COMMUNIST CONSPIRACY
ABROAD. J|§ A( ?4WBT BRITISH INDUSTRY. lg|Rpf. SB3?Bm»S T ER.S ’ ALLEGATIONS. BY ASSOCI AT lON-COPY RIGHT (Relived Sept. 18, 10.5 a.m.) LONDON, Sept. 17. in an official statement, saythey are convinced that the strUtfe|ad is part of a great Comagainst the inercanagitators induced men to ships with the deliberate int&*ljft*j|£®f deserting and leaving Biistranded all over the Sun Cable. HELD •jjlyjjg RESPONSIBLE: i^^ WTCAN DEOISTONlived Sept. 18, 10.5 a.m.) I CAPETOWN, Sept. 17. under instructions from PreIpolice. at Durban informed 'asters that they were acting h- refusing to feed the men. irnment holds the ships are fOtx)tbkt^J|i*tenanee of the men thus ft i •'rlsifMii' l ' K aMEßs ARRTVE. AND ONE WHITE. Funnel steamer, AutomcThe. crew is loyal labourers are working Hobart is unable to secure 1 abb»fcjfd-.|afe wliarf labourers adhering to to declare the vessel DEVELOPMENT. STRIKE. WAimßpS TO LEND A HAND. 1 Committee of the WabflMtapJtforkers’ Federation of Australa manifesto, stating tfiat'||S| pfcnnittee affirmed the right" of eyew- frtHe unionist to resent a re-, d nett£»gjjj or an attack upon workjSgip pnfioitions by the employers. TheyiOTll tiffed'' with disgust the action of AfimjlS WMilock Wilson (president of the lMHhj|pp>enmen’s Union) in appealing capitalist Governments throujiMH|pifie world to bludgeon "the, mbg^Uoj^h is union into accepting TlmHKaHpsidc. Workers’ Federation, thecled to assist the British their just demands instruct its members not tQ>argo in or out of oversea which the original crews hav «PWB» h ave en replaced Where steam has'been suppfMimflHpbe ship’s engineers memhers|Ml(raSjSy discharge cargo.. Vessels hv foreign and coloured crews ' worked. Members .are also render financial assistseamen. adds that prior to arrivin|||ii§|BHjs decision the committee watcM®^H&'cleli'berations > of the CommontSfel|*Htiabour Council, and had eon fertjtid v££h the council for the purevery avenue by assist the seamen wit bfjrafryMPling hardships to’the trade n> >i<>ipHr£jfißiical movement. From the owners’ representatives to it was Evident the desire for immediate in(l as^BfUipe. and the committee was MU*" the matter in very and could not be held reanv way for what the determine.) TlJ’feAwm.rs had declared emphatßUUTK- 1 '- favour of industrial war, nn d side re must accept their declArß^jr 1 ’ The Watersiders’ Federa- ' to take up its first line of tier WeC and therefore appealed to trade unions generally to assist in every way to bring about a satisfactory ending to the dispute. iaMPie manifesto signifies that the Infers ders will still mot load any ship jjwjjam Australian, port which has left Sami’ o her port with a crew of free Janour or which is .worked by its own HH|erk and engineers. It is therefore Si*s!ent that within a very short time w/hole exnort and import trade will definitely tied up, with the exj&iplj/on of such trade as is conducted Commonwealth Line and foreign y A«H ■KIEFUSA I J . OF CONFERENCE. IPHi sg| LABOUR' PARTY’S REPLY. 1 Ifli ' ; SYDNEY, Sep. 17. further,’big hatch of striking soaC#l were sentenced to seven days’ imment. S Commonwealth Labour Council nt a'further letter to the OverMtawwEMiiippfnfr’ Representatives’ AesociaiMcwJgStating that, in view of the potenMfe of a very disastrous and fargriljKng. industrial upheaval contained present seamen’s dispute, which settled must inevitably almost rjitfraMiately involve all industries assoBhßb'l jp any way with oversea transcouheil' woe ’surprised »nd dis.with the association’s rogjifiߧ.to meet in conference for the pnr;'*>s£• of attempting to arrive at a settlement. vl ;“he refusal left no other inference Stljln that the association had decided door to any negotiations v-wrin.- ’a Mew to a constitutional settlo.:jrt^nt ,7 C(pifhe dispute. The letter conthis is so the Labour CounAdSl regrets the necessity of being com- ' llcd/jjt#’ .;meet the association’s policy with one of similar §iihflira|Hp hut if the association desires jpo miifeMthe council later it can com- ” tnufiimti?'i,with Mr Garden (secretary fof ‘hAfeiClommonwealth executive), who
has been appointed by the council to administer its decisions.”
LIVELY MEETING. LEADERS AT LOGGERHE ADS. LONDON, Sep. 16. The unofficial strike committee held a mass meeting at a public hall at Canning Town, at which representatives of the Amalgamated Marine Workers’ Union violently resented the manifesto of Mr E. W. Harris, organiser of the of-ficial strike committee. Mutual accusations, such as “liar,” “blackleg,” and “traitor,” were interchanged. The meeting only served to widen the breach existing between the unofficial committee and the marine workers. MORE STRIKERS SENT TO PRISON CHRISTCHURCH, Sep. 17. Eighty-eight strikers from the Hororata, who were sentenced at the Lyttelton Alagistrate’s Court yesterday to terms of imprisonment in Paparua prison, left the port by train this afternoon for Paparua. They travelled in two) carriages specially provided for them. They marched from the Templeton railway station to the prison, a distance of about a mile.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19250918.2.24
Bibliographic details
Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 18 September 1925, Page 5
Word Count
765COMMUNIST CONSPIRACY Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 18 September 1925, Page 5
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Hawera Star. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.