Life of Albert Parsons
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-ruption upon the performances of the police and judiciary, and establish the wrongfulness of the sentence. Then, accepting the hypothesis of the truth and reason or the evidence; the entire theory that Parsons' accessoriness or that of his fellow defendants is attacked, and the Hon. Leonard Swett is copiously quoted in support of the position.-Chicago Sentinel.
This is one of the most remarkable books ever printed in America; it is a labor of love and memoir, compiled and published in poverty and privation, by the devoted wife of a martyr * * * in a cause which both husband and wife believed the cause of humanity.-Woman's Journal Boston.
HIS WISH
"Have I one more wish" said Parsons, with that familiar flash in his eyes, when, a few days before that black Friday, I called to bid him farewell. "Oh, yes, I have more than one. Never tire in advocating our high principles, in the warfare between cowardice and tyranny; "never cease until the American people know why we are murdered, and the class fanaticism characterizing our condemnation is understood."-(Extract from Editorial in Alarm.)
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