The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 48, October 7, 1897 - A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls by Various
page 23 of 30 (76%)
page 23 of 30 (76%)
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The Japanese are continuing to send large numbers of emigrants to
Honolulu, and the Hawaiians have become very much alarmed about it. They insist that the new colonists are Japanese soldiers disguised as laborers, and that the Mikado is sending them over to be in readiness to fight for the possession of the country in case the United States decides to annex it. * * * * * The strike in Hazleton is now over, but the settlement has not been made without a good deal of trouble and anxiety. When the state troops ordered out by the Governor arrived in the town, some of the men decided to go to work under the protection of the troops. The spirit of the strikers had been broken by the firing of the Sheriff and his posse, and many of the men who were peaceably inclined thought the best thing to do was to go back to work. The women did not agree with them. The wives and mothers of the unfortunate men who had been killed declared that their dear ones should not have been sacrificed for nothing; and as the men refused to continue the strike, the women decided to go on with it for them. A strike is of no use unless all the men stand together and hold out for their point. The women understood this perfectly, and they determined that the men should stand together. Arming themselves with sticks, they set out in a body for the mines that were being worked, and under the very noses of the soldiers raided the |
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