Store appears to be conducted
on good business lines, and the only thing wanting is to give the
general public an interest in the concern.
WRITES our special:
N.Z. trade unions have had to print new rules for registration under
the Conciliation and Arbitration Act, Wellington Typo. Society has
done a very wise and diplomatic thing – they have secured the
sanction of master printers to the rules, with signatures attached,
and in the books you will find the list printed, comprising nine
firms; and in their wisdom they have gone a step further by
advertising the list in the daily papers, with this note: “All
sympathisers with unionism and those who believe in a fair day's pay
for a fair day's work are requested to patronise these firms.” Let
other unions go and do likewise.
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