| Released Free Speech prisoners who visited the graves of
their murdered Fellow Workers at Mount Pleasant Cemetery, May 12, 1917. | [8] |
| The Flying Machine as now used in Western logging. | [21] |
| One of the thousands who donate their fingers to the Lumber Trust. The Trust compensated all with poverty and some with bullets on November 5, 1916. | [33] |
| Joe (Red) Doran Capt. Jack Mitten The Launch Wanderer. | [48] |
| Organizer James Rowan; Showing his back lacerated by Lumber Trust thugs. | [55] |
| Beverly Park | [70] |
| A close up view of Beverly Park showing cattle guards. | [71] |
| The Ketchum Home near Beverly Park | [83] |
| Mayor Gill says I. W. W. did not start riot | [102] |
| Jail at Everett | [116] |
| Funeral of Gerlot, Looney and Baran | [119] |
| An all-I. W. W. crew raising a spar tree 160 ft. long,
22½ inches at top and 54½ inches at butt, at Index, Wash. | [132] |
| Another view of the same operation. | [133] |
| Judge J. T. Ronald | [139] |
| Pilot house of the "Verona" riddled with rifle bullets at Everett | [162] |
| Arrival of the "Verona" at Seattle | [169] |
| Cutting off top of tree to fit block for flying machine. | [189] |
| VERONA AT EVERETT DOCK, under same tide condition as at time of Massacre. | [200] |
| View of Beverly Park, showing County Road. | [210] |
| THOMAS H. TRACY | [216] |
| Everett from the water. To the left G. N. Depot from where by-standers viewed battle. | [223] |
| Victims at Morgue. John Looney Hugo Gerlot, Felix Baran Abe Rabinowitz | [235] |
| JOHN LOONEY | [243] |
| FELIX BARAN Dark lines on body caused by internal hemorrhage; Portland doctor said life might have been saved by operation. | [252] |
| HUGO GERLOT | [260] |
| Dead body of Abraham Rabinowitz. | [264] |
| Part of 78 prisoners of County Jail Everett Wn. Released May 8, 1917. | [272] |
| Singing to the Prisoners. | [277] |
| Charles Ashleigh speaking at the funeral, of Looney, Baran and Gerlot. | [282] |
| Gus Johnson Felix Baran John Looney Hugo Gerlot Abraham Rabinowitz | [290] |
| May First at Graveside of Gerlot, Baran and Looney. | [294] |
PREFACE
In ten minutes of seething, roaring hell at the Everett dock on the afternoon of Sunday, November 5, 1916, there was more of the age-old superstition regarding the identity of interests between capital and labor torn from the minds of the working people of the Pacific Northwest than could have been cleared away by a thousand lecturers in a year. It is with regret that we view the untimely passing of the seven or more Fellow Workers who were foully murdered on that fateful day, but if the working class of the world can view beyond their mangled forms the hideous brutality that was the cause of their deaths, they will not have died in vain.
This book is published with the hope that the tragedy at Everett may serve to set before the working class so clear a view of capitalism in all its ruthless greed that another such affair will be impossible.
C. E. PAYNE.