The Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 5, 1919 Page: 1 of 4
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18,210
READERS
THIS WEEK
The Oklahoma Leader
SUCCESSOR TO OTTER VALLEY SOCIALIST. SNYDER, OKLAHOMA.
NOW I.ET US
REACH
20,000
No. 41—Vol. 5.
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA. SATURDAY. APRIL 5, 1919.
-op®!*) so
Weekly.
current topics plAUD DEMAND
Discussed by
OSCAR A ME RINGER
SPY LfiUV REPEAL
"The Good Government
League," a rebuncocratic auxil-
iary; working for the election ot
Republicans and Democrats
who are run 0 <? as nonparti-j
sans because ^ v are ashamed Chicago Socialists Cheer Ad-
of the parties t ' belong to, is j , „ oi.i...
out with a new f \ -an :
"Abraham L> % >ln rather
than Karl Marx." \
This is refreshing n>
Karl Marx was 5- ardent
supporter of Abraha m, lincoln.
Lincoln was a great admirer of
Karl Marx.
Marx inspired the New
Year's address of 1863, in which
the working people of Manches-
ter, England, pledged them-
selves to support Abraham Lin-
coln in his struggle against the
slave power, a power, by the
way, which had as its compon-
ents the fathers of Burleson,
Gregory, McAdoo, Redfield,
Daniels, Houston and Woodrow
Wilson.
# *
The ruling class of England
was strong for the confederacy,
and the only reason why John
Bull did not enter the war to
make the world safe for the de-
mocracy of the sires of the
above patriots was the violent
opposition of the English work-
ers. And this opposition was
greatly due to the labor of Karl
Marx.
I lack the space to reprint the
Manchester New Year's address
or the answer of Abraham Lin-
coln, but I will give a few para-
graphs from the address of the
International Workingmen's As-
sociation, written by Karl Marx
in 1864, and adopted at a meet-
ing presided over by Karl
Marx:
"To Abraham Lincoln, Presi-
dent of the United States of
America:
"Sir—We congratulate the
American people upon your re- I who arc arming against the workers
• election by a large majority. If t0l)£j'
resistance to the slave power
was the watchword of your first
election, the triumphal war cry
of your re-election is death to
r slavery.
"When an oligarchy of 300,-
000 slaveholders dared to in-
scribe for the first time in the
annals of the world 'Slavery'
on the banner of armed revolt,
* * * then the working classes
of Europe understood at once,
even before the fanatic parti-
sanship of the upper classes for
the confederate gentry had
given its dismal warning that
the slaveholders' rebellion was
to sound the tocsin for a general
holy war of property against
labor, and that for the men of
labor, with their hopes for the
future, even their past con- )ng to huy Amcri,„„ producls .■ ■
quests were at stake in that tie-j^^.,, ^oid. w« are going to establish
mendoUS conflict on the other In hoanl of trade ami promote eco-
side of the Atlantic. Every- ' om. relations."
where they bore, therefore, pa-j soldikrs lack jobs.
tiently the hardships imposed j "crim.. in chi pago is duo to the
upon them bv the cotton crisis, ! cost of food." Sldlniiin l harged "Tile !
opposed enthusiastically the I Midlers a«,,;: siting their jobs back j
, • . . • • —these soldiers who f.>11.erht for com-
pro-slavery intervention impor- m(,rclii] „nt„r|,rl„ „ Thp „ov„rnment ;
tunities of their betters—and i could elothe them and feed them in i
from most parts of Europe con-! war. but in peace they can go ragged I
tributed their quota of blood to iin<1 hungry."
the good of the cause." '\,BV1 V I
And to show how closely the
minds of Lincoln and Marx
were allied on such a profound
question as internationalism,
let me give two other quota-
tions :
"The strongest bond of hu-
man sympathy, outside of the
family relation, should be one
uniting all working people of
all nations."—From Lincoln's
address to the Workingmen's
Committee of New York citv,
March 21, 1864.
"Workingmen of all countries I Tom Mooney
unite."—Closing sentence of s"'" N' '
1 • charge to obstruct th
dress by Rose Pastor Stokes.
Nuorteva. Stedman.
CHICAGO—Socialists and sympa-
thizer!* packed the Coliseum here for
three hours Sunday, cheering the de-
mands of Rose Pastor Stokes, Santeri
Nuorteva and Alty. Seymour Stedman
for a general amnesty for political
prisoners, repeal of the espionage act
and immediate withdrawal of Ameri-
can troops in Russia.
Mrs. Stokes, who is under a 10-year
sentence under the espionage act and
whose case comes before the supreme
court in April, said:
"1 am proud," she said, "to be one
of those in the I'nited States who is
to suffer the penalty for active par-
ticipation in the movement to eman-
cipate the working da*'*. 1 am proud i
to be of those upon whom the dark j
forces of America have decided to'
vent their vengeance. 1 shall be glad
to serve the 10 years, if necessary, if ,
at the end I am freed to find the j
emancipation of the working class.
ARM \<>.\IXST WORKFKS.
"One thing will open the door of J
the prisons, and that is organized !
power of the workers. Organize! That j
is the one word I would speak to .
you.
"The war is not over. The imper-
ialistic war is dead—long live the
class conflict! Th* dread of Bolshe- j
vism is driving the capitalistic forces j
to organize.
"They are getting ready with lead
and rifles and machine guns. They j
are getting 100 per cent American or- \
ganizations to shoot down the work- i
era when they shall demand their '
rights.
"Let them remember, those law- i
abiding citizens who are organizing in ]
private. Take them this message: |
Tho responsibility for any despair of
the working class in the ballot or the
peaceful strike will rest with those
Tell them we Intend to use the
power of numbers, the power of the
economic weapon, to get justice."
french rkfl'sf to fight rl'ss.
"The French soldiery refhised to
fight against us," Nuorteva said. "This
is not the first time allied troops have
refused to fight us. It is true that in
northern Russia the allies still are
fighting us. 1 know the soldiers in
Archangel qre not anxious to fight the
soviet troops."
He told of British and American
soldiers being taken prisoners, then
being taken to Moscow to theaters,
banque'ts, etc. Then, he said, the sol-
diers were taken to the front and re-
leased.
"The Russians do not want to fight
workers anywhere. We are stronger
today than ever.
"There has been much reconstruc-
tion —such as the building of 9,000
miles of new railroads, opening of
schools and factories. We went to es-
tablish trade relations. We arc will-
THE DAILY
BY JOHN HAGEL.
We are now putting on the final drive to finish the pro-
motion work for the daily. Our field force is at work locat-
ing the 1,500 comrades who will purchase $50 in Leader
bonds. Here is the list of our agents:
E. C. Marianelli of McAlester.
R. L. Thurmond of Crescent.
A. T. Jones of Edmond.
J. A. Davis of Chickasha.
C. A. Lewis of Oklahoma City.
H. M. Sinclair of Tulsa.
Freda Hogan of Arkansas.
Mrs. C. Haessler of Wisconsin.
Alb. Cochran of Laverne.
Thomas Buie of Farry.
S. C. Thompson of Roll.
That makes 12 of them. The majority of them are well
known to the comrades throughout the state. They mean
business. They are going to locate those 1,500 comrades,
and finish this job. And with the promotion out of the way,
we will then have the daily.
To find these 1,500 comrades in Oklahoma these agents
are going to call on you. They need your help. They will
want a few hours, or a few days of your time. Nothing else
will matter. We must have your time and your money, so
that you can have your own daily. Truly, we are ready to
quit trading with the enemy. And those "that are not ready
now will surely be ready when we can furnish them with
the daily. They will not support capitalist newspapers, once
we make it possible to get news through our own paper.
The time and the money that you can now invest in your
own daily will bring returns manifold. You will always be
proud of the fact that you did your share in establishing
the first Socialist daily newspaper in Oklahoma.
Nothing that we can do will bring so much vitality to the
movement in the state than a big Socialist daily. Look at
the election returns from Milwaukee. The showing made
there would be impossible without a daily paper. And in
spite of all opposition, The Milwaukee Leader is growing
bigger and better than ever. In spite of the desire of cer-
tain interests to boycott the paper in the way of advertising,
the paper is securing more and more advertising right
along. A recent Saturday issue of the paper contained 20
pages, and was chock full of advertising.
What The Milwaukee Leader is to the Milwaukee move-
ment, The Oklahoma Daily Leader will become to the Okla-
homa movement. The comrades were all elated over the re-
port last week—$1,250 for the daily from one comrade.
With 12 workers covering the state, most of them in a little
Ford, we will probably find some more good comrades able
and willing to put in $1,000 for the daily. During the past
week $100 was received from a comrade recently moved to
Arkansas. He wants a daily in Oklahoma even though he
has left the state.
The final drive. Let us finish it. When you see The
Leader agent with his Ford, help him. Sign up yourself.
Be one of the 1,500. Then help him to find the others. It
just means 30 or 40 to each county. Let us finish the work
in each county. Save us the expense of covering a county
two or three times. Meanwhile, don't forget the subs for
the weekly. We want 10,000 new readers and we mean to
get them through your help.
Lenine Forces Move Into
Country to Aid New Regime
Against Ally Troops There
| Gen. Georgey, Commanding
Army of 70.000 Bolsheviki.
Reported to Have Crossed
Dniester and Entered Galicia.
■
KAROLYI. IN RESIGNING.
SCORES ALLY INTENTIONS!
Issues Proclamation Saying
Entente Planned to Use His
Country for Operations
Against Russian Socialists.
in M, :TIv
BASLE—The Hungarian minister
has been recalled from Vienna, a
Budapest dispatch reported Monday
afternoon.
Other dispatches said t
lutionury executive council
elded on separation of th
and state.
Commissions have been established
to liquidate the government's busi-
ness. The finance minister has noti-
fied bankers that confidential agents
and employes would hereafter man-
age the banks.
revo-
as de-
church
Proclamation of
Hungarian Soviet
PARIS- A dispatch from Buda-
pest given the proclamation of the
now Hungarian government as fol-
lows:
"The proletariat of Hungary
from today lias taken all power In
its own hands. By the decision of
tin* Paris conference to occupy
Hungary the provisioning of revo-
lutionary Hungary becomes utterly
impossible.
'•Tinier these circumstances the
sole means open for the Hungarian
government Is a dictatorship of the
proletariat.
"Legislative, executive, and Jiull-
elal authority will be exercised l y
a dictatorship of the workers. |K*as-
ants. ami soldiers' councils.
"The revolutionary government
council will begin forthwith work
for the roalliallou of communist So.
"The coiineil decrees the sociulU
/.ation of large estates, mines, big
industries, banks, and transport
lines, declares complete solidarity
with the Kusslan soviet govern-
ment, and offers lo contract an
armed alliance with the proletariat
of Hussia."
Branstetter, editor of The
Chicago .Socialist, presided at the
meeting and collected $2,000 for
maintenance of his publication. He
introduced John Collins. Socialist can-
didate for mayor, who deplored the
absence of Mcsm\-. Thompson, Hoyne
and Sw< itzer. who liad been Invited to
participate with hint in joint debate.
PKOTKST Dl HS' SKXTKM'K.
NEW YORK—Five thousand per-
sons Sunday attended a mass meeting
to protest against the Debs sentence.
The Rev Irwin St. John Tinker,
Chicago, recently sentenced to 20
years on a charge of violating t lie es-
pionage act, urged a general strike on
July 4 to free political prisoners and
Communist Manifesto by Marx.I r H(,,iviti(,s
Now be good goo-goos. Don't | w'hen n- uw'.i
NEW YORK SOCIALISTS
. acquitted on 1
government'*
ivas given an ovation
all American workers 1
trifle with historic characters. ] unite in unionization of an industrial
Stick to "Hole-proof" and commonwealth.
"Ever-wear," so that when dimami <;i:\i;it.\i. \mni:mv
you get your foot in it, it's hos-! tkrhk hai ti:, ind.—Calling the
ierv, not history. (country'* court y t< "military iu-
j tocracy." Socialists in mass meeting
j here Sunday demanded release of Ku-
! gene V Debs of Terre Haute and other
HISS NAME OF HANSON religious and political prisoners. Sev-
| oral life-long friends of Debs living
NEW YORK—More than 3.000 So- ' here and in eastern Illinois ;ind Indi-
cialists and Bolsheviki sympathizers *"a spoke in his behalf,
assembled her. Friday night to wel- . r._ ,.,,nr-r> irx
com* I, A «v K Martens, commercial SLAYER OF JAURtS IS
representative of the Russian soviet -.a. tqiai IM DADlC
government in the In ted States. UIM I nlML I IM rMnlO
hissed th name of Mayor Ol Hanson
of Seatt e. boo* d at mention of Ameri- PARTS—Raoul Villa n was placed
enn troops (n Rossi ind cheered and )n Monday for the murder, July
stamped when spankers predicted the 1014. of Jean I>- .Jaures. the French
earl* coming of "international Social- So'0ia]K,,. 1 ,$er
i*ni Jaures w shot while In 1 restau-
ant near the bourse ind the < r me
created a sensation, as it came durn g
the excitement incident to th.- out
break of the war Villain, arrested
the night of the murder, has been in
Jail since. He declared he was hostile
ro Jaures because ihe Socialist leader
hail fought tho French three-year
military law.
Says Country Should Be Al-
lowed to Work Out Own
Salvation.
American soldiers are in Russia In
violation of the constitution and
should be withdrawn immediately and
Russia should be allowed to work out
ts own salvation, in the opinion of
U. S. Senator Irvine L. Lenroot, Su-
perior, who made several speeches in
Milwaukee Tuesday
Senator Lenroot asserted foreign in-
terference only serves to strengthen
Bolshevism in Russia and other coun-
tries.
•LI :T lit SSI A YLONF-."
"We should not attempt to use our
troops to crush out Bolshevism by
force in Russia," sa d the senator. "Let
Russia do that heiself. If left alone I
believe Russia will shake off this thing
and prove it a failure there, and, con-
sequently. in the who e world.
•If it should show its fangs 11 this
country—which 1 hard'y think likely
we will have to deal with it.
"I do not refer to the dispatch of
troops to Russia in the first instance.
That was a legit mate pari of our
operations against Germany, but with
signing of the armistice they should
have been withdrawn W« are not at
war with Russia. rongress must de-
clare war and it has not done so."
(BULLETIN).
LONDON — A wireless dispatch
from Budapest. Thursday declared
that Count Karolyi, deposed premier,
completely at liberty. Rumors
v ere afloat Wednesday that he had
been arrested or assassinated.
(HI LM :TI \ )
BERLIN — The Berlin soviet
Thursday sent their felicitations to
the new Hungarian government on
its victory.
(lil l.l.l TI N i.
L< )NI>()N—Cecil 11 arms
(!> r-secretary for foreign
r.ounced in the house Thur
Roumanian army has 01
Maros river northward.
[The Maros rivet flows
through Hungary, Joining
ai Szegedy, 100 in lies so
Budapest. ]
WARSAW Bessarabia
claimed its independent
a soviet republic and b«
sive against th« Koume
bulletin.
PARIS—Hungary's alliance with th* I
Bolsheviki and declaration of war
against the allies makes necessary the 1
occupation of strategic 1 enters in cen-
tral Europe, unless peace is speedily |
signed.
This belief prevailed her Monday I
when leaders of the associated powers !
met to discuss ihe new crisis.
Spread of Bolshevism into Austria j
will mean severance of allied com-
munications with Poland and Checho-
slovakia, both of which are regarded |
lap iikely to join the Bolsheviki.
i BASLE—Gen. Georgey, command-
ing an army of 70,000 Bolsheviks, was
reported in a Vienna dispatch Monday
to have crossed the Dniester river and
entered Galicia.
I His army, composed largely of Hun-
garian and Bulgarian troops captured
by Russia during the war, is said to
be following the Lemburg-Budapest
railway.
(Lemberg is on!\ GO miles from the
Russo-iiungarian frontier. The Poles
recently recaptured the city from the
Ukrainians.)
A dispatch from Budapest said the
Czechos have begun to mobilize
against the Hungarians.
The Hungarian soviet sent Premier
Lenine a wireless, addressing him as
"ch'ef of the universal soviet " and
asking him military aid against the
entente. Lenine replied that Russia
is*delighted at Hungary's action and
that she would keep in touch with the
military situation.
russians \\ \nt to help
COPENHAGEN — Detachments of
the Russian Bolsheviki armies were
reported in a Berlin dispatch Monday
to be marching toward Budapest to aid
the new soviet republic In Hungary.
The dispatch stated a state of war-
had been declared between the entente
and that a general mobil zation has
[ been ordered in Hungary.
| Dispatches from Vienna said the
i Bolsheviki* in Budapest have promised
that the main forces of the soviet
j armies would be ready to march Into
j Hungary within a few weeks
S< OKI'S \ I LI I l> INTENTIONS.
New Republic Is Reported in
Berlin Dispatches to Have
Declared War on Entente
Powers.
GARBAI IS NAMED FIRST
PRESIDENT OF NATION
London Press Now Expresses
Fear of Spread of Bolshe-
vism Into Poland. Roumania
and Czecho-Slovakia.
bi'lletin.
PARIS—< 4:30 p. m. > -The allied
I mission has left Budapest, according
to dispatches received from that city
j Monday afternoon.
French troops have been disarmed
I by the Hungarians, the dispatch sa d.
HULlil'JTIN.
LONDON—Premier Le nine has went
I a wireless to Berlin Bolsheviks urg-
| nig thein to establish a soviet republic
111 Germany, according 10 Berlin ad-
| \ ices received here Monday.
bi'lletin.
VIENNA—-Communists held a de n-
onstration here Monday in sympathy
j with Hungary, urging establishment
of a soviet republic in Austria.
(bi'lletin).
I london entente detachment
Text O1 DlSpcUCh IndlCdtOS AI" near Budapi- t has been disarmed by
lied and American Lines
Were Pierced.
WITH THE ALLIED FOl
NORTH RUSSIA The Bolsheviki re
entrenching anil reinforcing both their
infantry and artillery at Bolshoia-
«'/era and are endeavonnK to hold this
importun point in the line, of the
| Hungarian soldiers, according to a dis-
patch from that city received Mon-
day by way of Vienna.
Another dispatch said official an*
IN ; notincement had been made In iTuda-
irn pent that a C7.eeho-Slov.1k army Is
marching against Hungary.
:• llied
a la
ommunlcaHons betw
id Onega.
BERLIN— The nev Hungarian so-
viet republic formed en alliance with
•h« he Russian Bolsheviki and declared
Oho- j war on the entente. Budapest dis-
S patches announced Monday.
Bolshevik forces were reported to
iuth from j he moving into Hungary to aid the
llied sup- new government against French and
other allied troops, which are scat-
tered throughout the -ountry.
The Karolyi ministry has resigned
and turned the country over to com-
munists.
iff airs an
duythat
The Hui
ording to
Buda p<
dispatch, h i
[Obozerskaia is an -mpoitant town
on the railway running
Archangel. Onega is the
ply base on the Gulf of Onega, about |
7f« miles west of Obozerskaia.
From th<* lexl of the dispatch it ap-
pears the Bolsheviki may have pene-
trated the allied IIiicm. getting ill the
rear of ilic \rncrh/ni and British
,|l|lLK j WHO NEW MINISTERS ARE.
\i>\ \\< 1 is SHOWN. Representatives of Premier Lenint
Sum] ■> III.' \m<'ricnn an.l Hrlt.nli V" i -1 t .-.1 to h.n. assl.-t.-.l in foiin-
.1 tacked fri'tn th* wo.it Miile of th' !ltc new >oeiall*t communist intn-
unci from th. dim icioni. tho j ""'V- wh"'h 'h '•• >«Hut w ' !1«. •
ruud Fighting under tho utmoH dir Alexander Oarhul, i "idor;'
n, ,iltl0K the- ;illied troops were unuhl.-1 Kuk"h Hiii-kh, mini
to ailrum'■ beyond the line of kovIoi .losol Pihmho' niln wsr
imirhlm- Kunn ! Wilhelm Boelm, mlt : oe.lal-
Struggling waist deep in th' soft .,Kal ion
drifting snow, the forces striking from] Heia Kun, minister of foreign af-
the east found a flanking movement fairs.
impra. tu !,i, and tbev w-re .,ble t 'n'" nt'w '•'•-bh.ei has issued the fol-
pr->i iess onlv it the rate of two-thirds lowing proclamation:
of a mile ail hour. Monday the allied : "I'liitlng with (he world's RoUhe.
troops vv.-n- hi on.i I long the roi 1 ' vikl. we rise against the entente and
he iil);ie< within i lni| erlalisiii and proclaim gen«Tal
mobilization. All opponents will Ik?
I eatwruted."
nil i rem ii
Sine situation I BBITMH IV PEAR.
Spencer Churchill, LONDON-—Fear of spread or Bol-
..dd the house that'shevisin Into Ro
last wo or three I Czecho-Slovakia
both
DM I l< tit
Russia.
1'kra
had be<
e Frenc
reme-
• t ting
M
icpr<
Poland and
e result of the
government in
<ed b\ liomlon
• of 11IJ
i hi
line asking him t
t and personally t
tation. i^enlne w
Rinational leader
n so'idar
■d the
I Iu
rep
Bolsheviki
ilita
it- |
established
n an offen-
i upat on,
Ro
TI..
Bcs
the
SHOl'LB t'ONTI N I I
Senator Lenroot dec
sh<
jld be
that
Bl *-« I N I SS
eclared business
I and factories
mployment ma\
!tured
I and is pushin
j the I'ruth rh
j The bellet
(the Russian
ing the Bess.
; constantly adMsecl or
< ount Karolyi. in announcing th
resignation of hi* nilnl-ir\ K-ued
proclamation deelarlng "llied oeetipa
lion A«a^ inleodcd lo make lian^ar
ihe "juniplng-off place" for opcraliou
against the Rus-laii I^d^hevikl \*it
tlie aid of the < «n-Im> tr<K p
ihe workmen'* and soldier-' counciL
had divlileil thai th« \ imi-t form an
alliance with tlx Bolsheviki ugalnst
ihe entente.
\ Ll.l I l> MONITOR* iv ltl\ I R.
PARIS- \" 1 i< 'I monitor ho iar
>1 \l> I « R INI < HIM \ I ION
II I"1 I R
M'l'l M..
said
din
no ill
Do you want a Dallv I.eader?
Then pay up your pledge. Buy
more Leader bonds. Invest an-
other $50. Let us finish this
>vork and have the BIG DAILY
LEADER.
operated
i.e reduced and returning so!
others obtain Jobs.
"Employers should be n
their dealings with labor th
feeling or misunderstandings be en-
gendered." he said
With the formal conrlus on of
. , |C( ording to thi senator, tele-
phone and telegraph s\«teina will vo
back to private ownership He said
there Is ittle sentiment in congress
f..r permanent ownership of these sys-
tems.
"Tli railroad question w II be on*1
of the first to enme hofore thp .\tr.i
.•^sinn of cunpr .ind «otnp solution
til1! be arrlvod at." the senator said.
We need more subs. Get them.
Get four subs for this paper
three months for SI. Get four
Socialists to pay 25 cents each
for a three months' sub Noth-
ing is easier. Try it.
•Mi
\n HI \|i is I lilt Iv
i h III. mm
part of the i<
■lallst and il i"
i to prate about
of I le \ppcaI to It
mest \
( Mix I
Ilk
nir paper inii'-.t
ponsiMli!> for
M-rscentioii of
'auk hypocrisy
>our Ifght for
r thenisel\es.
abian go\ernment.
XI STRI \ TO Bl
BERNE—Bolshevist
Austr a
minent,
cho
ikla
ai supply if ord*
rd ing to at
Thursday. Any mo c in
countries against the Hunt
go\ernment is expected tc
revolt.
The British m itar
Vienna, it was reported,
the government th< tlies
increas- Austr
is maintained.
The Austrian populat on is greitK
excited over events in Hungar\. espe-
iilly in view of their own economl i
situation. All restaurants in Vienna
ire . lo-ed, there if > khs or coal and
the rnest rat on h. been reduced >
an infinitely small quantity. Bolshe-
vism apparent y Is proving an inerea.-
ing attraction to substantia portions'
of the population.
Give this paper to your neighbor.
an appeal for
ilb _• .1 " \nun
i igtit."
amii -t'
• iiifoum
peal foi
I credit for Iu
skirmish in
\ppca I lo bill I scorn an>
ii pnldisli in iii\ behalf,
i. for an would I ratlien -
hirm iion I « behiial |uIm
oii«' word from >
n> colleague- an
[ | t)|i I look ll|MIII ><"
ls| i.
the
entci
WXIOI S RI
IMPORTANT WORK.
Help The Leader. Increase
the circulation. Invest SI in
four sub cards. Good for .'I
months.
h. To make your
Debs. Kate Rich
Castor stokes and
nir comrades." I
those who is fai -
c ami if yon hate
included me iu "mam of the coin-
rades, " i want >ou to strike m> nan.'
from tour list. I loath ! • be a "eom-
railc" of >oors. Von ami >our pa|s r
hfdpcd to create a hatred against Ihe
sim-lallst part \ and >on wilfiilh and
mali'ious|\ lied about tlie national
executive committee when it refused ;
to follow a course that would put I
more of our iiiciuIm < - in prison. In
or I that >011 make
thousand times
ml the rest of my
l-a:- than to l a e
i whom 1 hold rc-
rs«'culion of which
I aie victims,
appeal mi s;il),00tl
tilling; voiir own
Ii n pot riiieal pi
and I r« -
attic atw t
irs without rcspwf-
M>oi .I'll (.i:itMP«
Every Socialist should read
Till, OKI VHOMA IKADKR
Help not them on our list — 25
cents for three months.
We need more subs. Gel them.
■BOH
mm
msm
Mitt
ESMMMiigMSK,
******
mmlmi
la/irti'Miriiiili
• H rtrrrrr^---
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The Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 5, 1919, newspaper, April 5, 1919; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc148739/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.