This index was compiled at North Carolina State University between 2010 and 2012 by Prof. Dick J. Reavis with the assistance of several students, notably Vanessa Hays and Christopher Lipscomb



Download 4.35 Mb.
Page30/59
Date16.08.2017
Size4.35 Mb.
#32847
1   ...   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   ...   59

Lee, Johanna:
Untitled, Aug 29 1931, 4
Lee, Sara:
“Fifteen Arrested In Georgia Terror Drive Under Slave Law,” Nov 1934, 1
Lee, Shade:
“Operating New Gallows,” Mar 5 1932, 2
Lee, Tom:
News In Brief: Memphis, Tenn., Jan 1936, 3
Leeds County, Ala.:
“WPA Strikers in Alabama Win Partial Demands,” May 1936, 1
Leeds, England:
“Mother Handed A Corpse,” Apr 11 1931, 2
Leesville, La.:
“Misled White Workers Fire Into Negroes,” Mar 14 1931, 2
Lefrere, Earl:
“Louisiana Posse Murders Negro Worker,” Jul 11 1931, 1
Legge, Alexander:
“Fight Against Hunger,” Sep 12 1931, 4
Le Grand, Ala.:
“Starving Farmers Are Ready To Fight For Real Relief,” Mar 14 1931, 3
Lehman, Herbert H.:
The American Scene, “Governors Protest W.P.A. Cuts,” Apr 1937, 10
Leibowitz, Samuel:
“Where We Differ With Mr. Liebowitz [sic],” May 20 1933, 4

“I.L.D. Pushes Mass Scottsboro Defense; Brands Liebowitz [sic]Traitor,” Nov 1934, 1

“Scottsboro Mother Appeals For Support To I.L.D.,” Nov 1934, 5

“They Shall Not Die,” Nov 1934, 6

“Scottsboro Deaths Halted By I.L.D., Mothers Berate Liebowitz [sic],” Dec 1934, 1

“U.S. Supreme Court Faces Negro Rights in Scottsboro Case,” Feb 1935, 3

“Sheriff Shoots Scottsboro Boy,” Feb 1936, 1

Contributor, “Attorneys For Scottsboro Boys Issue Statement,” Feb 1936, 3


Leipzig, Germany:
“Clashes In Europe On Feb. 25,” Mar 7 1931, 1
Lemay, E.D.:
“Labor Spies’ Activity Told,” Nov 1936, 1
Lemke, William:
“Browder Terms Liberty League Greatest Danger,” Jul 1936, 4

“North Dakota Farmer Exposes Lemke’s Role,” Jul 1936, 4

“Audience Gives Lemke, Smith Cold Shoulder,” Nov 1936, 3

Cotton Row, Nov 1936, 5


Lemoine, Eddie:
“Union Organizer Mobbed By Louisiana Boss Thugs,” Sep 1936, 2
Lemoine, Elfridge:
“New Orleans White And Negro Fight Evictions, For Relief,” with photo, Nov 1934, 2
Lemoine, Feadestes:
“New Orleans White And Negro Fight Evictions, For Relief,” Nov 1934, 2

“Brutal Attack On Woman By New Orleans Cops,” Jan 1935, 2


Lemoine, Worthy:
“Union Organizer Mobbed By Louisiana Boss Thugs,” Sep 1936, 2
Lenin, Vladimir Ilyich:
“Commemorate Lenin In Chattanooga Meet,” Jan 10 1931, 4

“Charlotte Lenin Memorial,” Jan 10 1931, 4

“Lenin Memorial Meetings,” Jan 17 1931, 1

“Lenin—Inspiration of Southern Toilers,” Jan 17 1931, 4

“5-Year Plan Continues Work of Lenin In Soviet Union,” Jan 17 1931, 4

“Many New Members To Join Party At Meets,” Jan 24 1931, 4

“125 Negro and White Workers In Atlanta,” Jan 31 1931, 2

“New York Meeting,” Jan 31 1931, 2

“Pioneers Sing Red Songs in Chatta.,” Jan 31 1931, 2

“Fourteen Years of Soviet Power,” Nov 7 1931, 1

“Hoover Agent Takes Trip To Soviet Border,” Nov 7 1931, 3

“Build Our Revolutionary Party,” Jan 16 1932, 4

“January ‘Communist’ Splendid Number for Guide to Action,” Jan 30 1932, 4

“The Workers’ Greatest Leader,” Jan 20 1934, 4

“Communists Follow In Path Lenin Pointed,” Jan 1935, 6
Leningrad Academy of Science:
“Int’l Protest On Scottsboro,” Jul 11 1931, 1
Leningrad, USSR:
“Int’l Protest On Scottsboro,” Jul 11 1931, 1

“Delegates Who Visited U.S.S.R. To Tour South,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“5-Year Plan In Leningrad Now Complete,” Feb 6 1932, 2
Lenoir, N.C.:
Untitled, Jan 2 1932, 3
Lenoir City, Tenn.:
“Labor Fakers of Chattanooga In Cheap Swindle,” Oct 24 1931, 2
Leonard, Mary:
“Sentences Two Boys To Death,” Dec 20 1933, 1

Caption, Jan 20 1934, 1


Leopoldville, Congo:
“Revolt In The Belgian Congo Spreads,” Jul 11 1931, 3
Lepanto, Ark.:
“Farmers Starve Thruout [sic] Country,” Jan 24 1931, 1

“Three Negroes Are Lynched In One Week,” May 1936, 1


Leslie, Hubert:
“Miners Charged Educating Stool As Killer Freed,” Nov 1934, 3
Lester, Larry:
“Union Leader Murdered,” May 1936, 5
Lett, Walter:
Important News In Short: Montgomery, Ala., Sep 1934, 3
Letters:
“Power Co. Lays Off Old Workers,” Aug 16 1930, 3

“Wage Cut for Workers In Cotton Compress,” Aug 16 1930, 3

“Young Workers Are Hard Hit By Speed-Up Grind,” Aug 16 1930, 3

“Many Idle At Houston Port,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“Big Wage Cuts At Connors Steel,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“90 Cents a Day For Farm Work,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“Rome Textile Workers Starve,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“5-Day Penalty for Mining Rock,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“Cut at No. 8 Mine; Begin Lay-offs,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“Speed-Up in Chattanooga U.S. Pipe Shops,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“20-Hour Day at City Tunnels,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“Lowest Wages at Sloss-Sheffield Mines,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“Slavery On The Chain Gang,” Sep 6 1930, 1

“Week Pay At Tobacco Plant,” Sep 13 1930, 3

“Worker Is Beaten For Getting Job,” Sep 13 1930, 3

“Speed-Up In Dalton Mills,” Sep 13 1930, 3

“May Shut Down Ensley Shops,” Sep 13 1930, 3

Untitled, Sep 13 1930, 3

“T.C.I. Fires Old Men To Avoid Pensions,” Sep 13 1930, 3

“Lupton City Mill Workers Hard Hit,” Sep 13 1930, 3

“No Stretchout In Greenville,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Mass Lay-Offs In Elizabethton,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Wage Cuts In Houston Grow,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Injured Worker Gets No Compensation,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Workers Succumb To Bad Air In Chatta. Tunnel,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“No Benevolence In A Boss,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“A Day In Hot Kilns For $2.00,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Cut Wages and Crews, On Ripley Boat; Undermanned,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Don’t Be Yellow, Says Ala. Farmer,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Lay-Offs and Wage-Cuts in Danville, Va.,” Sep 20 1930, 3

“Writes Of Moscow Congress,” Sep 27 1930, 1

“10% Wage Cut In Candidate Bankhead Mine,” Sep 27 1930, 1

“Building The Southern Worker,” Sep 27 1930, 2

“Pioneer Tells of Child Labor,” Sep 27 1930, 2

“Chained Day and Nights on Gangs,” Sep 27 1930, 2

“Ain’t Hiring Nobody,” Sept 27 1930, 3

“$1.50 A Day Rotten Work In Miss. Sawmills, Railroad,” Sep 27 1930, 3

“Workers Join Party As Connors Steel Closes,” Sep 27 1930, 3

“Landlords Take Full Crops From Tenants,” Sep 27 1930, 3

“9-Cent Cotton And No Credit,” Sep 27 1930, 3

“Rain Floods Workers’ Homes, Sep 27 1930, 3

“Textile Workers In Elizabethton Want Red Union,” Sep 27 1930, 3

“See Thru A.F. of L. Labor Fakers in Miss.,” Sep 27 1930, 3

“Miner’s Child Starves To Death,” Oct 4 1930, 1

“Houston TUUL Continues Work Despite the Attacks of Police,” Oct 4 1930, 2

“Making Red Shop Out of U.S. Pipe,” Oct 4 1930, 3

“Workers See Worst Times In 16 Years,” Oct 4 1930, 3

“Travels 20 Miles To Get $2 A Week Job,” Oct 4 1930, 3

“A Vicious Speed-Up Method,” Oct 4 1930, 3

“More Pay? ‘Bad Nigger,’ Says Boss, ‘Fired!’” Oct 4 1930, 3

“Club Worker Asking Pay,” Oct 4 1930, 3

“Food Trucks Don’t Dare Go By Mill Town,’ Oct 4 1930, 3

“Building The Southern Worker,” Oct 11 1930, 2

“Cut Textile Workers $7 in Elizabethton,” Oct 11 1930, 3

“Won’t Sell Bargain Food To Negroes,” Oct 11 1930, 3

“More Than Half New Orleans Dock Workers Jobless,” Oct 11 1930, 3

“Must Pick 1 Bale Cotton To Get Food,” Oct 11 1930, 3

“Use Fines To Speed Workers,” Oct 11 1930, 3

“Pioneer Sees That Workers Must Vote Red,” Oct 11 1930, 3

“Build The Southern Worker,” Oct 18 1930, 2

“Miss. Mill Barons Plan Wage Cuts at Banquet, as Men Starve,” Oct 18 1930, 3

“Whiskey Prize For Worst Boss,” Oct 18 1930, 3

“Speed-Up Kills Negro Worker,” Oct 18 1930, 3

“Barber Hill Oil Workers Live in Sties,” Oct 18 1930, 3

“Leave Cotton in Field; Is Not Worth Picking,” Oct 18 1930, 3

“Workers Walk Out When Wages Are Cut to 20 Cents Hour,” Oct 18 1930, 3

“A Letter From A Ruined Crop Farmer—Our Answer,” Oct 25 1930, 1

“25¢ An Hour On Ringling Yacht,” Oct 25 1930, 3

“Homes Too Cold—Keep Warm In Mines, Says Smart Boss,” Oct 25

1930, 3


“Fish Flops Around In Stale Water,” Oct 25 1930, 3

“Slavery In Atlanta Laundry,” Oct 25 1930, 3

“Maimed By Speed-Up; Then No Job,” Oct 25 1930, 3

“Low Wages for Food Workers in A.F. of L.,” Nov 1 1930, 2

“14-Hour Day; Starvation Under Hoover’s Reign of Prosperity,” Nov 1 1930, 4

“Fired Because He Could Not Speed Up,” Nov 1 1930, 4

“Fink Masters Kicks [sic] Out Seaman Seen Reading Our Press,” Nov 1 1930, 4

“Makes $8.60 For 8 Days’ Work In Mill, “ Nov 1 1930, 4

“How Workers Get Subs in Atlanta,” Nov 1 1930, 4

“Best Amidships; Hell For Crew,” Nov 1 1930, 4

“Road Workers Must Serve Boss; No Pay,” Nov 1 1930, 4

“Negro Plasterers Kept Out of Union; Jobless,” Nov 1 1930, 4

“Such Fakers For Bosses’ Candidates,” Nov 1 1930, 5

“Studying With The 8,000,000,” Nov 1 1930, 6

“Workers Pay For Nurses But There Aren’t Any,” Nov 8 1930, 2

“Killing Pace Amidst Filth At Dixie Mill,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Sailor Jailed As Vagrant; Reveals Graft,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Evictions In Elizabethton,” Nov 8 1930, 3



“‘Build Party, Southern Worker,’ Says Invalid,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Getting Sick Of Boss Rule,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Tries to Sell Flash-Light to Keep Alive,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Government Is Scab Herder For Danville Mills,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Jobless Worker Loses Belongings For Rent,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“85 Percent TCI Workers In Ensley Unemployed—Fed On Bunk,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Bosses Use Jobless To Cut Down Wages,” Nov 8 1930, 3



“Use Negro Taxes to Better White Section,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Marine Hospital More Like Prison,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Miner Walks Miles To Work, Make $1.80 Day,” Nov 8 1930, 3

“Reply To Misled Worker,” Nov 15 1930, 2

“Slashing Wages In Walker County Mines,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“Made Sick By Poor Ship Food,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“Paper Finds Its Way,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“Farmers Have Not Price To Enter Fair,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“Speed Up On Part Time In Foundry,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“While Hoover Talks Relief, Evict Worker,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“Cropper Sees Struggle As Only Way Out,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“Continue Work Despite Police,” Nov 15 1930, 3

“8 children to Feed--Wife of Tenant Farmer Desperate,” Nov 22 1930, 1

“Jail Seamen In Houston Daily,” Nov 22 1930, 2

“Bosses Treat Negro Miners Like Slaves,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“Get’s [sic] $7 For Full Week’s Works, Urges Militant Fight,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“Sea Institute Is A Black Hole,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“Cut Wages Of All Building Workers,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“Disease Is Pay Check For Labor,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“Jobless Gets 50 Cents To Evict Himself,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“Free Yelping Boss Coyote, Not Worker,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“A.F.L. Raises Dues Then Lifts Charter,” Nov 22 1930, 3

“Runs From Farm To Escape Starvation—Same In Mines,” Nov 29 1930, 1

“Negro Seaman Tells Of His Trip To The Soviet Union,” Nov 29 1930, 2

“‘Serves Him Right,’ Is Super’s Answer,” Nov 29 1930, 2

“New Machines Mean Speedup Cuts, Layoffs,” Nov 29 1930, 3

“Cutting Cane At 75¢ A Day, Slop For Food, No Shelter,” Nov 29 1930, 3

“Jobless Sailor Commits Suicide,” Nov 29 1930, 3

“Demands Rent On Honk Of Horn—No?—Evicted!” Nov 29 1930, 3

“Protest Stagger Plan; Get Fired,” Nov 29 1930, 3

Untitled, Nov 29 1930, 3

“Use Race Lies To Cut Wages,” Nov 29 1930, 3

“After Elections More Lay-Offs,” Nov 29 1930, 3

“New Stretch Out Scheme In Textiles,” Nov 29 1930, 3

“Read This—Then Get Busy,” Dec 6 1930, 2

“Hire Expert To Cut Down Mill Wages,” Dec 6 1930, 3

“Full Crops And Seed Taken From Farmer, Left Starving,” Dec 6 1930, 3

“Lands Job—Has To Pay In Chest,” Dec 6 1930, 3

“Accent New to Miss. Had to Dodge Jailers,” Dec 6 1930, 3

“Cannot Wait 50 Years, But Must Fight Lynch Now,” Dec 13 1930, 2

“Put Our Paper To Work So—” Dec 13 1930, 2

“Thanks! But How?” Dec 13 1930, 2

“Foot Mashed in Speed-Up—Then He Is Fired,” Dec 13 1930, 2

“Saw New Life At St. Louis A.N.L.C. Meet,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Bringing Race Hatred on Job,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Jail Husband as ‘Vag,’ Try Same On Wife,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Child Hand In Mill Supports Whole Family,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Speed Workers Up As Order Beg For Jobs In Greenville,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Police Aid Unemployed—With Clubs,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Wage Cuts As X-mas Gift In Savona Mill,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“United Fruit Speeds Up Men With Curses,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Prisoner Made Happy By Southern Worker,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Negro Dock Worker Dies of Starvation,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“One Waiter Does Work Of Two Now,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Demand Food, Not ‘Pie In The Sky’,” Dec 13 1930, 3

“Worked Only 22 Days For Whole Year,” Dec 20 1930, 1

“‘Roast Little Pig, or Die a Poor Hog’,” Dec 20 1930, 1

“Starved Out At Casey-Hedges,” Dec 20 1930, 1

“Cops Despise It; —Must Be Good,” Dec 20 1930, 2

“Steal Ships And Lives Of Sailors, Too,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“Speed-Up Kills A Longshoreman,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“No Fake Insurance Like This For Us,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“Happenings In Norfolk,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“Speed-Up At Tenn. Power,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“Machine Shop Afloat Needs Sailor Slaves,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“Black As Well As White Need Food,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“Jobless Loses Money Working On Relief Job,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“Hard On Farm—Hard On R.R.,” Dec 20 1930, 3

“New Stretch-Out Coming In Elizabethton,” Dec 27 1930, 1

“World Is Coming To End—Don’t Fight, Says Church,” Dec 27 1930, 2

“Pulls Off Doors To Force Tenant Out,” Dec 27 1930, 2

“Never Made More Than $6 a Week For 38 Years,” Dec 27 1930, 2

“Terrible Conditions On Old Sea Tub,” Dec 27 1930, 2

“Starving Ex-Soldier For United Fight,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Morgan Line Gives Sailors Slop to Eat,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Leader of B’ham Jobless March Describes Action,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Tenant Farmer 60 Years, Broke,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Make Sailors Do Dock Work,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Hoover Gives Out 5 Jobs—We’re Fired,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Mate Drowns Dock Worker By Speed,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Die Starving And Boss Will Call You Hero,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Aged Jobless Worker Gives Last Pennies For Our Paper,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Worker Burnt After Helper Is Laid Off,” Dec 27 1930, 3

“Jailed as Vagrant For Protecting A Child,” Jan 3 1931, 2

“‘SW Best In World’ Says Boss Victim,” Jan 3 1931, 2

“More Speed-Up In Savona Textile Mill,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Cause Behind Lynch Justice,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Cut Wages For Banana Line,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“More Wage-Cuts At Fairfield T.C.I.,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Boss Charity Dolers Insult Negro Jobless In Chatta.,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“No Crawling For Charity-Fight!” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Order Us To Live On $1.78 a Week,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Santa Brings More Lay-Off,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“‘Buy Now!’ So Goes To Buy But Forgets He Needs Cash,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Speed-Up So Great Boss Uses Pistol,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Use Jobless To Cut Wages, Lay Off Men,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Feed Jobless Wormy Meat,” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Won’t Starve, Won’t Walk—He’ll Fight!” Jan 3 1931, 3

“Tells How He Kept Alive,” Jan 10 1931, 1

“Must Not Let Paper Stop, Says Worker,” Jan 10 1931, 2

“Standard-Coosa Workers To Get Wage-Cuts On 3 Shifts,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Made Mistake—Only A ‘Nigger’,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Closed Banks Take Savings,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Low Pay, Long Hours At Western Union,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Dicks Shoot Workers Gathering Coal,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“New Machines At U.S. Pipe Lays Off Workers,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Ex-Soldier Gets No Relief With 4 Children Sick,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Negro Truck Driver Work [sic] 12 Hours For $1,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Kill Worker On Ft. Worth ‘Relief’ Job,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“City Ice Cuts Workers’ Wages,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Want More ‘SW’ For Elizabethton Workers,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Bemberg Won’t Hire Workers That Struck,” Jan 10 1931, 3

“Ex-Soldier, Jobless And Sick Ready to Fight Real Enemies,” Jan 10 1931, 4

“Shoot And Club Workers,” Jan 10 1931, 4

“More Food Riots Brew as Red Cross Give [sic] 50 Cent ‘Relief’,” Jan 17 1931, 1

“Tells World How Fake City Hall Promise Is,” Jan 17 1931, 2

“Resists And Wins Against Her Eviction,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“Jail Jobless To Build State Road,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“North Greets Chattanooga Pioneers,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“Worker Tell [sic] How B’ham Trial Proved Communists Are Right,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“Didn’t Jim-Crow Negro Money—Jim-Crow Aid,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“Offer Jobless In Atlanta Job At 10¢ An Hour,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“Lay Off 700 At City Warehouse,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“4,000 Storm City Hall In B’ham For Job,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“Charity Relief Insults Workers,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“Long Hours, Low Pay,” Jan 17 1931, 3

“America Is Rich But Who Has It?” Jan 17 1931, 3

“We Want No Charity Relief But Unemployment Insurance,” Jan 17 1931, 4

“Killed Gathering Coal To Keep Off Freezing,” Jan 17 1931, 4

“Calls On Women Workers Join Fight,” Jan 17 1931,4

“3-Day Week, Low Wages In Mines In Va.,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“10% Wage-Cut In Glanzstoff,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“All a Laborer Needs is Soup With Hog Rings,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“Atlanta Worker Calls For Fight Upon Eviction,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“Big Speed In Dixie Mercer,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“Preacher Spills Hokum In Chatta. Flop House,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“Rayon Corp. Cheats Maimed Worker Out Of Compensation,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“Slashing Wage Cuts In Mills of Charlotte Area,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“Stop Feeding Jobless Seamen On Lykes Line,” Jan 24 1931, 3

“$3.15 A Week In Atlanta Woolen,” Jan 24 1931, 4

“Have Big ‘Red Sunday’ For Paper In Galveston,” Jan 24 1931, 4

“Jobless Worker Does All to Build ‘SW’,” Jan 24 1931, 4

“Slop Meal Reward For Charity Jobs,” Jan 24 1931, 4

“Texan Ex-Preacher, Farmer Calls For Fieht [sic] Right Now,” Jan 24 1931, 4

“Starvation In Standard-Coosa,” Jan 31 1931, 1

“Boss Charity Gives $1 Week To Jobless Man And Sick Wife,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Cut Wages in Chatta. Iron Co.,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Fired, Starving, With Her Baby,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“‘Go Away Nigger’ Boss Says To Unemployed,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Holy Joes Try To Divide Workers,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Less Men Do More In U.S. Pipe Foundry,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Pie For Sally Captain; Jobless Wait For Heaven,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“‘Stick Around’ and Starve—No, Fight!” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Workers Council In New Orleans Fights For Aid,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Jailed Jobless Leader Says Must Build Southern Worker,” Jan 31 1931, 4

“$19.50 Highest Wage In Viscose Department,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Clean Machines on Own Time in the Spool Dept.,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Atlanta Relief Jobs Cut Wages,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Boss Justice—A Case In Point,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Can You Live On Air Until Spring?” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Co. Steals Pay, Beats N. Orleans Dock Workers,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Fakers Stop Ex-Soldiers Hunger March In Atlanta,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Many Now Ask: Who Has America’s Riches?” Feb 7 1931, 3

“More Evictions In Chatta.—Fight Them,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“More Spools, 5¢ Hour Cuts In Twisting Dept.,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Sick Seaman Told To Eat Well—But How?” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Worked to Death On Stretch-Out In Dalton Mills,” Feb 7 1931, 3

“Buy Off Jobless To Evict Others,” Feb 14 1931, 2

“Pray, Don’t Fight, Say Sky Pilots,” Feb 14 1931, 2

“50-Year-Old Negro Woman Set for Fight,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“64 Do Work of 500 In Tire Co.,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Coning Workers Make $15 Less Than 1929,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Closed Savona Mill Evicts From Houses,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Cut More Wages By Fines in Spool Dept.,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Cut up to 20 Cents Hour at Wade Co.,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Free Banker But Jail Workers For Fighting Hunger,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Lay-offs and Wage-Cuts Epidemic in Kannapolis,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Mayor Bass May Even Stop Soup Lines,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Red Cross Gets Rake-off From Ark. Merchants,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Says Our Paper Is Grand—Build It,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Wages Cut Up To $3 Week in Buckeye Oil,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Waiters Get $7 Week; No Limits To Hours,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Worked 19 Years in Mill—Fired,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Works for $8 Week; Asked to Live on Less,” Feb 14 1931, 3

“Gets 5 Years In Brushy Mt. Mines For Demanding Food,” Feb 21 1931, 1

“Connors Steel Has Only 30 Men at 25 Cents Hr.,” Feb 21 1931, 2

“‘Our Paper Is Right Stuff’,” Feb 21 1931, 2

“Red Cross Tell [sic] Workers Not to Bother Them,” Feb 21 1931, 2

“Wages $4 Week, Gets Burnt Bread for Food,” Feb 21 1931, 2

“3 In House Work But Barely Exist,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“20% Wage Cut In Greenville Textile Mills,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Charity Slop For ‘Lucky’ Jobless,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Expose Bemberg Democracy Plan,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Get 1-Day Job and Is Docked for Doctor Bill,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Glantzstoff [sic] Cheats Gassed Workers Out of Insurance,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Houston Dial Phones Lay Off Many Girls,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Jobless Seaman Learns Lesson From German Red,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Nothing To Do But Unite and Fight,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Pay 15¢ Hour On Birm’gham ‘Relief’ Jobs,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Red Cross Takes Names Only—But Gives Not,” Feb 21 1931, 3

“Boiler Plant On 3-Day Week,” Feb 21 1931, 4

“Chest Gives $1.00 Week For Family,” Feb 21 1931, 4

“Jobless Worse In N. Orleans,” Feb 21 1931, 4

“No Slop But Real Relief,” Feb 21 1931, 4

“Preacher Does Stuff for Boss,” Feb 21 1931, 4

“Brushy Mt. Mine, Nashville State Jails Are Living Hells,” Feb 28 1931, 2

“Greenville Textile Workers Going ‘Red’,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“‘A Dollar A Day Is All They Pay’,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“Cars For Boss, Relief Fakers; Poor Starve,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“Fight Jim-Crowism Buy Joining Com. Party,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“A Ky. Miner Shakes Hands With So. Wor.,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“Boss Frames Unemployed Nego [sic] Renter,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“Gaston Farmers Want To Fight,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“‘Speed-Up’ Holy Song of Boss Preacher In Ga.,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“S. W. Best Paper For U.S. Working Class”,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“Staggered Men Cut 50¢ Weekly,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“Stony Creek Farmer Tells of A.F. of L. Red Scare Lies,” Feb 28 1931, 3

“Strange? No, System Makes Starvation,” Feb 28 1931, 4

“Croppers In Ala. Organize For Struggle,” Mar 7 1931, 1

“‘No Hotel Room Leaders’ In Danville’s Next Big Strike,” Mar 7 1931, 1

“Hoover Thinks $1 Day Enuff for Family of 7,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Efficiency Plans Killing Stockholm Men,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Robbed By Landlord, Croppers Will Fight,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Striker Says Danville Men Need Fighting Union—N.T.W.,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Disease Caused By Stale Water,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“$1 Pay For Week Work,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Speed-Up In Mines Means More Workers Lives Lost,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Ala. Farmers to Follow Militant Ark. Action,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Militant? Then We’ll Deport You,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Texas Dockers Must Stand By Orleans Strike,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Cut Seniority At L.N. Shops,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Devil’s Island Evils Suffered By La. Jobless,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Texas Cops Jail Workers Asleep In Empty Houses,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Family of 9 Starving; Red Cross Refuses Aid,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Chattanooga Worker Welcomes S.W.,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Jail Leader As Hungry Man Dies,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Starving Farmers Are Ready To Fight For Real Relief,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Many Displaced In Pipe Shops,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Both A.F. of L. And Ku Klux Fool Workers,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Our Paper Gives New Life and Courage,” Mar 14 1931, 4

“Hosiery Workers Dying From T.B. As Wages Are Slashed,” Mar 21 1931, 2

“City Farm In Houston, Trap After 25% Cut,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“Eliz. Scab Herder Put In Charge of Relief,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“Elizabethton Striker Raps U.T.W.,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“Farmers Rally To Organize For Relief,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“Farmers Tricked Into Buying Land In Carter County,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“No Clothes—So Children of Ky. Miner Stay Home,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“1-Year Sub. For Best A.F. of L. Sell-Out Story,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“Women’s Home Work Pays Only 4¢ an Hour,” Mar 21 1931, 3

“Boss Takes All B’ham Workers Pay For Rent,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Chad-Hos Mill Workers Get 15% Wage Cut,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Danville Strikers To Join A Fighting Uion [sic],” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Deport Mexican Who Worked Too Hard,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Guard Beats Prisoners On Chatt. Chain Gang,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Houston Editor Steals $5 From Young Worker,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Mill Boss Fools, Cheats, Evicts, Pregnant Mother,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Mill Com. Men Serve Bosses Faithfully,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“T.U.U.L.L. [sic] Red Classes Held,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Wants Fighting Information,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“De Priest Shows His True Colors,” Mar 28 1931, 4

“Worker-Farmer Unite!” Mar 28 1931, 4

“Stop Eviction In Charlotte,” Apr 4 1931, 1

“$6 Week On Birmingham Relief Job,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“Red Cross Tells Starving Family To Wait a Week,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“Workers Put Furniture Back, Tenant Is Jailed and Beaten,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“Shut Down B’ham Soup Kitchens,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“More Rats The Church Harbors In Elizabethton,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“Only 2-Day Week In Exeter Mines,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“Boss, Negro or White Is Against Workers,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“Since Columbus Is Too Long—Change It,” Apr 4 1931, 3

“Form Mine Committee At Exeter,” Apr 11 1931, 1

“How Does Pill Peddler Know?” Apr 11 1931, 3

“Wages Down In Mines At Dora Fields,” Apr 11 1931, 3

“Workers Starved, Red Cross Feeds Rayon Mill Favorites,” Apr 11 1931, 3

“Greenville Tenant Farmer, Lost All, Calls For Struggle,” Apr 11 1931, 3

“Cut Wages 70 Cents Daily Johnson City,” Apr 11 1931, 3

“Help Jobless B’ham Worker Save His Home,” Apr 11 1931, 3

“The Reply To Greenville KKK,” Apr 18 1931, 1

“SW ‘Fly In Pie’ Of Well Paid Church Heads,” Apr 18 1931, 3

“White Negro Workers Meet Police Afraid To Interfere,” Apr 18 1931, 3

“$2 Plus Cuss Words For Weeks Work in Ga.,” Apr 18 1931, 3

“Jobless Force Rich To Give Some Relief,” Apr 18 1931, 3

“Jobless T.C.I. Worker Forced to Give Up Children,” Apr 18 1931, 3

“Red And The Reverend,” Apr 18 1931, 4

“8 Houses, 8 Starving Families—No Rent,” Apr 25 1931, 3

“Sloss Steel Worker Gets Sick, Is Fired,” Apr 25 1931, 3

“Need More Copies of Our Paper In Fight,” Apr 25 1931, 3

“Made To Run All Day In Sugar Refinery,” Apr 25 1931, 3

“Fight Stretch-Out,” Apr 25 1931, 3

“Many Unemployed, But County Uses Chaingang,” Apr 25 1931, 3

“Expose Two Stools At Elizabethton,” May 2 1931, 3

“Cut Wages Twice in 3 Months in Rayon Mill,” May 2 1931, 3

“Southern Worker In Heart of Mississippi,” May 2 1931, 3

“16 1/2 Per Cent Wage Cut In Molasses Plant,” May 2 1931, 3

“Force Charlotte Stores To Feed Jobless Workers,” May 2 1931, 3

“Workers Evicted In Elizabethton,” May 2 1931, 3

“Red Cross Still Investigates As Workers Starve,” May 2 1931, 3

“‘Kindness’—And Then Some,” May 9 1931, 3

“Perfect Speed System on Docks For Cotton Time,” May 9 1931, 3

“Farmers Pay Bemberg Tax,” May 9 1931, 3

“Police Attacker Free, Scottsboro Boys Face Chair,” May 9 1931, 3

“More Speed-up In Spool Room,” May 9 1931, 3

“7-Day Week Means Speed-Up For All Glanzstoff Workers,” May 9 1931, 3

“Husban’s [sic] Pay Cut; Wife Ready to Join the Fight,” May 9 1931, 3

“‘Can’t Wash in My Bath, Duck Pon [sic] For You,’ Yells Parasite,” May 9 1931, 3

“Can’t Erase Boss Scars on Workers,” May 9 1931, 3

“Young Worker Fights Eviction,” May 9 1931, 3

“50 Do Work of 90 in Bemberg Chemical Dept.,” May 16 1931, 3

“Boss Rot in New Orleans Election,” May 16 1931, 3

“Workers Choked By Boss Greed,” May 16 1931, 3

“B’ham City Relief Cut As Plants Shut Down,” May 16 1931, 3

“Workers Enraged At Jailing Of T.U.U.L. Organizer,” May 16 1931, 3

“Women Weavers Faint From Fatigue In New Stretch-Out,” May 16 1931, 3

“Last 25 Cents To Renew Subscription,” May 23 1931, 3

“KKK Stops Cars To Make Negroes Keep In ‘Place’,” May 23 1931, 3

“Wants To Know If We’re Free,” May 23 1931, 3

“Ga. [sic] Ministers’ Alliance As Bad As In Chatta.,” May 23 1931, 3

“Want War Funds For Unemployed,” May 23 1931, 3

“Gal. City Officials Lead Life of Czars,” May 23 1931, 3

“Fire 53 Workers On B’ham Relief Job,” May 23 1931, 3

“Cut Farm Worker,” May 23 1931, 3

“No Sugar or Meat,” May 23 1931, 3

“Expose Lies in ‘B’ham Truth’ on Scottsboro,” May 30 1931, 2

“75¢ a Day For Plowing in S.C.,” May 30 1931, 3

“Leaves City To Starve On Farm,” May 30 1931, 3

“Farm Worker Gets $1.00 For Week’s Work,” May 30 1931, 3

“Coffin Mills Only Ones Running in Greenville,” May 30 1931, 3

“Farm Children do Work of Men—Get No Chance,” May 30 1931, 3

“Greenville Building Workers Unemployed,” May 30 1931, 3

“New Stretch-Out In Calvin [sic] Mill; Seal All Windows,” May 30 1931, 3

“Dock Workers Pay For Not Finishing Sooner,” May 30 1931, 3

“Negro Preachers Say “Can’t Bother About 9,” May 30 1931, 3

“Calls On Negroes To Join With White Workers In Fight,” May 30 1931, 3

“Gal. Ministers ‘Thank’ Gov. Miller For Favor,” May 30 1931, 3

“10¢ Coins For ‘Safety’ And More Speed-Up,” May 30 1931, 4

“Story of Arkansas Food March Told By Leader,” May 30 1931, 4

“Harlan Miner Exposes UMW Leaders Sell-Out,” Jun 6 1931, 1

“Farm Woman Shows How Bosses ‘Protect White Womanhood’,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“Force Workers Borrow From Boss at 15 Perct.,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“400 Families Starving In Opelika, Ala.,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“Home Town of One of Scottsboro Boys Welcomes S. Worker,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“Many Evicted In Charlotte,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“Mill Bosses Try Frame ‘Friendly’ Elizabeth. Sheriff,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“Preacher Praises K.K.K. Mobmen,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“Stop Starving By United Fight,” Jun 6 1931, 3

“$1.25 Day For Ditch Digging,” Jun 13 1931, 2

“By [sic] Cotton—Sure, But Where Is The Money?” Jun 13 1931, 3

“Shops Are Place For Our Paper,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“Women Workers In Greenville Laundries Get $8 A Week,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“Cut Wages In Tapestry Mill In Charlotte,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“Want Organizers At Huntingdon, Tenn.,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“Scabs Warned To Keep Off Harlan,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“‘Cut Wages Of The Privileged’,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“T.C.I. Closes More Mines,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“U.T.W. Fakers Again Robbing Dues From Danville Workers,” Jun 13 1931, 3

“A. F. of L. Rank And Filer Raps Green’s Speech,” Jun 20 1931, 2

“B’ham Bakery Slaves Workers 10 to 18 Hours,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Convicts Sweat In Ala. Jails for 15 Cents a Week,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Danville Bosses Prepare Break New Strikes,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Faker Tells Negro Workers To Stick By Boss,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Harlan Worker Calls For Action,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Saw Millers Get 50¢ for Ten Hours,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Try Cheat Woman Of $3.00,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Wash, Cook, Tend Ten For $3 a Week,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Via Freight and Highway,” Jun 20 1931, 3

“Exposes Brutal Treatment In Ala. Prisons,” Jun 27 1931, 2

“Bosses Discover Greenville Slum,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“Danville Worker Hits ‘Welfare’,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“Gets Puppy For Two Weeks Work,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“Miners Starving At Cromona, Ky.,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“Negro Workers Boycott Vicious Bosses’ Paper,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“Rich Parasites Take Charter of Negro Community,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“Rob Cropper, Then Send Him K.K.K. Threats,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“‘Times Better’ Take $1.50 Week,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“Wage Cuts Amount to 50 Per Cent In Last Year at Reidsville Mill,” Jun 27 1931, 3

“4,000 Striking Or Blacklisted In Harlan, Ky.,” Jul 4 1931, 1

“Great Activity In Greenville,” Jul 4 1931, 2

“Relief Jobs At 15 Cents Hour,” Jul 4 1931, 2

“Would Keep Job But Not Save Boys,” Jul 4 1931, 2

“10¢ Hour For Tampa Dockers,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“10% Wage Cut In Silk Mill,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“30 Cent Day In Milne Chair Co. For Negro Women,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“Force 20% Wage-Cut On Shopmen,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“Framed Himself Helps Nine Boys,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“Defeat Another Cut On Fish Dock,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“New Orleans Dock Strikers Blacklisted After Sell-Out,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“Opium Plant Disorders,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“Starvation Winter Ahead For Croppers,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“Stop 65% Cut On Texas City Dock,” Jul 4 1931, 3

“Young Workers Active In Scottsboro Defense,” Jul 4 1931, 3

Notice announcing postponement in publication of several letters, Jul 11 1931, 3

“Harlan Miners Join NMU Fight On Starvation,” Jul 11 1931, 1

“50¢ Day For Peons In Sumter County,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“Capitalist Press Lies To Workers About Bolsheviki,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“Chatta. Ministers Alliance On Defense Before Workers, Jul 11 1931, 3

“Charlotte Family of 8 Starve [sic] On $1 A Week,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“Cromona Miners Form Southern Worker Club,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“Gets 30 Days For Refusing White Man,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“Living Off Junk Piles,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“Negro Landlords In Chatta. Just As Bad As White,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“What! $3 Week Not Enuf? Get Out, Then,” Jul 11 1931, 3

“Negro War Vet Tells Of ‘Glorious’ War,” Jul 18 1931, 1

“Mills Use UTW To Fight Union,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Danville Bosses’ Tool Loses His Job,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“‘We Are Dying For Food, Slaves’,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Sees Communist Party As Only Leader,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Force Negroes Out of Business at Camp Hill,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Force Croppers To Work Off Landlord’s Taxes On The Road,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“‘Speak Up, Don’t Starve Quietly’,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Five Negro Girls; Take Wages Away,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Another Belly-Crawler Attacks Boys Defense,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Insult Negroes Even in Jimcrow Part of Trolley,” Jul 18 1931, 3

“Poor White Farmers Join Fight,” Jul 25 1931, 1

“A Letter From Dadeville,” Jul 25 1931, 1

“Petty Leeches Do Boss Work,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Uncle Toms In Chatta. Act As Stool-Pigeons,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Mayor Lied To New Orleans Jobless—No Jobs, No Money,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Let’s Fight Starvation Instead of for Bosses,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Wage Cut Half By Docking At Winston-Salem,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Kona Mines Cut Wages 5¢ on the Ton,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Plan Peonage Child Farm In Austin, Tex.,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Pants or Food—One or Other for Farmers,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Miners Begging For More Papers Help Send Them,” Jul 25 1931, 3

“Red Cross Refused To Treat Negro Wounded in World War,” Jul 25 1931, 4

“A Worker Who Has Finally Opened His Eyes,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“Catch Crabs to Live in Tampa,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“Cromona Miners Getting $7.00 a Week; Seven in Family,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“Gets Jailed And Fined For Getting Job,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“Glad to Hear Mother of Scottsboro Boy,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“Knoxville Workers Marched on City Hall,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“Must Cut Out Lynching by Organizing Together,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“U.T.W. Still Tries To Collect Dues,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“War Experiences Told By Vet.,” Aug 1 1931, 1

“Worker in Soviet Union Tells of Scottsboro Protest There,” Aug 1 1931, 3

“Begged For 8 1/2¢ Hour Job—Nothing Doing, Kills Himself,” Aug 8 1931, 3

“If It’s War, Let It Be Our Own,” Aug 8 1931, 3

“Mill Pioneer Helps Dad Organize Union,” Aug 8 1931, 3

“More Armories For Alabama,” Aug 8 1931, 4

“Race Hatred Trial Against 3 Negro Boys,” Aug 8 1931, 3

“Receiving Our Reward For Fighting In War,” Aug 8 1931, 3

“Warns Farmers Against Fakers,” Aug 8 1931, 3

“Workers In Soviet Plant Give Reply To Scottsboro,” Aug 8 1931, 4

“61 Cents For 36 Hours Work,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“58 Days in Jail—58 Times Better Fighter,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“500 At Tampa Aug. 1 Meet,” Aug 15 1931, 2

“Canned Fakery For Unemployed,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“Farmer Takes Place Of Mule at Plow,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“Fire Char. City Worker With 13 Children,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“Gives Demands For Which They’re Jailed,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“Last Pennies For A Real Newspaper,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“Spinners Do Doffing,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“There’s Plenty But We Starve,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“U.T.W. and K.K.K.,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“Bosses Prepare Young Workers for New War,” Aug 22 1931, 3

“Cropper Penniless After Season’s Work,” Aug 22 1931, 3

“Relief Refuses Aid To Starving Family,” Aug 22 1931, 3

“Starved, Steals Cantaloupe—Gets 30 Days on Gang,” Aug 22 1931, 3

“Bosses Use B’ham Killing To Check Workers Struggle,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“Cadden Says 20,000 Unemployed in B’ham,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“City Pays $1 Day To Father of Six,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“Harlan Miners Determined To “Fight On, Win or Die,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“Landlord Wants ‘No White Trash Croppin’ For Me’,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“Mill Town Government,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“Miners Fired Gave Out Sou. Worker,” Aug 29 1931, 1

“Shoeshine Slaves Get 50¢ for 11 Hours,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“Tobacco Profits High, Workers Wages Cut,” Aug 29 1931, 3

“10,000 Texas Workers Jobless As Martial Law Is Declared,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“Another 10% Wage Cut For Victory Workers,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“‘Free’ Fla. Workers Get 40 Cents a Day,” Sep 5 1931, 4

“Miners [sic] Wife Tells of Thugs [sic] Activities In Harlan County,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“Meetings Banned,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“No ‘Bacy For 30 Days—50¢ for S.W.,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“Remember Bosses 1917 Lies And Ala. Terror Now,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“Scheme to ‘Save’ Miners, on Rocks,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“Some People Just Won’t Work,” Sep 5 1931, 4

“Soon It Will Be War,” Sep 5 1931, 4

“Starvation in Land of Plenty, What’s Wrong?” Sep 5 1931, 4

“Workers Gain Boy’s Freedom,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“Workers Must Return Pay To Dam Company,” Sep 5 1931, 3

“Bosses Say Only 620 Jobless In Greenville,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Children Taken From Unemployed Mother,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Danville Fighters Wants Our Fighting Union,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Jobless Seaman Get [sic] 25 Days On Chaingang,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“No Retreat—Fight Bosses Terror In Ky.,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Workers Fight B’ham Terror,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Workers In Milne Chair Plant Organize Against Starvation,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Doesn’t Yet Know How To Fight; Seals Instead,” Sep 19 1931, 3

“‘Hobo Express’ a Way To Evade the Fight,” Sep 19 1931, 3

“Jim Crow Relief For The Unemployed of Tampa, Fla.,” Sep 19 1931, 3

“Negro and White Workers Denounce Oscar De Priest,” Sep 19 1931, 3

“Negro Fakers Aid Bosses In Hunger Drive,” Sep 19 1931, 3

“Southern Ry. Shops Has Big Wage Cut,” Sep 19 1931, 4

“Stockham Pipe Slashes Wages of All Workers,” Sep 19 1931, 3

“Tampa Youth Build Party And T.U.U.L.,” Sep 19 1931, 2

“1-Day Strike Gets Partial Mill Victory,” Sep 26 1931, 3

“Dying Woman Mill Worker Denied Food Necessities,” Sep 26 1931, 3

“Landlord Hog Demands Rent of Ill Woman,” Sep 26 1931, 3

“Stale Bread Charity From S.A. Fakers,” Sep 26 1931, 3

“Charity Fake Forces Jobless to Donate Work,” Oct 3 1931, 3 

“Forced Labor On Highways In Alabama,” Oct 3 1931, 4

“Foundry Cuts Wages; Drivers Workers More,” Oct 3 1931, 3

“Improves Old Place; Landlord Wants Pay,” Oct 3 1931, 3

“Kentucky Miners Prepare Strike Machinery In Spite of New Raid and Arrests by Gunmen,” Oct 3 1931, 1

“Paid For House But Ordered Out,” Oct 3 1931, 3

“Thieving Preacher-Landlord Robs Whole Cropper Family,” Oct 3 1931, 3

“Defy Sheriff By Mass Action and Halt Evictions,” Oct 10 1931, 3

“Hell In Prison Coal Mines Of ‘Sunny’ Tennessee,” Oct 10 1931, 3

“Tell Stockham Workers They Should Save $,” Oct 10 1931, 3

“Virginia Tobacco Growers Up In Arms Against Starvation Prices,” Oct 10 1931, 3

“Young Workers Must Fight For Wages and Hours,” Oct 10 1931, 3

“Youth Starving In No. Carolina Must Organize,” Oct 10 1931, 3

“25 Years on Job; Now Out of Iron Works,” Oct 17 1931, 2

“Three Men In Family Work, Yet All Face Starvation,” Oct 17 1931, 3

“Don’t Starve; Fight Bosses Fake Charity,” Oct 17 1931, 3

“Appeals for the Southern Worker,” Oct 17 1931, 3

“Crooked Boss Jails Tampa Fraud Victim,” Oct 17 1931, 3

“Klan Sets Off Fireworks in S.C. Mill Slave Town,” Oct 17 1931, 3

“Workers Forced To Eat Garbage In Bosses’ Barn,” Oct 17 1931, 3

“Halt Evictions In Chattanooga,” Oct 17 1931, 4

“Union Denied Use of Public Library,” Oct 17 1931, 4

“Everything Is Jim-Crowed But Dollars,” Oct 17 1931, 4

“Too Many Thugs In Harlan, Says Fighting Miner,” Oct 24 1931, 3

“Arkansas Children Denied Doctor’s Care,” Oct 24 1931, 3

“Communist Lead Against Terrorism,” Oct 24 1931, 3

“Secret Jailing of Miners Is Exposed In Ky.,” Oct 24 1931, 3

“Restaurant Help Get What Is Left on Table,” Oct 24 1931, 3

“Unemployed In New Orleans Build Council,” Oct 31 1931, 2

“Rotten Mill Conditions In Danville, Va.,” Oct 31 1931, 2

“Red Cross In Vile Plot To Enslave Labor,” Oct 31 1931, 2

“Tampa Police Answer Calls Of Socialist,” Oct 31 1931, 3

“[Illegible] In Terror In Mississippi Farming Region,” Oct 31 1931, 3

“Forced Labor In Arkansas Cotton Fields,” Oct 31 1931, 3

“U.S. Pipe Shop Workers Existing on Hunger Wages,” Oct 31 1931, 3

“No. Carolina Workers Join Textile Union,” Oct 31 1931, 3

“Ala. Land Owners Steals All From A Negro Cropper,” Oct 31 1931, 3

“Yellow Socialists Exposed in Tampa Meet,” Oct 31 1931, 4

“Florida Farmers Chase Police and Support the Reds,” Dec 5 1931, 1

“Police-Legion In Tampa, Fla., Raid Workers,” Dec 5 1931, 2

“Build Metal Workers Union Stop Speed-Up,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“New Items From Camp Hill Front,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Birmingham Stool Pigeons Trying to Stop Workers Reading Red Literature,” Dec 5 1931, 3

'Mill Slavery For Women in Mills of Danville, Va.,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Our Paper Must Know Its Writers,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“McWane Pipe in New Wage Slash,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Work Like Mules in Steel Trusts Ala. Coal Mines,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Carpenters In Texas Sold Out By A.F.L. Agent,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Bosses’ [sic] Thieving Wife Robs Worker,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Tenant Organization To Stop Evictions,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Landlords Advice,” Dec 5 1931, 4

“National Biscuit Robs Workers,” Dec 5 1931, 4

“Klan Mayor Aids Com. Chest Fakes,” Dec 12 1931, 3

“Landlord Steals From Farm Hand,” Dec 12 1931, 3

“Mayor Evades Hunger Meet,” Dec 12 1931, 4

“McWane Pipe In A Big Wage Cutting Drive,” Dec 12 1931, 3

“Negro Worker Lynched For Demanding Pay,” Dec 12 1931, 1

“N. Orleans Arrest Aimed at Seamen,” Dec 12 1931 2

“Politician Wants An Anti-Red Law,” Dec 12 1931, 3

“Tampa Workers Build Big Union,” Dec 12 1931, 3

“Win Demands At Stockham By Activity,” Dec 12 1931, 3

“McWane Starvation Plan Is Terrible,” Dec 19 1931, 2

“Organize Miners At Edgewater Pit,” Dec 19 1931, 2

“Stockham Workers Fight ‘B’ System,” Dec 19 1931, 2

“Missed Paper; Thought We Cut Him Off,” Dec 19 1931, 3

“Strike Fruit Packing Plant at Birmingham,” Dec 19 1931, 3

“Force Release of Charlotte Girl,” Dec 19 1931, 3

“A Filthy Bunch of Spies at Stockham,” Dec 19 1931, 3

“Young Communist Murdered in Street,” Dec 19 1931, 3

“Starvation On Fake Charity Of Red Cross,” Dec 19 1931, 3

“Charity Grafters Get Best of Poor Workers,” Dec 19 1931, 3

“Pizitz Starvation Pay for Women Workers,” Dec 19 1931, 4

“Birmingham Police Take Negroes’ Guns,” Dec 19 1931, 4

“More Tyranny At Camp Hill,” Dec 19 1931, 4

“Cannibal Meat Only,” Dec 19 1931, 4

“Worse Than Slavery In St. Petersburg, Fla.,” Dec 26 1931, 1

“Spivak Workers Aid Paper, Though Sick,” Dec 26 1931, 1

“Left-Over Chicken Bones Given to Sick,” Dec 26 1931, 2

“Boss Thieves Of Camp Hill Stealing All,” Dec 26 1931, 2

“Charlotte Jobless Defy Police Thugs,” Dec 26 1931, 3

“Demands Graft to Cash Mill Checks,” Dec 26 1931, 3

“Ask Charity For Shoes, Get Weeds,” Dec 26 1931, 3

“Lynchburg Cotton Mill Slaves Get Miserable Wages,” Dec 26 1931, 3

“Tampa Prisoners Are Puzzle to the Police,” Dec 26 1931, 3

“Chest Got Money But Gave Soup To Jobless Worker,” Jan 2 1932, 3

“Landlord Took All; Now Wants to Run Cropper Off Land,” Jan 2 1932, 3

“McWane Cuts Pay and Forces Overtime for Nothing,” Jan 2 1932, 3

“Willie Peterson, Scottsboro and the Awful Situation in Stockham Pipe,” Jan 2 1932, 4

“Bad Conditions In Carroll County, Tenn.,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“Bootlegger Chief of Police Jails Workers’ Leader,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“Charity Graft A Great Game For N.C. Bosses,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“Danville Mill Slaves Forced To Give Money,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“New Orleans Police Raids as Xmas Present for Jobless,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“Slaw [sic] Sheffield Cuts Wages of All Their Coal Miners,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“Stockham Shop Paper Driving Bosses Crazy,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“Bosses’ Wives In Camp Hill Drive Slaves,” Jan 16 1932, 3

“Learn How To Fight Bosses At Camp Hill,” Jan 16 1932, 3

“Natl. Textile Union Needed In The South,” Jan 16 1932, 3

“N.C. Farmers Face Mass Starvation,” Jan 16 1932, 3

“Negro Judases Must Give Up Stolen Money,” Jan 16 1932, 3

“Pollard Demands Special Police to Deal With Strike,” Jan 30 1932, 2

“Workers Will Fight Against Va. Wage Cut,” Jan 30 1932, 3

“Hunger Prevents Study at School,” Jan 30 1932, 3

“Slave In Bosses’ House For $4 Wk.,” Jan 30 1932, 3

“Long Hours Work For $4.50 Week,” Jan 30 1932, 3

“Bosses’ Wife Cheats Girl Who Worked at One Place Six Years,” Jan 30 1932, 4

“Stool Pigeon At Bus Depot Helps Police,” Feb 6 1932, 2

“Neighborhood Councils Get Jobless Help,” Feb 6 1932, 3

“Boss Takes One Dollar From Pay of Two Worokers [sic],” Feb 6 1932, 3

“Stealing From Jobless Working Women,” Feb 6 1932, 3

“Landlord Preys on Starving Family,” Feb 6 1932, 3

“Tennessee Coal and Iron Getting Ready for War,” Feb 20 1932, 2

“Danville Cops Raid Home and Jail Workers,” Feb 20 1932, 3

“Communist Party Can Get Results,” Feb 20 1932, 4

“Salvation Army Scab Herders,” Feb 20 1932, 4

“Operating New Gallows,” Mar 5 1932, 2

“Red Cross Garbage For a Whole Week,” Mar 5 1932, 2

“Full Wages, Full Crews, For Seamen,” Mar 5 1932, 3

“Arkansas Police Squad Mob [sic] and Torture Worker,” Mar 5 1932, 3

“Longshoremen And Builders Fight Hunger,” Mar 5 1932, 3

“A Fine Gang of Crooked Office Holders In Ark.,” Mar 5 1932, 4

“Farms For 2 Months For No Pay,” May 20 1933, 3

“Relief Checks Are So Small that Workers Are Forced to Peddle; Negro Families Get Less,” May 20 1933, 3

“No Cash For Pickett’s Mill Workers!” May 20 1933, 3

“Red Cross Works Jobless Twelve Hours for $1.00,” Jun 1933, 3

“Work of Croppers Produces Only One Share—the Landlord’s Share,” Jun 10 1933, 3

“Men Fight Buzzards For Rotten Meat,” Jun 10 1933, 3

“Nut and Produce Workers Get Cut,” Jun 10 1933, 3

“Destruction of Crop Takes Bread From Mouths of Thousands of Farm Laborers, Writes Texas Farmer,” Jul 12 1933, 3

“Labor Fakers Try Set White Against Negro,” Jul 12 1933, 3

“Make Sick Worker Walk Ten Miles To Relief Job,” Jul 12 1933, 3

“Millionaire Saves On Worker’s Lunch,” Jul 12 1933, 3

“Put Two Men’s Work On One In Steel Mill,” Jul 12 1933, 3

“Red Cross Food Order for Week Lasts Three Days,” Jul 12 1933, 3

“T.C.I. Workers Who Got $8.00 in 1930 Now Get $3.80; Company Deducts Jobless Aid From Pay When Re-Hiring,” Aug 15 1933, 2

“A.F. of L. Fakers Are Bosses’ People Says Steel Worker,” Aug 15 1933, 3

“Croppers Allowed 4 Cents on Cotton Now Selling at 10,” Aug 15 1933, 3

“Get 75¢ In Groceries In Place Of $15 Wages,” Aug 15 1933, 3

“Negroes Get Lower Price For Cotton,” Aug 15 1933, 3

“ACIPCO Pipe Shop Is Turning Off Workers Nearing Pension Age,” Aug 31 1933, 2

“Charity And Bosses Compete In Wage Cutting,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“Cotton Price Is Up, But Only the Landlord Gains,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“Cropper Gypped Out Of $50 For Destroyed Crop,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“Cut Off All Relief Work In Charlotte,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“Food Workers Pay For Own Meals Under ‘New Deal’,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“N.C. Firms ‘Do Their Part’ By Cutting Wages, Aug 31 1933, 3

“‘So Hard To Sit In The Office,’ Says Relief Head,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“Wages Of Girls In 5 And 10 Don’t Pay Carfares,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“Workers Buy 50% Less Milk, As Cost Sky-Rockets,” Aug 31 1933, 3

“Army Recruiting Officers Round Up Boys On Soup-Lines,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“Cotton-Picking Time In Texas Brings New Slavery For Jobless,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“Everything Is Up But Wages,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“Hitch Men To Plows In Red Cross Fields,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“Jobs Are Fewer, Prices Higher, and Farmers Get Less,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“Ky. Miners Find That ‘New Deal’ Means Pay-Cuts,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“Landlord, Relief Head Combine to Starve Croppers,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“‘Re-Employment is Only In the Papers,’ Say Jobless in Arkansas,” Sep 20 1933, 3

“Boasts Of N.R.A. Are Lies, Says Worker,” Nov 15 1933, 3

“Dock Workers Are Forced to Live in Filthy Hotels,” Nov 15 1933, 3

“N.R.A. Brings Fast Pace, Less Pay To Boothton Miners, Nov 15 1933, 3

“N.R.A. Means Pay Cuts, Speed-Up In Ala. Foundry,” Nov 15 1933, 3

“Ship’s Gangs Forced To Load Freight Without Extra Pay While Car Gangs Are Jobless,” Nov 15 1933, 3

“Work In Water At Sayreton Mines,” Nov 15 1933, 3

“Workers In Unit Stove Get Less Pay In New Deal,” Nov 15 1933, 3

“Cotton Acreage Plan Would Drive 80,000 Tenant Farmers Off The Land In Texas,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“Drop Hundreds of Starving Families From Relief Rolls,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“End Of The Year Finds Cropper’ Family In Rags,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“15,000 In Arkansas Face Eviction From The Land,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“Laundry Boss Cut Pay After Raise Was Promised,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“NRA Cut Wages In Gulf State Steel,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“Va. Croppers Get $160 A Year And A Little Flour,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“Work on Infants’ Wear Brings ‘Just Enough For Beans,” Dec 20 1933, 3

“Ky. Miners Find NRA Means Rising Prices, Wage-Cuts,” Dec 20 1933, 4

“NRA Brings Wage Cut To Workers In Dudley Bar Mill,” Jan 20 1934, 3

“Women Slave All Week in B’ham Laundry for $2.64,” Jan 20 1934, 3

“Wylam No. 8 Mine Cheats Workers On Yardage; Little Pay for Dead-Work,” Jan 20 1934, 3

“No Hiring Going On At Pipe Shop Or Rolling Mill,” Jan 20 1934, 3

“Westfield Plate Mill 110 Forces Men To Do Overtime Work Without Pay,” Jan 20 1934, 3

“Sloss-Scheffield [sic] Often Hogs Whole Pay-Check for Rent,” Jan 20 1934, 3

“‘Save Him By Your Protest And Outcry’—Mrs. Peterson,” Feb 10 1934, 2

“Blast Furnace Crews Half Dead At End of Shift,” Feb 10 1934, 3

“Ky.-Tenn. Miners Get It In Neck When UMWA Heads Sign Contract,” Feb 10 1934, 3

“Mill Committee Makes Bosses Put Up Time-Sheets,” Feb 10 1934, 3

“‘Southern Worker’ Forces Foreman to Quit Speeding Up,” Feb 10 1934, 3

“‘Wouldn’t Quit The Reds For All The Mules in Alabama,’ Says Paxton,” Mar 25 1934, 2

“Ark. Locals In Fight On Lewis Machine,” Mar 25 1934, 3

“Men Work Like Prisoners On Jax Docks,” Mar 25 1934, 3

“Mexicans Are Almost Slaves In Texas,” Mar 25 1934, 3

“Southern R.R. Isn’t Paying Enough to Live,” Mar 25 1934, 3

“Speedup Artist Is Still Boss At Raimund Mine,” Mar 25 1934, 3

“Things Much Worse At Dolomite Mine Than Before N.R.A.,” Mar 25 1934, 3

“Carolina Textile Workers Win Gains In N.T.W.U.,” Jul 1934, 3

“Dock Workers Organize On Norfolk Waterfront,” Jul 1934, 3

“Florida Fruit Packers Can’t Make Enough,” Jul 1934, 3

“Florida Jobless Organize Stick-Together-Clubs,” Jul 1934, 3

“Miners ‘Holiday’ Gains Demands,” Jul 1934, 3

“Negro Ore Striker Shot Down On Picket Line,” Jul 1934, 3

“Pipe Shop Cuts Pay,” Jul 1934, 3

“Sharecroppers Only Way Out To Build Union,” Jul 1934, 3

“Student Sees Increasing Fascism,” Jul 1934, 3

“Rank and File Union Ore Miners Vote Demands,” Sep 1934, 3

“Starves On Relief,” Sep 1934, 3

“N. Car. Textile Mill Afraid of Leaflets,” Sep 1934, 5

“N. Orleans Police Try Break Strike of Longshoremen,” Sep 1934, 5

“Not Afraid Of Jail—Norfolk Worker Writes,” Sep 1934, 5

“Pledge To Build Communist Party In Mobile,” Sep 1934, 5

“Ruby Bates Speaks To Textile Strikers,” Sep 1934, 5

“Scabs Work at TCI After Strike Sell-Out; Co. Divides Negro, White,” Sep 1934, 5

“Selma Bag Mill Cuts Force Half As New Deal,” Sep 1934, 5

“T.C.I. Shut Down Throws Workers Out To Starve,” Sep 1934, 5

“Unemployment Council Leads Relief Struggle—Win in Spite of the Police,” Sep 1934, 5

“Girl Pickets Refuse Betray Struggle, Framed In Georgia,” Oct 1934, 1

“Florida Jobless Unite Against Dirty Deal,” Oct 1934, 2

Untitled, Oct 1934, 2

“Angelo Herndon Urges Build Mass Paper!” Oct 1934, 4

“T.C.I. Carries On Underhand Campaign Against Union Men,” Oct 1934, 4

“Mitch Halts Strike of Dolmite [sic] Miners,” Oct 1934, 4

“Danville Textile Worker Urges Build Union,” Oct 1934, 5

“Negro Textile Workers for Unity With Whites—Fight Speed-Up, Oct 1934, 5

“T.C.I. Coke Plant Speeds Up Lay-Off,” Oct 1934, 5

“Steel Workers Aid Textile Strikers,” Oct 1934, 5

“A Soviet Girl Textile Worker Writes to Us,” Oct 1934, 5

“Mobile Strikers Spurn Red Scare,” Oct 1934, 5

“Croppers Defy KKK Threats In Struggle Against Low Pay,” Oct 1934, 5

“Strike Sentiment On Mobile Docks,” Nov 1934, 4

“Miners Blacklisted As Mitch Sides With Scabs,” Nov 1934, 4

“B’ham Girl Goes Anti-War Meet,” Nov 1934, 5

“Fight Conditions On Relief Jobs In New Orleans,” Nov 1934, 5

“TCI Workers Cut Off Relief With No Aid From Co.,” Nov 1934, 5

“Scottsboro Mother Appeals For Support To I.L.D.,” Nov 1934, 5

“Molders Stalled By AFL Leaders,” Nov 1934, 5

“FERA Layoffs In Jacksonville Follow Fakers,” Nov 1934, 5

“Speed Up On Forced Labor Job In Jacksonville, Florida,” Dec 1934, 2

“Selma Negro Free On ‘Rape’ Charge,” Dec 1934, 2

“Ore Miner Tells How Bosses Try to Bust Union,” Dec 1934, 5

“Faker Leaves Citras [sic] Union To Take Job With Company,” Dec 1934, 5

“TCI Union Men Defy Cops, Hold Mass Meeting,” Dec 1934, 5

“Seamen Win Aid By Mass Action In New Orleans,” Dec 1934, 5

“Textile Workers Fight Misleader,” Dec 1934, 5

“Organize Against Slave Conditions In The Black Belt,” Dec 1934, 5

“Not Wanted in Ranks of Militant Workers,” Jan 1935, 2

“Mobile Seamen Fight Against Forced Labor,” Jan 1935, 3

“Negroes Treated Like Dogs On CWA,” Jan 1935, 4

“Blacklisted Textile Worker Calls To Learn Lessons of Strike Betrayal,” Jan 1935, 5

“Florida Citrus Workers Strike Against Pay Cut In Spite Of Misleaders,” Jan 1935, 5

“Promises Made By T.C.I. Bosses To Prevent Strike Now Forgotten As Workers Thrown Out To Starve,” Jan 1935, 5

“Texas Toilers Forced By Law to Starve,” Jan 1935, 5

“Union Ore Miners Resist T.C.I. Starving, Freezing and Spy Attempts,” Jan 1935, 5

“Union Miner Sees Danger In Laws Against Reds,” Feb 1935, 1

“Fire Union Militant Then Speed Up At American Casting,” Feb 1935, 4

“Union Delegate to Workers’ Congress Reports—Urges Support For H.R. 2827,” Feb 1935, 4

“Been Slaves Long Enough Says Ga. Textile Worker,” Feb 1935, 5

“Croppers Organize Against Landlord Robbery,” Feb 1935, 5

“Fla. Citrus Workers Win Strike Despite Terror, Traitors,” Feb 1935, 5

“New Orleans Mill Owner Heads NRA, Speeds Workers,” Feb 1935, 5

“Smash Jim Crow In Union Says Steel Worker,” Feb 1935, 5

“Take $200 For $19,” Feb 1935, 5

“T.C.I. Blast Furnace Worker Calls ‘Build Party and Union’,” Feb 1935, 5

“White Toilers Storm Jail To Free Negro In Tarrant, Ala.,” Feb 1935, 5

“Miner Writes of Bad Times Under Fascism,” Feb 1935, 6

“Member UMWA Women’s Auxiliary Call to Defeat Traitors in Union,” Mar-Apr 1935, 4

“Ore Miner Exposes Dirty Work of Boss, Scabs and Deputies,” Mar-Apr 1935, 4

“Sharecropper Sees Strike as Only Way Out of Misery,” Mar-Apr 1935, 4

“Vets Strike Against Wage Cut On Govt. Project in Florida,” Mar-Apr 1935, 4

“Low Pay, High Costs Hit Virginia Toilers—Work for H.R. 2827,” Mar-Apr 1935, 5

“Frame-Up of Textile Strikers Told—Appeal For Solidarity in Defense,” Mar-Apr 1935, 5

“Textile Worker Tells of Boss Attacks in Atlanta,” Mar-Apr 1935, 5

“Unity Grows Between White and Negro as Union Wins Gains in Iron Industry,” Mar-Apr 1935, 5

“Worker Exposes TCI Election Intimidation,” Mar-Apr 1935, 5

“Deny Negro Toilers Relief—Say to Pray,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6

“Life Under Workers’ Rule Told by Miner,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6

“Negro Farm Toiler Writes of Soviet Life,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6

“TCI Tries to Split White and Negro,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6

“Young Farm Worker Wants School—Not Slavery,” Mar-Apr 1935, 7

“Reds In Dixie” Mar-Apr 1935, 7

“T.C.I. Miner Says Prepare In Locals for Strike,” May 1935, 2

“Texas Sheriff Jails Hundreds of Jobless,” May 1935, 2

“Will Never Give Up Jury Right, Negro Says,” May 1935, 4

“Conditions In Pullman Plant Get Worse,” May 1935, 5

“Danville Textile Mill Has Stretch-Out,” May 1935, 5

“Fascists In Florida Shown Up By Toiler,” May 1935, 5

“Pipe Shop Worker Calls for Unity Against Bosses,” May 1935, 5

“Trades Council Leaders Exposed As Member Calls For Honest Leadership,” May 1935, 5

“U.M.W.A. Misleader Answered by Women’s Auxiliary on Red Scare,” May 1935, 5

“Member of B’ham Trades Council Hits Clique Rule,” Jun 1935, 2

“Workers in Tarrant Exploited by Troops,” Jun 1935, 2

“T.C.I. Thugs Even Prevent Miners from Planting Corn,” Jun 1935, 2

“Cropper Wants To Build Union In Mississippi,” Jun 1935, 3

“Atlanta Textile Worker Wants Paper Spread,” Jun 1935, 5

“Children Starve As Relief Is Cut,” Jun 1935, 5

“Croppers Resolved To Fight Landlord Oppression, A.A.A.,” Jun 1935, 5

“Kick Out Fakers, Says Wife Of Union Miner,” Jun 1935, 5

“Miners Called To Block Sell-Out, T.C.I. Robbery,” Jun 1935, 5

“Seamen Gypped On New Orleans Waterfront,” Jun 1935, 5

“Steel Workers Fight Attempts To Split Union,” Jun 1935, 5

“Unemployed Aid Striking Girls,” Jun 1935, 5

“We Suit His Calibre,” Jan 1937, 16

“T.C.I.’s ‘Agreements’,” Jan 1937, 16

“Too Old For Relief?” Jan 1937, 16

“Signing Up Already,” Mar 1937, 15

“We Can Stop It!” Mar 1937, 15

“The Only Road,” Mar 1937, 15

“It Won’t Be Long,” Apr 1937, 15

“Got Jobs, But—” Apr 1937,15

“Welcome Textile Drive,” Apr 1937, 15

“Before He Drowns,” May 1937, 15

“Farmers of Tomorrow,” May 1937, 15

“They Didn’t Know,” May 1937, 15

“C.I.O. Comes to Mobile,” Jun 1937, 8

“Farmers Need Wagner Act,” Jun 1937, 8

“School’s Our Right,” Jul 1937, 15

“Stool Pigeons Exposed,” Jul 1937, 15

“As the Oranges Grow,” Jul 1937, 15

“Tenders of Low-Flaming Fires,” Jul 1937, 15

“A Southern Worker Fights in Spain,” Sep 1937, 13


Directory: history -> usa -> pubs
history -> Developed for the Ontario Curriculum
history -> A chronology 1660-1832 The Restoration Settlement
history -> History and Social Science Standards of Learning Enhanced Scope and Sequence
history -> Evolution of the National Weather Service
history -> Chronological documentation for the period through 1842 Copyright Bruce Seymour blio, Cadet Papers of Patrick Craigie
history -> History of the 14
history -> History of the ports in Georgia
history -> That Broad and Beckoning Highway: The Santa Fe Trail and the Rush for Gold in California and Colorado
history -> Capitol Reef National Park List of Fruit and Nut Varieties, Including Heirlooms Prepared for the National Park Service through the Colorado Plateau Cooperative Ecosystems Studies Unit by Kanin Routson and Gary Paul Nabhan, Center for Sustainable
pubs -> Radical Magazines of the Twentieth Century Series

Download 4.35 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   ...   59




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page