The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 13, 1929, Page 3

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' + Copyright, Publishers Co., Inc, BTL, HAYWOO All rights reserved. Republica- tion forbidden except by permission. Becomes a Soldier; the Wall Street Explosion; Money for Defense Big Bill Haywood, leader of the most militant section of the American labor movement for a quarter of a century has told his own story of work and class war up to the point where he was sent to Leavenworth Penitentiary with all those convicted in the great Chicago trial of the 1.W.W. He tells of the torture of prisoners, of escapes and food mutiny. Finally he was bailed out and imme- diately organized a general defense committee. One of its first tasks was to defend the group of 1.W.W. on trial in Wichita, Kansas, for criminal syndicalism. He wrote the famous pamphlet, “With Drops of Blood,” and made an appeal for funds for defense of this and other cases. Now go on reading. Reis ms ioe By WILLIAM D. HAYWOOD PART 109. HE Wichita trial, resulting in a conviction, took place in December. I had secured the services of a first-class lawyer in Kansas City to work in conjunction with Fred Moore. This lawyer went to New York with Fred Moore. Then he went to Washington in connection with the case. few days. They found his baggage, brief case and all the documents at his room in the hotel. The Kansas City lawyer dropped the case after his visit to Washington, D. C. We filed an application for a new trial on be- half of the men convicted at Wichita. But for some reason, Moore neglected to make the application in time. I again called a conference at headquarters and had Moore there to explain this apparent neglect. I demanded of him that he cite in a letter to the judge the full reason why he, as counsel, had not made the application for a new trial within the reauired time. said that to do that would be “committing hari-kari.” Moore I then told those who were at the conference of other delinquencies committed by Moore during the Ettor and Giovanitti trial at Salem, and the Everett trial at Seattle. While these had not been so serious as the present negligence, the organization must protect itself. Moore at this time was the attorney for the defense of Charles Kreiger at Tulsa, Okla. Kreiger demanded that he be continued as his lawyer. Moore handled the Kreiger case successfully, but that terminated his relations with the I.W.W. He was later employed by the Workers’ Defense Committee in the defense of Sacco and Vanzetti. Pate ete | WENT to New York City, where I spoke at several defense meet- ings. The night I left I was standing on one of the platforms at the Pennsylvania Station when a young man dressed in an army uniform walked up to me. Before he spoke, the thought flashed through my mind—“Now, what’s up?” He said: “You are Mr. Haywood?” I replied: “Yes, that’s my name.” I'm a son of a Don’t you remember me out in Idaho? He said: “I’m Corliss, don’t you remember me? Sheriff Moseley’s. I remembered him as a little boy. He used to come to our cell door nearly every day. I said: “You're in the army now?” “Yes. I first joined the Medical Corps and then I took up avia- tion. You saw the porter carrying in that silver thing? That’s a rophy that I won at Mineola today for fast flying. I came very close to the world’s record. This is my friend, Lieutenant Streete. He is the man who recently made the flight to Nome. If you come :2 Washington I would be glad to take you up. There’s no danger,” xe said, “not nearly as much as there is with an automobile, I’ve vaken up my mother and sister.” I said: “I might be glad to go up with you some time. Are you foing on this train?” He replied: “Yes.” “Well,” I said, “I’ll-be traveling in fast company.” I got off at Philadelphia, and the following night spoke in the labor Assembly Hall. I was leaving the next afternoon. Before I sot on the train I got the Philadelphia and New York papers and read of the terrible explosion in Wall Street, New York, which had killed 19 people and injured 200. Without a scrap of evidence the charge was deliberately made hat Communists or other radicals had planned to kill some of Amer- ca’s greatest capitalists. Somewhere along the road I was able to get the Chicago paper | vhere I found in big headlines that Haywood was wanted in con- vection with the Wall Street explosion. The story went on to say hat the authorities were searching for me. I determined in this in- tance not to surrender myself, but to avoid arrest as long as possible. When I -arrived in Chicago I went to the office of Otto Christen- en, a lawyer employed by the I.W.W., and with him went to Grace say, a summer resort where I enjoyed the hospitality of the caretaker f a summer home belonging to one of the Chicago capitalists. It is not difficult to imagine the influence that the Wall Street xplosion had on the minds of the judges of the Circuit Court, the udicial body before which our application for a new trial was pending. When I went back to headquarters, I decided to draft another ppeal. I went to Maurice Becker, who was then working for the rganization as cartoonist, and asked him to draw me a drop of blood. Vhat he drew looked much like a pearl or a grape, It was anything ut what I wanted. I dipped a pen into a bottle of ink and held it p until a drop fell on the paper. I said: “That’s what I want.” Becker said: “Well, why not have the cut made of that?” This I did, and used it on the appeal I wrote entitled: “With Yrops of Blood the History of the Industrial Workers of the World fas Been Written.” The first words were printed in red, with the rop of blood on the first and fourth pages. The appeal recounted the ersecution of the I.W.W., the imprisonment and murder of members, ling of halls, denial of right to exist and function as a labor or- anization, ' * ‘HERE was a generous response to the appeal. For the month of * November over $22,000 was received for the general defense. Lib- rty Bonds and cash contributions were sent in for bail. During the rials there was an aggregate of $400,000 received for general defense, ind a half million dollars for bail. The black bordered letters that were returned by the Post Office made use of by having them distributed in street cars, theatres, estaurants and by dropping them here and there on the streets. Cur- ms-minded people were certain to investigate a letter with a black ordr, for the purpose of finding out who was dead. The letter with drops of blood created a decided sensation. It , 48 printed in England, Russia and other countries. The National Se- arity League used the drops of blood on a circular issued by that ganization when they were after the scalp of Winthrop D. Lane, ho had used the letter With Drops of Blood in an article that was ot derogatory to the I.W.W. Lane had visited me while I was in te penitentiary. I gave him what information I could. * * ™ There were many others who wrote favorable articles in support "the organization and the men in prison. The American Civil Liberties Union took up our case and issued veral pamphlets in our behalf, or rather, as the members of that ganization would say, in behalf of justice and civil liberty. Stee Sa J Tomorrow Haywood tells of the formation of the Communist nd Communist Labor Parties, and of the Palmer Red Raids, You a t a copy of Bill Haywood’s Book free with each yearly sub- to the Daily Worker, either new or renewal. oes pit ata Sse ktanas BOOK Jonviction of the Wichita Boys; Sheriff’s Son While in New York, Fred Moore disappeared for a | | | ross, oy monocinet BRITIOH FINANCE AFGHAN BANDITS. TO RAID USSR, ‘Are Trying to Restore i: Bokhara Emir | MOSCOW, May 12. — British- financed Afghan bandits have begun to raid the Soviet border again, in |the Turkmenistan and Tadjik: an | | border regions between the U. Ss. |R. and Afghanistan. A bandit raid- inging party along the frontier was| one development, and another was an invitation by the bandit king of Ka- | bul, Bacha Sakao, to the exiled emir | of Bokhara and other violently anti- | Soviet emigres. Sakao has promised |them aid in attempting to regain [their former territories in the Soviet | Union, | Red Army Smashes Bandits. | The Red Army has defeated and} |dispersed a group of several hun- | dred bandit raiders under the notori- ous Maksu Fuizali, who was one of | | the few to escape. This band is one | of the largest of a number who have |been making raids along the border in attempts to terrorize these vil- | lages. These bands, called “Basmatchi,” always have been active in the bor- |der regions, but the Soviet Govern- |ment suppressed them in the days after the revolution. Now, under the inspiration—and finances—of the | for the Negro Champion by May 30 Negro workers against high rents, | Set back these peace maneuvers British imperialists, these bands! have been rapidly reorganized and/gro labor paper are the leading slo- wherever met with and against all ®"Xious for peace in Mexico, it is are well-armed and led by Czarist/gans in the campaign to increase pussy-footing on race and labor is-| ite likely that pressure is being refugees. Prisoners who have been ‘captured confirm this. Sakao is the source thru which the British are organizing and financing these raiders. FARM MATERIALS IN U.S. 5. R. GAIN DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 13 Page Three French Women Demand Right to Vote LATERRE yp oig M parte aes deat Bolt VOTER Sie Photo shows a French suffragette standing by a billboard de- manding “Votes for Women.” The French imperialists fear the large vote of the working class women. BUILD N EGRO CHAMPION 2,000 Subscribers by May 30, Is Aim “Two thousand ne subscriptions |leads the every-day struggles of the and the building of a powerful Ne- long hours, low pay, discrimination the influence of our paper among | sues. the Negro workers during National Wars Militantly. Negro Week,” said Cyril Briggs,| 8. Because its analyzis of the editor of the Champion, in an in- |Negro’s problems and the means we terview with the Daily Worker yes- must take for their solution are by terday. far the clearest and most able given Ly any paper in the United States. Because it wages war mili- uncompromisingly and un- | ceasingly upon all enemies of the The Negro Champion, official or- gan of the American Negro Labor Congress, will be distributed in many industrial centers where many Negro work re employed to ac- Negro workers, in and out of the aint them with the Congress and Negro xace. t it stands for. | 5. Because it keeps you informed Quotas Assigned. of the progress of the world-wide v GILREADYTO | The attempts by clericals and re- fe is .| Quotas have been designated for iFirst Half This Year tne tccsts of the A. N. L. © through, | Shows Big Increase out the country, and special commit- | tees, of white and Negro workers, MOSCOW, (By Mail).—During |#¢ at work on the drive. : the first half of 1928 ons for reading the Ne- |tions of agricultural raw materials |&'C Champion have been printed laggregated 640 million roubles com- |pared with 547.7 million roubles spent on the same raw materials |during the first six months of the |previous fiscal year. Collections of cotton amounted to |776,300 tons against 684,300 tons for the same period last year. Collections of sugar beet agere- jgated 9,359,000 tons and were 5.2 | per cent below last year’s collections. The reduction is due to the fact that | last year there was a record crop of sugar beet not equalled by this year’s harvest. of | A total 9,200,000 big hides were collected, as against 5,800,000 last year. The number of small |hides collected amounted to 15,000,- |000 compared with 11,100,000 last year. The collections of autumn wool amounted to 8,141,000 tons jagainst 6,251,000 tons last year. | A slight decline has been regis. | tered in the collections of flax, hemp |and tobacco, ‘Huge Blast Furnace Begins Operation in \‘USSR Works in Crimea | ODESSA, U. S. S. R., (By Mail). —In Kertsch in the Crimea a ne blast furnace has been opened. The oceasion was turned into a great celebration of the industrialization. The furnace belongs to one of. those tremendous industrial works which | the Soviet Union has built in recent years.’ The workers sent telegrams of greeting to the French sailors in| connection with the tenth anniver-| | sary of the Black Sea mutiny. The ‘new furnace will supply 250 tons of and distributed. The reasons are as follows: Leads Negro Workers. Because it strives for the or- jganization of Negro workers for their protection against economic exploitation and for the breaking down of ail barriers against Negro workers in the trade unions, struggle for emancipation of op- ! sressed races and classes. 6. Because it is the Negro w ers’ champion against all oppression, €conomic, raci 7. Becaus Workers’ Foes : fA Renee MAKE PEACE WITH CHURCH StruggleBetweenCalles and Gil Over CROM MEXICO CITY, May 10.—Not content with having sold out to Wall Street, Portes Gil is now ready to capitulate to the reactionary cath-| olic church in Mexico. He has invited | Archbishop Ruiz, head of the cath-| olic church hierarchy, to take the lead in opening negotiations for set- tling the quarrel, and the latter has submitted the matter to the vatican. It is likely that peace will result, on the basis of making common cause against the masses and for mutual defense of Wall Street and the vatican. The break between the govern-| , ment and the church came in August 1926, when through the so-called ae “Calles law,” catholic priests were! Two of the misleaders of the Brit- suspended from the churches and|ish Labor Party, active in the clec- services were ordered discontinued. | tion ‘campaign, are shown above. Many attempts have been made dur- They are the wealthy pride of the ing these three years to bring about | British “socialists,” Lady Mosely, peace, and when Gil took office he whose wealth came from the exploi- was supposed to be friendly toward tation of British workers, and Mrs. resumption of relations. Philip Snowden, whos husband, Philip Snowden, has a long of betrayal of the British wo and who, as chancellor of the ¢ chequer in the MacDonald cabinet, received much praise from the Eng- lish financiers. “SOCIALISTS” IN VIENNA RETREAT recor U. S. for Full Pacification. actionary large landowners to over- throw the Gil government, however, temporarily. With Wall Street so brought to bear upon Gil to make peace with the clericals. + 2 * Conflict Between Gil and Calles. MEXICO CITY, May 10.—That there are dormant dissensions be- tween the present president of Mexico, Portes Gil, and his prede- cessor and actual minister of war, Calles, is explained by the Mexican Communist Federal Deputy, Hernan Laborde, in a recent article in “El Machete,” organ of the Mexican | Communist Party. | Make Cowardly Deal on Rents to Keep Peace ’lelared that it was opposed BEFORE FASCISTI It was well known that Obregon was a bitter enemy of the of Calles. According to Laborde, only the death of Obregon prevented it seeks to educate a split between him and Calles on! mobilized by VIENNA, May 12.—With the parades of the fascisti organization, rk- CROM, which was the main support the Home Defense Corps, and the socialist corps in Vienna scheduled for today, 10,000 police have been the christian socialist the Negro worker in trade union | the question of the CROM and the government to “keep the peace.” principles and the need for organ- | ization. | 8. Because it is ever on the alert to expose the camouflage schemes of the oppressors and of their tools within the race, 9. -Because it |news ard new: leads ictures. 10. Because it prints news other with live power of the laborista_ party. Since the demonstration of the Gil Hostile to CROM. fascisti at Wiener-Neustadt last Almost immediately after his in-| October, and the passivity of the auguration Portes Gil showed his| social democrats in the face of the hostility to the CROM leaders, |threat of a fascist dictatorship, the while Calles remained their defender. | provocative weekly parades of the It was interesting that when Portes | fascisti in “socialist”? Vienna itself Gil started his campaign against the has added weight to the threat of CROM, Calles, the minister of war, the notorious counter-revolutionary 2. Because it participates in and|Negro papers are afraid to toch. and not the minister of labor, re-|Major Pabst, who helped murder Negro Misleader Thru the nomina- tion of several Ne- grocs to Annapolis and West Point, where Wall Street trains the leaders in the slaughter of |workers, the Negro sleader and capi- talist politician O. ea De Priest is playing Wail Street's game, by thus at- tempting to encour- age the oppressed Negro workers to become cannon fod- ler for Wall Street m the coming perialist war. i im- Ne- gro appointees in West Point nad An- napolis meet with white chauvinism. Aids Imperialism nominees to Annapolis, Lawrence Whitfield. Fire Engine Workers Win Strike for Union Tacna-Arica Deal; Sure Leave Fancy Togs After Year’s Struggle ELMIRA, N. Y. (By Mail).—The strike of the machinists of the cast iron daily. A second furnace! American La France and Foamite will be opened shortly with a capa-| Corporation has‘ been won after 12 city of 275 tons a day. The basis months. The 300 machinists on |of a third furnace with a capacity strike were fighting for the right to |of 375 tons per day was also laid. organize. The company makes fire | The furnace works will be so ex-| |tended during the next four years| | that upon its completion it will pro-| |duce 10 per cent of the total pro-| | duction of the Soviet Union. The} | great significance of the new works | \is that it will greatly assist in the) | abolition of the metal shortage and! |assist in making the Soviet Union| | independent of capitalist countries. | |It has also the significance that it| | will turn Kertsch into an industrial center and this is part of the pro-| gram of the Soviet Union for the Tartar population of the Crimea, ie., to industrialize them, About 3,000 Killed in, Persian Earthquakes During Last 2 Weeks THEREAN, Persia, May 12.—The death toll in last week’s earthquake jon the Soviet-Persia border was re- ported at approximately 3,000 per- sons in advices received here today. In the Khorassan area, several villages are reported virtually de- molished, FOREST FIRES IN CANADA WINNIPEG, Man., May 12. series of devastating forest fire: swept through the parched timbe lands of northern Manitoba and Sas- kachewan today. Stiff winds mad the work of fire fighters difficult. | A heavy rainfall was all that could halt further spread of the flames, lighters said, engines and extinguishers, Tottering War Lord Rival war lords are aiming to end the rule of Chang Hsiao-Liang (above), over Manchuria. He is the on of the former dictator Chang Tco-lin, who was assassinated. This will mean substitution of one bloody dictatorship for another; both op- press the workers and peasants of China, The Red Armies of the Chi- nese workers and peasants grow in power daily, and threaten the war lords in many sections. To Publish Details of to Be Favorable to U.S. SANTIAGO, Chile, May 12 (UP). |—Details of the settlement of the | Vaena-Arica province dispute be- | tween Chile and Peru will be. pub- | lished tomorrow, it was said in reli- | able sources tonight, President Hoover’s memorandum outlining the basis of the settlement, as given to ‘the United States as mediator, was | iveceived at the foreign office here | \late yesterday. The memorandum also has been communicated to the Peruvian for- eign office, . * * During this so-called dispute the Yankee imperialists refused to ac- jcept any settlement but one which would assure United States control of the nitrate fields in Chile and the Guggenheim copper mines. They also wanted an outlet to the sea for Bolivia, which is in the grasp of Yankee oil and mine interests. It is believed that the settlement will undoubtedly prove favorable to | United States imperialism. | ‘Baptist College Boys) Squabble; Tell Stories of Man of God’s Affair Sailors Hear Young Communists. At 96th Street, the Communist Youth League held a successful anti- militatist demonstration. A large number of sailors, of the U. S. navy ships stationed at that point heard speakers expose the role of Amer- ican imperialism thruout the world. | Seyeral hundred copies of the Daily Worker, containing a special appeal to the sailors, were distributed among them, { Photo shows one of De Priest's |, ceived a deputation of CROM dele-/Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Lieb- gates and later defended their cause} knecht, of a “march on Vienna.” before Portes Gil. Sell Out Workers. While the CROMistas lost all poli-| In the face of this fascist provo- tical jobs and influence, it is note- cation, the social democratic leaders worthy that, due to Calles being the have made compromise after com- minister of war, CROMista leaders promise, until now they have agreed remained the directors of the muni- to the repealing of the rent laws, | tions factories and that one of the hailed as their “triumph,” for the leaders of the CROM, Gasca, ac- sake of peace with the fascisti. Otto companies Calles in his campaign Bauer, the “Austro-Marxian” leader, against the generals of the North.|is urging support of Herr Danne- Revolutionary Phrasemonger. berg, who arranged the rent com- Thus Calles has still behind him| promise with the christian social- the apparatus of the CROM, whom | ists. he supports, while Portes Gil en- Whatever gains the Vienna work- courages another group of labor or-|ers won by mass pressure in the way ganizations opposed to the CROM of housing relief, will therefore be and supporting him. To win the null by 1931, when rents will be adherence of the anti-CROM ele-| for the landlords to decide and will ments, Portes Gil, who has proved | mount to the sky, as the result of on former occasions that he is op-| this “socialist” sellout. posed to all labor organization: Build Workers Corps. uses now the most revolutionary) The Communist Party of. Austria phraseology. By attaching to him-|is exposing , the” treacherous “char- self a “revolutionary” anti-CROM acter of ‘the socialists and their ‘organization he hopes to make him- cowardly withdrawal/in the face of self independent of Calles and the the armed forces ‘of{fascism. CROM, Workers’ ‘defense’ corps are being |built in the factories by the Com- munists, despite the fact that the former chancellor Seipel had de- clared these corps’ illegal. Home Is Advice to Tourists in USSR INDICT OFFICIALS The question of a wardrobe should not trouble the prospective tourist to | the Soviet Union, according to Mil-| ton Goodman, director of World Tourists, Inc, 175 Fifth Ave. au-| thorized agents in America for Rus-| WHITE PLAINS, May 12.—Eight indictments against Mamaroneck village officials and other public employes were returned by the West- chester County grand jury, which _iment he received in the barracks, sian tourist traffic. has: been investigating vice condi- “In the Soviet’ Union,” Goodman |tions for the past seven weeks. Su- said, “there is no formal clothing | preme Court Justice Frank L. Young standard as there is in other Euro-| received the indictments, some of pean countries. In Russia, clothes N . > play a negligible role in identifying which charge bribery, others omis- the communal importance of the {sion of duty and some both ullega- wearer, The head of a state school | tions. system with thousands of schools under his supervision may be seen wearing a blue flannel shirt, a pair of heavy corduroy trousers, high leather boots and a felt hat, or in) many cases, a cloth cap.” “Dress simply and comfortably,” is Goodman’s advice ‘to the prospec- | tive tourist. The Soviet govern-' ment, he said, has decreed that there | | Wall St. Appointee is no limit as to what the tourist may bring into Russia provided everything carried is for personal use only. Two parties under the auspices of | World Tourists, Inc., are already in| Moscow and two others are now in| the process of formation and will! leave in the last week in May on| the S. S. Acquitania. | MISTREAT SOLDIERS ABERDEEN, Scotland, May 12.— Charles Evans Hughes, Jr. will, war purposes. FASCIST TERROR IN POLAND JAILS 45 COMMUNISTS Workers Unfurl Red Flag In Court MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., May 12.— The trial of 35 Communists of West- ern Ukraine in Biolystok has been concluded, with heavy jail sentences jmeted out to the defendants by the Polish fascist court. Five have been sent +o prison for 15 years, five for i2 years, four for 10 years, 14 from period varying from 3 to 8 years. Seven were released, after torture, while awaiting trial. Over 150 witnesses had been sub- poenaed, but of these only 45 ap- peared in court, As the judge entered the court- room the accused unfurled a red flag, whereupon the judge ordered that the accused be removed from court. This was done, but after a short space of time they were trought back again. At the begin- ning of the trial an incident oc- curred between the judge, who had roughly interrupted one of the ac- cused, and the defending lawyer, Durash. The chief accused, Epstein, de- nonsense to ac- cuse the Communist Party of hav- ing organized an arms dump. “The Communist Party,” he declared, “is to individual terror and strives to alter the existing system of society by an armed insurrection of the masses. For this purpose, however, the Party needs more than the few pistols which have been pro- duced by the police. For an armed insurrection the Communist Party veckons with the arsenals which are at present in the possession of the government.” In Tarnopol, in the Western Ukraine, a great process has com- menced against 41 workers and pea- sants, including 3 accused aged 16, 17 and 18 years, respectively. The accused have been in prison await- }ing trial for over six months. Most of the accused are charged with high treason, committed by the fact of holding membership in the Com- munist Party. The others are ac- cused of being accomplices and with concealing their knowledge from the euthorities. The indictment accused the prisoners of having formed Com- |munist groups in the country,. with kaving distributed Communist liter- ature on a mass scale and with hav- ing held conferences, all in the |years 1925-28. The trial will last about three weeks. GOBS EXPOSE RECRUITING “Toucey” Sailors Tell of Experiences By GEORGE PERSHING. The recruiting propaganda of the |United States imperialist battle- \fleet is being bolstered up by “lib- erty” rations and improved working lconditions, at least while in port, according to two sailors interviewed iyesterday by a Daily Worker re- porter. The sailors interviewed were from the “Toucey,” No. 282, a destroyer of the 9th Squadron, 25th Division, Scouting Fleet. The “Toucey” has been with the Scout- ing Fleet in the vicinity of Colon, Panama and through the Caribbean. | Menus consisting of ham and cab- |bage, bread, butter, jam, coffee and ice cream make up the noonday meal, while cereal, milk, bacon and leggs are served for breakfast dur- ing the ship’s stay in port, Visit- ors who swarm the ships include many young workers, and these young workers are led to believe that the meals being served are the same as those at sea, whereas the truth is just the opposite. A sail- |or’s food on the sea consists of cold storage and canned rations pre- pared by inexperienced cooks. Shore leave is given to many members in the personnel, while in a “Liberty” port. Two days out of leach three, during which time the sailor may spend what is left of his meager wage of $21 a month in |cheap east side amusement palaces. On board ship while cruising the sailor is compelled to work eight hours out of each 24, but while in practice the ships are four on and ‘our off, making the working day !2 hours. From this salary of $21, 20 cents is deducted for hospital fund and the ship’s comraissary hares in the balance. Excessive court-martial sentences re imposed upon the sailors ta break them to the machine like discipline |of the Navy. Deck, summary and |general court-martials are utilized \to intimidate and terrorize the | sailors with sentences, ranging from | 20 days in the “Brig” to 20 years in the foul and torturous cells of the | navy prisons. | Wall Street militarizes the work- ‘ing youth for its own imperialist But this also serves The disappearance of a Buckingham | follow his father’s footsteps in fill-|as a boomerang against the bour- Palace sentry from his post was ex- | plained today when Signalman George Sivewright limped Aberdeen on blistered feet and sur- | rendered to police. He had walked most of the way from London, which he left on April 80. Sivewright said he disappeared because of the treat- cabinet, sit in New York, eisai ing political offices for Wall Street. He has been appointed solicitor gen-| ploited young workers will be, ulti- into |eral of the United States to succeed | mately, in the ranks in the struggle William B. Mitchell, whom Wall| against the imperialist war and for Street called to a higher post in the| the destruction of the bourgeoisie. The senior Hughes is at present busy trying tc put over fare steals for the Interboro Rapid Tran-| use their arms against their real geoisie, since these very highly ex- | These workers will learn not only | the use of arms, but will learn to enemy—their own exploiters, fy

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