Page:The Mystery of Central Park.djvu/81

Rh In fear and trembling the girls crowded timidly about the shaft to read what new misery the foreman had in store for them. They instinctively felt it was a reduction, and the first glance proved their fears were not unfounded.

Some of the girls began to cry, and Dido, the bravest and strongest, spoke excitedly to them of the injustice done them. Even now they were working for less than other factories were paying.

"There is surely justice for girls as well as men somewhere in the world, if we only demand it," she cried, encouragingly. "Let us demand our rights. We will all go down, and I will tell the proprietor that we cannot live under this new reduction. If he promises us the old prices, we will return to work. If he refuses, we will strike."

The braver girls heartily joined the scheme, and the weaker ones naturally fell in, not