Show ON lOW PERIL SCARE I THING HING OF PAST LABOR SAYS uel mel Gompers and Present Present Pres- Pres ent Officers Re-elected Re by Federation By Telegram Special Mewl Kewi BALTIMORE BALTI p. p Md lid Nov Noy 2 27 The The ican Federation of Labor brought weeks' weeks session to an In notable table President b by re electing and all other present Sl nd choosing Buffalo as the 1917 city rHe e last hours of the convention were voted ot d largely to international ques- ques iii It was voted in spite of a com- com report that conditions were not for an international labor press gr gress ss in connection with the peace aty meetings at the end of the war t efforts toward such a congress uld be tabled Labor it was wag deed de- de eel ed by resolution should insist on presentation res in the treaty making matting Andrew Furuseth president of the ens en's union raised the only dis- dis ting Ung voice Labor he said could have any influence in the i and the only result that uld ld Id follow fonow labors labor's taking part would to Ita to saddle on the labor movement the thEl responsibility ty for th the terms freed eed upon no matter what they ht be list ket t for Mexicans ile le indorsing the revolution under Jin Mexico and declaring the right Mexicans to wor work out their destiny keeping with their concepts of lib- lib he rAthe convention ratified the e efforts forts the executive council to obtain a a. oration of a Carranza decree outIng outing out- out Ing ring all strikes s in Mexico Carlos arlos Lovera Mexican l labor Jabor lea leader er presented with a gold locket and alsed for his part in bringing land and American labor interests to- to Lovera with a speech telling the growth of the labor movement II Central Central and South America won one the Ith the warmest demonstrations of the invention John Bohn Golden Boston and Frank Faron Faron Far- Far on Springfield Ill were named as delegates to the British trade ion tort congress and Emmanuel Kovel- Kovel Rochester ochester to the Canadian trades labor congress low Mow Peril Gone Prominent ro labor lead leaders rs here declared ight night the federation had driven a ae ae aike ike e in the coffin of the Yellow Peril Measures taken in the closing hours the convention they said proved between American labor and anese labor soon will b be a thing of past They beli believe belies the bitter feel- feel between the ra rac on the Pacific been responsible ble for the fears Iwar jar with Japan They said this ter feeling is now practically gone Just Must ten years ago a California gate legate said President Roosevelt Hed ed a al bu bunch burich ch of use to the White use and r read d the riot act to use bese bese beuse be- be use se of the troubles we had had with the Japanese which threatened the re relations relations relations re- re lations between the United States and Japan What a lot has happened in those ten years ears Striking proof of th the change was shown when Bunji Suzuki fraternal delegate from labors labor's friendly society of Tap Japan an was called to the platform In InI Inthe inthe the last hours of the convention and I presented with a gold locket by members Members members Mem mem- bers of the California delegation The convention referred to the executive l council Suzuki's request that a representative representative representative of the American Federation of Labor be sent t to Japan next spring to preach unionism to the Japanese The executive council intimated it I would send President Gompers The latter has indicated ted hi his willingness ess to go |