aJag THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMifNLR .. I jSSSaSaSJi , - . - I Wrangefs Defeat Sheds Light on Trotzky s 'Labor Army I : " ; 77 Military Coup Gies New Significance to Red War Lord's, Pilgrimage Where Forces Were Raised to Crush White Army V the following article C-cif Frarcis McCullagh. writing from first hand tacts, sets forth mat vividly he nanner in which Leon Trotzky. the Pd Jm:tcr of War. personally sowed tit seed': of Solshcvism in the territcrv 'vhere Gen W rangcl's White army, ss :te. events nroved. was to meet crush-ng defeat Capt McCullagh's r.aTXMtive s not only a tratne-d observer': intern elv m'erestmg dcscriptt e vork, mtdm timel hv the re-.-nf defeat of Gen WrangeF forces but HL- n brings out m full the sig- ficance ol Trotzky's "Red Labor Army' c-mpa gn. T which was closely 'ollowed not by in dustrial advancement bu. by a mi'itary coup His Lccoun' of Tro'iky's visit, jsfl bich trarsformed Ekaterin'' nr$ into a gigantic . rjDzganda ball, five new and itoundi l dea of what Rfd propaganda v i'jB really rvcans and shows agfir th-l :haos I 'fiflj ?nd misery ever go hand rp Land wth B Communism. By CAPT. FRANCIS McCOLLGH 1 020, by Tun St Vont Htsn LUX DON, Saturday ROTZKV Mk. lender or the Red armies v.'sitcd ICkatcrlnburg While hh I was there hi order, as his purpose BH 9"U given, to turn two or three of his armies n. Ir. Rf d la'-nr armies and to make his sol H diers, in right of ail the wnrld, beat ihelr swerds into ploughshare. wH Thi last occasion 1 1 which he hid visited "'fB i' town hi political n i. t . and he y 1 1 a I grazed si it through the Iron bars ol i HH prison van. The foreign newspaper eorre- Hftl xperdents m Potrograd had itidulecd at that yB if H those correspondents was mad enough to '.VI prophesy thai time would romi when Hhl this Jewish convict would vlsil. as com mander-in-chief ol all the Russian armies, a H Siberian town in which, after sen ins ions term of imprisonment politics i JH sub)ect. the Casi himself had met a violent Hi Ekaterinburg w'a gayly decorated In 8LBg hor.ot of Trotxkya visit, hut (he Botahtylst ES Minister ol War came, unostontaMouslv ough in the nlghl time 8 nd refused l fl In Id any parades, inspections of troops or h anv other formal function? whatsoever He H Is a slleht built, wiry man of medium I ji height, dressed as private soldier, and . w ji houl anj .1 i i i ! won n 1 - HH car which has been Inverted for the higher HH officers of the Red army. It Is of lha'Kl HH clcth. Is cut in the styjs of the Steel helmet H worn by thr indent Russian bngatyrs 9H (lnlehts). and the whole front of it (a cov H ered by a hupe star, the red star of Bolshe- H Visfll. Mis til developed calves were en- H casd in a pair of Rrltl.sh army puttees gaMH trobably one of the many pairs which :ie fH ha: sent to Kolchak and which had travelled m. further re.t u lib (he nimble legs "T (1e- T . Aides Aboard Trctzky's Train W rk '"'L&Ua Like Slaves Under Mercness Dr'ver H lie wore no bell and carried no weapon: H tils face Is sallow. Mephlstophellan. and dl- B tlnctly Jewish: his eye dark and bright: bis beard and muntache scanty. His movs y men ta ai tp Irk tnd animated, and in-- ca- HB paclty for work superhuman. The em- ployees on hi-- train told me thai the led i JP clog's life of it. The typewritinjf Kills wer " :-cPt working i 1 1 day and far Into the mcht i HIls numerous 84 etaries were glued thi i desk i all da His telephoi n wei . i H Ing Into the receivers or taking down teie- H phone messages for twenty hours out of the twenty-four. H Their master had it Is true, made their H work somewhat easier for them by ruthless- H ly cutting out ah the polite phraaea with H which Russian telrpnone users under the H old regime ushered in a conversation. .-Ml superfluities were droppfd. His business jLB manners are not only brusque, they are H brutal. This brutality may be necessary. fjifipT however, for he ha9 got an immense amount '; of work to attend . r. a i- I he hat to Seal with j popie who. though they are excessively 'J polite perhaps l should say because thej I " -re axefsajlvely polite are as dilatory as well bred Turks. There u i no denying the fad thai 'n ttnjl February last Trotzky was a busy man. He SBS published on his train a newspaper. En jjHBf Route, tor which h" wrote articles every aMBl day. and h dictated besides numerous con- HBV tributlons for the locai paper In the towns MBV through .Which he parsed. Till. f course. tllt pave him an "nnrmou! "pull." especially aa jjjr no able editor h .i the librvt to differ from F 1 him by a hair's breadth. I 1 Trotzky delivered lot'.c pulillc speeches fm everal tunes ., week and spenl tl leaal sis HP houts every cia presldintj over conference wm ot commissaries, railway ofUcials. factory firB men. and even doctors lie had fitfd to his jfljjH 'rain a wireless apparatus which kept him In constant communication with IfoiCOW . sag ai:d he received dally interminable messages ihput the eastern front, the southern front ktBJ the Polish front, the northwestern and Fin- (ffijlg nish fronts, as well as copies of all the oom- municallons received from the British and figSj other foreign Government??, not to speak of urSJ ast amount of technical material sent by HL his own War Office. HHV"4 He employed about a dozen secretaries a h tame editor to run his paper, a number of IV L tame diplomatists to look after diplomatic HB( atTalrs and several domesticated C;arlst of- r.cers to deal with purely military matters mi;Vni H put ihe fear of Trotzky if not the fear oj fjod into all these subordinates, but thev rather gloried than otherwise In their servi tr.de Most Ruslans like to serve a relent laaa master. mM Trotzky Takes Up Great Task Of Transport Reqrganiamtion As if all thl work were not enough. Trotzky devoted himself at Ekaterinburg to Uansport reorganlsatjoo, a task which would a. uip absorb the energies of a dozen Sir Eric HB Gkfddeaea and when KrauMln wont to Eng- land Trotzky calmly took over the Commis- j sarlat f Ways of Communication on th? t grcu'nd that as railway a played such a fcroal pat In military operarlona he hud battel I take charge of them as well as of the armv. V, A I. this testifies to Trotsky's audacity and H IndefUgabtrity, but It also bstraya a fatal I S'ji , , 11 i f n lack- of orcanlzers In the ranks of the Reds. Ar.d. it Is almost tlitaersSSarj to add. Cjv rnment work ts not well ilonc Despite the elertric thrill which the pres ence of tl.e Red armv Commissar communl eatei t' B ery Jo rrfuncnt department which he enters there is a slut of work Whlob i Iori the whole machinery, and there are no', enouch exptrtfl to deal with that wor';. The oflice are In a chaotic state filled with visitors who cannot be attended to and with incompetent clerks rushing hither and thither. Many hi the old bureaucrats are. it Is true dribbling back from Paris with their tails between their lei.. but as they are dis trusted and are always placed under incom petent Reds no really cond svoik can be expected Of tln-m There Is nothing in the wnrld which a rulins class dislikes so much a beinc placed on : n equality With people BThom they had been accustomed to regard With contempt ae Interior beings. The stories lold of Troty ley's revels and dissipations are obvious nonsense. The onl i! .at on the Bolshevik war lord allowed himself was a short walk every day in a eabtlftll p'ne grove where 1 tuwd to walk myself and an hour's hard physical exer- i i'- daily shovelling snow from the railway track In this physical exercise he made everj man. woman and child in his ti-aln Ink. part, ami the example he thus set wa itood. for. as I think I have- already re- marked, the educated Russian has the same contempt for manual labor a ihe while sahib has In India Even Mrs Trotzkv. Master Trotisky in boy of eleven or twelve) anc' Master Trotzky 's governess a young Jewess of twenty or twenty-five, had to shovel snow like the rest: and this craze for manual work remained even wfaep Trotzky was not looking on. Trotzky Makes Var "n the Louie To Check the Ravage oi Tynnus sunuer had h' arrived in Ekaterinburg than Trotzky plunged straight into wo-k ci d I marvelled at the sudncitj with which in I x kled matters which oucht. one wuul th'nk. in have hjen left entirely to -iert.. I s..ii one example, the typhus que?- t'on. for I know nometlilng about it. Havl i. hin.. a year eorllei. to vlsil all the typhus hOKpltalS in the Urals to interpret for Col. c:arke. th" head of the Canadian medtea1 -mki whom C.rn Sir Alfred Knox ha I s"nt to the front with the o'decl of doing Something t.. stop the terrible wastage 61 mpt caused by typhus among Kolcbak'a troops. In Clarke "found most of the trouble t i e due to the apathy of the Russian doc tors, who would do nothing unless I hey were given imiim'ted quantities of unproourahle .i sectiCldes. though, as Dr. Clarke told them until he w:'s honse and exhausted and flnal v en Ugh I fne disease himself, heat would have served their purpose equally well. On February 19 Trotzky summoned tho D M. S.. listened In ominous calm to his Statement that there was n chsnce of tvphus deereasi:is in any case till the month of April an. I then attacked him with n Hidden burst of violence which nearly fright ened I hoi worthy out inefficient foi. tlonary ' . o 1 1 Ills mig "I a;n no loctor." aid the Bolshevik war lord v it t know that typhus is communi cated by lice. Now It must be possible to destroy these lice by delouslng apparatus and by a certain decree of heat. h h could 'f necessary, be produced In some of our pub-li- laths. Several of the baths are verv nearly hot enouch for the purpose ft It is. and BVfn if the soldiers have not cot . hunge of clothes they might wah In one part ot tiie hathhoiise while (heir ClotheB are I- iiii disinfected in anctlicr part. I am not a believer In this doctrine ot fatalism that you preat h. I will Immediately appoint a com r.nttee to investigate this question, and If 1 find that you do not at once take some tep in the muter I will hand you over to th Extraordinary Commission, flood day' N'exf day an excellent bathhouse va. opened free at the railway station and I mvself erjoved tlie first bath that T had ha.' for three months. The committee was never ibeleaa appointed, and it published every thing, even details r.f hospital mtsmanag ment that were enough to make one's hair stand on end. for the Bolshevists, when It .suits their purpose, allow the fullest llbertv ti the press The creat propaganda encine t Ii i.-'i hart r.Ncd the Red Army and smashed KolchaW and Denikln was then turned onto the louse m" all Ekaterinburg, was soon placarded with posters preaching cleanliness and de noundng dlrt. Some of them contained rP resrnta'lons of 9 louse macnlfieI to Ihe si' of a small cow and pointed out. In the ac- ompanying letterpress, as a worse enemy than the 'Supreme Ruler" "Kill it" veiled the posters, "as yu would kill Kolchak. It Is a far more dancerous enemv. Kolchak has put 'o Jiath thousand of Communists It puts to death tens of thousands." The ni.mlier and N'arlety of these warnincs w-er Mry creat: and there was every kind of strtkir tz life size picture In glaring colors to ailraci the attention of the illiterate, as well as good medical hints to Impress those whe could read Powerful Engine of Propaganda Serves More Sinister Purposes The same all-powerful engine of propa ganda Is employed for other purposes to teach Communism. 10 enlist support for the Red army, to foster a hatred of England, to excite a craze for education and to produce a contempt tor priests and Christianity. On the day after his arrival Trotzky ad dressed a large Communist meeting; and here I might remark that no such thing as a public meetlnc in our sense of the word is ever held in Red Russia. The Bolshevik leaders only address meetings which hae been carefully packed with their supporters and T know of only one case In which It na announced heforehand that they were going to speak. Jt Is imposflhle for any one who is nol a Bolshevist lo find out when Ienlne golnc 10 speak In Moscow, ihe reason b' ing simply fear of assassination, and It Is next lo impossible for a non-Bolabsvik 10 heat him, Trotzky. who la a consummate orator, made a very able speech, or which tl e keynote was briefly this: "We have defeated Kolchak, but a much mere serious enemy remaine. namely, the ruined ecoribmjc system of the country. To pis that riglll w.- must work harder than men over worked before since history began, i'txly per cent, of our railway locomotives t.re out of action, am) If they continue break- w EH Miss Yurovsky. the belle of Ekaterinburg and a leader tn one oi the Boishcvik anti-Christian societies, lives within plain sight oi' the house where her father murdered the ex-Czar and his family. ' .. . '. " ,77. ' i THt youni; woman pictured here is Mi Yurovsky, daughter of Ynkel Yurov-s-y the n an who mu-dcrc-d the ex-Czar ana his family Sh? . the oellc I Ekaterinburg and is engaged to marry (it not already .vedded to) Son.-v ky, the chief liijure of the 'Workmen's nd Soldiers Depulie. of EUnter fnbarg all of whom signed the Heath wrrant executed by Yirovvky f apt i ' p. who Intfl virwed Yt icvsh lvei . : doicriptio . c he . ng a' j na n "T.er a very hin home Riri to of strirgl .iewish type and t'.cut ifitn ecn -r; old, came into the room She wa Yuro rsky't daughter Mic is aead cf the League of Commuttial 1 omh,' a sort af nversion of thi Y M C. A., eh ch he BoTthevia s lave cstnblo.hcd all over Russia with the idea of - inc'nj up ihe i- ring genfrohfn in strict Socialist and anti-Christian principl's Y i vsky and li s f.imily live in one of the best houses ;n ikater r,b ir.i 01 ly -i h r 'tance fro n nd wiiiiir. icw of the house wrier, the :m'.-ria' ami y 'or,- to death. Although p ovitied with a li e post undei t-e V ? rrent 'uir.ihed viti .imple food Z.nt ot' or create; comfoitj, 'h tli.e oi it.e Czur c wreck of man and dying fast from heart disease, C pt McCul la h yt I Ing down at the same rate we shall bavs C' per cent, out of notion within tlif'c months: which means a total breakdown of our transport system, and therefore of our system of governments These engines must 1 repaired. The men who repair them must hsv food and fuel The rallsvay lints mils be cleared of snow. Wood must be cut and brought lo the railways The Ural fac tories tmiKt be staited This means that ! must work, w ork, work " lie certainly painted a picture gloom v ei m:ih to waim the heart of. say. Winston Churchill, but he did it with a purpose; he wanted to alarm his followers thoroughly and lo nidki them see that the economic situation was extremely serious. He did not go so far. however, as to make them despair and I afterward discovered that fi" deliberately understated the actual ex tent of the economic breakdown ami omitted altogether tO tOui h on many very disquiet ing features. He ended on a note of robust confidence and caused a sensation by announcing In conclusion that six hundred million i ub'.es In gold had L-een captured with Kolchak. al thcugh he. must nave known that the amount was only three hundred million. This news by the way. had been carefully withheld from 'he public- until the head of the Red army could use It. as he did. in an effective peroration. Red Leader s Appeal Reechoes Over the Whole Ural District I was surprised at the rapidity with which th- speech was. by previous arrangement echoed and reechoed ujl over the country Tin Fight Against Economic Rutn" became a catchword like "Walt and See'" or "We Want eight and we won't wait." or any of the other famous catch phrases of British politics It became a slereotyped newspaper headline. It stared at one from placards on all the walls To Judge from the reports In the press, it was repeated by every village orator throughout the Urals. At a meeting o the Ekaterinburg Soviet which f attended It was the principal subject of discussion, and at a meeting of the Communist League of Youth which Trotzky attended. UlM Yurovsky daughter of the Cur's murderer and president of that league, delivered speech on the same lines. Trotzky must have smiled his Mephlstophellan smile when he heard all this parrot outcry, most of It almost a repetition of what he had said him self Trotzky 's treatment of the working classes was marked not only by an absence of flat lery but even by an autocratic touch whici one would never have expected. Finding on his way from Moscow to Ekaterinburg that the workmen in a certain Ural factory were not working hard enough he had fifteen of the worst "slackers" arre.sied and placed on their trial before a workmen's tribunal In Ekaterinburg. " At one point on the Une his train was stopped by snow, whereupon he had the whole of the local Soviet taken Into custody for disobedience lo the order for removing snosv from the track. Thev also ,vere tiled beforo a jury of their peers; and. while tho case wrus still t(l judice. Trotzky wrote, over his own name In the newspapers, a ferocious onslaught on th' accused, whose condemnation was thus made certain, Hi ii: not say anything about their delaying him, but he inveighed against them for de lay ln the trains which brought bread to tho women and children of Moscow and to I th Red workmen who bad hurled the tyrant frcm his throne and stood in the breach against Denikln and Judcnltrh." Trotsky's tr.iln consisted of about a dozen rriages, but II could not be described as sumptuous, consisting mostly as it did of wagOna-lUs cars, all of them, save Trotzky s OWI car. tieiiiK very much overcrowded with pi rsonncl. typewriters, desks, writing tables and document! Hatred Inspiring Posters Give Circus Appearance 'o thf Train .Ml the outside of Trotzky's train waa i. .ited svith advertisements of Bolshevism mi oi' Itamcnts to class hatred Imagine an American President touring the country in a train plastered all over with posters like thai of a travelling circus' And yet side b, de with this ultra-Americanism and I'Mrn-modernism the latter represented by ubist a:id futurist productions that looked like nothing on earth), was a good deal of hocry old Czarism. Close, to tho futurist posters stood Lettish guards, who were merciless as the janizaries of an Ottoman Saltan About a dozen of them travelled on Trctzky's train and kept unostentatious but careful watch on every one who approached or entered It The police precautions taken to proteci l.ei.ine -iml Trot.-.ky .-in- ;is minute, thouch pot as evident, as those formerly taken to protect Nicholas II Thus the more Russia changes the more It is the same thing, t has had a tyrant who dragged it savagely bj the hair of the head, so to speak abreast of contemporary civilization, it has now h tyrant who thinks that he Is driving it far r.head of al! modern civilization. But It al- ays haa a tyrant. Ii was forbidden for any outsider to ente Trdtsky'a train without permission and the names of all persons who had the enfrer watv pasted up inside the doors. Trotsky, to do him justice, is a remarkable man, and Is idolized by the Bolshevists, who say, and with truth, that he is the ablest M!i lster of War that Europe has produced during the last six years of Armageddon. He foitnd a numerous and well disciplined army on., of men who were sick and lired of warfare and who only supported the Bolshe vists originally because the BoJahevlatS promisee them peace. He did this despite th? fact that ne nitnself had never been In the army or studied warfare, except as an extremal antl-mllltarlst war correspondent during the first Balkan war. Sees Signs Trotzky Will No: Always Remain a Bohhevist Most men find it hard enough to deal with one digressing s'ibject at a time, but he switches from 9ns important matter to an other a dozen times In tho course of a single day and comes to a rapid and generally a right decision each time Lt roy-Beanlleu says that "the Jewish mind la an instrument of precision it has the exactness of a pair of scales"; and Trot zky has all the mental precision and the ex treme Intellectuality of his race, owing to this fact and to the fact that he Is very am bitious and Is endowed with a ruthless physi cal energy and personal bravery which one does nl always expect to find In h Jew. I am doubtful If Trotzky will always remain a Bolshevist or will always submit to the dei pt . but less aKile Eenlne. Trotzky re sembles Lloyd Georgo in many respects and I should not do surprised If. like Lloyd George, In became practically a dictator. Be r-istSr Transformation of Town W here Czar Was Slain Into Huge Propaganda Hall Re- j eals Soviet's Inner Workings cculd do so to-morrow if he liked, for he has th Red army with him and his War Offlc in Moscow 's ( fortress bristling with ma chine g ins and filled with troops who are dev cted to him. 1 bad lived in Ekaterinburg previously to the occasion of Trotzky's visit, rtrst in 1 o 1 S -rv the Czechs were there, and :n-ain 111 1319 when Kolchnk's troops and a bat talion of the Hampshire Regiment occupied It, r both these occasions It had brfn a Terj busy place the railway station lieire Mocked with staff trains, most of which might be briefly described as bordcli nrr.hu lnnti the station platform, a local Picca dill In more f-nes than one belnK always crowded wiih officers and ladles, the s'ree's filled with soldier-c horses, cabs and the speeding motor-cars of great General" the shops and eating houses full of feod ;he market place crowded with farmers' carts In fact it was like any other army base a town of good choeti OVerCTOWdlig, khaki "hustle." hordes and sin. Boisterous imperfect, with streaks of religion and bursts of philanthropy, it was. with all its fault--human Trotrky Transforms Ek3ter i lburg Into Fantastic Propaganda Centre The Bkiterlnburg that met my eves on this visit was completely thanred Trying in dea ribe thaf change to myself In one Word l meant to say "Bolshevism." but found myself saying "Puritanism." For be tween th- two :h' re are the most astontsh i g resemblances, perhaps because extremes meej. perhaps because the one is as pre niilstlan as the other Is post-Christian. I know that It ought not to be so and that Lenlne should be seated on a heai of skulls quaffing human blood, while Trotzky should be engaged nightly 'r. oacch.tnalian revel", but. as a matter of fact. Lenlne leads as austere a life as Oliver Cromwell while Trotzky Is as busy a-s Lloyd George. Th" platform of Ekaterinburg station was no longer a promenade, and only people who had business to do cam" there. It waa sometimes deserted altogether save for three grim and watfhful figures thirty paces apart. Trotzky's Janizaries, One great ha.l in the station had been turned into a typhus hospital and another great hall Into a "prop aganda point." The station walls were covered with ildvertlsemantB, not advertise ments of the nerve tablets and hair tonics order, but Bolshevik propaganda advertise ments. At each end of the platform was painted a huge notice ordering all O. C.'a to bring their men without fall to the "propaganda point" and to apply there for newspapers and "literature." which would be given free. These propaganda points exist In every station along the Siberian Mne and are very remarkable' institutions. The largest hall in the station building Is always selected and I generally presided over by a C ? Rd so'dler. who has a tiny office, apart. Seated there on a collection of Roishevlst nevvs papera he wrestles in his spare moments wun inii voluminous uiumes m rv;ii .inr. lad rates lo the young the damnable and pernicious heresies of Krautaky. or engages In edifying conversation about Lenlne's lat es encyclical With wise ungodly old Com munists from the local Soviet. Pictures and Cartoons for Evert Pja.-e of Bolshevist Erterprise Over the entrance of the Ekaterinburg hall there was painted in large letters tho text "Those who work not. neither must they eat." while inside one saw on every wall the well known appeal of Karl Marx. ' Workers of the world unite' You have a world to pain and only your chains to loee." The pictures and cartoons with which the whole Interior was covered from floor to ceiling might l divided into several groups. L Those praising the Red army and cal culated to fortcr a military splrft. 2. Those coi'demnlng capitalists, priests and militar ists t. Those Mattering ihe workman and Promising him the owrlordshlp of the world. 4 Those exciting anger against foreign countries particularly France and England. There were appeals to the railway work men not to go on strike, but to remember that by striking they would Inflict a deadly blow on democracy, and that though their present discomforts were great there was a good time coniLng Tlere were charts showing the parts of machine guns .Mid the way to make tomb? anu these were generally accompanied by explanatoi y letter press and by appeals to thj workmen to drill and arm and study the mechanism of their rifles, so that tio power pn earth could disarm them and force them back again Into the old servitude. Side by side "with these were charts ex plaining the construction of the latest agri cultural machinery and exhorting (he peas antry to make themselves proficient agri culturists. The attacks on religion consisted of caricatures showing monks and priests making money out of holy relics and squan dering that money privately on revels and debaucherv. The priest -was sometimes rep resented as a huge leering spider weaving his web around the WlUZhik and Ills wlte and children and these anti-clerical cartoons were generally accompanied tv satirical doggerel from the pen of the Soviet's prin cipal poet. . Moscow Communist who writes n Kreat deal of coarse, satirical verse under the pen name of Ivan Bcdny 'Poor John). Many huge colored cartoons were devoted to Kolchak and Denikln. and were mostly vulgar but effective. The triumph of the Red rrm was ex hibited, not without a rough art. In a series of Cartoons, son., showing the Bed soldier winding through frozen steppes others showing them barging madly through the smcke of battle No Public House or Church In the Ccmmuns Pictvic In one double pictura a number of bloat ed capitalists, smirking priests and purple nosed Generals were shown In the act of binding the Russian workman m chains. In the other section of the same picture the workman was seen breaking the chains. Scattering hit would-be masters right and left, and Jumping on the stomach of the fattest of th ii The "elimination" of the landlord waa represented in a cartoon containing many sections. In ihe eaily sections we hud the old days of serfdom, in tho latter sec tions we had the landlord running for his life, accompanied by the parish priest, and S3 BB finallv f prosperous and contented peas- entry owning everything In sight and pro- vided e.itb a palatial md well attended 1 Communist ( hool but with no public house f or church in the village. Some posters dealt with British rule in India ami others with the situation in Ire- I land The Bolshe ist expert on Irish affairs f Is a Comrade Kerzhentscff. who was In Ire- j land during the Easter rebellion and has pub'ished a number of pamphlets on "The Mali Revolution' and ihe Irish question gen- If crally P.eing an able Journalist and head of j. the Rosta (RusxlJin Socialist Telegraph H U'novi, he makes great capital out of the f( present state of things In Ireland. if' . i nln-ioyt :rliglous tone was lent to this If, Propaganda Hall by the pictures relating to Kar; Marx. One showed a sinking ship In IE which all humanity was perishing save onlv ft one man, who ws standing on a raft In the P form of an op,, hook. ,vro which waa fi written the name ' Kail Marx" Th're were l?T also numerous busts of Karl Marx, looking pafrinreha; (n long hair and beard, but the n r.i prominent object was the red tar of ' Pdshevlsm a huge construction of red gia.s with a light inside fixed high up near ih celling and throwing I baleful light on u the gre.-xt crowd always gathered underneath " In' the evening. These crowds attended the service of song and ' instruction' which went rn daily from I about .5 o'clock to midnight, and Which was Certainly very popular, for I never found it iH possible to get anything but -tanding room The best local stneers and musicians, as well as good musician? from Russia per formrd gratis op a platform at the end of H the room wh' re there was a piano and an f orchestra. N'ot only were revolutionary if songs given, lasslcal songs by imshkin and Lermentov were also heard, as well as I music by Tchaikovsky and other great com- posers. Recitations. ;eeiures Cn art. edu- jf cation, socialism, typhus, and every con celvable subject lent variety to the. enter lalnment Slogan of Bolshevism Shrieks I From Every Pos and Pillar r l have already alluded to the decorations j in honor of Trotzky's arrival. These took the form of Red flags passim, of many trl- t.mph.il arches, of many pictures of Lenlno H and Trotzky on the walls, and of all sorts of jH other pictures, a. well as a vast amount of bunting, evergreens, transparencies and col ored cloth on all the house fronts. Everywhere in gigantic letters the war I cry of Bolshevism shouted at one: "Workers ot the World Unite!" I anything ever be c.ims true by constant repetition, this union must soon lake place, for It is a stereotyped heading on every issue of every newspaper. It appears in about a dozen languages on some of the Bolshevist paper money, it ap pears on all the propaganda matter and all the Go. eminent stationery and Bolshevik mothers paste it oer their child's cradle ss n i American mother pastes ' God Bless Our tl Home." LH The former British Consulate which had been converted into a Bolshevist Govern ment office had broken out into a perfec eruption of decorations with a picture of framed In R wreath of evercTeens. JH OS the centre of the scheme The French H consulate next door, which had been con verted into a Court of Justice, was similarly decorated and carried a picture of Trotzky. Peter 'he Great had been knocked off his r-destal In the centre of the town, and hl ft.ire had been taken by a large marble head of Karl Marx Catherine the Great had also pen .Icpoie.l In f-ont of tho Cathedral was at p; romidlcal erection of wee 1 covered with red cloth bearing the inscription "To . L-Tbor " It was adorned with brass plaques ' representing half-naked figures toiling in r mines, forges and factories, these figures be- ' !ng so well designed that T suspe. r the f fl ploques must have been taken from some museum E House Where Czar Was Murdered Becomes a Political H aduuarters a I The house where the Crar was murdered was converted Into an office of the Political Department and bore a great painting rep lesenting the Red army charging through smoke and snow. The square In front of this house had been called "Resurrection Place." hut that name has now been changed 'o The SqujiT' r.f National Vengran.-e " Which shows that the Bolshevists, who ought to know, entertain none of those doubts about th murder of the Czar which some people In this country still harbor. The street that runs north and south of that square Is called Karl LPbknecht street. and the other principal street, in which tne municipal theatre is situated. Is called Le- street All the remaining streets and squares have also had ther names changed, L Formerly there were few Government ir. stitutions and no clubs In Ekaterinburg, but i ow there are whole -streets consisting of aJ)V nothing else. Instead of promoting business, however tins multiplication of Government offices has killed It The dead hand of H Government conttoi has stifled every kind of enterprise. The town had many Communist eating houses, but they were only for Communists And - disagreeable workhouse appearance they all had. Exactly the same in every re spect save that some bore the sign "Soviet Government Eating House For Adults." and others the sign Soviet Government Eating House For Children." Tho ehll dren. by the way, are well fed In both Eka- I tcrinhtirg and In Moscow, but thi is all part of a large and i unnlng scheme to get them from their mothers and make them regard themselves as children of the Statu and not bound by ties of peculiar affection to any man and woman. Repelled by the blank, barracklike ex-te-lor of the Soviet feeding troughs. I tried to 1 buy food elsewhere, but I found it utterly impossible. It wits' not that the Red army had eaten up everything or thut all the food had been s nt to European Russls, for no fod had been sent scross the Crals since the Bolahs- ists came to that town, which lies close to 0 Of the richest agricultural districts in the v. .. rid and, though there had been a Whits army in Ekaterinburg when I was there last, the civilians could nevertheless got plenty of food The reason for this stoppage lies in Ihe Socialist theory that tho State should feed everybody and that there .should be no pri- ; t( restauro is, no shops, and no middle class at all. This kills all private enterprise as surely as a tree is killed by the cutting away of Its roots