Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1929 Copyright, 1929, by Publishers Co., Inc, BIL HAY WOOD’ S Workers Fekt se International * All rights reserved. Republica- tion forbidden except by permission, see Foe Everest’s Desperate Defense of the Union Hall at Centralia; Torture and Lynching; Frame 4 Up His Fellow Workers; Jury Intimidated si} ig Haywood has described many incidents in the period of class struggle when for over 20 years he led the most militant unions in America, and has come down to that time when, under sentence of 20 years in prison, he is out on bonds, pending decision on appeal, and is conducting the IL.W.W. General Defense Committee. In the last chapter he described the fi: raid on the Centralia headquar- ters of the ILW.W. lumber work union, and the preparation for the American Legion’s attack on it during the Armistice Day Pav- ade. Now read on. tga, eae By WILLIAM D. HAYWOOD PART 113 AMONG the men in the Centralia union was Wesley Eyerest, an overseas veteran of 1 rkable courage, who was said to have wor more medals for valor in France than Sergeant York. He had returned ito the work he was interested in as a lumber worker, organizing and ‘educating his fellow workmen. He was selling literature when Elmer Smith, a lawyer with a conscience, told a meeting of union men -hey had a legal right to defend the hall against attack. On November 11th, 1919, a parade of American Legion men and Josortea patriots was held. At the meeting to “deal with the I.W.W.” mentioned above, a secret plot was concocted among the Lumber Trust leaders to mob the I.W.W. Hall, jleading the paraders into the attack. | At the moment agreed upon, the leaders cried jout upon signal from a man on horseback, “Let's go-o-o! At ’em, boys!” and the door of the hall peas smashed in, some entering, when a rain of bul- lets came from within, halting the attack and leay- ling two attackers dead and several wounded. Some lof the mob carried ropes, evidently ready to lynch jthe union men. One fellow who died said before jhe cashed out, “It served me right.” That was War- qren Grimm, : | But the hall was surrounded and the attackers gained entrance in @orce, seizing the few workers there, with the exception of one man, Wesley Everest. Leaving the hall by the rear door he broke through tthe mob and made for the river, rifle bullets of his prepared assassins zipping around him. With little ammunition, he stopped to reload, @eached the river and tried to ford it. Failing because of its depth, he ame back to shore and shouted his readiness to surrender to any jeonstituted authority. oe t The mob paid no attention and came on, firing as they came, until Everest saw there was no hope of ceasing the fight and resumed fir- yng. This halted the mob but one man came on, armed and firing. With his last cartridge Everest shot this fellow, Dale Hubbard, nephew bf the chief conspirator. Everest was seized by the mob. | On the way to the jail he was beaten, kicked and cursed. With a rifle-butt his front teeth were knocked out. A rope was thrown round pis neck, but with characteristic defiance he told them, “You haven't et the guts to lynch a man in the daytime.” t IGHT came. Maimed and bleeding in a cell next to his fellow work- ers, lay Everest. At a late hour the lights of the city suddenly ivere extinguished. The jail door was smashed. No one tried to stop he lynchers. Staggering erect, Everest said to the other prisoners: ‘Tell the boys I died for my class.” A brief struggle. Many blows, A sound of dragging. The purr- Yng of high-powered cars. Again the lights came on. The autos reached the bridge over the Chehalis River. A rope was tied to the steel tramework and Everest, with a noose around his neck, was brutally icked from the bridge. After a pause he was hauled up, and it being . dound that he had some life left, a longer rope was uséd and the brutal ibrocess repeated. Again hauled up, the ghouls again flung the body tiver. An auto headlight was trained on the body, disclosing that some jadist, more degenerate than the rest, had ripped Everest’s sexual or- ans almost loose from his body with some sharp instrument during he auto trip to the bridge. s Finally, after riddling the body with bullets, it was cut loose and Yet fall in the river, later to be found, a sodden, ghastly thing, taken yack to the jail where it was placed in view of Everest’s friends there prison and at last buried in an unmarked grave. { Four union loggers were taken out of jail to do the work of burial Under a heavy guard of soldiers. Some kind of a farcical inquest was J * @ eld. Fi In the hall that day, besides Everest, were Bert Faulkner, Roy ecker, Britt Smith, Mike Sheehan, James McInerney and Morgan. The thtter broke down under the torture all were put through. The terror tlontinued for nine days. Loren Roberts, 19 years old, was driven thsane, | * REIGN of terror existed throughout the Northwest. More than a thousand men and women were arrested in the State of Washing- pn alone, Union halls were closed, labor papers suppressed, and m: ten were given sentences of from one to fourteen years he z their possession copies of papers that contained the truth about the pentralia tragedy. tl From the headquarters of the Employers’ Association tame many aulletins, among others one dated December 31, 1919: “Get rid of all “pe LLW.W.’s and other un-American organizations. . . . Deport the endicals or use the rope as at Centralia. . . - Until we get rid of the 'W.W. and radicals we don’t expect to do much in this country. . . . eep cleaning up on-the I.W.W. .. . Don’t let it lie down. Keep up public sentiment. nV George F. Vanderveer, attorney for the I. W. W., was then in hicago. As secretary of the General Defense Committee, I talked over with him the situation at Centralia. This was the most important case in which the I. W. W. had ever been involved. While they were not so many men to be tried, yet it was a case of life and death and was different from all other cases because the men at Centralia were in- dicted for murder, when in fact they had done nothing but. protect their lives, their bodies and their property from a mob whose hands were reeking with blood. He rushed across country to take up the defense of the eleven men who had heen arrested at Centralia. Lewis County and the Lumber and Employers’ Association had provided special prosecutors for this trial. There was a heavy array of these mouthpieces of capitalism and they were backed up by all the authority of the State. The governor had sent the militia to the town of Montesano where the trial was held, and the Congressman had sent word that the members of the American Legion who were employed as deputy sheriffs, could wear their uniforms in the court room with a red chevron to designate past service in the army. Against this force which the timber wolves had employed, Vanderveer stood alone. He was a lawyer with a heart, as dangerous as a workingman with brains. With everything against them, witnesses intimidated, the court room packed with soldiers in uniform and every possible thing done, even to threaten the defense attorneys with death and jurymen over- awed, the verdict was a foregone conclusion. * T= jury was out a total of 22 hours and 20 minutes. In their verdict, Eugene Barnett and John Lamb were found guilty of man-slaughter, or murder, in the third degree. The judge refused to accept this ver- dict, and sent the jury back to change it, and the final verdict was -guilty of murder in the second degree—Eugene Barnett, John Lamb, Britt Smith, Bert Bland, Commodore Bland, Roy Becker and John McInernéy. Acquitted: Mike Sheehan and Elmer Stewart Smith.” They judged Loren Roberts insane and irresponsible, Bert Faulkner was released during the trial. A part of the jury’s verdict, forced as it was by an atmosphere of terror, nevertheless said: “We the undersigned jurors, respectfully petition the court to ex- tend leniency to the defendants whose names appear on the attached verdict. Signed and sealed.” * * * * . . Tn the next issue Haywood tells of the way Judge Wilson doubic- crossed jury and defendants, and handed out what were practically life terms to the Centralia victims. Get a copy of Bill Haywood’s Book free with one year’s subscription to the Daily Worker, wlth Usa sie BEX i ee Clie hE ai os AAA Congress o AGAINST OPEN- SHOP SLAVERY Food Strikers Heroic | Struggle Reviewed | On April 4 there started a pioneer strike of great historic importance to the mass of highly exploited and | unorganized toilers in the cafeter industry. When the Hotel, Restaur- and Cafeteria Workers Union began its organization drive on March 18, there were very few work- +ers in the cafeterias who belonged to the union. cafeteria workers united in the union, carrying on their first strug- sle against the open-shop. A mass meeting of cafeteria work- ers was held on April 3rd, following | two previous meetings, the response of the workers growing greater at exch meeting. At this mass meet- ing, the enthusiasm and readir for struggle of the workers was such that they voted unanimously for a general strike, On the first day, 250 workers from 12 cafeterias walked out, joined the union, organized shop committees, established picket lines and distribut- ed thousands of leaflets calling upon their brothers and sisters to join them. .On the second day, results Were surprising to all the leaders. The ranks of the were swelled to over 500. 1 pass- strikers manifested a determined en- th sm, and more and more of the exploited dishwashers, bus boys, counter men and cooks revolted against the intolerable 12-hour open- shop slavery, the miserable wages, the speed-up, the unsanitary cond tions, the abominable food, until there were 1500 involved in the struggle by the third week. At least twice a week, and pi ticularly on Monday noon, mass pi keting demonstrations took place. The thousands of needle trades work- ers, coming from the shops en- thusiastically joined in the parading before the places struck, singing “Solidarity” and other workers songs, cheering the strikers and boo- ing the cops. Several times their indignation rose to such a high pitch at the brutality of the cops that they interfered and rescued the strikers from the “arms of the law.” A protest demonstration was staged in front of City Hall. If any of the cafeteria worker: had any social democratic or pacifist illusions before the strike, they cer- tainly got rid of them long before the protest demonstration took | place. The daily attacks of the cops, excessively severe fines and long jail | sentences, the obvious alliance be- tween bosses, police and courts, piled up proof that the whole corrupt sys- | tem is against the workers, who can expect no justice in the courts con- trolled by the bosses, that the work- ers can only fight against the bosses, police, courts, banks, e' through organization, through their union, with the aid of such fraternal work- | ing class organizations as the Inter-| national Labor Defense and the Workers International .Relicf, and the only political party that is hasod upon the class struggle, the Com- munist Party, During the six weeks of the strike, there have been arrests, an average of 34 per day. Of these, about 200 have been sentenced to 3 to 60 days in the workhouse. The fines paid by the union total over $7000. About 60 of the strikers have been badly beaten taining broken noses, cuts, abrasions and contusions, necessitating treatment by a doctor. | Besides these, hundreds have been slugged at one time or another, Al-| most without exception, the victims | cf police brutality have gone right | back to the picket line, just as soon | as they could recover from their in-| <uries, or when they get out of jail. | In the third week of the strike. the owners, seeing that they were losing the fight, and that the strik- ers could not.be terrorized into going | back to work, began action to get an injunction. In their petition for the | |injunction, the owners admit their | |losses, due to the effectiveness of the strike. The Wil-low Corporation, for instance, admitted that each of their | chain of cafeterias that were struck, was losing $500 a day. The stock | of this chain of cafeterias dropped sharply on the market, Ten cafe-| terias have closed their doors en-| tirely, their losses were so heavy, 25 | owners have been compelled to sign an agreement with the union. It is | apparent that the revolt of the cafe-| teria workers, whom the bosses be-| | lieved were docile slaves, was so suc-| (cessful that the bosses concluded | that the most desperate measures were necessary to save them from this “terrible spectre of unionism” which is haunting them night and} |day. The last, most desperate and) vicious legal weapon of the bosses is the injunction. And so they be- took themselves to one of their _lackeys on the bench and got out the | restraining order and injunction pro- | ceedings began. On May 7th, Judge | Henry Sherman of the State | Supreme Court granted injunctions to the United Restaurant Owners’ Association and also to the Wil-low Cafeterias, Inc., which operates 22 cafeterias in New York City. This is one of the most sweeping in- junctions ever granted to the em- ployers in New York. It makes un- lawful any interference whatever with the business of the cafeteria owners, It outlaws all strike ac- et Now there are 2000 ing day, as the fight waxed hot, the. | workers out of 25 or 30 belong to the | t Latin America Dies—For Auto Bosses’ Profits Ky Photos above were taken at the exact moment when Har y Wirth, motor-racing dri was killed at Deer Park, Babylon, L. I., when his automobile struck a guard rail in front of the grandstand, and overturned. The top photo shows the auto in its st somersault after hitting the rail; the bottom photo nal somersault. | These skillful auto drivers prostitute their skill for the profits of the FORD BEGINS HIS ENGLAND PLANT To Exploit Thousands tivities,—picketing, distribution of | strike leaflets, everything necessary |to the conduct of a strike. | As the strike spreads, especially in the East side, the strikebreaking activities of the reactionary bureau- crats of the A. F. of L. which began in the first week of the strike, are increased. The A. F. of L, officials Union s Opens in lioni _ [train ‘Wall St. | DAVIS OFFERED. ~—PRILIPINE 108: May Accept Task of | Exploiting Peasants WASHINGTON, May 16—| Dwight F, Davis, secretary of war | in Coolidge’s cabinet, has been of- | fered the post of general-governor | ! the Philippines by Hoover, to re- | slace Colonel Stimson, who has now | | | sot the highest imperialist job of ecretary of state. It is said that Davis, who expected some better reward for his imperia!- accept ist services, will, however, this one. During Stimson’s administration in the Philippines, American inter- | ests have been encouraged to make | larger investments in the island and| 20t0 shows two soldiers at Gov- to form large plantations by expro- | errors Island, William Fritz and, priating the peasants’ land, a pro cess similar to what has occurred in | 7¢«” Engler, who were appointed to Porto Rico, The result has been that! jest Point, where officera are many of the peasants have lost their | land and are swelling the army of! traincd by Wall Street to lead in agricultural workers and unem- vn ‘ ; Davis, with his imperialist train- | !¥all Strect officer is congratulating ing as secretary of war, will at- tempt to continue the process the aid of the native betrayer: Baldwin and Cook Both Speak for Imperialism in the British Elections | LONDON, May 16. he official- dom of the Miners’ Federation of Great Britain, headed by the arc | them. h it FAKERS SUPPORT BRITISH “LABOR” ‘Communists Point Out 8s pe El {i ve consciously neglected the ex- ~~ A b , Cook, has issued a man anu oo cee an UAnother Detroit fee oae Eee treach- | Treachery neglect the mass of unorganized, un- | erous labor party program. 2 % a s, skilled or semi-skilled workers in! DAGENHAM, Essex, England, Cook, who at one time pretended |_ LONDON, | May 16.—MacDonald other industries. May 16.—With the beginning of the to be a co-worker in the minority '°"4 ie Bolitical henchmen. got ihe The reactionary, yellow socialist Construction of the new 5,000,000 labor movement, has now shown his |“CUally treacherous General Counci pounds sterling Ford automobile fac- tory here today, the penetration of Ford abroad in competition with United Hebrew Trades called a con- ference of A. F. of L. misleaders to plan a campaign of strikebreaking. ae Risie of the Trade Union Congre true ace completely. : __|sue a manifesto tonight supporti Premier Stanley Baldwin, taking | the labor party in the general ¢ the field for the torie + ane aioe again Ye- | tions, [In a statement to that most vicious | British and French auto interests, | cated his usual rant about ie Nie yr eritsteeeatowy ene) Gre of lying sheets, the Forward, there| ‘kes another step forwai d and pritish government, which is DOW Leshs: ty. SGoHuse” ELA. Somber te was a forced admission of these] Stains even more the Anglo-Yankee| caged in a.naval race with the|'°", %¢ confus a 2a) f j rivalry. ng De aney f Imakes reformist demands, such as fakers that they have neglected the "alts : Yankee imperialists, being the jritic ownership and sont. ot cafeteria workers, and that the Hotel!) The factory is expected to create v nerskip and control o a veritable Detroit here with all the peed-up, ‘wage-cuts and wholesale firing common to the American plants. It is estimated 300,000 Fords will be produced at the plant annually as well as parts for Berlin and Paris. Ford had originally planned to build his open-shop plant at Cork, where he had already begun manu- facturing, but on the success of the British manufacturers in having a high tariff passed on autos, he moved that plant to Mannheim and is building his new one here. Restaurant and Cafeteria Worker: Union is the only real organization | in the field. This is the reason that they must get busy with a “cam- paign to organize the cafeteria work- ers,” for which ostensible purpose they have appropriated $25,000. Why | this sudden interest in the exploited cafeteria slaves? Obviously because | of the success of our strike in mak-| ing the first great step towards unionism for the food workers. But will the A. F. of L. fakers really organize? Of course not. Hyman Bushel, for 20 years a | lawyer for the A. F. of L. was ap- pointed by Tammany Administration Mayor Walker to the magistrates bench. While there he was the most No Liberty for Workers cs Bea Des eer ater yall CalNUR ieatseee andeceaarimberialael veer uno ete Ouveur apenas b sai: Ola ian eon dundee Sanci abiicnis i low its lead. Again, as usual, hej im “wares, which wecanee would not commit himself cn any |} eid fake pian for disarmament, as a som tactful electioneering move. URGE SUPPORT OF ~ DAIRY STRIKERS Communists Hit Police Terror in Pittsburgh have stood only cn paper for j time. In contradistinction to this treach crous program of the labor fakers the Communist Party of Great Bri- the tain enters elections with a ub ela struggle program, pointing out how the officialdom of 2 Trade Union Congress has re- ed to organize the unorganized end the unemployed, how it has ex pelled all wor! criticizing the policy of betrayal and how it co- |¢perated with the British imperial- lists in the subjugation of the colo- {nial peoples. H, Pa., May 16.—The|™™ Perle of Pittsburgh Dis a PITTSBURG Pa vicious of all magistrates in impos- arty of Pittsburgh Di-| Women Workers and Young ing high hail, excessive fines, and Ye. Riso beh Workers! Join the Ranks of the long jail sentences upon the strikers Se AMES Cie A a : Hecucich: the sun tore ehe fe Gun immed Ey ee Jase Bee ee bosses, to bring the officials of the ae aPC cerns inet Priest’ Killed pigs union to trial for contempt of court. iry j Pries led Leading Immediately afterward, he resigned from the bench to work more openly as attorney for the bosses associa- tion. He is now acting in cou prosecutor of the strikers arrested, aking demagogie speeches, apyeal- ing to all the class prejudice of the magistrates, accusing the strikers of being professional gangsters, led by “red Bolsheviks who have no respect Tho - Train Wrecking Band > In Mexico; 40 Arrested Dairy strikers and quit work. appeal is also made to city resta ant, lunch room, and grocer ers to refuse to handle pro ithe Liberty Dairy Produc . See a te in order to help the strikers win! MEMICO CITY, May 16.—1 BSC U a been leading a Catholie band, wreck- The workers have been on st ing trains and plundering towns since Friday, May 10. Strikers | pore, “for Christ, the King,” has Picketing the milk routes and stop-|1,,0n Killed in battle and forty of his deliveries are ar } : ping milk for the sacred laws and institutions A fi este’ fanatical followers are under arrest, of our glorious government.” While daily. The company issued a state-| hich, apparently, has broken up the he was still on the bench as a‘‘judge” ment: to the: press declaring that it) church army in the state of Guana of the arrested strikers, it was favors the formation of a company} 4314, brought out that he, together with an attorney for the bosses, had a con- ference with Walker, Whalen anu Ryan of the Central Trades and La- bor Council. They planned the cam- | paign of wholesale arrests and police | brutality against the strikers, | Now this renegade, this A. F, of L. lawyer, this shyster who acts bothj as judge and prosecutor, who boasts | that he is “fair. to organized labor,” is having conferences with Lehman and Flore, devising the best means of helping the bosses in their futile at- | tempt to break the strike. Lehman, Flores and Co., having helped the, bosses to get the injunction, are now | supplying scabs, gangsters, fixing | up the police, and providing bosses with “union signs” where one or two The statue of “liberty,” above, docs not represent liberty for the workers of the United States who slave long hours for low pay, when they are not unemployed. Ralph Gleason, a 22-year-old unemployed worker, also did not find this statue a symbol of | liberty, Ironically, this unemployed | worker leaped from the top of the | statue to end his life, after a vain! shunt for work lasting many months. An electric chair would be | | more appropriate on this pedestal, | workers said when Sacco and Van-| | setti were murdered, A. F. of L. Thus is exposed their) true role in the Jabor movement, a/ despicable role like that of Woll Green and Co. Long Live the Revolutionary Struggle of the Oppressed Colo- nial Peoples! Chester Workers Aid ‘Hoover’s Economists _ Textile Mill Strike; | Plurb Out New Spiel WASHINGTON, May 16.—“Pros- Hold Picnic May 30 perity is great, profits have just | started to grow, after seven splendid years,” is the summary of President Hoover's committee on recent eco-| nomic changes. The report boasts of growing markets, swift trans- | portation and science. It disregards altogether the tremendous growth CHESTER, Pa., May 16.—Aid to the Southern textile strikers was pledged by representatives of many | labor and fraternal organizations at the recent textile relief conference held by the Workers International | Relief here. +... of unemployment and “rationaliza- | It was decided to hold a_ picnic | tion” of industry. steals: oe Sean eect | In an indirect way, it complements | Farm, Upland Lane, Memorial Day, | the labor misleaders on their avoid- , 7 ance of strikes, but pays no atten: ee rede ey be obtained | tion to the recent wave of strikes jagainst wage cutting and speed-up. ; It admits that “careful judgment”! solnnaney american 'éectlon Sof Wire inecded to “maintain the bale | the Communist International, the | ance” jn the future, and warns | Communist Party of the U.S. A. | against speculatior fea union, but would recognize no realj union of the workers. The men stand solidly “for a real union which will defend our interests and fight our battles.” The appeal sharply condemns the \action of the city police in arresting 1 wialat, pickets and breaking up picket lines}, “il Yielding to Church. around the Liberty Dairy plant. |The Archbishop Leopoldo Ruiz y The American Federation of Labor | Flora issued a statement to the press is denounced as “an agency of the|Yesterd y bosses.” The statement points out| bishops in Mexico, askin i that the engineers, of the A. F. of|Sent to re-open negotiations with the L, local of Firemen Engineers, re-| Mexican government for the return fused to join the strikers and to-|0f the Mexican churches to the zether with the police are helping! Ptiests. He stated that “neither side to break the strike, despite the fact| Wished the continuation of the pre that the newly organized local union | <*t hostilities.” is also affiliated to the A. F. of L.! The appe One cf his aids, the religious con- spirator, Sotero Grimaldo, who was killed with him, is said to be the man who bombed the presidential train not long ago. * * * Reap the benefits of the May al concludes by urging the strikers to watch the A, F. of L. organ‘zers, so that they will not sell out the strike, to send delega to the Trade Union Unity Congress at Cleveland on June 1. Reich Bankers Accept Wall Street Terms In: Reparation Re por t PARIS, May 16. — The report drawn up by the sub-committee on reparations containing the reserva- tions of the German bankers and | industrialists to Owen Young’s plan, although already in the hands of | the international bankers, has not yet been officially made public. | The report contains the sugges- tion of the German capitalists that in case Germany finds herself in “diffieulty”’—meaning in a genevel strike or in a revolution—the pay- ments should be suspended for thav period, which no doubt the allic. will agree to. The ‘Reich bankers’ demands arc rtually an acceptance of Wail Street’s plan, with its creation of the International Bank thru which will pass all debt and reparation dayments, eS ha CRORR Mmm mermnne mee Day demonstrations by getting into the Communist Party work- ers who participated. Prepare for the big struggles that are coming by building the Communist Party. Page Three ievideo Ma y 20 «ile MANY COUNTRIES EN] aU 8 f NT GENTER tiwiG vy g REPRE MILITA 2 Delegates, 1 Negro, frome. U. Hee NTED IN t Cor the Latin- 1 Confeder video, Ur to a cable- The fir m receive de Union ducational William Simons, its 0 the con- 1 “The cable there is ex- cellent re n of workers from ni vatin-/ ican countri all ‘volutionary centers, they already been es od, rep- ‘0 Delegate. Bes a Negro worke ate from the Trade Union gue, The f the Latin-Amer- ican Union Confederation is a part of the world-wide movement the creation revolutionary Je union centers about which to rally the e¢ rowing radical gainst the so- the labor move- ng danger of for al reformers w Main Tasks. The Montevideo Congress, which mes before the Trade Union Unity C ence in Cleveland, June 1, and re the Second Congress of Pacif ariat at Vladivo preceded on con countric Trade Union Seecre- t 1, in to fight exico, Mexico C the Ya s’ tool, the Labor als of OM). tion of ted by the reformist offi nions. (C Mexiean trad The cong task of organizing workers and u ectional and ¢ dustrial cle g the scattered, unions into in= 1 their unions, ernational Federation of Transport Workers, ete. ifie Trade Union Sec- © organization and mm parallel with those of Montevideo Congress, has al- eady sent the congress an. invita- tion to the Vladivostock Congress. Exploiter QO. K.’d The Wall Street legislators in the U.S. Senate have given their O. K. to the eligibility of Andrew Mellon, billionaire exploiter of thousands of | coal miners, metal and steel work- ters, to hold the post of secretary of | the treasury, altho there is supposed to he a federal law against the treas- ury being in the hands of anyone with b ess interests. But Wall Street is openly maintaining the federal government as its own. T am concerned, I can’t discovered the ex- asses In modern society ir strife against one another. ans long ago of the class 1 economists or th Midd the following proposi- that the existence of classes is bound up with certain phases of material production; 2) that the class struggle leads neces- dictatorship of the i | ation of a society of free and eq —Marx. Visiteeeseeeeeeee S oviet Russia VIA LONDON—KIE 10 DAYS IN L cA NAL—! USINGFORS AND INGRAD and MOSCOW TOURS FROM $3 85. Sailings Every Month INQUIRE: WORLD TOURISTS, INC. 175 FIFTH AVENUE Telephone CHICAGO—See un for your AL (Fiatiron Bldg.) NEW YORK, N. Y. LGONQUI fons—MOSCOW =|