INDUSTRIAL WAR IN U.S.A.
THE PRESIDENT’S PLAN,
Press Association—“By Telegraph—Copyright.
WASHINGTON, July 29. It is announced that President Harding is confident that the railway strike will end early next week. Ho has_ worked out a compromise which neither side, it ie believed, will dare to reject. The only definite statement regarding the plan is that it does not contemplate separate agreements between, individual railways and employees. It will be submitted- to tho executives on Tuesday and to the unions on Wednesday.—A. and N.Z. Cable. THE HERRIN MASSACRE. MINISTER’S DENUNCIATION. NEW YORK, July 29. (Received July 31, at 9.5 a.m.) The Postmaster-General (Dr Work), spaking at a Chicago municipal celebration, severely arraigned the State Administration for its lack of means for the enforcement of the law, which would have prevented the Herrin massacre, or to punish tho perpetrators. He declared that the incident would have brought pallor to ill cheek of a war-painted Indian. Ha warned organised Labor that the unorganised public, numbering 100,000,000, though slow to anger, would frame laws and compel the enforcement of them.—A. and N.Z. Cable.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 18034, 31 July 1922, Page 6
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179INDUSTRIAL WAR IN U.S.A. Evening Star, Issue 18034, 31 July 1922, Page 6
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