OCR Text |
Show DARB SAYS HE . SUFFERSFOR TOILERS "My Experience the Natural Result of Battle I Have Waged," He Declares. Clarence Darrow, the noted labor attorney at-torney who was recently acquitted on a 'charge of bribery In Los Angolcs In connection with the McINamara case, arrived ar-rived In this city yesterday afternoon and Is staying at tho Semloh hotel. Tomorrow Tomor-row nrght he will speak In tho Salt Lake theater on the subject. "Industrial Conspiracies." Con-spiracies." Next month Mr. Darrow will face a charge similar to tho ono of which he was acquitted in Los Angeles that of attempting to bribe Jurors, When asked regarding his oxperlenco In the McXaraara brothers' trial and following fol-lowing it. Mr. Darrow expressed the opinion opin-ion that such an experience was but uie logical consequence of .a life which, for the past thirty-five years had been spent ln fighting tho battles of labor. "One cannot fight on tho danger lino without cvposlng his own life," he said, and ho added that he did not soe why ho should expect troa.tmcnt different from that of others who hail dared to lift their voices agaimit injustice and to side with the poor and disinherited as against tho rich and strong. Mr. Darrow talked about a not distant dis-tant future when all men would bo brothers broth-ers and when there would be no such thing as jail or penitentiary- Ho referred re-ferred to a jail as a sllont confcssslon of tho failure of tho human race to solvo Its problems without recourse to hatred and brutality. |