The evening world. Newspaper, May 4, 1905, Page 3

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WHITE SLAVE’S | LETTER CLEARS MYSTERIES Police Believe Arrest of Isa- hella Will Explain Gir!’s Disappearance, TWO VICTIMS FOUND. Escaping from East Side Prison One Sent Note to Commis- sioner McAdoo. SENT “OWNER’S” PICTURE. Detectives Capture Man and Now Beek for Other Girls Lured : to His Hands, core < As the result of a letter written to Comminstoner McAdoo by a "white @ave" girl, the police say the disap- pearanoes of many young girls will prob- ably be accounted for, and Angelo Isa- Della was to-day held by Magistrate Moss, in the Centre Street Court, in 02,000 ball for a hearing to-morrow, Yesterday Commissioner McAdoo re- eetved the following letter: “Dear Mr. McAdoo: I write to ask you to help me, I am in great trouble, A man named Angelo Isabella has kept me for six years as his slave, He made me marry hin under a false name and under duress, Another girl, named Bertha Thielman, who is not yet @lx- teen, wag also kept by him as a slave Mfr, McAdoo, you may have children of your own, and you know w that means. One of this man's victims died fn the hospital, Lf I didn't make money for him he would beat me terribly ana bite mo like a dog. “It you will o: help you, Once 1 hard T took poison escape him.” How Girl Escaped, 4 Zillamen, Brook! of Isabella, dat Mul- y help me, God will abella beat me #0 and tried to dle to no letter was signed Snedeker aver ph ould be fou No, 1 Standish to rookiyn, They woman of wo broths iives 1 Ziilamen £ to wand Bertha t during the cot, where fe of a gone to son street, Second Girl's Story. Bertha when seen told the polleo that sho was an or nd had tived with her uncle a OM Brovdway, Willams) t last Au gust a young 1 "Tony" had taken Now York, promising "a He took her to a hous ring street and eold her to a main, who in turn sold her to Istbetla tor her to No, 121 Mott st sala. she and Stella we months, Atfer that taken to No. 6 Bayard strect they were kept prisoners { | In Janu ha's brother Her- Man appealed to the police and tire, | newspapers to help him tad his sister, The young man was « ved Ina dee partmont siore and lived In Hoboken, MAY BE VICTIM OF FOUL PLAY Well-Dressed Man Found by | Policeman Dies in Will- iamsburg Hospital, AUTOPSY IS ORDERED. Police Believe Body to Be that of A, P. Bird, of Ashe- ville, N.C. Knockout drops or a sandbag are the supposed cause of the myaterious death ot @ well-dresest young man who wos found dying early to-day at the corner of Clay street and Manhattan avenue, Williamefourg, and who later died in the Eastern Distrtot Hospital, No manke of violence ‘were Glacovered on him, and from the fact that: Polteeman Rellly, who found the man dying, saw some men running away, foul play is sus- pected. ‘The Coroner has ordered an au- topay, ‘The police believe the body to be that ot A. P. Bird, of Asheville, N. C,, from 4 lodge card of the Biks of that otty, The body 1s that of a man of thirty years, five feet four dnches, weighing 180 pounds, very neatly dressed in good clothes, with clean linen and under- clothes, Policemam Retlly saw some men bend- Ing over @ prostrate man aout day- break in the factory district’ at Clay SEEKING MORE OF PLATT’S CAS Aged Millionaire Asked: to Pay Claims Growing Out of Suit, to Get Back Money from) Hannah Elias. | A halt-tozen lawyers appeared before doe O'Gorman po-day in another tan- sult of agent hn Ellas to Ait) ele of the t against Hani gmwing out R. Pu eet back (60 worth of propecty ded given to her during eight years, Gilbert H. Montague, who was ver of all the property bh woman and clatmed by nd w 1 by the Appettate Division vund that Lt wna egal and appointing Mim void, wants an ng and p nt of 1 1 neo rooeleynship was hte fee while m 1s about $5,000, street and Manhattan avenue, @pproach they fled and he found the man insnesiblea An ambulance was called from the Eastern District Hos- pital, where the dying man was taken. Besides the Elk card, $24 in cash and a minature photograph of a handsome woman was found, together with the card of W. M. Cooper, Townseml Bulld- ing, 1101 Broadway, At the real estate office of J. Russed Davidson, where Cooper had desk room, it waa learned that the lawyer had gone to Asheville several weeks ago and had not return- ed, The dead man's description does not fit Cooper, 4 FAMILY WRECKS NEWMAN LOVE Wife 11 Years Older Than Hus- hand and of Different Faith Says His People Caused Trouble—Asks Separation. he ap- held ad on the nes Differences in age and religtous be- Waehington Brauns, who was Mrs, |lefs (igure in the divorce case of as's attorney has an order for Mra, Honry J. Newman and his wife, sho las to fiel a bond of $10,000 for the |seeks separation on the ground of payment of the balance of his fee as |cruelty, and he charges that she de- a condition precid to the substitue |sertal him, Newman {s a Hebrew, lon of Danivi Daly as her attorney, |thitty-four years old, and his wife, who Me. Daly appeared for her to-day and {8 forty-fve years old, was roared a protested that she ought not to be calle Catholic. She, however, forsook her eA upon to pay @ penny to the receiver church when they were married by forced upon he ismuch as ehe won Justice McCarthy, of the City Court, the suit brought against her by Platt. |In 1902 Samuel Hofl, representing the Lincoln) ‘'Dhelr marriage was kept secret for Be Cr with whom Mrs. two years, then, Mrs, Newman alleges, nd other personal! her husband took her to his home, , presented a ol Warren med to. he oth unis, vr Warren Ul had earned con and pay a Com w mt by are the small vlte nd ine etgler due represented Platt, would Seiver Mon- claim- aim where she was forced to stay In a hall bedroom, except at meal time, and his family mado life most unpleasant tor her, Finally, she left and went to live with a sister in Philadelphia, Through her attorney, Charles Beck+ mun, she to-day applied before Justice © Gorman for alimony and counsel fees, Mariin H Vogel, for Mr, Newman, sald his client wak ready and willing to provide @ good home for his wife, He sid thelr trouble was largely due | to the difference In thelr ages, To Plead for Anna Valentine HACKENSACK, MAY 4.—Roy, Mather J.B, and Rey, BR, W feft Hackensack for Trenton thls ing to appeal to the Board of Pardona| in behalf of Anna Vatentine, under sen+ fence to be hanged {n the Hackensack Jali on May 12. ‘We feel sure of have ing the death penalty commuted,"’ sald Ry. Mr. Bilott, "Three vote in her favor a year ago, and I am sure Go Gtokes will vote for her to-day, We only need one more, five belng neces: gary.” Jail for Trust Official. TOPEKA, KAN,, MAY 4.— J, Smile eecretary of the Ix Association, was An con The “‘Lid”’ Is Off! y street, Just round the bend, There's a game of chance whgre peo- ple spend Weary hours In search of gain; Some win while thousands play in vain, 'Tis what t “Life,” A ceaseless effort—an endless strife, Why lose when winning is not hard To those who hold this lucky card? ty (all the game of You May Enter Boldly into Life’s Game With This Talis = Important Foreign and Telegraphic News. « Oe nt yas che horg Jenters at Ds ‘1p down the price of grain. pened his case to the State |Preme Court [it to he ited States Supreme Court | nish Company, on Battery March street, | wad lost aula. Ills contention was | where a band!e containing rags and pa | uline Th coun einiey ase doy, [Bes eamumted with turpentine, and a [Hoch for a nardoh. whieh wus dented, | plese of tin from which a spark would Then there was bothing for Smiley bat | have generated had been left, The bun- to serve his niet of ninety days 1 FL Raa Ra etna ra |dle was already hot enough to make it he Gran. Deale Association will | uncomfortable “to handle, The police pay the fine, but Smiley must, sufter | Dalove vhat similar bundles of combus- |the imurisonment. THe left for Lacrosa |'tble matter have been distributed In | to-day to begin his sentence, | buildings marked for destruction, giving PARIS, MAY 4.—King Edward Paris at noon to-day for London, Was arcony entutives of Py elgn Minister Delcasse elals and friends: Baroness Hatter y bonane and many including Baron Alphonse de Rothschild, of orchids and roses, BOSTON, 4—Dhe pollee bell 744 Z_5=]] Business Bargains offered last week through tho Morning World. |King Edward Goes Home, as Groin a | foted in Rush aunied to tho depot by repr sident Loubet and Por- tel the King with a superb His Ma- |Jesty vescowed a number of decorations |Makes Nature | Help Set Fires, that many of the theondlary fires which unty three vears ago of violating the | have been recently started in this olty stroyed hy fire early to-day, Three ge rons were caused by spontaneous combustion, the material nosessary to cause com bustion having been prepared by an In- cendiary, The latest discovery was su- and lost; then hoe carried | pear the building of the Murphy Var- | the incendiary ample time to cover his vracks before a fire resulted, lett) Peconic Bank Opens Monday Hel” saG HARBOR, May 4—In spite of the loss of $40,000 through Cashier Fran- cls 1, Palmer the Peconte Bank, closed since Monday, will re-open on Monday noxt, All, stockholders will stand an assesament of 0 per cent, on the dollar, ‘The Bank of Long Island, ‘the South- ampton Bank and the Greenport Bank of- and The ‘of the Order of Victoria and expressed | pNP ‘ [erent ‘satisfaction with his aojourn to | Peconke with, pr ch eee Ce) The newspapers comment favorably | Money, speculat in Gre sitar DHUTHNIRMBOR RR Ho Ieee iat ¥ | hos returned $19,000 and is still at Mb- erty, To save him from arrest by the surety company on his $10,000 bond his father-in-law, “Blijah Cullum, has “of: fored to put ‘up $5,000, representing the leve | savings of a life time, New Cabinet Lady ? DES MOINES, IA., May 4,—Accord- Ing to a special from ‘Traer, Iu, Sea tary of Agriculture James Wilson. will be ‘married there in June, Tracer 1s his former home, The name of the bride ts not an- | nounced, but she ts believed to be a school teacher whom he has known for AUS, It is said that Mr, deavored to Kccep his engagement eret on account of opposition of davehter, who is now in Europe, Three Dead in Duluth Fire, DULUTH, MINN, MAY 4—The b,fth Ayenuo Hotel, Fifth avenue woat, tn the | wholesale district of Duluth, was de- "i Wilson has en- KOs his ‘THE WORLD: THURSDA penrma EHIIOCAN. YING IN STREET, Y RVENING. MAY 4, 1905. MOTHER'S LOVE WOVENIN THIS DOUBLE TRAGEDY Strange Story Told After Finding of Bodies of Man and Wife. MYSTERY IN DEATHS. Idolized Son Marrled Against Parental Opposition, Declares Sister of Dead Woman. PHILADELPHIA, May 4.—Mrs, Flore ence Ward, of Port Kennedy, Pa, @ er of Mrs. Robert Rushton Bhaw, who, with her husband, wae found dead In a field near Blackpool, England, yeeturday, made a etatement In defense of her dead alster's memory to-day. Bhe said her sleter was Wiizabeth Walker and was married to Shaw In this olty five years ago, she being then nineteen years old and the husband only twenty. They were first cousins and the mother of Shaw, with whom they lived tn Blackpool, was jealous of the love which the husband bestowed upon his young wite. The mother, Mrs, Ward stated, Molized her son and was opposed to his marriage, ‘This fact, she intimated, might have something to do with the tragedy which fed thair ily eriMy sister was highly esteemed by hor frends here and & better girl never \{ived," declared Mra, Ward. "It is an e to even suggest anything {m- proper in her life previous to her mar. Hage. We Hved together for years and ‘it was impoasible fur her to have been \Tinplicated In en intrigue with a man without, ny know! edge, I declare pont ively that she was & food girl, incapa- oing Wrong. bias fave all been looking forward to {am visit from my sister and her hus- | band, as Shaw promlscd when he mar- ried hor and took her away that they would come back for a Visit lo hey parents and friends in five years.” ‘The parents of Mrs, Shaw now’ reside in Port Kennedy, they having removed | to that place since the marriage of thelr Anughter, —— CHOKED TO DEATH BY PIECE OF STEAK Mortimer Dugan Dies in Spite of Efforts of Brother and Sivier- in-Law to Save Him. A plece of beetstenk lodged in the ‘mroat of Mortimer Dugan while he was eating breakfast at his home, No, 21 East Fitty-alxth street, to-day, and he dled of strang'riation half an hour later at the Presbyterian Mospital, Dugan Lived with his brother and alster-in-law. While he was eating breakfast with them to-day he asked his sister-indaw for a cup of coffee, As she started to get It he began choking. His brother slapped him on the back and Mra, Du- gan tried to glye him water, but these | remedies proved of no avail. Then they | summoned the police, who sent in a call | for an_ambulance, When @ doctor ar- fived Dugan was gasping faintly for Breath, He was taken to the hospital, where he died before the physicians could extricate the plece of steak, TOLD OF KIDNAPPING PLOT. | Frightened because of & mysterious postal card warning him of a threat to kidnap his fourteen-year-old daugh- ter Grace, Charles Doxey, of No, 2122 Fulton street, Brooklyn, has appealed to the police of the Ralph Avenue Sta- tion for protection, The postal was sigined Mrs, & Smith, and warned the father that three de perate men had conspired to steal tre girl and the greatest care must be ob- served. The card was postmarked a’ 4 hearby station, Detectives were sent, to the house lrst night, but were unable to learn in#) than that Mr, Doxey had recelved Ui postal One of them re- , mained on guard about the house, | ves were lost and two men are miss- ing. Three bodies have been recovered that of John Myes and two unknown pereons, A gale was blowing and made fire-fighting difflowlt, The hotel wis a wooden atructure, Gresham's Daughter Dies, BUFFALO, May 4.—Mrs, Kate Gra- hams Andrews, wife of William H, An- drewa, president of the Manufacturers’ Club, Is dead at her home in this city from heant disease, She was a daugh- ter of Walter Q, Gresham former United States Judge at Chicago and Secretary of State under President Cleveland's administration, The inter- ment will probably be at Washington, Secretary Gresham having been buricd at Arlington, Cleveland Alds a College. LINCOLN, NEB., MAY 4—A despatch Tecelved to-day from P, L, Jackson, of Princeton, N, J., financial secretary to Grover Cleveland, informs the Hastings | College authorities that Mr. Cleveland has contributed a large endowment to the college fund, The exact amount is not stated, ri Debs to Head Rival to A. F.L. TARRN HAUTE, Ind, May 4—Eu- gene V, Debs to-day confirmed the re- port that he is to head the Industrial | Union, a new labor organization which will be launched next week In Chicago, ‘The organisation will be a rival of the American Federation of Labor, Boller Exploded; One Dead. WARREN, O., MAY 4—The boiler of Baltimore and Ohio engine No, 1947, at- iughed to @ freight train, exploded to- day at DeForest, one mile eaat of here, Inesuntly Killing Ahe fireman, whose name and residence unknown, N. 8. Kelly, of Newoastle, Pa,, the el | at wn wixty feet and pro! bad af Why have the people come to despise the very term "Inbor union? ‘The feeling seoms universal and ts held by the great general public and by probably nore than half of the unwilling membors of the untons. Statistics show about ten “unton'’ mem- bers to every eight hundred citizens, and this small minority undertakes to rule the rest of us, and if we don't obey exactly and quickly they slug, throw bricks\shoot, cut, dynamite, boycott and murder, BORY WORKERS Most all Americans were born of worl people. We know what it js to work and work hard, Wo ure not children of Dukos, Farle or the {dle rich and we have an in- born sympathy for and a desire to help along every honest, peaceable workman. So merchants, manufacturers and all sorts of employers who used to work with their hands and now work harder with their brains to get together money to pay to those who work with their hands, have with tho Beneral public, borne pationtly many acts of tyranny and abuse until the union lend- ore have become more emboldened and tn- toxicated with power, WANT TROUBLE ‘They must make trouble in order to feed thelr vanity by seeing themselves discussed the in the papers, and also to show "Unton'’ that hires them thet ‘the something doing.'' 80 they order people about, interfore with business, stop street and radirond cars, bullding operations, de- Hvery of goods, sorving of menis, dolivery of bread, mont or even milk necessary to koep babies allvo, and we have beon troated to the horritying scene of thelr interfering With tho macred rite of burial of the dead. ‘They have the ‘mpudence to Interfere in any and every act of life, demanding that all movements be made only according to “the union rule." Their continued abuses and Interference with the rights of citizens ‘ban so outraged tho people that they not only detest the name ‘labor union" but are forced to take up the most rigorous and emphatic measures to stop these outrages, and atop this interferonce with the move- ments of the common people. PEOPLE ANNOYED When a man wants to go to business on a car he doesn’t want to be told the unions have ‘'tled up the line’’ When he relies for biu diuner on having the meat, bread and vegetables delivered it doesn't sot at all well to lose his dinner because tho “untons” bad tied up the meat or bread supply, or the teamsters' unfon slugged and driven off the new teamaters that tried to deliver the goods, His baby needs milk, but the ‘milk drivers’ union'’ has stopped the supply, ‘Let a few of the d-— babies dle, some sacrifices must be made for the supremacy of labor.'’ He tries to paint his own house at evare times, but the painters’ union hoot bim, and Poyeott the paint dealer and grocer that relia him good ‘A sudden leak of a water pipe ts flooding his house and destroying his property, but the rules of the plumbers’ unton {mpore ai! torts of penalties if ho tries to help the trouble, So they Interfere in all sorts of ways with the liherty and freedom of tho common people, making life & burden sand man an abject slave to the impudent “or- dere" of the labor boss, and theso labor untons know no limit to their exactions and abuses so long as they have power to ride down the peopl They go the full limit even to demanding that the laws of the U. 8. Gov't give way to thelr rul A COSTLY DLUNDER When Pres, McKinley eame to lay the corner stone of the federal building tn Chicago (that the unions had delayed for years and forced thereon an unnecessary cost of some millions of dollars, which had to he paid out of the pockots of the com- tnon people) he made the fearful mistake ot bowing his head to the ‘orders’? of the labor bosses and allowed them to put on hia neck the yoke of a Union Card" before he was allowed to lift @ trowel and lay that corner stone, Think of tt, The chief Hxecutive of this gov't made to stop down from his eminent position and allow a union boss to sit there and issue ‘orders.’ That one act made the labor unions so avunk with power and impudent that it has cost Chicago in losses to business, wases butidings, depreciation of real estate and destruction of property by fires set by unions Hterally hundreds of millions of dollars and many ives, Iw {t any wonder the common people aro sick and tired of “unions,” They ordered the little Colonel now in the White House to discharge @ printer because he wouldn't Join a union and they also ordered him not to ride on a certain R. R. that refused to obey them, but they found there a wine ‘and brave man, the real Executive of all the people and not alone of the ten in elght hundred or the one thousand who seok to corner the labor market and shut out the eighty thousand who do not. He says: “When any\ labor union secks improper ends or seeks to achieve proper ends by improper means all good oltizens and more especially all honorable public nervants must oppose the wrongdoing ns resolutely as they would oppose the wrong doing of any great corporation. Of course, any violence, brutality or corruption should not for one moment be tolerated.” GBENUIND TRUST But here we see a genuine trust. a labor trust, a combination to sell labor, and this arrogant trust proposes by threats of vio- lence to force people to buy its commodity, Aud why do they block progress, prevent others from working, separate themselves trom other citizens, hate every ono not in heir ‘‘unton,’’ boycott and threaten, con- uct themselves as bandits and outlaws und commit all sorts of crimes to force themselves and their one-sided ideas upon peoplet COST TO CITIZENS They become criminals in order to force a tow cents or dollars extra out of the putlie, Then after they baye forced thelr lavor on some firms, they refuse to do the work ws directed by the employer and a strike occurs, @ fight to see if they can forse the employer to let them do the work as they want to and not as he require. ic, The Chicago teauustors refused to deliver goods where directed and committed at: forts of outlawry, because the enjoy hired mon who would properly help then do business, A mechanic pays for a ton of coal, and petore it {a delivered tho labor trust Issues ‘orders that the coal shall not be touched. ‘The mechanic's family is cold and sufter- ing, 80 he tries to deliver his own coal snd ty lugged unconscious by the “unton labor trust committee."* WHAT FoRt All this interference with the affairs of the poople, the violence and criminal ugll- ness 1s first to sell labor at Ligher prices tan tho market rate and next to show (ho men who buy Inbor that they have no right to say how that labor shall be used, but that tho workman shall say what he! shall do, how ho shall do tt and when. | These are the reasons puro and simple, {and tho publtc—you and I—must suffer in- | convenience nnd loss, and ultimately pay | all (he bills, for maintaining order by our city, county or Stato authorities, the total cost of prosocuting the criminals, and on ton of all that, we, the public, must pay Whatever rise tn wages Is made to buy off the troublo-makers, It 1s the people who suffer and pay. Suppose the “Union’? four millers go on strike for a raise from $$ to $5 a day and tle up or blow up the mills and finally Secure tho advance In wages. That advance must be put on the price of four and the People pay ft, and also pay all coats for ippressing the rioters. 80 wo wer na few men becomo avarictour for money, form a Inbor trust, and by coercion foree the rest of the people In tho United States to submit to the impudencd and arroganco ond also pay all the bills, ‘There would bo no limit to the abuse If the “Unions had their own ,way unchecked, Ts {t not time the people took steps to pro- tect theinselves from this violont and grasp- ing trust? ALL JOIN Fppose every one of us adopts the Tabor Union {den (labor trust) and by com- dination force avery onp else that doesn't belong to our Union to buy what we have to Fell at our price, or slug the Iife out of thery, Let the farmers’ unton sot the price of whert at §20 A bushel, and picket, assault or kil the miller and Mow up his mill if he tries to buy wheat at less price of any one but a "Union" firmer Then tho millers’ unton sets the price of flour at $85 a barrel, and calls every one “scah" that refuses to buy flour with the Union Label” on, and turns over the wagons, Icills the horses and beats tho drivers of any “sen” miller, Then every: body, workmen as well ns employers, would have to pay about {8 a barrel extra on every barrel of flour to the little Inbor trust of mill Somo ono snya, "that's ex. treme." It ts not, but Is exactly what would happen if that particular unton got Tower enough, You see, the only Mmit to the avarictousness of a Inbor trust ts net by the people at large, when thoy are abused Jong and hard enough to rise and quash tt. Thon let the water works “Union” set the price of $1 a pail for drinking water and boycott and assault the family that unes its own well water. ‘You are no friend of the Union man if you don't drink unton water.” Finally the undertakers’ ‘‘Unton" fixes the price of a burial at $350 (any price they set ‘‘poes," for that's the union rule), and the poor corpse whose relatives can’t borrow or beg the price to pay the "Unton" must go without the privilege or be dumped {oto the street und the hoarse overturned if fan independent funeral be attempted, OIL TRUST The Of Trust 18 a peaceable organization compared with the riotous, arrogant anit lawbreaking Libor trust, a menace to cvery oltizen, including the upright members of tho Unions themselves, In a public contract to be tet, immedt- ately @ demand {8 made that only “Our Union'’ be employed and receivo the peo- ple‘s money and threats of all sovts of political defeat and diro disaster are made, Suppose a quarry trust should demand that no other stone be used, or the Steel ‘Trust mako similar demand and actually tle up the work to enforce “orde What a how! would go up, but the public hos focllahly cuddled these Labor Unions until they have become disensed and are a public menace and nulsance. Hvory ono concedes the right of any re- Uglous body, fraternal socicty or a labor Union to ret un rules for their own guld- ance, But they have no right whatsoover to make Inws for tho control of other People, and whon they Interfere and forco their presence where they are not wanted ey should be locked uy and proseciited. Theso Inbor union manipulators, and some members of unions are out and out anarchists and dangerous enemies to the publie, ‘Thelr minds Jaw’ just os tru north pole, Have a careful.took at the stock and si turn to anarchy or ‘'no ® needle turns to the OPPOSK POLICE When a manvtacturer cannc® afford to Pay the price asked for labor, the unions, fn order to force him, go on a strike, Picket, boycott, riot, and set up general disorder, Then the police are called tn to preserve peace. Thore has been no dis: order by the man who buys Inbor, It is only caused by (he men who have labor to sell and who become outlaws, and bandits under the leadership of anarchists. ‘The police are hired by the people's money to protect the community, but when theso peace officers appear do the Unions show kenulne American citizenship, and that de Ne for peace, and the maintenance of the people's laws that marks the true man and patriot? Never! They hiss and stone the police, shoot them when they dare, and when whipped into a semblance of decency loudly protest in every possible way against the presence of police, shoriffy, Milltla or Regulars. Why? Only one reasn, they want (o commit crimes and hate anything or any one that check# them MILITIA ME Te) Ave discharged from the Untons, You fe ere tho same criminal Instinet allied opposition to tho people's protectors, a Why do they want the Militia broken up— so they can rlot and burn at plonsurot ANUL INJUNCTION BILL ‘This has been pushed hard before Con- areas by the Labor leaders, It {9 a bill to tnko away from the courts any right to issue a ruining order to prevent the commission ot crime, Under tho prevent vito laws for the protection of Ife and property, when It seems clear that striking | Pandits, and outlaws plan to K other mon ot destroy property, the | an (ssuean order ov Injunction com- then) to desirt or refrain from This has been a| % me and ean vever mimo any = penseadle person, but the Unione" have the appalling impudeace to ask Congress to pace a bill to tle the hands of every court and this allow the Wnion strikers full away to assault, dynaonite, purn and destroy without hindrance, Does | tho anarchist spirit show? UNIONS PROTECT CRIMINALS When Union men are caught assaulting, Durning. er in murder, whose money pro- Union mon, atta court tects them? Union funds. Aro their minds In favor of the law or of the lawbreakers? After you have decided whether this good sizod body of Union members have the criminal mind or not, have a look at their stondy efforts to stop progress and natural wrowth, APPRENTICES They deny the right to young men to learn a trade. Thin is to keep the supply of workmen scarce, make high wages for the fow, and drive all the balance Into poverty and perhaps crime by lack of chance to learn a trade and earn an honert ving. BREAK CoyTRActs A tow and very few instances, show Where Unions honor a contract when it feems to their interest to brenk it, The Wisely managed Brotherhood of Locomotive Enginevrs, has become justly famous for Mts Intogrity in this respect, also the Typo- Srophical Union, but the great majority havo shown themselves entirely unworthy. PERJURY Tn ono case tn a court tn Ohio upwards of 40 Union men aworo falsely as shown by tho court ordering the Union books and rocords examined. Thin ts but one of hun- dreds of canes in the courts in the last 20 years, They lend themrclves to any sort of crime they dare perpetrate to prevent other Amerteans from earning a living. They seek in every way to prevent immt- gration when our farmers and housewlyes need help mont seriously. ‘They encourage workmen to do as little as noratble, They put the botch workman (if he be: long to Union) on the same woges as tho wkitled mechanic, ‘They continually meek means to stop work, harass those who pay Inbor and have ruined countless enterprines that formerly brought money and prosperity to commlnt- thee RUIN TO ENGLAND The "Tnlon" plan has been ao effectively conducted in England. by keeping down the outont, “soldiering'? and doing as little work as possible, keeping out {mproved machinary and conducting all Inditetrtes under Unton rule that other countries have taken the business and we ceo a tremen- dous army of unemployed’? all over Ting- land now erying for work and broad which thelr “unton' rules have driven away, The Union will produce the sane con- ditfons here It they are not curbed. They have driven away millions of dollars worth of work in the pant two years by thelr eternal fight against progress. They atop work and tle up Industry on the slightest pretext, DANGER TO PROPEL "'W'"™ If thin trust be allowed to grow and tn- crease in strength it will dominate and rect every act of the people—the common people, who are now abused, tyrannized over, and the cost of their actual necossi- tis Incrensed by strikes and labor troubles, in order to foster the power of the leaders of the trust. It must be curbed and no time should be lost. Question, how? A REMEDY First lot every citizen refuse to humiliate himself by joining the nefarious boycott In Any ense, and remember the ‘union boy- cott" takes a form called the “union label’ by which the unions say: “Don't buy any- thing except that which we make. Boycott whatever fe made by independent work- men.'* A self-respecting American who has any regerd for the rights of his fellow man, and for his own guarantee of freedom, will remember that many of the finest and most akilitul American workmen are not union men and do not require a union label on thelr productions to force them on the people, but thy high character of their work shows In the articles they produco which nell better without a “unton label’ than with it, Thin {s true of hats, shoes, clothing and the great wi ty of buman necenaities, The arrogance and impudence of the proclamation of the Uniona, “buy only of us, all else is bad," has driven hundreds of thousands of the best class of buyers to Fefuse to prostitute themselves to these “unton orders’ and they decline ahsolutely to buy anything with a union label on tt, SEAL OF SLAVERY Remember the union label as managed under "diseased untonirm' {s the seal of servitude and contribution to the most Arrogant and abusive trust extant When a solf-respecting patriot thinks of the femontacal acts, indignities and abuaos heaped upon fren Americans, in forcing this modern ‘diseased unionism’ upon them, In order to support @ faw trust lead- evs (alias labor leaders) it makes the blood boll, and the good old fathors’ spirit of freedom and justice arise and domand of uw that we use the sternest measures to free our people from this new and hated form of tyranny. ORGANIZE TOWNS The next atop toward freedom ts for each city, town and hamlet to form a Citizens Association for mutual protection; band to- fether amd by public sentiment and act protect your citizens in thelr freedom to work when and for whom they please, and the freedom of morchants to sell to whom: soever desires to buy, despite any ‘‘union'? orders. TRAITORS If any merchant ts coward enough to refuse to ‘help defend his city and her people, preferring to lckspittle for the tyrannous "Untons,"' don't boycott ifm. just let the public know it and he will quickly find that 8 per cent, of the people Are not ‘Union and his cowardice and traitorous attitude toward his townspoople will bring {ts own reward, Then havo your Citicona Association agree to support and protoct your industries in continuous actiy- ity. particularly when the ‘Unions’ try to shut them down and thus seek to ruin the town, Some, yes many, towns have suftered untold lows from belng “unionized” and in. such It 19 easy for the oltizens to form their associations for protection, for they have seen the necessity, Let other towns that have not yet been through the fire take warning and act in tle for no epidemic of disease can di the financial barn to a town at {4 sure to come from "diseased wnton- ui! Woll stayted with the certain follow- . disorder, assaults, dostrus- tion of property and loss of business, LON MEN JOIN Lot the peaceable Union men join with the other citizens so that they cannot be tyrannized by their leaders or the anar- chists and sootaliats, ‘Vhere are many Unions so unlawful ang ualy ha even the national labor organiza. tions deplore their existence and sometimes withdraw thelr charters, but this great movorent by citizens to protect thomaelves does not necessarily mean the destruction of all Untons, MUST BE CURRED It 1® absolutely demanded by public poltey that they be strongly curbed and held to Strict obsorvance of the law. When they boycott, intimidate or conspire “in restraint of ‘trade’ tet the Citizens Association's lawyere proceed against and punish ther Under the existing laws and let publie sentiment be #0 pronounced and outspoket Aa to force the criminals to haye « cece regard for the rights of citizenn of oloees and conditions, ‘ on't hesitate to openly denounce a noley, i abusive and unlawful “Union man an elp luck Hee deck him up It necessary to pre ° FBAR No noycorrs T Droy ull your fears of the throat these bandits. ‘Their buycotts. tail fiat of pelp the firm boycotted, If they try eycott, ailvertive the fact and the decomk Doople will double your business, It 1s @ poleriaue fact that It generally means dee font of @ political cundidate to have. Bit Indorsed'’ as a “friend of the ne. for the big $5 per cent. of cans bite thoir tyranny and put the shelf when (hey have a chance, bed i) CONDITIONS 8 A hopeful sign to seo the “Unto slowly changing for better and they ee continue to improve and become more law, ablding If they expect an indignant. ube to permit them to oxist. One great dee terrent is the violwut character of the edie tors of their labor papers, who persistently iisstate facts and mislead thelr readers, b} highly colored ‘roports ‘aid. commentay thet {inflame the minds of people, led too’ often by thelr prejudico instand of cool reason. . But slowly tho Union man ia coming te nderstand that if he becomes a Iawe tweaker In response to the anarchtstle age Feations of his inbor paper he mist pay the penalty of orime ngainst his fellows Whou the anarchists, socialists and ort Inais ave either driven out or suppreseed, the unions will perhaps then pattern atte® tho honored Brotherhood of Locomotive Mogineers, and win respect for thelt mem: hers, by ‘honesty, uprightness and goo} citizenship. then’ the Union man. wilt known aka capable, thrifty and high grade workinan (the old ‘Trade Unton Idea) and the scrubs and pratenders will not be ils! lowed to flaunt a Union Card os evidence of their right to ubuse and maltreat all the balance of mankind, ‘The Unions as now mado vp necd an immense amount of hous cleaning and the public has been forced by. theiy ugliness to demand it, Byary ight UMDkIe Union man. knows the ands te earnest in his desira to have the criminals expunged, for the peacoable mambors are, genounced by the public for thelr assocta. tion with the others, Tf these high grade men would withs draw from the mismanaged bands of oute Jows gud set up a union where good works manship var the test, and then offer thel® firet class labor nt even higher prices tha common, with their contracts mado leg rosponalbie, and if it became known that when A buyer of labor didn't care to pure chase, thix untor would peaceably offer tt Inbor elsewhere, but not go bullying MWko 9 lot of bandits aud Jawbroakers, th would then command the admiration an reanect of tho eniira community, for people ike to see workmen prosperous, Observe the high position in the minds of the pub; He that the Locomotive Engineers have won for thomeelvex by just this plan of prow codure, Many and many a high grade man fs an unwilling associras and inember of the ans archy-talnted unions, and he seeks freedom somehow, somewhere. H Help him, Tt 1s no insult to tell a man he fe tn @ piace that stinks, he may Know and dew plore it, but if he defends the stinking, place he Insults hiinself, CRIMINAL BRAND ‘ So when you hear a Union man denounes® those who point out the crimes of the Unions and seek to purify them, you may know to n certainty that he |9 of the anat= chiet, criminal type and squirms when the sunlight of publicity Is turned upon hima» Among this cluss will be found the majority of labor paper editors, We should femand of our public ofietaty that they proceed as thoy did in. the trust and give the people proteotion from, this labor trust that opprossos the comme people more than a doren meat or trusts, € i What ts — cent or two on a gallon of o} as compared with the hundreds of vat wort , of of docent brend-earners thrown out of wo! from timo to time, and the hundreds millions of dollars in business lost to the? people by tho withdrawal of capital from industry, i) REFUSE TO BUILD jf Tt {sn common remark nowadays that no one but a foo! will start a new buildin or @ now Industry and subject himself the tremendous tosses, indignities, and wor, ty from the labor untons, The proposed building operations and new Industries that have been abandoned fi the part (wo years amount in dollars an cents, lost to our work people. more than! would keep an army in meat and oll for @! lifetime. Citizens, high and low, you must riso in your might and free yourselves from this Worst of ll trusts—this startling menace to human Mberty, Tt ts before you and {ts ine juries are felt by every man but the few eavy-Hving leaders who have by organtans tion of tho 16% of workmon. threatened the complete domination of the 85% of unore ranized citizens, Thia fair country has already been in- ured hundreds of milions of dollars and {iY foupte aubjected to countless scores of {ndignities by the labor trust, AcT We havo oonspiracy and trust laws, Write President Roosevelt urging that he direot tho proper ronment officers to do heir duty with thls most rulnogs of all ts, then don't forget your own. aos tho boycott, the unton label to organize your towns for protection, Read this article over again carefully ang, Act. Cc, W. Post. = N, B, You ask what motive inspires m@ to pay about $20,000.00 to print this "prods Jomation of fveedom” In the various pupere in the United States sure to bring down on me hundreds more of coarse, villtyini abusive letters from labor union thugs an many kind letters from Inwabiding mem-> vere of Unions, Tho oMeints of the Labor Commissfoner's, f Michigan say I pay the highest tages tn the state for lke work, But 4 will not bow to the comtc opera kings and Fotemates of the Jnbor unions or allow them to ‘unionize! the Poatum factories, Theretoro boycott ‘'Postum'’ an@y Nuts, Freee trained to rin my businoss andy they were not; yet they proposo to and! their abuwe bas been sufficient to Interost J een Study of the fearful conditions | that confront our country, to-day, The people of the world have given m money enough to spend In. theso, talk through the papers in trylig to make better And sater conlitions for the common péople, Whether the Postum business runs or not. Rvores of letters have come to mo from work. people and others: some from wnton ent qecounting their sufferings from wnton Hemination and wreing that tholr eases be laid before the public. Tt will not answer for us to only sym pathize with the poor, the oppressed, thoag Who haven't power enovgh to drive o| Mee te nand resent opprossion, wo muss Hein them tie the hands ef the oppressors, ; ericans must act Americnny ny New. magiHa of my foreboars in seh eetntortabte homes, took with them the old fint locks, slept on the ground tn] tity and frost: bunery, footsore, and hale Mathed they, gtliniy | pushed on wher ote dod of Human Liberty urqed p the Blot ay owove for me ant for pony an fuantlg, of freedom. woven ‘in — huttles were cant alls an FUMeee Tana where Words. oro used to Mets ho tangles In the yarn. Pe OU hte stunty,graddads cf urn stoga Aint Joon wnt N10 WA ; by thn aned wetth Ito lod tt wad f tied down tons. § V0 to bene handed Wowshoulders beoause the wearing {eon ny few dollars, and are you cowards conte pide yours boriuse some forelem (MOUSH Len anarchist orders you to atrip,| it oft? th that the hlood of 1776 1 have fair velne will tingle and coursing 10 waken. Then Americans will Aci until you pov Ti : 100)

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