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...Government management under the most favorable circumstances does not bring about these results. - e.g., Germany; France; Belgium; Italy: Forum XI, p. 79-90; Kirkwood 235, 236, 249, 250, 239-241, 284, 225, 322, 263, 224, 226; Hadley...
...HUTTON and J. A. FAIRLIE.Best general references: D. A. Wells in Forum XVII, 1 (March 1894); Lalor, Cyclopaedia of Political Science, II, 485-490; Nation, LIV, 24, 133 (Jan. 11, Feb. 22, 1894); D. B. Hill in Congressional Record, June...
...Aldrich and W. D. Brookings.Best general references: N. Y. Tribune, June 22 to July 13, 1894; T. M. Cooley in Forum, XVIII, 5-13 (Sept. 1894); H. J. Fletcher in Atlantic, LXXIV, 534-541 (Oct. 1894); Injunctions in N. Y. Tribune, July 3, 1894; Interstate Commerce Act, Feb. 4, 1887; Judge Grosscup's charge in N. Y. Tribune, July...
...injunctions were just in protecting the railroads. (a) The government compels the railroads to run regularly for the public good: Interstate. Commerce Act, S S 1, 2, 3, 5; N. Y. Tribune, July 4, 1894; Atlantic, Oct. 1894, p. 538. (b) The strikers were injuring the railroads: Forum, Sept. 1894, p. 6. (c) The injunctions were the only peaceful means by which the government could speedily lend help...
...injunctions were just to the general public. (a) The best means for the government to protect the public must be (1) swift; the strike was doing irreparable damage to innocent people: Forum, Sept. 1894, pp. 5-13. (2) If possible, peaceable. (b) The injunctions were the only means both swift and peaceable. (c) The increasing magnitude of railroad strikes demanded a vigorous legal precedent which should check violence and protect the public: Forum, Sept...