Show We published the other day that Andrew An-drew Carnegie had given 5300000 and that Edward Cooper and Abram S llowltt had added 200000 more to en i tblc Coopers Institute In New York tol educate about 500 pupils In the scientific I principles which underlie the different trades Mr Edward Boyce in his Miners Magazine says that labor has I I I been robbed of nearly nil Its product Lhifs fording I Into a condition of help f lessness and dependence and that this 1 I lij I particularly true of American labor I sri But Mr Hewitt speaking of this oroposed Increase In the usefulness of ho Institute I founded by Peter Cooper I says the pupils will nil have to go also J rthore to learn the trades lheinselvt I I tad thus become workmen but that Its It-s the Idea of the trustees to teach TTh N 1 1 thor the use of tools so that when they leave the Coopers Union schools I they may enter upon employments that I will pay them from the star But aNew i L a-New York paper says of these benevolent I benevo-lent anticipations Mr Hewitt reckons reck-ons wlthoul the trades unions which will set themselves mubbornly against allowing the graduates of the Coopers t Union schools to enter upon any nrj t ploymont whatever In New York city I tI I j I I and adds if a single one of the I Coopers Union graduates should cecure a job at 515 a week a ntrlke by every f other workman alongside of him would instantly ordered and he would have f to quit He would not be allowed to I Join a union lie would have to leave I I the city and secure work somewhere else That doesnt look as though I American workfngmen were quite yet slaves It looks as though the hardest r thing that a young man has lo compete com-pete against In his effort to earn a llv lIng by any skilled work Is the combination com-bination of his felloivworkcrtt to prevent pre-vent his having a chance to even earn I his bread I |