RAILWAY STRIKE
OVERTURES ABORTIVE
LOCO. MEN DECIDE TO GO ON
HELP OFFERED FROM AUSTRALIA. .
(UNITED TRESS ASSOCIATION. —COPYRIOBT.) (BEDTEK'S TELEGRAM.) (Received 25th January, 2 p.nu) : I LONDON, 24th January. The railway managers, in reply to a request oi the Locomotive Society^ for a fresh conference,*" emphasise the determination of the managers not to discuss a revision of the decision of »,the National Wages Board, but, 'if the Locomotive Society's executive Will indicate the existing differences they have in mind, a meeting will be arranged, if the differences are such as can at present be usefully discussed. The executive of the locomotive men subsequently decided to inform the rail-* way managers that the strike must con- ' tinue. . , Mr. Bronjley announced that a cable had been received from the Australian Federated" Engineers' Association offering financial assistance, which it was decided to accept. . A hundred thousand South Wales and six thousand Lothian miners are idle.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 21, 25 January 1924, Page 8
Word Count
152RAILWAY STRIKE Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 21, 25 January 1924, Page 8
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