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Show f f pa THE OUTLAW REDS Some of the eastern cities have recently been f ooded with circulars addressed to "comrades" who arc supposed to exist among the working class. These "fliers" purport to represent the view of the communist com-munist party in America. They begin with a savage assault upon all kinds of organizations, including manufacturers, chambers of commerce, the Aerian eri-can eri-can Federation of Labor, and "kindred la bor unions," whom they denounce as "labor "la-bor fakirs.' The communist party in these circulars figaivs it out that our present pres-ent form of government is a capitalist state and the only soution they can find is in the overthrow of it all and the substitution sub-stitution of the soviet government. Of course there is not the alarm felt over this agitation that existed, during the critical days following the war, with its discontent discon-tent among soldiers and civilians because of the disarangement of their usual course of living. The activity of the Reds is, nevertheless, not to be ignored,, and it is therefore felt to be a matter of jiterest;; to be referred to in pubic, printv.qU fchis, time when there is talk about rfvvarting tor imind good citizens that the "method should not be confined to flies. lb tto t |