Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 March 1887 — INDUSTRIAL NOTES. [ARTICLE]

INDUSTRIAL NOTES.

Milwavkee dispatch: “The strike Of the printers iu this city is at an end, the Typographical Union having allowed its members to procure work wherever they can pet it. The blow is a heavy one to the 'union, and it is doubtful if it can hold together under the strain.'’ SIX' HUNDRED men wbo struck for 10 per cent, advance in pay at the . American j AYire Works at Cleveland were paid off and : discharged. Manx of them have_poae to i Altoona, Pa., and the remainder will 'seek i employment elsewhere., , .The strike of ; the Irakemen on-the New York. Pennsyij vania and Ohio Road stopped freight traffic i between Youngstown and Cleveland.... ; Marquette. Mich., dispatch: “The rumor i of a great strike of construction laborers on | the east division of the Duluth, South I Shore and Atlantic Railroad proves true, i All workmen on the Sault branch struck, demanding an advance of from $1.40 to $2. The laborers of the middle division also went out,, striking from sympathy but making no, demand--. The total number out is about five hundred.” THE Staking miners at Peoria, HI., are greatly excited over the arrival of 100 negroes to take their places... There is bo ! change in the silk-dyers’strike at Paterson, jN. J. Ten thousand operatives are as-

fee ted, and the employers refuse to treat with the strikers except as individuals.