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Show I BILL HAYWOOD SHOULD BE SUPPRESSED. Haywood, tho I. W. W. leader, needs the attention of the government. He is glibly talking of ordering 75,000 harvest hands to quit work In tho Da-kotas Da-kotas while the crops are being gathered, gath-ered, and he predicts a spread of strikes to the extent of paralyzing the Industries of the United States. 0 What ails this country? Are wo becoming be-coming another Russia, without patriotism pat-riotism and wholly unconscious of the mpanlncr nf tlifi wnv in which wa are Iongaged? How can any man talk as does Haywood, Hay-wood, and escape the heavy hand of discipline? In Germany, the I. W. W. disturber would have been shot the moment ho was caught after writing tho letter he did to President Wilson. But in tho United States, a coarse-grained, soured sour-ed agitator can go on spouting disloyalty disloy-alty and retain not only his liberty, but bo the center of admiration. President Wilson, no doubt, is indulgent, in-dulgent, believing that those who feel they have a grievance over the conditions condi-tions of labor, should be allowed to "pop off," as does an engine when the steam pressure is too high, but there should be a limit to this disorganizing propaganda of the I. W. W. |