AMERICAN STRIKERS.
EARLY SETTLEMENT EXPECTED.
WASHINGTON, July 27. (Received July 28, at 12.10 p.m.) To-day’s developments indicate that the end of tiro coal and railways strike is not far distant. Mr Harding had a conference with the leaders of the railway strike and the executives. Ho urged tho men to return to work, and the disputes would be submitted tor rehearing by tire Labor Board. Unless a hitch occurs the strike will possibly bo over in forty-eight hours, 'Meanwhile the striking car repair men have reached an agreement with the BaltimoreOhio Railway Company. So far ns tho coal strike -is concerned, various owners in Pennsylvania and Indiana offered to meet the strikers at a. nation-wide conference. Mr Lewis, president of tho Unit’’' l Mine Workers, declared that the miueu had admittedly won. A call for a general conference was going out in a few days.—A. and N.Z. Cable.
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Evening Star, Issue 18032, 28 July 1922, Page 6
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148AMERICAN STRIKERS. Evening Star, Issue 18032, 28 July 1922, Page 6
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