The evening world. Newspaper, August 9, 1904, Page 3

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OF CROLL Bt It’s Mostly About the Button- Faced Lady Who Haunts the Bachelor Brother of Mrs. Nicholas Fish, RISTEN TO THE STORY; SEE PRETTY PAJAMAS! Vulgar World Might Never Have Known of This Had Not the Distracted Gentleman Quar- relled with the Janitor. A Button-faced woman, a veiled wom. Qn, relentioss pureuers of sinister pur- pose, the Tenderloin police and a mys- tery dark and awful are involved tn | the feud between Carroll Br: « bachelor and the brother of Mra. Nich- olas Fish, and A. H. Price, the janitor of the bachelor apartment-house at No, % Weat Thirtleth street. An Evening World reporter heard both aides of the controversy to-day as far As Mr. Bryce and Mr, Price would un- ravel the threads of the mysterious tangle that led the bachelor to summon the police last night to protect him from the janitor, Mr. Bryce ts six feot tall, very thin, | dark-ekinned and peoullarly thetic In his tastes. Mr. ttle more than four feet tall, also thin and when excited drops his h’e in the BEproved ovck wy style How he could 4 do any bodily ‘ujury to the stalwart Mn Bryee puts another kink tn the already profound mystery, Awtully Niece Place, When The Evening World reporter called on Mr, Bryee he found the bach- elor resplendent in sky-blue pajamas fad orimamn slippers, His apartment wes darkened and two candles were burning on a binck oak writing desk. ‘Phe reporter knocked at the door un- y obtruaively, and a moment later a long, thin arm reached out and assisted bim within, “Bh-sh!" came from the wispifie form fn the sky-blue pajamas and crimson slippera. When the reporter recovered ; from his amasement at his strange re- Ception he asked if he was in the pros ence of Mr, Bryce, and, if go, could he / learn of the source of diffioulty between him and Mr. Pride, the janitor, — ‘The bachelor sank upon an ottoman, his long, thin Angers through bis hair, and breathed a tremendeus ~ ‘ 4 M ¥ a Suddenty he sat up and with a vig- Prous puff blew out one of the candies, Can You Hear Himt “Mr-er-er,” preluded Mr. Br: “er he ia @ very dangerous mau. Ty ute hae become @ vurden to me. He hgs Wrecked my nerves. Ab, could I but ell you all, But there is a deep mya- Of ita deep, deep, mystery. tery back by Aye ya # ous the o- n be repewted with ing cuphaals, “Lee him tel, let him Die y—service,” whia- Mr, Bryce, “and he-he--he--te tor, refuses to brush my viothes. yoni ph yes, he bas wrecked my ut, hush; I cannot tell you uble began—let him cell; tell, the sky-blue pajamas then arose and signalled graciously to the door. Now tor Mr, Price, then visited Mr. Price O. 18 West Thirtteth @irest. He found a tiny ilttle Engl n. with @ piping vole, and the plot ed indeed. ‘8 @ bloomin’ odd gent,” prefaced ioe, an’ Hi don't kaow wnat tw of ‘im ‘E's Mr, mike been ‘ere eighteen months going on, but hour trouble he- Then he calls wan four months ago. me to ‘ls chambers, times a day he o callg me, up to tell ton-! woman, until I get clean hex- asperated an’ I don't go hup to ‘le eum- "HB also telle mas that the buttons woman has hothers who Blarst ma, bat there in a ere. tell hit Bas should—le¢ ‘im tell bit shonid. ut this but- od Mr. Price afte: “makes ‘la break- complains the coffee ke ‘im rs] golor ‘e 0 ” continu us mysterious pa’ t for ‘im an’ '@ too brown. I expects the coffee to be, ani Vinto a hawful tirade. sepia wash ott ¢ G "ast night ‘hi waa standing in front « Of the wen down comes Mr. At When ‘e sees me 'e rushes wale ond, @ jouts hout the winder for a bobby. 'E offers a cabbie four shill- Ipks ‘to fetch a bobby, and when a po- Moe: mes ‘¢ asks for protection, '¢ Man Co @ \s big enough to eat me policeman, telis'im he must get'a wae ts a detective, an’ goes to the Te Y= Hee station and ge lle ia t "t thin: the first ‘o's ed woman strang® customer, ' Hi shan‘t, is going 't goodness, create £ al I 4 "R writes eight letters a to the owners tm lodgin’s an’ tells them what a hewful character Hi am. But * they {s the ones as knows me, HI bein’ with them ¢ight years. and they send ‘ly letters to me, an’ T says to ‘lm, sarcas- fo. pursues ‘im, @ is, but let t on me 0 and HI y abla to tho. ‘Hi gee you have been sendin’ mor, lettors, Mr Bryoe, thank ye kindly” An’ Hi re Aes N.Y jer man, "EB goes in ne , and east the police.” pT BOATS IN COLLISION. Three Members of Crew Drowned and One Saved, NORFOLK, Va., Aug. &—The schooner Tila Francis, of Rockland, Me, was munk to-day off Cape Cod while in colll- with the steamer Nantucket, Oapt. orndike and three members of the Bree? Comet One man was iv RE found through “World Wants.” The Three and Seven Time Rates are called “Result Givers.” Try them to-day, | Price is & LOVELY MYSTERY. P= THREW HIMSEL FROM A WINDOW Thomas C. Gallagher, a Cus- toms Inspector, Plunges from the Fourth Story of the Gov- ernor Hotel and Is Killed. Thomas C, Gallagher, a young man temporarily employed as a United Btates Customs Inspector, threw him- self from @ fourth-story window of the Governor Hote, Noa & Whitehall street, early to-day and was instantly killed, Gallagher was suffering trom extreme nervousness and despondency, and while his relatives Mistet that his fall Was an secidont, the pollos, after learning his frame of mind from some of his close friends aad observing how high the window from which he fell ts from the floor of the room, became convineed that he deliberately killed bimeelf, The police also learned to- day, what none of his friends or busi- | ness associates knew, that he had a wife and six-year-old son, who are at ') present in the Adirondacks, Gallagher himself lived with his mother and three brothers at No, 111 Hast Lighty- seventh street. Negtectful of Duties, Gallagber bad been !n an extremely nervous condition for some time, and hie allment wes aggravated by frequent reprimands edministered to him by Customs Superintendent Shafer for the jax performance of his duties, Gal- lagher was late for duty yesterday and waa again called sharply to sosount Later ho wes «ent to the Atlantic Tranaport pier to work on the Minne apolia, and met shere Deputy Surveyor Norwood, who also reprimanded bim for beimg late. He worked later on the Zeeland, and quit at 98 o'clock. He ter t | called up Inspestor John O'Donnell on sani gtell you ball: l@t] the telephone and asked tf he could gtay with him all night, as he war afraid if he weet hame thet he would again oversieep, O'Donnell gave him a cordial invitation and sat up waiting fo, him until 8 o'clock to-day. Gallagher, however, after making this arrangement, went to the office of a *| friend, Dr. A. R, Jenieine, of No, 11 State street, and told bim that be was going to the Governor Htel, He asked him to P-} come with him, a¢ he was nesvous and tired and wanted some one to talk ta Dr, Jenkina did go with him, and stayed unt! midnight, The physician was ex- tremely Feliceat about what took place during the evening, but admitted to an Kvening World reporter that he had warned Gallagbe against any attempt on bis life, Talked of Sutctde, “Hie was very nervous,” raid Dn Jen- kins, “and asked me what he should dd. I advised him to go to sleep. He sald he was afraid be might oversieap, didn't want to gtve him an opiate, so I sat and talked with him, in the hope that it would calm tim. He told me that he had given hig wife $178 to take their little boy to the country, and fore I left he asked me to write sent for if he met with any accident. “I feared he had something in his mind that ought not to be there, and I warned him against suicide, I told him that he was a Roman Catholio and that the consequences of self-destruction were very serious for one of his faith. He listened to me very carefully, and when I about such folly from his thoughts, I am not at all sure ¢ he killed himself. He might have walked amly know that part of our talk man on the subject of suicide” Gallagher had three brothers, Frank, who is a policeman: Josepa, who ie em- ployed in the Post-Office, and a thi brother, who is said to be well know! in Harlem as a politiolan. His father was a policeman and was killed during & street riot just twenty years ago to- day by being struck over the head wish @ rock. Gallagher's mother scoffed at the idea that her son committed suicide to-day, She said he lett terday morning very eheolutely. go reason tot edt Ha COMPANY TO GIVE. TIPS ON ELECTION The National Eleotion Associa- tion Establishes Headquar- ters in St. James Building— Latest Thing in Tipping. TURKISH CRISIS Possibility of Minister Leish- man Boarding Warship for | Protection, in Case New Ne- gotiations Fail, |s Considered. Consideratte curiosity was expressed by politicians to-day as to the exact business to be pursued by a new cor- poration-which has opened headquarters in the Bt. James Building, at Broadway and Twenty-sixth street, just opposite the Kepublican Congressional Commit- tee's headquarters, On the door of WASHINGTON, Aug 8.—Secretary Hay occupied considerable time at the! Cabinet meeting to-day in n presenta-| tion of the latest phases of the Turkish | situation. He recounted the dotalls of hia interview with Chekib Bey, the Turkish Minister, at which the Secro- the new offices is this title; “Tha Na-| tary foroitly stated the attitude of the tonal Election Assoclation|” American Government ‘The objeet of the assoc was ex-| He explained also the reasons which haa actuated him in reques that American European squadron should be sent to Smyrna, the most conyer Constan ingpie. LG plained (© an Evening World reporter to-day by @ man in charge of the office &s Lollowa: | “We are golug to make careful oan- | deemed by the Beeretary that vaases in every district in every State trecone ee hie een Gout be dis- to the Union, with te idea of furnisaing | Wperdentirely, a IMOMMALION ON7De Fewuil OF Le oouuig Presidential election to those dispvees ry wagers. We think that we can give complete information on every Con- district, every State and every Ce enon cree ants election We are we can the om aay contest, from the districts to the national oon- Assembly ing 8 @ tipping agency, GOVERNMENT TOOWK TELEPHONE PLANT WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—Considera-~ tion was given by the Cabinet to-day to the proposed petablishment of an inter-departmental telephone syvtern for the transaction of Government business in Washington. Under a re- cant deaision of the courts the Chess- peake amd Potomas Teleyhone Com- , and in the event of their failure tt may be that Minister lehman will leave tus post and go aboard the American flagship thus creating « situation of some serious- new YUNG DAA WL CET OT BU ‘Young Man Who Was Found Wounded in the Park to Go From the’ Prison Ward in Bellevue. Lawyer EB. BR. Smith, of iowa, a cousin of Samuel 1. Dana, appeared before rate Breen, in the York- vilie peut this afternoon re hed the court if he would sooept a! work on a new building at Perth Am- sunsel peaes, equi ' dneted by lawlens and pany is proceeding to cotleat from the | " i) « h Am They try to counsel peats, equity erikes conducted b ‘a Governeveat-additional charges for gov: | rome “ie fade te nee ee injured boy fell and in his descent caught &/and jumtice, but they might as well criminal members of labor unions ernment telephone service. Contracts at Bellevue pital and telephone wire whieh bad become |jaunch a feather in a cyclone. Then Necent people read with horror the havo been presented to the Govern. | fi g to te coume {he surrosdin crossed with an eleatrte -vire and wes|they sometimes try to keep at work tales of distress, women attacked and ment Pal advance th. the ratee hore: | remain there, emong the distenearic| Newvily charged when they need the wages and know sometimes stripped on the street (St ¢lement whioh {te Way Into thle tofore paid are charged. wae ot night,” sald Mr ami brough| he ‘This proposition does not meet the ap- proval of the President and members of the Cabinet, and {t has been sug-| prisoner was {a suffering ‘trom gested that the Government ereot and the delerium tremen nnd diel in the operate a telephone system of its own] next to M Bene, In horrible agony among the various departments and| He will neve well aa long as he has to_ witness such sights The strate agreed to accept $800 cash bail, whloh ts to De deposited with the City Chamberlain. Sergeant Arnetiy, who first saw the Injured man in the the offices of the District of Columbia. After a thorough discussion of the subject Secretary of the navy Morton was delegated to make an Investigation of them atter and to report fully at a ai Was shot a aa rai that ge af erick soe manasa (aru rhe oe vised, 4 ortvate.room. ‘ ) ager oS ‘THE WORDD) ‘TORSDAY “RVENING; OGDEN GOELET, HER MILLION DOLLAR MANSION AT NEWFORT AND THE GREAT HALL In Newport residence. CABINET TAKES UP. ‘ONE TRUCK DRIVER. | to he sewed and bandaged by a surgeon | truck and the side of the ADGUST' sy 1908, A SUPLUS OF HS |One of Them Took Him by the| | Neck and Dragged Him Into the Street and Now He May Be Deported. Unuayal teethnony a has been tn this months wns br Market Cou eared to be § Non-support on le band ¢ man waa Foseph Lio’ Rosa Ligosk said he had just ou from A " abando: we jun Ma ate y Were arour a] by a bedia shouts in the street frog of ¢ tootlverSermeaint Suyder, w @ reserves, cleared the erowd and fount Mre Lizosky holding her husband by the neck. She had drugmed iui from No. tig Gowrck at where, oe alleged, she had found him eli heard ihe that support testified she was well ja wife weeks ago, ele n London when Lis * wornan Lirosky and {ited having —marrted ears ago in Austria, but said she had deserted bim and came te this sountry my be deported to Answer to a charge of bleamy Has been declared by the labor unions against the products of the Povtum Cereal Co., Ltd, via: Grape- Nuts and Postum Food Coffee The labor papers notify the public not to buy these things until Mr. C. W. Post, the proprietor, obeys the or- ders of the Unions These “orders” are that he with draw the advertising from certain ‘newspapers that have fallen ander \their displeasure. | They openly announce that they ‘propose to “break up,” “ruin” and “put out of business” the publishers jof such papers. and insist that Mr Post join in this ecnspiracy with them These publishers have brea fuith- jfal tn thetr contracts with Mr. Post are upright business men and good oltizens, their only crime belng that |they decline to turn over the man- |agement of thelr papers to th ers of the labor trusts (alias Unions) who are generally ignorant, wilful ‘and violent men, Incapable of con- ducting a business, Mr. Post declines to be party to such unlawful conspiracy to finan- cially ruin any one, and this, together with the fact that he has been rash enough to publicly expose some of the criminal acts of members of la- bor unfons, has produced this boy- cott. ‘The average American citizen, not employing labor, knows Iittle of the inanfferable arrogance, impudence and violence of the arrogant bullies decorated with brief power by jhe most tyrannous of all trusts, the “la- | bor trust” or Unions, Cumagaanniaiie | Put supreme power tn the hands of Michae! Bien, @ truck driver, of No. @/any Ignorant man not accustomed to Green lane, Brooklyn, while driving a jaffairs, and he quickly becomes a big truck of the Jersey Model Baking |bully, denouncing and abusing any Company eastward on Chambera street |one and every one who does not in- was thrown in front of a horse car in letantly obey his “orders.” He cares front of No. 48 by a sudden bolt of hi Inothing for law or the rights of horae, and would have been crushed to | others death had not an Italian driving an-! The Gnions are made up of two other truck risked his own life to rave | siagges, ist. The men who have a| him, Both men were badly out and had |oosay and abusive tongue, and who} ean how! down and by violent and) loud talk dominate the meetings of the Unions. These men are seldom If ever good | workers or thrifty, home-owning and desirable citizens; they have small chance on thelr own merits to earn first-class wages unless they can force themselves on employers by a Unton ecard. They bring on strikes and misery for good workmen, and try to and do blackmail employers {nto settling same by paying them graft money. Some of them have been jailed for such offenses, but the great majority still hold forth, They have brought untold disgrace on the fair name of “labor” and made the term “the poo-er werken mon” a by-, word hissed and laughed at by the public. The second or other class in the labor antong {s made up of good, ea- pable, Intelligent, peacealle, thrifty citizens, who go {nto unions with the laudable purpose of bettering their} condftions and to support an honest association, which they hope will he SAVES ANOTHER Plucky and Modest Italian Risks His Life to Drag Fallen Man from in Front of a Street Car. from the Hudson Street Ho#pital Rien fell between the wheels of his ar, and wos being crushed between the iwo when the Itaiian jumped from bis truck, | crawled under the wheels of two heavy| wogons and under ti hoofs of Bien's frightened horse and reached the fallen driver just in time to drag him from bafore the front of the horse car. Other drivers then assisted the two men to thetr feet, and an ambulance wae sum- moned from the Hudson Street Hoapi- tal. Both truckmen were badly cut about the face, hands and arms, and the eu! seon had to take @ number of stitches in their wounds. They would not go to the hompital, however, and drove away \n_ their respeotive vebicles, The [tallan m to give hie mame FELL OW LWVE WIRE cureneie, THIS AUSTRIAN HAS [TWO VERDICTS W.. 'SENATOR VES named | | lly telling the facts about them and we Bais, - SHOOTING OF DALY es Five Coroner’s Jurors Hold De-|A Noted Figure in Polftios. tective McEvoy Responsible, Years, He Continued and Four Exonerate Him—-. Public Life Until ness pelled Him to Retire, | MISSOURI, 0 —_—_——— Sleuth Cries as He Tells Story .| SWEPT SPRINGS, Mo.,. An, ase CP lingortag for woeks between, death, former United States |G. G. Vest passed peacefully a day, He had been so near death who shot an eacaped | Without 9 struggle. AU the bedside when the end | Was his wife, Dr. Jarvis, the ‘@ physician, Senator Vests eon Attorney | der, his daughter, Mrs, George Py. ther four jurymen rating hint after ¢ Dut adwick, w harge ne in+| Jackson and her husband, ¢n@ paroled Mevoy in tie custody | Thompson, a niece of Mra. ; ay tho West One Hun-| The body will be taken on i this event nen hd tig in the private car ef A. A. Allen, Vieo-Premdeat and (suager of the Missourl, Kanga voy wae a witness in his own be- | '¢*8# Reitroad, he met Daty ja a bundle, that the tred His fifth atryet etation ¢ taken before the Grand and ‘Twenty ase W fi ce, nd who wae a ean George Graham Vest, Ile swore t carrying @ a pawne sof young man weve so sua- | *P!4ous figure in the polities of > » thar placed him under arrest ne for years, wae bono at Fragie that Daly confessed that tort, Ky. oo Dec. 6 Isgy Senator Vest 5 sen the contents of the bundle Was educated at Centre College” con an \t One Hundred and Twerty-em | Sen sudled & Lexington, After Rie) . and St. Nicholas avenue.” sald | @dmitaion to bar, in 1853, he fe | fe detective, ‘he bvoke away from me, | Mined to leave Kentucky add 4 1 chased e alr thee ths} Me practioe of law in the centrab pone) thon of Missouri, q In i block and a half. firing : i Imes By that tine 1 played and je was gaining on “whe was a Presidential 5 go Lahot at htms L didn’t tatend to on the Dessoaratic Ucket and in the f¢ ps 1 hb t r h f wi | yeas wi I him 1 wanted to atrtke hie foot or | gtr af der We iepreeauctjvey a is let sitting a Neosno. he Di MeBvoy bewan to cry, and tears pulled of tae State, Jefferson "eh e rr Jown hls cheeks ns he told of coming up me was in it he eral to the wounded fugitive and talking to bim ae he was dying. Policemen from Harlem testified chat Daly's character was bad in that he had been arresd ! not shown that he had ever been convioted of @ crime In ashington ator from Salssouri. Hie "ean maj figure and wus prominent fe anth shortly before d competent, thrifty and peaceadle| mand that these criminal, bullies. be Worker, and a corresponding disltke| restrained and forced to obey and antipathy to the arrogant andjlaw, and the unions thet bai violent pretender of the other class, ‘them have forteited the J ‘The second class named are for the/the public, these criminale timo being forced to stand the de-| The barm nunclations of the public aga{net la-|brought to the fair name of bor untons, for they are in sad com-|able, honest labor is too great pany which has brougt® disgrace | easily computed jave the: Mb- “ upon the name of Unions; so there, Swch outrages to ensl; seoms no way but for the decent erty of the common and men to stand It unt!l In some way American citizen make the they can obtain control, and make and surge. Many of us 0 the off or now unions which they |that in 1776 shouldered the olf may form lawful, respectable and|lock, left thelr comfortable: worthy of the esteem of the public. for the open camp, auffered fea We are on record a@ being friends cold, hanger and exposure, as and well-wistiers of the second class disease and even death to named, and as thoroughly and unsl- jhe sacred heritage ot terably opposed to the law-breakers, that seme old, sturdy, qriminale and wuilles.of the other to-day calls;for the claas;,¢9 when union men denounce |gtand fast and oppose ‘and revile us ft is easy to determine | ugly sptrit of tyranny and in which class they belong. so plainly shown by these The union men in the first clase untons. are geoutne and undeniable Anarch-! ‘Phere are things im. this» Its, allens one baka . dearer than money or b Let us analyze and see | » We expend al a When a strike occurs they picket a year vith Seemed most plants, threaten people, assault meQ, which goes to. printers . workmen. Probably two mi year more are spread a@ dynamite property, boycott and even | work people, farmers and others, - % murder; thoy are criminals aad op- ‘“ a posed to all law An Anarchist Is one opposed to Our factories cover many a hw ;sround, and the business fu When police or the military are'the food and clothing for $,000 human beings... This act of the Unions is for the purpose of ruining the ness, and therefors taking the If hood from thea 3,000 people wi God has created and natorally tends shall be fed and clothed, Our work: people are paid called in to preserve the peace and protect the common people, do these men welcome and uphold them? They do not, but hasten to “protest” and do al! in thelr power to remove them, so they carry can out thetr neta ot violence and law-breaking They favor no law but their own, and that fs the true hall-mark of an| wages. Anarchist pure and simple. Those who have been with ug Some one says we are harsh {n our|year receive 5% above BP Wages, and the two-year ‘ond veterans receive 10% above the hight © est regular wages. They are of Be © cessity in the wock clean and Capes ble. Most of them own their and are unusns‘iy thrifty, oer af prosperous, the savings account! one of the banks numbering above f the labor wi 11,450. The agitators have tried to Introduce vbelr -lods of strikes, hatred, poverty amd | distress among our people to the present conditions of ease Bade prosperity, but thus far our have been Intelligent enough to cline to make the exchange. It is these peaceable and reputable i citizens, living in content, # , done harm to no one, whom Labor Union Anarchists propose “ruin” and “put out of along with the company. Every industry {* dependent the public for {ts existence, for less the factory produces articles sufficient merit to meet the ned’ the public no business can Y A factory produces the very grade of goods and a general fective boycott 1s establis prevents the public from auch prodficts, the business stop. We have stated the tacts deseription of these men, We are not responsible for their character and acts, They do these things regard- Jess of any one, and the only y the public can fairly judge them 1s to know the facts It Is this class of union men who ave placed a boyeott on our prod- ucts In trying to force us to join thelr lawless ranks and rutn some publist ers, and thay ore the ones ¥ho pre pose to punish Mr. Post for fearle ‘< - their methods. A man with a family of children lo support was kept out of work by a strike i Chicago, The tamily would have starved had he not obtained money to buy them bread God Almighty has instilled in the mind of every man worthy the name a desire to work and furnish bread and clothing for his little ones, but in this case the labor unton satd he must not God's motive was the strongest; ha broke the rules of he union and went to work They caneht him one evening on the street, knocked him down #ith brass knuckles, kicked him uneon- actous, then, pried bis month open And poured carbolle acid down his throat Another man who was forced to ny MO Was PATERBON, ™ J, Aw Kort, of this city, « carpenter William Rutehard ant aleo carpenters, and both residents of Paterson, were # and He wi nding up, and shocked. Dov but Kort died soon after The two other men were City Hospital, where the: be recovering Kort eight years old and single own here, having been hey rushed to Kort's asstatance. still holding on ¢o the live wire when the man attempted to plok him and they were both severely burned 8 were summe honestly conducted, truly and fairly, work so support his family was met, in the interests of labor; but, tothelr and the strikers pnt thelr Angers tn surprise and disgust, they find that his eyes, gouged one of them out un- whenever they try to speak tn the ¢\! it hung on hie cheek Are these meetings for fairness and honorable the only cases of outrage? procedure they are hooted and Hundreds of acts equally infamous howled down by the other class. are repeated from day to day during KLE in 9.~-1aonard while at to the truth of which we are to make oath. [f the great buyl public decide to obey the orders the Labor Unions and refuse to chase our products, we have but. thing to do—go ort of pusiness amd let the families dependent on ‘ business go adrift and shift fort selves. Such ruin will carry down with [t everything connected with — the Industry that bas taken Joan Troost, |they are fair, but they are abused and Touts street-car strike), workmen frequently their families maltreated blown to pleces with dynamite, men and themselves beaten back into sub-| assaulted, mobs formed, mililons of mission. So there are literally hun-'dollars worth of property destroyed, dreds of thousands of decent Amerl- many Ives lost and a general reign can workmen absolutely forced to of terror, disorder and anarohy con- bear the disgrare and ignominy of ducted by the labor trust In trytng to the galling yoke of Unionism be- force the balance of mankind to obey cause of the hated tyranny of the/ without question the mandates of others. the leaders of the Unions. Every American of the right sort, Such oatrages on the public peace is 4 workman, either with Drain or/and such absolute disregard of the hand, or, better yet, with both; and tyes, property and liberty of citizens fn the mind of cach ts a funds has finally aroused the people to a tal deen-seaced respect for the.abled universal and not to be ignored de in the street, thetr arrival taken wo the ¥ Aare anid to waa twenty He was well active in poli | and millions of money to estab! We cannot and will not join conspiracy of these labor unfons to ruin publishers. We cannot and will not discharge a single one of onr faithful and time. tried workmen npon the orders of anv labor nnion. Upon these principles we stand, the unions can make thelr bo effective and sink our shin, ¥e go down with the captain Om bridge and lo command. POSTNM CERFAI, CO,

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