least one of the leading newspapers here, The Morning Telegraph, denounces unionism, saying it was originally in the interest of workingmen, but lately it has become political despotism, and union labor leaders political adventurers. "Capital," said The Telegraph, in an editorial this morning, "will leave Australia, and go where labor is not a political despot." I do not know of a leading paper in the United States that would care to print a similar editorial. Plenty of such editorials are printed in the United States, but in trade papers, and not in leading daily newspapers.
Wednesday, January 8.—We sailed at noon today
for Auckland, New Zealand, on the ship "Maheno."
It is about the size of the "Sonoma;" six thousand
tons. . . . We are accomplishing so much by law
now that I suggest the adoption of a law providing that
no ship of less than twelve thousand tons be permitted
to carry passengers; a six-thousand-ton ship is too small.
Adelaide drew seat No. 13 at the table, but I did worse
than that: I drew two men in my room. I resent
two men in my room as I do going to jail, but resentment
did me no good; the ship is crowded, and I was
compelled to stand it. But what do you think happened
to Adelaide, who occupies seat No. 13 at the
table? She has a room to herself. . . . One of
the men in my room is a New-Yorker named Bond,
an importer who has a branch house in Sydney. The
man with him is one of his traveling salesmen. Mr.
Bond is an old traveler, and has made this trip many