Carpenter . any legislatures topowerful moneyed influence; the heavypenalty imposed upon the poor, the lightsentence imposed upon the rich felon; thedenying of American citizens a trial byjuries in injunctions and contempt cases. These are a few ills that the agitator willagitate about until they are cured. Theseevils do not exist by divine right, it isthe duty of all the people to lend their aidin eliminating unjust conditions, but in thefinal analysis it will be found that the so-called, agitator has done the work. THE EVOLUTION OF CARPENTRY. (By Thomas MONG the many build-ing crafts of the


Carpenter . any legislatures topowerful moneyed influence; the heavypenalty imposed upon the poor, the lightsentence imposed upon the rich felon; thedenying of American citizens a trial byjuries in injunctions and contempt cases. These are a few ills that the agitator willagitate about until they are cured. Theseevils do not exist by divine right, it isthe duty of all the people to lend their aidin eliminating unjust conditions, but in thefinal analysis it will be found that the so-called, agitator has done the work. THE EVOLUTION OF CARPENTRY. (By Thomas MONG the many build-ing crafts of the daynone are being sub-jected more to theenvironment of in-dustrial evolutionthan the craft of car-pentry. How to as-similate this modern-ism in the mainte-nance and operationof our craft is a mat-for the thoughtfulconcern on the part of our membership. To whom does innovated industry be-long? To the mechanic or craft it dis-places, or to the mechanic or craft whichwants to organize for its control, or to the. F. Kearney.) crafts already organized and who desire itonly by reason of the change of ma-terial? The facts of the matter are, the buildingindustry never lacked a sufficient numberof crafts for a full performance of the la-bor of their calling or the construction ofthe building, and were the lines of so-calleddemarcation between the trades less ob-served with the beginning of the evolutionof industry, and more attention given topurposes of assimilation, the vitals of or-ganized effort would not today be in thethroes of jurisdiction claims. The aim of all organized effort ought tobe to keep industry within the control ofthe crafts which have at first hand perfect-ed themselves in the acquirement of de-7 TH E CARPENT^ scriptive, oonstiuetive and mechanicalability. These are the very essentials of carpentryor carpenters work in whatever change ofmaterial dry construction may present it-self. The first shows the lines or methods forforming every species of work by the rulesof


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Keywords: ., bookauthorunitedbr, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1911