.MTIyMw.OTY1ODk

From Newberry Transcribe
Jump to navigation Jump to search

6 - in this one and too many that talked on the outside, He said they had done nothing but what the Company had been informed of ? to getting the circulars that had been sent out to the chairman, and that they had some traitors ? when and they would find out who they are, as they had some as good men working on this as the Company had. Hoyr came in and they had quite a long talk, most of them urging him to accept Arthur's place in case Arthur should resign. Hoyr said that would not do before the strike was over because the minute the Company found out that they were quarreling among themselves they could do nothing and that they must not do anything that would cause bad feeling among their own men as the Company was just waiting for something like that to occur and then they would be gone. He said he thought if they formed the association the same as the steel and iron workers that they could win any strike. He said that they saw how they (the Steel & Iron Workers) forced the Manufacturers to come to terms and they could do the same thing with the railroad companies only better, and what ever they do there Thursday they must do as a unit and