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1917 "Patriotism in the Middle West," The Masses, 9: 19-21 (June, 1917). (The militia raid on the I. W. W. hall in Kansas City, Mar. 27, 1917.)

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The tenth annual I. W. W. convention," International
Socialist Review, vol. xvii, pp. 406-409 (Jan., 1917).

"What Haywood says of the I. W. W.," Survey, vol. xxxviii,
pp. 429-430 (Aug. 11, 1917).

Woehlke, Walter V., "The I. W. W. and the Golden Rule: Why Everett [Wash.] used the club and gun on the Red Apostles of direct action," Sunset Magazine, vol. xxxviii, pp. 16-18, 62-65 (February, 1917).

1918 Blythe, Samuel G., "Our imported troubles and trouble makers,” Saturday Evening Post, May 11, 1918. (The I. W. W. and the war.)

Browne, L. A., "Bolshevism in America," Forum, 59:703-17,
June, 1918.

Bruère, Robert W., "Copper camp patriotism," (The I. W. W.
and the war. The Bisbee deportations). The Nation, vol.
106, pp. 202-3, 235-6 (Feb. 21 and 28, 1918).

"Following the trail of the I. W. W.," "A first-hand investigation into labor troubles of the West." Series of articles on conditions in mining, lumbering and agriculture, The New York Evening Post, Nov. 14, 17, 24; Dec. 1, 8, 12, 15, 1917; Feb. 13, 16, 23; Mar. 2, 9, 16, 23, 30; Apr. 6, 13, 20, 1918.

The Industrial Workers of the World"-
'—an interpretation,
Harper's Magazine, July, 1918 (pp. 250-257).

Callender, Harold, "The truth about the I. W. W.," International
Socialist Review, vol. xviii, no. 7, pp. 332-342 (Jan. 1918).

(The I. W. W. in the lumber

"Colonel Disque and the I. W. W.," New Republic, vol. xiv,
pp. 284-285 (April 6, 1918).
industry of the Northwest.)

bogey," International Socialist (Feb., 1918).

* Debs, E. V., "The I. W. W.
Review, vol. xviii, pp. 395-396
Easley, Ralph M., "Survey of I. W. W. activities during the
war," New York Times, July 7, 1918, sec. iii, p. 3, cols. 1-6.

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Defensive propaganda for accused leaders answered..." Based on brochure written by T. E. Harre who, the editors state, "has made a careful survey of the activities of the International [sic] Workers of the World since the outbreak of the war."

"Great Labor Trial Astounding Verdict," The Labor Defender, vol. i, no. 14, pp. 3-6 (Sept. 1, 1918).

Green, W. R., "I. W. W. organization," Congressional Record, vol. lvi, pp. 6799-6800 (May 9, 1918).

1918 Hartman, F. H., The I. W. W."-a scapegoat," The Radical Review, July, 1918.

"The I. W. W. as an agent of pan-Germanism," World's Work,

vol. xxxvi, pp. 581-2 (Oct., 1918).

[The I. W. W. in the lumber industry of the northwest]. Remarks of various members of the U. S. Senate, Mar. 21, 1918. Congr. Record, vol. lvi, no. 82, pp. 4095-4101.

* Keller, Helen, "In behalf of the I. W. W." The Liberator,
March, 1918.

King, William H., (U. S. Senator from Utah), [The I. W. W.],
Congressional Record, vol. Ivi, pp. 6565-6566 (May 6, 1918).
Landis, K. M. [Address to the jury in the case of Wm. D. Hay-
wood v. The United States of America, August 17, 1918].
Defense News Bulletin, Aug. 24, 1918, pp. 3-4.

Misconceptions of the I. W. W.," Labor Defender, Dec. 1, 1918,
pp. 4-5. Published also as a leaflet.

* Phillips, Jack, "Speaking of the Department of Justice," International Socialist Review, vol. xviii, pp. 406-407 (February, 1918). (On the U. S. Government indictments of the I. W. W.) Reed, John, "The social revolution in court" (illus. by Art Young), Liberator, September, 1918, pp. 20-28. Reprinted in Cal. Defence Bulletin, Nov. 4, 1918.

Sherman, Lawrence Y. (U. S. Senator from Illinois), [The I. W. W. and the war], Congressional Record, vol. Ivi, pp. 87428745 (June 20, 1918).

Speech in the United States Senate, June 20, 1918. "Spruce and the I. W. W.," New Republic, vol. xiv, pp. 99100 (Feb. 23, 1918).

"Telling it to Wilson," Labor Defender, vol. i, no. 16, pp. 4-5, 11 (Oct. 15, 1918); reprinted in The Liberator, November, 1918, pp. 43, 47. Also reprinted in The Nation under the title: "Is civil liberty dead?".

Reprint of a memorandum on the Federal Government and the I. W. W. sent to President Wilson by the National Civil Liberties Bureau.

*Thompson, Jas. P., "Industrial unionism: what it is," International Socialist Review, vol. xviii, pp. 366-73 (Jan., 1918). A reprint of his testimony before the U. S. Commission on Industrial Relations.

"Tulsa, November 9th" (story of deportation of I. W. W.s from Tulsa, Oklahoma, Nov. 9, 1917. The sworn statement of the secretary of the Tulsa local of the I. W. W.) The Liberator, vol. i, pp. 15-17 (April, 1918).

Walsh, John T., “The I. W. W. trial," The Labor Defender, vol. i, no. 12, pp. 3-5 (July 30, 1918).

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1918 Walsh, Thomas J. (United States Senator from Montana), [The Industrial Workers of the World], Congressional Record, vol. Ivi, pp. 6566-6569 (May 6, 1918).

Excerpts from I. W. W. papers and pamphlets.

Warren, W. H., "Treason by the wholesale; an exposé of I. W. W. methods," Oregon l'oter, vol. xii, pp. 310-311 (Mar. 9, 1918). "What has been proved at the I. W. W. trial. Review of evidence introduced at Chicago...," New York Times, Aug. 4, 1918, sec. iv, p. 4, cols. 1-6.

"This article, in which is presented a concise statement of what the trial has brought to light, was written by an observer, acting under official auspices, having access to all the records and sources of information."

"What shall be done with the I. W. W.?" Seattle Municipal News, vol. vii, pp. 1-2 (May 4, 1918).

Wolff, W. A., "The northwestern front," Collier's Weekly, Apr. 20, 1918. (The I. W. W., the lumber industry and the war.) Yarros, Victor S., The I. W. W. trial," Nation, Aug. 31, 1918, vol. 107, pp. 220-223.

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"The story of the I. W. W. trial": I. "The atmosphere of the trial," Survey, Aug. 31, 1918; II. “The case for the prosecution," Survey, Sept. 7, 1918; III. "The nature and pith of the defense," Survey, Sept. 14, 1918. Vol. xl, pp. 603-604, 630-632, 660-663.

Young, Arthur, "The social revolution in court," The Liberator,
September, 1918, pp. 20-28 (illus.).

The Chicago I. W. W. trial.

1919 Carleton, Frank T., "Pedagogy and syndicalism," The Public, February 8, 1919, vol. xxii, pp. 133-134.

On the I. W. W. after the war.

"The future and the I. W. W.", by a Washington official. The Public, February 8, 1919, vol. xxii, pp. 134-136.

The I. W. W. and the lumber industry.

"Ol' rags and bottles," The Nation, January 25, 1919, vol. cviii, pp. 114-116.

An account of the I. W. W. trial at Sacramento, California, by The Nation's special correspondent.

Parsons, Geoffrey, "Wichita's way with a wave of I. W. W.
Bolshevism," New York Tribune, March 2, 1919, sec. vii, p. 3.
Sterling, Jean, "The silent defense in Sacramento," The Liberator,
February, 1919, pp. 15-17.

The Sacramento conspiracy case.

INDEX

A

Aberdeen, S. D., free-speech fight,
264.

Agreements, 86, 101, 115, 198, 319,
323-324, 371; constitutional amend-
ment on, 330.

Agricultural workers. Vide Farm
laborers.

Agricultural Workers Organization,
335, 337, 339.

Autonomy, craft, 63, 97, 101. Vide
also Decentralization.

B

Baltimore I. W. W. cigar makers,
245. 247; Amalgamated Clothing
Workers and the I. W. W., 250-
251.

Barnes, J. M., 147.

Berger, Victor, 140; on sabotage,
279.

Berkman, Alexander, 316.
Bohn, Frank, 62, 95, 103, 314.
Bolsheviki, 372-373.

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Boring from within" policy, the,
60, 65-66, 81-82, 89, 104, 118; Jan-
uary (1905) Conference on, 66-
67; attitude of Socialist party, 82;
vs. "dual unionism," 297-302; re-
sults of policy in England, 300.
Vide also Dual Unionism.
Bowman, Guy, 300.

Brewery Workmen of the U. S., Na-
tional Union of the United, 38, 55,
58, 61, 72, 215.
Bridgeport, Conn., strike of tube
mill workers, 203-204, 214.
British Labor party and the I. W.
W., on workers' control in indus-
try, 12-13.

American Federation of Labor, 35,
54, 66, 108, 114, 118, 123, 129, 186,
210, 215, 249-251, 276, 297, 301-303,
318-319, 325, 334, 337, 370-372; on
the I. W. W., 65; locals repre-
sented at Ist I. W. W. convention,
71-72; I. W. W. criticism of, 83-89;
friction with I. W. W. in strikes,
116-117, 204-205; at Goldfield,
Nev., 191-192, 195; and I. W. W.
at Lawrence, Mass., 287.
American Labor Union, 44, 54, 58,
70, 71, 74-75, 90, 102, 122, 132, 153;
compared with I. W. W., 45; prin-
ciples of, 46; weakness in 1905, 54.
American Railway Union, 40, 54.
Anarchism, 251, 279, 296, 308, 314.
Anarchists, 109, 314; at 1st I. W. W.
convention, 78; at 3rd convention,
178.
Anti-militarism.
and War.
Arizona, "sabotage" law vetoed by
the Governor, 345.
Arizona District Industrial Council
of the I. W. W., 163.
Association of United Workers of
America. Vide Socialist Labor"
party.

Vide Militarism

Augustine, Paul, 151.

Australia, the I. W. W. in, 280, 340-
343; Unlawful Associations Act,
280, 341-342.

Brooks, J. G., American syndicalism,

27.

| Brussels, International Labor and
Socialist Congress (1911), 251.
Budapest, International Labor Con-
gress, on admission of I. W. W.
delegate, 271-273.

Bulletins of the Industrial Workers
of the World, 146.
Bummery," the, 220, 369.
Butte, Mont., controversy between
I. W. W. and A. F. of L., 319 et
seq. dynamiting of the Miners'
Union Hall, 319-320; reds" vs.
"yellows" at, 320-322.

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Chase, C. H., 230.

Chicago, Ill., window washers' strike,
123; Industrial Council of the I.
W. W., 163.

Chicago conspiracy case, 345; the
indictment, 7; verdict and sen-
tences imposed, 8.

Chicago faction of the I. W. W.,
compared with the Detroit wing,
220, 234, 250; and the Detroit
wing, 247-240; and the Baltimore
clothing workers, 250-251; condi-
tion after 1908 split, 258; Pre-
amble to Constitution, 349-350;
membership statistics, 352-357.
Vide also Industrial Workers of
the World.
Cincinnati, Ohio, marble workers'
strike, 123; Industrial Council of
the I. W. W., 163.

Cleveland, Ohio, stogie workers'
strike, 123.

Cloth Cap and Hat Makers, Unite,
forbid members to join I. W. W.,
118.

Clothing Workers. Amalgamated.
and the I. W. W. in Baltimore,
250-251.

Coates. D. C., 79.
Cole, Thos., 228.
Cole. T. J., 176.

Collective bargaining. Vide Agree-

ments.

Confédération Général du Travail
36. 47-48, 109, 272-274. 207, 299,
326; compared with I. W. W., 274.
Constitution, 102, 110, 176, 236, 271,
306: departmental and other sub-
divisions, 98, 134. 164-165: locals.
99; officers provided for, 99; Gen-

eral Executive Board, 100; mixed
locals, 162; industrial councils,
163; initiative and referendum,
308, 329-330; agreements, 330;
Preamble to. 349-351. Vide also
Structure and Preamble.
Contracts. l'ide Agreements.
Control of industry by workers, I.
W. W. emphasis upon idea of, 12;
present unfitness of I. W. W. for,
13; policy of W. F. M. on, 43-
Conventions of the I. W. W., con-
stituent convention (1905), or-
ganizations represented at, 68-69,
74; types of unions represented,
70; method of representation, 72-
73; distribution of power in, 74-
75; doctrinal types at, 76-79; reso-
lutions, 91-92.

Conventions of the I. W. W., 2nd

(1906), 129, 136, 176-177; contro-
versy at, 136 et seq.; 3rd (1907),
178-182, 188, 210-211; number of
locals represented, 180-181; efforts
to modify Preamble, 188-189; 4th
(1908), 212, 218, 221-228; dele-
gates at, 221; officers elected, 228;
5th (1910), 265; 6th (1911), 265,
271; 7th (1912), 275, 293, 296;
8th (1913), 303; 9th (1914). 325-
330; 10th (1916), 335-336, 338-339,
347; pre-convention conference of
the "Proletarian Rabble" (1906),
137-139; Sherman faction (1907),

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