Atlanta Georgian:
“Thank You, Mr. Hearst!” Jun 1936, 4
“Georgia Dick Sees Red,” Jul 1936, 4
Atlanta Six:
“Wide Campaign For Gastonia 7,” Aug 30 1930, 1
“Pledge At Sacco-Vanzetti Meets Save Atlanta Six,” Aug 30 1930, 1
“500 In Chatta. Jobless Meet,” Sep 6 1930, 1
“Labor Enters National Drive To Save Atlanta Organizers,” Sep 13 1930, 1
“Remember Ella May!,” Sep 13 1930, 1
“B’Ham Workers Resist Terror,” Sep 13 1930, 1
“Remember Ella May!” Sep 13 1930, 4
“Preparing the Ground in Georgia,” Oct 4 1930, 4
“Chattanooga Mass Protest Thurs. Night,” Oct 18 1930, 1
“Special Issue of Southern Workers On Atlanta Case,” Oct 18 1930, 2
“Raise Call To Free Atlanta Six At Polls,” Nov 1 1930, 2
“The Election Campaign,” Nov 1 1930, 6
Caption to photo of Henry Storey, Nov 8 1930, 1
“Atlanta Women Aid I.L.D Defense Of Six,” Nov 8 1930, 3
“Demand Death for Lynchers; Right to Build Negro Nation,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“54 Delegates From 3 States Present; Send 9 to St. Louis,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“‘Stagger’ Atlanta Workers,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“Urge T.C.I. Terror For Communists,” Nov 22 1930, 1
“Plan Nation Fight For Negro Rights,” Nov 29 1930, 1
“Girl Pickets Refuse Betray Struggle, Framed In Georgia,” Oct 1934, 1
Atlanta Woolen Mill:
“$3.15 A Week In Atlanta Woolen,” Jan 24 1931, 4
“Prepare Fight In Atlanta Mill,” Feb 7 1931, 2
“Lay Off Older Workers In Atlanta Woolen Co.,” Apr 4 1931, 2
“2 Meetings in Atlanta,” May 9 1931, 1
“Cotton-Picking Time In Texas Brings New Slavery For Jobless,” Sep 20 1933, 3
“Ga. Mill Workers Ordered Rehired,” Mar-Apr 1936, 6
“Racketeers in Patriotism,” May 1937, 6
Atlanta Worsted Mill:
“Atlanta Worsted Mill Signs with TWOC,” Jul 1937, 12
Atlantic City, N.J.:
“Parasite Kills Self,” Sep 19 1931, 3
“S.T.F.U. Meets In Arkansas,” Jan 1936, 4
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad:
“10¢ Hour For Tampa Dockers,” Jul 4 1931, 3
“More Southern Railroads Cut Workers Wages,” Jan 9 1932, 1
Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company:
“Chest Got Money But Gave Soup To Jobless Worker,” Jan 2 1932, 3
“‘Southern Worker’ Challenges N.R.A.’s Lower Wage-Scale for South; Shows that Talk of Cheaper Living Here is Lie,” Dec 20 1933, 2
“McDuff—Prince of Stool Pigeons,” Jan 1935, 1
Atlantic Refining Co.:
“Six Dead, 30 Hurt,” Sep 19 1931, 1
Atlas Clothing Company:
News of the Month in the South, “Miners Help Striking LaFollette Clothing Workers”,” Mar 1937, 11
Atmore, Ala.:
“Lash Sick War Vet In Alabama Prison,” Dec 19 1931, 2
Attucks, Crispus:
Illustration, Jul 1937, 4
“He Died for Liberty,” Jul 1937, 4
Auburn, Ala.:
“Cotton Price Is Up, But Only the Landlord Gains,” Aug 31 1933, 3
“Farm News,” Mar-Apr 1936, 5
Auburn, N.Y.:
“She Never Lost A Passenger,” Jan 1937, 14
Auerbach, Isabelle, aka Helen Marcy:
Contributor, “Set Trial On Fair Day To Assure Mobs,” Apr 4 1931, 1
Contributor, “‘Save Us’ Negro Boys Write Folks In Chattanooga,” Apr 18 1931, 1
“400 Cigar Workers Cheer I.L.D. Speaker,” Jun 20 1931, 1
“700 At Second Tampa Meet,” Jun 27 1931, 1
Contributor, “Stripping the Tampa Tobacco Workers,” Jun 27 1931, 2
Auerbach, Solomon, aka James S. Allen, aka James Bigelow:
Contributor, “What Do We Stand For?” Aug 16 1930, 1
Staff box, Aug 16 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Aug 16 1930, 4
Staff box, Aug 30 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Aug 30 1930, 4
Staff box, Sep 6 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Sep 6 1930, 4
Staff box, Sep 13 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Sep 13 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Sep 20 1930, 4
Staff box, Sep 20 1930, 4
The Reds Say, Sep 27 1930, 4
Staff box, Sep 27 1930, 4
Staff box, Oct 4 1930, 4
The Reds Say, Oct 4 1940, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Oct 11 1930, 4
My Life, Oct 11 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Oct 18 1930, 4
Staff box, Oct 25 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Oct 25 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Nov 1 1930, 6
Staff box, Nov 1 1930, 6
Staff box, Nov 8 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Nov 8 1930, 4
Staff box, Nov 15 1931, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Nov 15 1930, 4
Staff box, Nov 22 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Nov 22 1930, 4
Staff box, Nov 29 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Nov 29 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Dec 6 1930, 4
Staff box, Dec 13 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Dec 13 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Dec 20 1930, 4
Staff box, Dec 20 1930, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Dec 27 1930, 4
Staff box, Dec 27 1930, 4
Staff box, Jan 3 1931, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Jan 3 1931, 4
Staff box, Jan 10 1931, 4
Staff box, Jan 17 1931, 4
“Jailed Jobless Leader Says Must Build Southern Worker,” Jan 31 1931, 4
Contributor, The Reds Say, Jan 31 1931, 4
Staff box, Jan 31 1931, 4
Staff box, Feb 7 1931, 4
Staff box, Feb 14 1931, 4
Staff box, Feb 21 1931, 4
Staff box, Feb 28 1931, 4
“Rush to Defense of Our Comrades,” Mar 7 1931, 4
Staff box, Mar 7 1931, 4
Staff box, Mar 14 1931, 4
Contributor, “Workers Hail Paris Commune,” Mar 21 1931, 4
Staff box, Mar 21 1931, 4
Staff box, Mar 28 1931, 4
Staff box, Apr 4 1931, 4
Staff box, Apr 11 1931, 4
Staff box, May 2 1931, 4
Staff box, May 9 1931, 4
Staff box, May 16 1931, 4
Staff box, May 23 1931, 4
Staff box, May 30 1931, 4
Staff box, Jun 6 1931, 4
Staff box, Jun 13 1931, 4
Staff box, Jun 20 1931, 4
Contributor, “Farm Workers Getting as Low As 15¢ Day—Organize, Fight!” Jun 27 1931, 4
Staff box, Jun 27 1931, 4
Staff box, Jul 4 1931, 2
Staff box, Jul 18 1931, 4
Staff box, Jul 25 1931, 4
Staff box, Aug 8 1931, 4
Staff box, Aug 15 1931, 4
Staff box, Aug 22 1931, 2
Staff box, Aug 29 1931, 4
Staff box, Sep 5 1931, 4
Staff box, Sep 12 1931, 4
Staff box, Sep 19 1931, 4
Staff box, Oct 3 1931, 4
Staff box, Oct 10 1931, 4
Subscription blank, Oct 10 1931, 2
Staff box, Oct 17 1931, 4
Staff box, Oct 24 1931, 4
Staff box, Jan 30 1932, 4
Staff box, Feb 6 1934, 4
Augusta, Ga.:
Lynch Law At Work: Augusta, Ga., Nov 22 1930, 2
“‘Education’ for A.F. of L. Sell-Outs Is Line of Labor Fakers,” Jun 13 1931, 2
“Textile Strikes Sweep South As N.R.A. Brings Pay-Cuts, Stretch-Out,” Nov 15 1933, 1
“Girl Pickets Refuse Betray Struggle, Framed In Georgia,” Oct 1934, 1
“We Shan’t Forget,” Oct 1934, 2
“WPA Workers Sentenced,” Jan 1936, 3
Austell, Ga.:
“$2 Plus Cuss Words For Weeks Work in Ga.,” Apr 18 1931, 3
Austin, Eugene:
“How the ‘Black List’ Works In Kentucky Coal Regions,” Oct 10 1931, 1
Austin, Tex.:
“34 Are Lynched In 9 Months,” Oct 4 1930, 4
“Tells How He Kept Alive,” Jan 10 1931, 1
“Jail Leader As Hungry Man Dies,” Mar 14 1931, 3
“Prisoners to Take Workers’ Jobs,” Mar 21 1931, 2
“Plan Peonage Child Farm In Austin, Tex.,” Jul 25 1931, 3
“Some People Just Won’t Work,” Sep 5 1931, 4
“Carpenters In Texas Sold Out By A.F.L. Agent,” Dec 5 1931, 3
“Destruction of Crop Takes Bread From Mouths of Thousands of Farm Laborers, Writes Texas Farmer,” Jul 12 1933, 3
“Plowing Under Puts Tenants Deeper Into Debt; Mortgaged Farmers Fear Foreclosure in Fall,” Aug 15 1933, 3
Caption to photo of Diga Colony, Aug 15 1933, 4
“Cotton Acreage Plan Would Drive 80,000 Tenant Farmers Off The Land In Texas,” Dec 20 1933, 3
Important News in Short: Austin, Tex., Nov 1934, 4
“Houston Seamen Win Some Demands, Fight On,” Jan 1935, 2
“New Orleans, Austin Anti-Fascists Protest Visit of Hitler Agent,” Feb 1935, 1
“Texas Jobless Unite To Fight For Relief,” May 1935, 2
Australia:
“Legal Lyncher In Scottsboro Appeal Threat,” Sep 19 1931, 2
“Communism Stronger Each Year, Says Prof.,” Feb 20 1932, 3
Austria:
“Clashes In Europe On Feb. 25,” Mar 7 1931, 1
“War Veteran Sounds A Warning,” Aug 1 1931, 4
“Wall Street’s War Game,” Oct 3 1931, 4
“Workers Of South Must Carry Out Mass Fight Against War Plotters,” Oct 31 1931, 1
“World Is Facing Danger of New War Slaughter,” Feb 1936, 7
“Hitler Moves To Start War In Europe,” Mar-Apr 1936, 1
Autauga County, Ala.:
“Congress Agrees To Let Farmers Starve to Death,” Feb 14 1931, 1
Auto Mechanical School:
“Parade Welcomes Mrs. Patterson,” May 2 1931, 1
Automation:
“Houston Dial Phones Lay Off Many Girls,” Feb 21 1931, 3
“Speed-Up In Mines Means More Workers Lives Lost,” Mar 7 1931, 3
“Many Displaced In Pipe Shops,” Mar 14 1931, 3
“Miners Lose Jobs By Mechanical Loading,” Jun 13 1931, 1
Avella, Pa.:
“Pledge At Sacco-Vanzetti Meets Save Atlanta Six,” Aug 30 1930, 1
“Miners Hunger March 16 Miles,” Apr 25 1931, 1
Avon-Georgia and Alabama:
“Mill Movies Hide Misery,” Feb 1936, 6
Avondale, Ala.:
“Organize L.S.N.R. at Pell City,” Apr 18 1931, 1
“NTWU Organizing Mill Workers In Pell City,” Apr 18 1931, 2
“20,000 Alabama Textile Workers Strike, Picket,” Sep 1934, 1
“WPA Strikers in Alabama Win Partial Demands,” May 1936, 1
Ayers, M.N.:
“Red Scare Raised As Union Big Shots Work With Bosses,” Oct 1934, 3
Aymon, Paul J., also Aymond [sic], Paul J.:
“Betray Danville Textile Strike,” Oct 18 1930, 1
“Urge T.C.I. Terror For Communists,” Nov 22 1930, 1
“New Stretch-Out Coming In Elizabethton,” Dec 27 1930, 1
“Will Elizabethton Fighters Accept New Stretch-Out?” Dec 27 1930, 4
“Tenn. Miners Ready for General Strike,” Jun 13 1931, 1
“Labor Fakers Of Chatta. In Scabby Deal,” Feb 20 1932, 3
-B-
Babson Institute:
“N.R.A. Moves To Fascism Says Resigning Board Member,” Jul 1934, 4
Bachmann, Carl G.:
“House Launches Attack Against Foreign-Born,” Feb 28 1931, 2
Bacon, Henry:
“Ala. Hearing Postponed, Some Released on Bail,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“ILD Names Murderers of Ralph Gray, Davis,” Aug 8 1931, 1
Badge, Will:
“Ore Miner Tells How Bosses Try to Bust Union,” Dec 1934, 5
Bailey, Josiah W.:
“Elections in North Carolina,” Sep 27 1930, 4
“Admits Crisis,” Nov 8 1930, 3
Bailey, Levin C.:
“Negro Worker Lynched For Demanding Pay,” Dec 12 1931, 1
“Ritchie, Maryland’s Lynch Governor, Defends Murderers of Matt Williams,” Dec 19 1931, 4
Bailey, Lyman J.:
“Plan Peonage Child Farm In Austin, Tex.,” Jul 25 1931, 3
Bailey Tobacco Co.:
“The Stuff Boss Justice Is Made Of,” Dec 20 1930, 2
Bainbridge, Ga.:
“Georgia Answers Congress With Another Lynching,” Jul 1937, 13
Baker, B.H.:
Lynch Law At Work: Augusta, Ga., Nov 22 1930, 2
Baker, C.O.:
Lynch Law At Work: Greenville, S.C., Sep 5 1931, 2
Baker, Edward:
“McCleny Turpentine Operators Charged with Peonage,” Jul 1937, 13
Baker, F.:
“Jail Seamen In Houston Daily,” Nov 22 1930, 2
Baker, Grady:
“Workers Oppose Deputy Gunman,” Feb 1935, 2
Baker, Henry:
“Protest Murder of Warren, O., Worker,” Oct 17 1931, 1
Baker, Larkin:
News of the Month in the South, “Harlan Coal Operators Tyranny Over Miners Told,” May 1937, 13
Baker, Lawrence:
News of the Month in the South, “Harlan Coal Operators Tyranny Over Miners Told,” May 1937, 13
Baker, Phillip:
“Sheriff Hands Defenseless Negro Over to Lynch Mob,” Mar-Apr 1936, 3
Bakery and Confectionary Workers Union:
“Chattanooga Labor Leaders Acquitted,” Jan 1937, 10
Balboa, Panama:
“Banana Strike In Panama,” Apr 18 1931, 3
Baldwin County, Ala.:
“Disease in Alabama Jails,” Mar 7 1931, 2
“Ala. Farmers Union Convention Votes State Organization Drive,” Dec 1936, 7
Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency:
“Farmers Tricked Into Buying Land In Carter County,” Mar 21 1931, 3
Baldwin, Julius:
“Deputy Murders 3 Harlan Miners,” Sep 5 1931, 1
Ball, Jim:
“Arkansas Tenant Is Given 7 Years,” Mar-Apr 1936, 3
Ball, L.F.:
“Secret Jailing of Miners Is Exposed In Ky.,” Oct 24 1931, 3
Ball, Mary:
“Marion Official In Lynching,” Sep 20 1930, 4
Ball, Rufus:
“Active Chatt. Worker Jailed,” Sep 5 1931, 1
Ballard, Isaiah:
“Warfare For Bread On Farms,” Jan 24 1931, 1
Baltimore Evening Sun, The:
“Lucky Fellow?,” Jan 1937, 11
Baltimore Sun, The:
“Burn Baltimore Papers,” Jan 2 1932, 3
Baltimore, Md.:
“Donations,” Oct 18 1930, 2
Untitled, Oct 18 1930, 4
“Hunger Marchers Demand Relief In Many Cities,” Jan 31 1931, 1
“400,000 Thruout [sic] Land In Jobless Demonstrations,” Mar 7 1931, 1
“Scottsboro Conferences in 12 Cities,” May 16 1931, 4
“The Boss Solution,” Sep 12 1931, 3
“Negro Labor Increases In All Industry,” Oct 24 1931, 3
“Vicious Police Torture 60-Year-Old Farm Worker,” Nov 7 1931, 2
“Ritchie, Maryland’s Lynch Governor, Defends Murderers of Matt Williams,” Dec 19 1931, 4
“Second Victory for I.L.D. in Orphan Jones Lynch Plot,” Jan 16 1932, 2
“Maryland Slavery At Point of Gun,” Jan 30 1932, 4
“Threaten Ades For Defending Orphan Jones,” Feb 20 1932, 2
Important News in Short: Washington, D.C., Nov 1934, 4
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad:
“Fight Against Hunger,” Sep 12 1931, 4
“Railway Union Heads In Big Wage Cut Plot,” Jan 2 1931, 1
Baltimore Bar Assn.:
“Threaten Ades For Defending Orphan Jones,” Feb 20 1932, 2
Bancroft, Charles:
“Racketeers in Patriotism,” May 1937, 6
Bank of Blacksburg:
“Gov’t Officials Caught,” Nov 29 1930, 4
Bank failures:
“Bank Crash In Tenn. Reveals Rule Of Boss,” Nov 29 1930, 1
“Bank Failures Mean Sharper Mass Misery,” Nov 29 1930, 1
“68 Banks In Week Before X-mas Closed,” Dec 27 1930, 1
“More Bank Failures Hit Farmers in South,” Jan 17 1931, 2
“Croppers To March Again In Arkansas,” Jan 24 1931, 1
“Workers Lose When Little Banks Crash,” Jun 20 1931, 2
“Another Bank Crash,” Oct 24 1931, 1
“Many Banks Close,” Dec 5 1931, 1
“Boston Banks Crash,” Dec 26 1931, 2
“Bank Failures in One Week Increase Over 100 Per Cent,” Jan 2 1932, 2
Bank of Tennessee:
“Bank Crash In Tenn. Reveals Rule Of Boss,” Nov 29 1930, 1
Bank of the United States:
“The Bank Failures,” Dec 27 1930, 4
Banker’s Trust Co.:
“The Bank Failures,” Dec 27 1930, 4
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
Bankhead Farm Tenancy Bill:
“Bankhead Bill Is Death Warrant For Small Growers,” Feb 10 1934, 2
“Bankhead Bill, AAA Hit Farm Toilers—Aid Landlords,” Jul 1934, 1
“Sharecroppers Only Way Out To Build Union,” Jul 1934, 3
Important News In Short: Montgomery, Ala., Sep 1934, 3
“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” Oct 1934, 1
“Mass Protest At Bankhead Bill Forces Gains,” Oct 1934, 3
“Sharecroppers Plan Struggle,” Nov 1934, 4
“Croppers Union Proposes Unity, Plans Strike,” Dec 1934, 1
“United Front Burning Need In Fight Against Hunger and Terror, Say Communists!” Dec 1934, 4
“Croppers’ Unity Call Answered by Union In Arkansas,” Jan 1935, 1
“The United Front in the South,” Jan 1935, 1
“Tenants, Croppers Form United Front; Arkansas Leader Jailed,” Feb 1935, 1
“Farmers Condemn Bankhead and AAA,” Jan 1936, 3
“Jasper Central Body Backs Painters,” Jan 1937, 10
“Land for the Landless,” Mar 1937, 7
“Farm: Share Croppers Union Demands Land for Landless,” Mar 1937, 13
Bankhead Gift Tax:
“Croppers Union Proposes Unity, Plans Strike,” Dec 1934, 1
Bankhead, John H.:
The Reds Say, Aug 16 1930, 4
“Bankhead Bill Is Death Warrant For Small Growers,” Feb 10 1934, 2
Bankhead, William Brockman:
“10% Wage Cut In Candidate Bankhead Mine,” Sep 27 1930, 1
“Turn Defeat Into Success In Alabama Election Campaign,” Sep 27 1930, 4
“Homes Too Cold—Keep Warm In Mines, Says Smart Boss,” Oct 25 1930, 3
“Against Boss Line-up in Alabama—Vote Red,” Nov 1 1930, 5
Banks, Ganze:
“Harlan Prisoners Praise ILD Help,” Dec 19 1931, 2
Banks, George:
“W. Va. Lynch Gang Kills 2 Young Negroes,” Dec 19 1931, 2
Banks, James:
“Tuscaloosa Lynchers Again Active,” Sep 1934, 2
Bannon, Charles:
“Bloody Lynch Law Toll Mounts For This Year,” Sep 5 1931, 2
Baptist Missionary Conference:
“Minister Tried by Norfolk Workers For Betrayal,” May 1935, 4
Baptiste, Rev. L.:
“All-South Conference Called On Lynching, For Union Rights,” Jan 1935, 2
Barber, Henry J.:
“Farmers In Gun Fight For Bread,” Jan 3 1931, 1
Barber Hill, Tex.:
“Barber Hill Oil Workers Live in Sties,” Oct 18 1930, 3
“Leave Cotton in Field; Is Not Worth Picking,” Oct 18 1930, 3
Barbeton, Ohio:
“Scottsboro Protest Grows Thruout [sic] World,” Jul 18 1931, 1
Barbourville, Ky.:
“Miners Strike,” Oct 4 1930, 2
“Armed Troops Stop Funeral Preparations,” Feb 20 1932, 1
“Harry Simms Murdered By Gun Thug,” Feb 20 1932, 1
Barbusse, Henri:
“Soviet Peace Policy,” Feb 20 1932, 2
Barcelona, Spain:
“Toward Revolution,” Sep 12 1931, 4
Barcourt, Maurice:
“‘No Niggers’ Says A.F.L.,” Mar 28 1931, 1
Barlow, T.E.:
“Arrest 28 In Fort Worth Eviction,” Jul 12 1933, 2
“Leader Of Tex. Unemployed Is Killed In Jail,” Sep 20 1933, 1
“T.E. Barlow, Martyred Leader Of The Southern Workers,” Nov 15 1933, 4
Caption, Jan 20 1934, 2
Barnard, Chester:
“Racketeers in Patriotism,” May 1937, 6
Barnes, Henry Elmer:
“Smash Harlan Censorship,” Oct 17 1931, 3
Barnes, Robert:
“Chain Gang Victim,” May 1935, 2
Barnesville, N.C.:
“Warfare For Bread On Farms,” Jan 24 1931, 1
Barnett, Eugene:
“Two Centralia Prisoners Out After 12 Years,” Jan 9 1932, 2
Barnhardt, Tex.:
“AAA Destroys Food, Clothes,” with photo, Feb 1935, 2
Barr, Pat:
Contributor, “Union Parents Want Children Taught By Union Teachers in Walker County,” Nov 1936, 2
Contributor, “Steel Workers Soon To ‘Talk Turkey’,” Jan 1937, 9
Contributor, “Disarm Industry,” Mar 1937, 6
Contributor, “Steel Victorious!” Apr 1937, 3
Contributor, “Save Our Children,” May 1937, 7
Contributor, “Mary and I Are Glad Our Son Went to Spain,” Jul 1937, 8
Barr, Willie:
“White Legion—Fascist Spy Gang Against Workers,” Jul 1934, 1
Barret Roofing Company:
“Steel Men Join Union Fast, CIO Leader Reports,” Nov 1936, 1
Barrington, Tenn.:
“Textile Town,” May 1937, 5
Barron, Victor:
“Leader of Brazilian Workers Faces Death in Prison,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4
Barton, Ann:
“Spread Strike As Thugs Raid Union Center,” Jan 9 1932, 1
Barton, Belle:
Trade Union Topics, Feb 1936, 2
“Yes, Communists Run James Ford, Republicans Told,” Nov 1936, 3
Barton and Company:
“Dairy Strikers Tricked Into Signing ‘Confession’,” Mar-Apr 1936, 3
Barton, Jack:
“Red Scare Fails To Split Ranks of WPA Locals,” Feb 1936, 1
Trade Union Topics, Feb 1936, 2
“Jack Barton Freed of ‘Downs Law’ Charges,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4
“WPA Strikers in Alabama Win Partial Demands,” May 1936, 1
“C.P. Leader Framed On Vagrancy Charge,” May 1936, 6
“Local Leader Railroaded to Chain Gang,” Sep 1936, 1
“Gelders Kidnapped, Beaten; Protested Barton Arrest,” Nov 1936, 1
“Yes, Communists Run James Ford, Republicans Told,” Nov 1936, 3
“Barton is Freed By State Court,” Dec 1936, 7
“Bessemer Law Invalidated, C.P. Demonstrates It Is Legal Party,” Dec 1936, 8-9
“Disarm Industry,” Mar 1937, 6
News of the Month in the South, “Bessemer Literature Law Appealed to Supreme Court,” May 1937, 13
Barton Manufacturing:
“Union Parents Want Children Taught By Union Teachers in Walker County,” Nov 1936, 2
Barton, S.F.:
Trade Union Topics, Sep 1936, 2
Bartow County, Ga.:
“Protest Clark Lynching Thurs. In Chattanooga,” Oct 11 1930, 1
“Wipe Out The Lynchers,” Oct 11 1930, 4
Bartow, Fla.:
“Fla. Citrus Workers Win Strike Despite Terror, Traitors,” Feb 1935, 5
“Tampa Officer Exposes Police, Defies Klan,” May 1936, 3
“Cops And Klan Found Guilty In Florida,” Jun 1936, 3
Baseball:
“Scabs Work at TCI After Strike Sell-Out; Co. Divides Negro, White,” Sep 1934, 5
Bass, Edward Davis:
“Chattanooga Jobless Present Demand To City; Unemployment Conference Called For Oct. 15,” Sep 20 1930, 1
“Rain Floods Workers’ Homes,” Sep 27 1930, 3
“Crumbs For The Jobless,” Oct 4 1930, 1
“Cover Horton Steal; No Aid For Jobless,” Jan 17 1931, 2
“Boss Charity Gives $1 Week To Jobless Man And Sick Wife,” Jan 31 1931, 3
“Another Chatt. Worker Puts Back Furniture,” Feb 7 1931, 1
“Jail 4 Workers in Chatta., Call City Hall Meet Feb. 25,” Feb 14 1931, 1
“Mayor Bass May Even Stop Soup Lines,” Feb 14 1931, 3
“We’re Marching Again on Feb. 25th!” Feb 14 1931, 4
“Chatta. Jobless At City Hall Feb. 25th,” Feb 21 1931, 1
“Push Chatta. Relief Fight In Elections,” Feb 21 1931, 1
“Give A Decisive Answer on Feb. 25th,” Feb 21 1921, 4
“Hint At Troops To Fight Hungry,” Feb 28 1931, 1
“Workers’ Candidates Fight For Relief in Chattanooga,” Feb 28 1931, 1
“The Policy Of Hunger And Bayonets,” Feb 28 1931, 4
“Chatta. Trial Set March 19,” Mar 14 1931, 1
“A.F. of L. Supports Mayor Bass,” Mar 14 1931, 1
“Fine Communist $10,” Mar 28 1931, 3
“City Cuts Out All Relief In Chattanooga,” May 9 1931, 2
“Chattanooga Soup Line Crowded At Closing,” May 23 1931, 1
“Chatta. Kitchens Hand Out Bread to 12,000,” May 30 1931, 4
“Halt Evictions In Chattanooga,” Oct 17 1931, 4
“Mass Action Wins Defense for Jones,” Dec 12 1931, 1
“Mayor Bass Admits Public Works Fake,” Dec 19 1931, 3
“The Lies of Chattanooga Politicians,” Dec 26 1931, 4
Bass, Meyer:
“Southern Liberals Defense of Lynching,” Dec 5 1931, 4
Bass, Neil:
“Bank Crash In Tenn. Reveals Rule Of Boss,” Nov 29 1930, 1
Bass, Simon:
“Arkansas Tenant Is Given 7 Years,” Mar-Apr 1936, 3
Bastrop, La.:
“Lynch Wave On Increase,” Sep 1934, 2
Bates, A.C.:
“Cropper’s Strike Wins Big Gains Despite Terror,” Jun 1935, 1
Bates, Bramlett:
“Death Sentence for Self Defense,” Nov 7 1931, 4
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