The literary digest . jj^ CUVtR CAVt rt*^ Oliver Plowed FieldsBring Greatest Yields. :,{) Vw Literary Digci for March L 1919 WHEN 2,300 SOLDIER-PRISONERSSTRUCK AT FORT LEAVENWORTH IT was mass mutiny, and American mili-tary regulations would have excuseda mass slaughter, but the great strikethat took place at Fort Leavenworth onJanuary 30 was settled bj other military justice the T\Titerof the single inside story of this un-precedented uprising calls the settlement,which the New York Evening Post refersto as an armistice agreement. Butneither the strike itself nor the agreement
The literary digest . jj^ CUVtR CAVt rt*^ Oliver Plowed FieldsBring Greatest Yields. :,{) Vw Literary Digci for March L 1919 WHEN 2,300 SOLDIER-PRISONERSSTRUCK AT FORT LEAVENWORTH IT was mass mutiny, and American mili-tary regulations would have excuseda mass slaughter, but the great strikethat took place at Fort Leavenworth onJanuary 30 was settled bj other military justice the T\Titerof the single inside story of this un-precedented uprising calls the settlement,which the New York Evening Post refersto as an armistice agreement. Butneither the strike itself nor the agreementthat settled it has attracted as much news-paper attention as the conditions which itrevealed in our great miUtary prison where,on the word of a high military authority,American soldiers are serving sentencesrunning up to forty years for such trivialoffenses as refusing to hand over a packageof cigarets at the command of an Senate Military Committee recentlyliegan an investigation of the whole system. It is necessary to understand the methodsof om- courts-martial, and
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidliterarydige, bookyear1890