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Editor Railway Conductor:
At a regular meeting of Division 378,
September 15, a preamble and resolutions were adopted denouncing
the assassination of President McKinley and expressing sympathy
for his loving wife and relatives. We mourn with them in the loss
of our friend and President. Every labor organization in this city
has passed similar resolutions through their president, Samuel Gompers,
of the Federated Trades Unions, including the Machinists’ Union.
It speaks well for organized labor to be so loyal and patriotic
in this hour of the country’s sorrow, on account of losing the greatest
friend to organized labor that ever sat in the presidential chair.
Wm. McKinley was the one President and the only President that ever
met organized labor on the level. He sat alongside of our Grand
Chief Conductor at Chicago at a called meeting of the four railroad
organizations and addressed them on the labor question. He should
be remembered in the hearts of all organized railroad men, as he
believed in labor organizations. The writer was in front of the
Washington Post building on the evening of the assassination at
Buffalo and the bulletins were sent to the multitude of people on
the streets below when the writer overheard a very pompous and corpulent
individual talking in a very loud voice, saying that organized labor
was to blame for this. I finally worked my way over among the crowd
and called him down in some plain language, more forcible than polite,
winding up with telling him that organized labor was the means of
keeping down anarchy; also that organized labor got all the reforms
for labor that the government employe [sic] was now enjoying—eight
hours for a day’s work, thirty days annually with pay, and several
other reforms too numerous to mention. The world is just full of
such men as this mouthy individual, thinking he might make a hit
to knock on organized labor. Organized labor throughout the country
should express themselves against anarchy, then when the Fifty-seventh
Congress meets next December our lawmakers will know that organized
labor is back of them in passing an immigration law, also a law
that will root out all kinds of anarchists from our fair land. We
are compelled to pass such laws or the greatest country on earth
would be a failure.
Brother Welch, your letter puts me
to thinking if our Grand Division headquarters was in this capital
city of this great country and one of our Brothers in Mexico should
make an appeal for help through our Grand Chief Conductor in Washington,
how easy it would be for him to make a visit to the President, stating
his case. And all the Brothers believe that he would get a hearing,
saying that he would have the Secretary of State attend to the matter
immediately. That alone would be cause enough for the Grand Division
at Pittsburg [sic] in 1903 to move the Grand Division headquarters
to Washington, D. C. We will say some great emergency calls for
the voice of all organized labor, if all organized labor had their
headquarters here, how easy it would be to get returns from the
several subordinate Divisions and lodges. Brothers, labor is looking
for just such a grand move. There are so many people in this country
that knocks on organized labor to the employer that when an opportunity
occurs, like the assassination of our President by a confessed [790][791]
anarchist, that is against labor organizations, they should take
advantage of the opportunity to show ignorant people that organized
labor is for good government, good wages and organizations, and,
as President Roosevelt said the other day to two laboring men that
approached him, on asking him if he was not afraid to be stopped,
“No, indeed,” he replied, “you men are our protection, and the foul
deed of Friday will only make you more vigorous in protecting those
whom you elect to office.”
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