Show LIFE OF JOHN BURNS RIses DY FORCE OF HIS CHEAT ABILITY 111 < fw rl Cream its Ilrrn llsplil Clue lfto snd He Its Twice neon AikiHl In HI c blol 1olllon IUS Sperkee p JOHN IIUIINS the Kngllsh nodal Ut who Is vMtlo 11D l 1 America at present Iho New York World taj It 1 teas In HSU that Mr + llurtu referred to American workmen tin boaster and bluffers because they lId not re pond with cash to help uv lain the great strike of tho London ilockmcn of that fear This characterization crested tome feeling nt the time among the American lenders but It has obviously been forgotten for-gotten Tin growth of John turns toward prominence In the rank of labor reformers or an many arc pleaded to term them human emancipator emanci-pator has been to phenomenal and lie in I today N > universally accepted as the champion of all labor champion that there will bo little disposition to look backward for criticism of hit past conduct or utterance No longer agothau tho early sprlngof the present year Mr llurns nt that time and now member of parliament parlia-ment agltatul In the house of common tho adoption of a bill to put a fag upon what ho called statesmanship states-manship by prosecuting agency Ho found had found at that time nothing Illlorn I Inconvenient tn mi uptodato stale man than to Ira confronted with the Immature and violent atatcmcntsot his earlier jean It mutt bo admitted begin of the past with which to be menaced Ills life has been and U thoroughly consistent In the main He has to be sure as one step In iris progrc tonard fame an an emancipator followed another an-other Improved such oecs lon + by of organized labor In London and John hums wa the head of It The police talutrd Ilurn and the eoplo of the greatest city on the globe were easy In mlhdIn pile of lire fact that the public demonstration wo In connection con-nection with a gigantic strike tlll In progrcM at tho consclousnew that over the council of the unemployed ouch a man ai John hums presided Since this demonstration of MM the upvtard progress of the engineer so elitist and statesman has been constant con-stant Not only lUll he been honored with a place In tine llrltlsh parliament but ho Iran twice been asked to till n 1 cabinet position lladstone recognized iris genius and power for good and taking him by thohandononeoecaslon Midi Vo have both been l lined worker Mr Hum and I hope you limy lira many years to put your principal Into practice It II as a municipal reformer re-former that Mr Ilurn Is 1 best knots In London but what ho and lime associated as-sociated with Mm have accomplished 1 III that direction would scarcely be If escribed In detail appreciated by the people of New Yorkfor entirely differ cut are the condition obtaining hero and there It Iwith tho broaderand more general flews of the man that public opinion In thin country will have to do He Las been characterized al representing all Mage from the mildest form socialism to the most rampant species of anarchy That Iris public utterance will have great and unusual weight with tine worklngmen of this country is I Inevitable It is I assuring as-suring therefore to bo able to announce an-nounce that with such movement + al were represented time Cotoy crusade of last spring Mr Hums It not In sympathy sym-pathy Ho Iran declared himself as profcMlng to believe In any Inimo 4 I t fit r r d j f I t I F JOHN 1IU11KS r Lettering his temporal condition and physical surroundings Ho ha f not felt that It wa necessary to live I rf I Immediately among tho toiler In a i chcip tenement ho of thorn but tha pregnant question I may bo naked f What successful reformer over did con i sinter It necessary In 1893 ho bccamo prominent as socialistic candidate for the representation of West Nottingham In t tho London county council Ho woo at that time 27 years old and was an engineer by trade Ho hail been i born In tho populous and typically I labor district of llattersen and had only been absent from old Lunnon for a couple of yearn during which ho Miught to better iris worldly condition by sorting un foreman engineer In a ineclinnlcul enterprise on tho coast of I Africa He returned to London full of strength and vigor together with 1011I0 pronounced Idea on socialism which ho had ealhcrul by contact with Trench and iennnn socialists lie was always a fluent speaker and n man of commanding appearance with a r strong IlIMIhallty llewas also fortunately fortu-nately addicted to no bad habit lire following description of John Horn printed reluctantly by an organ of tire tory press after the conspicuous part lie played In tho London riot of 18SO hold good of him todayi mile II I a i burly squarefaced muscular man of ulot middle height Ho ha coal black hair mustache and beanl keen black l eye high check bone and an Intelligent Intelli-gent forehead He look every Inch what ho IIIa man of stern and resolute reso-lute bluff strong In will and physique 110 iras a voice of enormous power anl standing on Nelson column can make It ring through Trafalgar square HoI is Ho-I n vigorous and fearless speaker and unquestionably conscientious and sincere sin-cere Fur the part ho tqok In those riots of 1860 ho was buffeted by tho police and arrested Just three years later all London law lOOOoo dock laborer marching Imposingly but peacefully from the east end to tho city and back with tho police clearing n way for them although It had been a lord nr 3 ors procession It was a pageant deigned to show tho strength however that considering the wonderfully won-derfully rapid rise which John Hum has made In the world he lion but few dlato general revolution ornwirtunilng of tho existing order of thing In this he differs essentially from tins socialists so-cialists of Trance or Icruiany whatever what-ever may have been iris earlier view on the subject Ho places hIs faith solely iijvon trade union and ndvo cute gradual toward ascendancy by tho laboring classes In tho privilege privi-lege of governmental rule |