4 r ME BEAVER RADICAL. SMITH CDBTIS, Editor. JBEAVER, PA.. Friday morning, April 11 til* 1873. STRIKES. The workingmen of the east, it is said, are preparing to make a strike either to retain the eight hour sys tfem or for an increase of wages. *The loss to the country, by means of this practice is r simply enormous, the derangements of business disas astrous, and the bad feeling engen dered between the laborer and em ployer not only unpleasant, but de-, siructive ofsthat mutual interest and 1 reciprocal friendship that ought tO i exist, where the profits of industry \ are equally and justly distributed. It is impossible to disguise the fact that certain classes of men enjoy , great advantages over other classes in the rewards of their labor. Great fortunes are made in a few years, not by producing value, but by ac cumulating value that others have produced. Workingmen perceive that they are, in some way not derstcod, cheated out of the full en joyment of what they earn, in order that forty or fifty per cent, of their hard earnings may go to enrich oth ers who have more brains, better ad vantages, higher enjoyments, plenty of leisure and never are compelled tq struggle with all their strength ten or twelve boars a day to obtain the simple necessaries of life. This unequality of conditions and unjust difference of what men receive for their labor are creating a feeling of unrest and dissatisfaction among the laboring classes, and they' are agitating the question “Why is this? or how can we improve our con dition In organization there ; is power, and the workingmen in “our large manufacturing dictricts, real izing this fact, have combined to gether in unions and leagues to reg ulate the price of labor and to com pel employers to equally share, all things considered, with them the profits of their combined industry. The system of strikes is intended to accomplish this purpose. The means may not be very well chosen, and workingmen may not receive much immediate benefit therefrom, but they seem to attract public attention tto the subject of wages and the condition of the laboring class, and uq many instances obtain tka poravy relict demanded. The principle of striking for high er wages belongs to the plain of commercial morality. The working men have been taught by the stock gamblers, speculators and merchants, and ought not alone to be blamed for acting from no higher motive than do'those classes in their busi ness transactions. When the coal dealer at Cincinnati, by purchasing large quantities of coal, can con trol the market, he demands and receives his own price, which may be higher than- the intrinsic value of the coal, but taking advantage of & certain condition of things that he brought about, he compels per- j sons to pay him more for his coal j than it is worth. So when a man- J ufaoturer has received a heavy con- | tract, the workingmen, upon whose j labor he is dependent, take advan- j tage pf his necessities and demand j whatever they please for their la- : hor. The principle seems to be j that of eacltone for himself, and the | devil takes the hindmost. The manufacturers have their unions and combine against the con sumer. Only a few days since a number : of leading calico manu facturers of the East who, it is as serted, produce ninety per cent, or more,of all the calico printed in the United States, having combined to sell, their calicoes at a certain fixed price of eleven and one-half cents per yard, united in signing a letter to the well known firm M S. B. Chittenden e estimated by the same stand ard by which we judge other men. When the infamous Minnequa job was before the House he made a speech against tbe bill, denouncing it as corrupt in tbe morning, and in the afternoon, made one in favor of it, giving as a reason that he had received a letter from some preacher, asking him to vote for it. Tbe influence that was brought to bear upon him was of a very d ifferent kind, however, and was so apparent as to provoke tbe con tempt even ol those with whom he was acting. One member declared that it was tbe most remarkable conversion since that of the Apostle Paul. The Appor tionment bill passed does not differ ma terially frouLthe bill as it passed the Sen ate. Your district is composed of the conntles of Beaver, Lawrence and Waah ington, as your corespondent long sitl predicted it would be. General w h ? made a desperate effort to save \\ moreland and sink Washington w ? h ' Greene and Payette, but was unsuccessj It is to be hoped this is the last of a n D . lionments for years to come, for the i islature has had this question to q over for three successive years, 6 General Grant visited Harrisburg terday, and remained until this morni the gueai of CuL J. D. Cameron T ? g Legislature unanimously passed a r eso ! tion requesting him to visit ih e tt ‘ Houses, which he accepted, and last nil! was introduced to both Houses, spendin some time in conversation with Sp™, S and Members. rs Gov. Hartranft continues to send in to messages by the dozen, and th U 8 £ both Houses have sustained him \* X remarkable to see with what unaninr,' 3 those who denounced him during t/ campaign last fall, now endorse and 1* plaud bis action. He is to-day the popular man in the State, and so. It is gratifying to know he has d* deterrained to pursue the course be ha marked out, and that he has the courage requisite for the undertaking. FROM PHILADELPHIA, Philadelphia Openings- Spring p akll lons-ltflM itarnham Before ib e s„ Prem© Coart-Cod In the t'on«ic u . “on-Mr Hawkins—Pleasure Attrar (loos. Correspondence of tbe Radical. Philadelphia, April?, 1871. We still find our thick wraps comforta ble, although the swelling buds of the horse chestnut trees and the fiat of milliners make us sensible of the approach of spring. This year March could not dven by courtesy be called a m ? nth *Ji|ieveD April is behind hand la balmy feezes. Our openings in Phila delphia are great events. About three weeks anterior to Easter Sunday all the ladies whose own or whose husbands names happens to be in the Directory,are Inundated with showers of invitations to visit some lady's opening, day and hour being fixed. We have not yet reached lb New York custom of snug little lunches, assisted by dainty wines, where it is said, (but of course it is a slander) that the choice vintages open the hearts and pock ets of the ladies. The only placa where a lunch table is spread gratuitously for the feminine sex in this city is by the en terprising firm of Fletcher* Mitcbel.who in the fall set out the choicest canned fruits and vegetables for their customer to taste. To return to our milliners, how ever, bonnets of every sort, shape and style are to be seen, prices being some what reduced. A very neat hat can be purchased from flS'lc $2O. A new style which answers for either hal or bonnei is the favorite. Worn down on the bee is is a hal, set back ofl the head it becomes a bonnet. A hat is considered suitable lor everything except going to church, where Jnone but a very unevsngelical woman would be seen without a bonnet. Easter Sunday is tbe proper time to appear in new spring attire. The reason for this is obvious, as thq majority of people rfbogo to church are not entirely to the fact that It is a fine place to see the fashions, and the services being unusually protracted, better opportunity is afforded for inspection. Indeed Easter is a great festival here, even TJnitarlan churches be ing draped with flowers for the occasion, Even masculine human nature crops out in yellow kids and gingham neckties to do honor to tbe season. We have had quite an interesting case here this week, before the Supreme Ooarl in Banc, on an appeal from a decision of Judge Sharswood, at Nm Print, the ap pellant, MisS Bara Lam, seeking damages from certain election officers who refused to receive her vote. Miss Barnbam argu ed her case herself, being sustained by the presence and countenance of a number oi Indies, wbo doubtless felt that she pleaded tbelr cause as well as her own. Though she made a most exhaustive argument the Court sustained ihe decision of Judge Sharswood. Miss Barnbam will take her case to the Supreme Court of the railed Slates. j The wreck of the Atlantic has j filled out local journals with warning to ' the proprietors of nur new line of steaffi ers, safely being commended rather than speed. It was indeed a sad com men ten the representative character of man that four hundred and fifty of them could not save one woman. Probably, ; these Liverpool sailors and their gallvd | captain considered themselves so thor | ough’y representing woman that there was no necessity for ter to live at all, so allowed all to be drowned like rats in a trap, beneath fastened down hatches. The Rev. Mr. Barns has recently pre sided at a meeting opposed to the #ffoTt to put God Into the Constitution. “The r resolutions offered and accepted should have been sufficient to satisfy any reason able person of the dangerous character of that movement. It is a most remaikable fact, that in a country where intelligence is as generally diffused as our own, to* 3 appealing to a popular prejudice are so frequently passed without due reflection, as to their ultimate effect Were it, not that many of our laws are actually d letters, we would realize this fact more fully. In view of this our Sunday papers are beginning to growl over the act pass ed some lime since by Congress, punish ing the transmission of obscene matter through the United States mails. A right enough in Us self, but not sufficient ly explicit as it stands at present. Now. too, we begin to read about the Govern -