Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 July 1894 — A Popular Wave. [ARTICLE]

A Popular Wave.

Cincinnati Times-Star. Never in the entire history of troubles between capital and labor were more satisfactory and welcome protests filed against the compromising results of a labor conference than is the protest said to have been filed by a lot of Huns near Wheeling Creek yesterday. They said they would not accept the ierms of the compromise, packed their few effects, and to the number of thirty started back for the lanii once ruled by Attilla, the “Scourge of God.” if all protests could be thus emphasized, where the dispute lies between Americans on one side and foreigners who came here with the avowed purpose of never becoming Americanized on the otheV, the day would draw near rapidly when labor and capital would learn to war no more, when white-winged peace would hover over all their deliberations. The exodus of these few Huns is no less welcome to the loyal labor element of this country’ than was the exodus of Attila and his hosts to PopelLe: the Great. If the Visigoths and Vandals, the nihilists, socialists, et al. of the country would but imitate the example the thirty Huns set yesterday the dawn of better days -could at once be traced in the bori zon. J. Pierrepont Morgan is credited with the intention of erecting a monument over the unmarked grave ol brave Molly Pitcher, of Revolutionary celebrity, which lies near West Point, pdjacent to the Morgan country seat at Highland Falls, on tht Hudson.