Daniel L. Cease

Daniel L. Cease (? - March 22, 1928) was editor and manager of The Railroad Trainman in Cleveland, Ohio. The publication was a monthly published by the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen[1] In 1913 and again in 1926 he was on the Board of Arbitration of the Interstate Commerce Commission.[2][3][4]

Publications

See also

References

  1. "Disability And Death Compensation For Railroad Employees". Daniel L. Cease. JSTOR 1011120.
  2. "Pay Raised". Time magazine. December 13, 1926. Retrieved 2009-08-18. The Board of Arbitration met the end of October. On it sat For the railroads: Robert V. Massey of the Pennsylvania and William Ayer Baldwin of the Erie. For the workers: E. P. Curtis, general secretary, Order of Railway Conductors, and Daniel L. Cease, editor, Railway Trainmen. For the public: William Delavan Baldwin, chairman, Otis Elevator Co., and Edgar Erastus Clark, onetime (1906-21) I. C. C. commissioner, now Washington, D. C. lawyer. They had just 45 days, according to law, to hear both sides of the dispute and to make their recommendations for settlement.
  3. "Eastern Rail Heads and Trainmen Reach Agreement in Controversy. Withdraw Demand to Submit Questions. Hearings Begin in September.". Chicago Tribune. July 27, 1913. Retrieved 2009-08-18.
  4. The financial review. 1914. City of New York, neutral arbitrators; W. W. Atterbury Vice-Pres. of the Penn. RR., and A. H. Smith, Senior Vice- Pres. of the N. Y. Cent., as representatives of the railroads, and Lucius E. Sheppard, Senior Vice-Pres. of the Order of Railway Conductors, and Daniel L. Cease of Cleveland, editor of the "Railway Trainman," as representatives of the employees. On Nov. 24 and 25 the Inter-State Com. Comm. began hearings on the petition of the railroads east of the Miss. River and north of the Ohio and Potomac rivers for an advance of 5% in freight rates, which, the examination developed, was intended to apply to intra-State as well as inter-State rates, and likewise to import and export rates, and was estimated to yield $40,000,000 to $50,000,000 additional gross revenues. Two days were devoted to the railroad side of the case and adjournment was then taken by the Commission until Dec. 10. ...