THE STRIKE AT CARDIFF
100 VESSELS LAID UP. CHINESE SHOPS ATTACKED. By Cable—Press Association—Copyright Received 21, 9.20 p.m. London, July 21. Work at Cardiff is at a standstill. A hundred vessels are idle. The Lord Mayor conferred with the shipowners, who subsequently made proposals which the men considered. The Lord Mayor is hopeful that these proposals will form a basis of settlement. All the Chinese laundries were attacked at night. One was burnt. The dockers at Barry have struck.
NON-UNION SUGAR. Received 22, 12.50 a.m. Melbourne, July 22. A meeting of the Council of the Waterside Workers' Federation, Mr. Hughes, Attorney-General, presiding, confirmed the decision of the Executive not to handle non-union sugar during the currency of the Queensland dispute. Mr. Hughes afterwards declared that merely refusing to handle certain goods was not a strike.
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Bibliographic details
Taranaki Daily News, Volume LIV, Issue 24, 22 July 1911, Page 5
Word Count
135THE STRIKE AT CARDIFF Taranaki Daily News, Volume LIV, Issue 24, 22 July 1911, Page 5
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