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



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Powell, Paul:
“Tuscaloosa Croppers Open Fight For Cash Share Of Cotton Check,” Nov 15 1933, 1
Powell, Roy:
Contributor, “Must Pick 1 Bale Cotton To Get Food,” Oct 11 1930, 3
Powers, Maurice H.: see Poberski, Morris
Powers, H.M.: see Poberski, Morris
Powers, M.H.: see Poberski, Morris
Powers, George: see Poberski, Morris
Powers, Milt: see Poberski, Morris
Powers, Morris H.: see Poberski, Morris
Pratt City, Ala.:
“They Can Never Smash Us!,” Aug 16 1930, 4

“B’Ham Workers Resist Terror,” Sep 13 1930, 1

“Demand Death for Lynchers; Right to Build Negro Nation,” Nov 15 1930, 1

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

“M.C. Ellis, Candidate Of The Workers,” Aug 31 1933, 1

“They Found That The ‘New Deal’ Means Less Food,” Aug 31 1933, 4

“Alabama Labor At The Crossroads,” Mar-Apr 1936, 2

Caption to photo of James W. Ford, Nov 1936, 3

A Page for Southern Women, Jun 1937, 8
Pratt Fuel Co.:
“Slashing Wages In Walker County Mines,” Nov 15 1930, 3
Pratt, William V.:
“Money For War, But None For The Unemployed,” Dec 27 1930, 1

The Reds Say, Dec 27 1930, 4


Prattsville, Ark.:
“Gangs Terrorize Farmers Who Won’t Plow Under; Landlords Pocket Profits of Destruction,” Aug 15 1933, 2
Preece, Harold:
“Arkansas Children Denied Doctor’s Care,” Oct 24 1931, 3

“Ark. Croppers Face Hunger, Say Students,” Dec 12 1931, 3


Preece, Louise:
Contributor, “Plowing Under Puts Tenants Deeper Into Debt; Mortgaged Farmers Fear Foreclosure in Fall,” Aug 15 1933, 3
Premier Mine:
“Murder Gang Indicts Three Mine Leaders,” Oct 24 1931, 1
Preparedness Day:
“Tom Mooney’s Mother Pleads For Prisoners,” Mar 5 1932, 2
President’s Committee on Farm Tenancy:
“Land for the Landless,” Apr 1937, 16
Presley, J.D.:
News of the Month in the South, “Spindletop Farm Strikers Civil Liberties Violated,” May 1937, 13

Presswood, Bill:
“Relief Jim Crow In Greensboro,” Jul 1936, 6
Prestes, Luis Carlos:
“Leader of Brazilian Workers Faces Death in Prison,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4
Preston, Joseph:
“X-mas Cheer,” Dec 27 1930, 4
Price, Andrew, also Price, A.:
Lynch Law At Work: Toomsuba, Miss., Nov 15 1930, 2

“State Lynches Three Croppers,” Feb 28 1931, 2


Price, James:
“Negro Worker Shot Down By Brutal Police,” Dec 6 1930, 1
Price, J.R.:
“Knoxville Central Labor Body Helps United Mine Workers’ Official Fight Ky. Strikesrs [sic],” Feb 6 1932, 1
Price, R. Coy:
“Starving Farmer Kills Self,” Mar 28 1931, 4
Price, Victoria:
“Set Trial On Fair Day To Assure Mobs,” Apr 4 1931, 1

“‘Save Us’ Negro Boys Write Folks In Chattanooga,” Apr 18 1931, 1

“Protest Against State Lynching Grows Rapidly,” Apr 18 1931, 1

“Mob Threatens ILD Lawyers In Scottsb. Hearing,” Jun 13 1931, 1

“Bloody Lynch Law Toll Mounts For This Year,” Sep 5 1931, 2

“Try To Frame-Up Scottsboro Atty. Chamlee,” Jan 16 1932, 1

“Capitalist ‘Law and Order’ in Harlan and Scottsboro,” Jan 16 1932, 4

“Judge Furious at World-Wide Mass Protests,” Jan 30 1932, 1

“Sentences Two Boys To Death,” Dec 20 1933, 1

“Selma Negro Free On ‘Rape’ Charge,” Dec 1934, 2

“Scottsboro Trial Set for April 1st,” Mar-Apr 1936, 6
Prichard Cotton Mill Products Co.:
“Mobile Workers Win Demands After Splendid Struggle,” Jun 10 1933, 1

“We Answer New Attacks With New Struggles,” Jun 10 1933, 4


Pride, Eddie:
Lynch Law At Work: Little Rock, Ark., Jan 10 1931, 2
Pridmore, A.F.:
“Ruling Class Takes Another 17-Year-Old Negro Boy’s Life,” Jun 6 1931, 4
Primitive Baptist Church:
“Ink Red For Preacher, Asks Minimum Wage,” Jul 1936, 3
Primoff, George:
“Over $10,000.00 Spent By I.L.D. On Scottsboro,” Mar 5 1932, 3
Pritchett, James I.:
“Fine And Jail Sentence For W.G. Binkley,” Jan 9 1932, 3
Producers News, The:
Advertisement, “The Producers News,” Mar 5 1932, 2
Professional sports:
“Workers’ Soccer League Against Boss Class Sport,” Sep 26 1931, 2
Profits:
“The War Veterans’ Loan Bill,” Mar 7 1931, 4

“Who Is Starving?” Apr 18 1931, 4

“Landlords Get High Profit On Stored Cotton,” Aug 15 1933, 3

Untitled, Feb 10 1934, 3

“Tax The Rich, Take The War Funds And Keep The Schools Open!” Feb 10 1934, 4

“New Deal Dividends,” Dec 1934, 4

“Workers Insurance Congress Unites Thousands in Washington: Relief Cut More By New Deal As Profits Rise,” Jan 1935, 1
Prohibition:
Lynch Law At Work: Texarkana, Tex., Aug 16 1930, 3

Lynch Law At Work: Chattanooga, Tenn., Oct 4 1930, 2



“Plan Mass Fight For Release of 5 B’ham Workers,” Feb 7 1931, 1

“The Difference,” Feb 21 1931, 4

“Hopes To Avenge Brutality,” Aug 15 1931, 3

“Confiscate Legion Booze,” Oct 3 1931, 2

“Two Kentucky Police Shoot Enemy In Jail,” Oct 24 1931, 4

“Bishop Indicted On Election Fraud,” Oct 24 1931, 4

“Monkey Town Nabobs Held on Drunk Charge,” Jan 2 1931, 2

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

“Lynch Verdict In Frame-Up Against Jones,” Jan 30 1932, 2

“Greenville Bankrupt,” Feb 6 1932, 2


Prosperity Week:
The Reds Say, Oct 11 1930, 4
Providence, R.I.:
“N.T.W.U. Exposes Danville Sell-Out,” Feb 14 1931, 4

“NTWU Nat. Council To Meet,” Mar 28 1931, 1

“R.I. Textile Workers Win Strike,” May 2 1931, 1

“Textile Strike In R.I. Spreads Led by N.T.W.U.,” Jul 18 1931, 1


Provisional Committee for the Defense of Angelo Herndon:
“Klan Burns Fiery Cross At Home Of Herndon Defender,” Aug 15 1933, 2
Pruden, Ky.:
“Offer Reward For Jackson Dead Or Alive,” Mar 5 1932, 1
Prudential Insurance Company:
“Newark Building Workers Sold Out,” Nov 7 1931, 2
Pruett, G. P.:
“Sales Tax Passed In Alabama,” Jan 1937, 7
Pruitt, Irving:
“Errand Boy To Die For White Woman’s Crime,” Sep 26 1931, 2
Public transportation:
“Try To Segregate Negroes In Busses,” Nov 1936, 4
Public Works Administration:
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Dec 1934, 6

Important News In Short: Birmingham, Ala., Feb 1935, 4

“Workers in Tarrant Exploited by Troops,” Jun 1935, 2

“Red Scare Fails To Split Ranks of WPA Locals,” Feb 1936, 1

“Alabama Labor At The Crossroads,” Mar-Apr 1936, 2

“3 Strikes Called by Chattanooga Building Trades,” Nov 1936, 2

“The Only Road,” Mar 1937, 15
Puerto Rican Nationalist Party:
The International Scene, May 1937, 10
Puerto Rico:
“Steal Ships And Lives Of Sailors, Too,” Dec 20 1930, 3

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


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

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


Pullman Palace Car Co.:
“Lay Off 1,000 Men,” Sep 27 1930, 1

“2,500 Ensley Unemployed Demonstrate,” Oct 4 1930, 1

“Lay Off 2,000 Men,” Nov 1 1930, 5

“Conditions In Pullman Plant Get Worse,” May 1935, 5


Putnam, Conn.:
“8,000 In Mill Strike In New Jersey, R.I.,” Aug 1 1931, 2
Putnam County, Ga.:
My Life, Nov 29 1930, 4

My Life, Dec 13 1930, 4


P.V. & K. Coal Co.:
“Troops Enforce Injunction Against Striking Ky. Miners,” May 23 1931, 1
-Q-
Quin, Michael:
Contributor, “Angelo Herndon, Symbol of Strength,” Oct 1934, 4
Quirt, Walter:
“New Magazine Will Give Lead to Workers in Class Struggle,” Dec 12 1931, 4
Quitman County, Miss.:
“Many Perish In Black Belt Flood Disaster,” Jan 9 1932, 2

“Again the Flood Horror,” Jan 9 1932, 4


-R-
Raceland, La.:
“La. ‘Sugar Bowl’ Workers Get 70¢ a Day in Scrip,” Mar-Apr 1936, 5
Racolin, Alexander:
“Fifteen Arrested In Georgia Terror Drive Under Slave Law,” with photo, Nov 1934, 1
Radio stations: see WWL and WRBC
Radke, R.:
“Fight Or Starve!” Nov 8 1930, 2
Ragland, Norman:
“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” with photo, Oct 1934, 1

“Workers Get Candidates On Ballot, Fight Terror in Campaign,” Nov 1934, 1


Rail and River Company:
“Strikers Defeat UMW Strike-Breaking Pact,” Jul 4 1931, 1
Railroad Industry:
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Feb 1935, 4
Railroad Labor Executives Association:
“Membership of the RR Unions Speaks,” Jun 1936, 7
Railroad Workers Industrial League:
“Start Drive To Organize R.R.’s,” Aug 1 1931, 1
Railroad Workers Industrial Union:
“Workers Get Big Wage Cut On 2 Roads,” Oct 17 1931, 1

“More Southern Railroads Cut Workers Wages,” Jan 9 1932, 1


Railway Audit and Investigation Company:
“Rome Foundry Strikers Hold Ranks Solid,” Mar 25 1934, 1

“Labor Spies’ Activity Told,” Nov 1936, 1


Railway Express Agency:
“Wage Cut For Express Workers,” Jan 30 1932, 3
Raimund, Ala.:
“Speedup Artist Is Still Boss At Raimund Mine,” Mar 25 1934, 3
Raimund Mine:
“Raimund Miners Gather Forces For New Struggle,” Feb 10 1934, 1

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


Raines County, Tex.:
“Cotton Acreage Plan Would Drive 80,000 Tenant Farmers Off The Land In Texas,” Dec 20 1933, 3
Rainey, W.H.:
“State Bodies Vote for Industrial Unionism: U.M.W.A. Leads In Battle For Progressive Measures At Tenn.-Ala. Conventions,” May 1936, 1
Raleigh, N.C.:
Lynch Law At Work: Raleigh, N.C., Aug 30 1930, 2

Lynch Law At Work: Raleigh, N.C., Sep 13 1930, 2

Lynch Law At Work, Sep 20 1930, 2

Lynch Law At Work, Sep 27 1930, 1

Untitled, Sep 27 1930, 3

The Reds Say--, Sep 27 1930, 4

Lynch Law At Work: Oxford, N.C., Nov 1 1930, 2

Lynch Law At Work: Raleigh, N.C., Nov 8 1930, 2

Charlotte Notes, Nov 29 1930, 2

“Demand State Jobless Fund In N. Carolina,” Dec 13 1930, 1

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

“Charlotte Gives Bats For Bread,” Jan 3 1931, 1

“Charlotte Gets Signers for Bill,” Jan 10 1931, 1

“55-Hour Week Law In N.C.,” Mar 21 1931, 4

“Murder Negro Prisoner,” May 2 1931, 3

Lynch Law At Work: Raleigh, N.C., Jun 20 1931, 2

“N. Carolina Bank Crash,” Jan 9 1932, 3

“Torture Prisoners Probe Demanded by I.L.D. Reveals,” Mar-Apr 1935, 7

“Case of Framed N.C. Union Men Set For Appeal,” Jun 1935, 3

News of the Month in the South, “N.C. Liberals For Progressive Laws, “ Apr 1937, 13


Ramarez, Josefina:
“Spain: Louisville Hears Plea to Aid Spanish Democracy,” Mar 1937, 12
Ramer, Ala.:
Lynch Law At Work: Ramer, Ala., Aug 30 1930, 2
Randolph, A. Phillip:
“Red Baiters Answered By Randolph,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4

“AF of L Reactionaries Block Support of Scottsboro Boys,” Jan 1937, 4


Raney, William:
Trade Union Topics, Nov 1936, 2
Ranger, Tex.:
“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” Oct 1934, 1
Rango, Ga.:
“Thieving Preacher-Landlord Robs Whole Cropper Family,” Oct 3 1931, 3
Rangoon, Burma:
“Burma Workers Revolt,” Apr 25 1931, 3

“Natives In Burma Revolt,” Jul 18 1931, 2


Rank and File Trade Union Committees:
“Win Release of Eight Jailed in Birmingham,” Nov 15 1933, 2
Ransdell, Joseph E.:
“A.F. of L. Backs Boss Men,” Sep 6 1930, 4
Raper, Arthur:
“Lynchings Are Denounced As Vote-Catchers,” Jun 1936, 3
Ratification Convention:
“To Name Ticket In Tenn. Election,” Aug 30 1930, 1
Rayford, John:
“Kill Two; Wound Many In Cleveland Eviction Fight,” Oct 17 1931, 2
Raymond, Harry:
“Jailed Jobless Leaders Greet Southern Worker,” Sep 6 1930, 1

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


Raymond, Miss.:
Lynch Law At Work: Raymond, Miss., Aug 16 1930, 3
Raymont Concrete Pile Company:
“Jailed 17 Times For Selling Anti-Long Book,” Jun 1935, 1
Readers Ore Mine:
“Blacklisted Textile Worker Calls To Learn Lessons of Strike Betrayal,” Jan 1935, 5
Reading, Pa.:
“Miners’ Union Calls Workers To Support Their Class Party,” Oct 3 1931, 2
Reconstruction Finance Corporation:
“Covington Co. Masses Storm Court House,” Jul 12 1933, 1

“Strike on R.F.C. Jobs in Memphis Stops Wage-Cut,” Jul 12 1933, 1

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

“Plowing Under Puts Tenants Deeper Into Debt; Mortgaged Farmers Fear Foreclosure in Fall,” Aug 15 1933, 3

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

“Dadeville R.F.C. Sends Nerviest Letter Ever,” Sep 20 1933, 4

“CWA,” Jan 20 1934, 2

“Bankhead Bill Is Death Warrant For Small Growers,” Feb 10 1934, 2


Red Aid Society of China:
“Communists In China Give Land To Poor Farmers,” Aug 8 1931, 2
Red Army—China:
“Workers, Peasants Of China Set Up Own Rule,” Aug 16 1930, 2

“Boss Terror Grows In China as Reds Advance,” Aug 30 1930, 2

“Another City Falls To Chinese Communist Army,” Sep 20 1930, 1

“Communists In China Give Land To Poor Farmers,” Aug 8 1931, 2

“Chinese Government Policy Caused Floods,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Toward Revolution,” Sep 12 1931, 4

“2,000,000 Die Of Hunger,” Mar 14 1931, 3

“Chinese Reds Win Victory,” Mar 21 1931, 2

“Decapitate 1,800 Workers,” May 9 1931, 3

“Advancing Red Army In China,” Jun 27 1931, 1

“War Plotters Smuggle Arms Against USSR,” Dec 12 1931, 2

“New Stage in War Against China and the Soviet Union,” Dec 26 1931, 4

“Czech Tool Of France Plots Murder of Jap,” Jan 9 1932, 2

“Nanking Govt. Troops Flock To Red Army,” Jan 30 1932, 4

“World War Looms as Bandit Powers Clash in Far East; Demand U.S. Withdraw Arms,” Feb 6 1932, 1

“Stop The Robber War Against China!” Mar 5 1932, 1

“Draft Blanks Being Printed For New War,” Mar 5 1932, 4

Important News in Short: Shanghai, China, Nov 1934, 4

Important News In Short: Hong Kong, China, Dec 1934, 6
Red Army—USSR:
The Reds Say, Dec 13 1930, 4

“Workers Delegation To Soviet Union Witness Success,” May 30 1931, 2


Red Arrow Park:
“400,000 Thruout [sic] Land In Jobless Demonstrations,” Mar 7 1931, 1
Red Cross:
“Unemployment And Farm Crisis Looses Pellagra On Workers,” Sep 13 1930, 2

“Chattanooga Jobless Present Demand To City; Unemployment Conference Called For Oct. 15,” Sep 20 1930, 1

“Government Dooms Farmers To Starve,” Oct 4 1930, 4

“Help The Poor Kiddies, Please,” Oct 18 1930, 4

“25% Greenville Workers Jobless: Rest On Part Time,” Oct 25 1930, 2

“Exposes A.F.L. In Danville Gets 60 Days,” Nov 29 1930, 1

“The Danville Textile Strike,” Nov 29 1930, 4

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

“500 Organize Hunger March And Get Food,” Jan 10 1931, 1

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

“Lonoke Farmers Set Example,” Jan 10 1931, 4

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

“Arkansas Share Croppers Rouse Farms to Action,” Jan 17 1931, 2

“Croppers To March Again In Arkansas,” Jan 24 1931, 1

“Family Of 11 Living on 2 Ears Corn Day,” Jan 24 1931, 1

“Farmers of South, Fight Starvation!” Jan 24 1931, 1

“Farmers Starve Thruout [sic] Country,” Jan 24 1931, 1

“Farmers Invite Red Leader To Cullman Relief Mass Meeting,” Jan 31 1931, 1

“Jail Leaders Of Ark. Hunger Fight,” Jan 31 1931, 1

“Ready To Stop Danville Relief,” Jan 31 1931, 1

“Club Congress Into Action!” Jan 31 1931, 4

“A.F. of L. Sells Out Danville Strike; Workers Blacklisted,” Feb 7 1931, 1

“The Danville Sell-Out,” Feb 7 1931, 4

“Congress Agrees To Let Farmers Starve to Death,” Feb 14 1931, 1

“Only 75 Danville Strikers Hired,” Feb 14 1931, 1

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

“U.T.W. Tries To Hide Strike Lies,” Feb 21 1931, 1

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

“Something To Think Over,” Feb 21 1931, 2

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

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

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

“The Liberator Republished,” Mar 7 1931, 2

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

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

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

“City Council Flees Jobless, Refuses Relief,” Mar 21 1931, 1

“Ark. Farmers Call On Party,” Mar 21 1931, 2

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

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

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

“Greenville Jobless Council Gets Food For Hungry Workers,” Apr 4 1931, 1

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

“Miners Starve In Serfdom In West Virginia,” Apr 11 1931, 2

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

“Mayor Brings KKK To Reply To Workers,” Apr 18 1931, 1

“B’ham Jobless Demand Relief From Red Cross,” Apr 18 1931, 2

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

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

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

“6,000,000 Children Underfed,” May 2 1931, 4

“Troops Ready To War on Starving Miners in Okla.,” May 9 1931, 1

“City Cuts Out All Relief In Chattanooga,” May 9 1931, 2

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

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

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

“Relief Is Big Issue In Mine Strike Now,” Jul 18 1931, 1

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

“Marching Miners Force Relief In Henryetta, Okla.,” Jul 25 1931, 1

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

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

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

“Parasite Kills Self,” Sep 19 1931, 3

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

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

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

“Fight Against Hunger,” Oct 31 1931, 4

“Red Cross, Police, Charities Drive Unemployed to Slavery,” Oct 31 1931, 4

“Winter Relief Demand Before U.S. Governm’t,” Nov 7 1931, 1

“Farmers Under Red Flag,” Dec 5 1931, 1

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

“Hoover’s Hunger ‘Relief’ But $7.89,” Dec 26 1931, 3

“Many Perish In Black Belt Flood Disaster,” Jan 9 1932, 2

“Pineville Gang Steals Food; And Slugs Two,” Feb 20 1932, 1

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

“Strikes At Belton And Seneca,” Jun 10 1933, 2

Caption to photo of demonstration, “United Action Won Their Demands,” Jul 12 1933, 1

“Covington Co. Masses Storm Court House,” Jul 12 1933, 1

“Strike on R.F.C. Jobs in Memphis Stops Wage-Cut,” Jul 12 1933, 1

“Sears, Collegeville Preacher, Is Police Spy,” Jul 12 1933, 2

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

“A Call To Action,” Aug 15 1933, 4

“T.C.I. Workers To Head City Ticket Of B’ham Communist Party,” Aug 31 1933, 1

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

“B’ham Relief Workers Want Pay In Cash,” Sep 20 1933, 2

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


Red Diamond Coal Co.:
Important News In Short: Birmingham, Ala., Jul 1934, 2
Red Flag”:
“Stop No. Sea Practice And Sing Red Flag,” Sep 26 1931, 1

“Boy Gets One Year Sentence for Help To Tampa Strikers,” Jan 30 1932, 3


Red Front Fighters League:
“German Sailors’ Greetings,” Sep 26 1931, 1
Red International of Labor Unions:
“World Militants Meet In Moscow,” Sep 13 1930, 2

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

“Russian Revolution Meet in Charlotte,” Nov 1 1930, 5

“Celebrate Anniversary of Russian Revolution,” Nov 8 1930, 1

The Reds Say, Nov 8 1930, 4

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

“U.S. Negro On Moscow Soviet,” May 16 1931, 2

“Fight Against Hunger,” Sep 12 1931, 4

“No Illusions About Darrow,” Sep 26 1931, 4

“Strike Against Wage-Cuts,” Oct 3 1931, 4

“Canadian Police Kill Two Miners,” Oct 24 1931, 1

“To Launch New Central Organ For The T.U.U.L,” Dec 5 1931, 2

“Fakers Afraid Of Southern Mill Workers,” Mar 5 1932, 3
Red Mountain, Ala.:
“Lynch Posse On Hunt For Negro In Birmingham,” Apr 11 1931, 2

“T.C.I. Carries On Underhand Campaign Against Union Men,” Oct 1934, 4

“TCI Ore Miners Strike Against Layoff, Speed-Up,” Jun 1936, 1
Red Rammer, The:
“Forge Ahead! Build Party!” Sep 6 1930, 4
Red River:
“Flood Waters Now Exceeding 1927 Disaster,” Feb 6 1932, 2
Red River County, Tex.:
“Farmers Starve Thruout [sic] Country,” Jan 24 1931, 1
Red Square:
“Demonstrations Round World,” May 9 1931, 1

Important News In Short: Moscow, USSR, Dec 1934, 6


Red Trade Union Opposition of Germany:
“Int’l. Jobless Fighting Day,” Feb 7 1931, 1
Red Trade Unions of Czechoslovakia:
“Int’l. Jobless Fighting Day,” Feb 7 1931, 1
Red Wood Line:
“Speed-Up Kills Negro Worker,” Oct 18 1930, 3
Redmond, Sol:
“Murder Gang Indicts Three Mine Leaders,” Oct 24 1931, 1
Reds in Dixie”:
“Scottsboro and the White Workers,” May 1935, 6
Reed, Alex:
“New Orleans Dock Workers Strike,” Aug 16 1930, 1
Reed Shirt Factory:
News of the Month in the South, “Miners Help Striking LaFollette Clothing Workers”,” Mar 1937, 11
Reeltown, Ala.:
“Strengthen And Extend Share Croppers Union As Anwer [sic] To Dadeville Sentences,” May 20 1933, 2

“Miners Blacklisted As Mitch Sides With Scabs,” Nov 1934, 4

“Hero of Reeltown Murdered In Jail,” Jan 1936, 5

“Share Cropper Faces Prison,” Apr 1937, 6

News of the Month in the South, “Paroles Appealed for In Reeltown Cases,” May 1937, 12
Reeves, Hardy:
“Misled White Workers Fire Into Negroes,” Mar 14 1931, 2
Regensburg, E. & Sons:
“Tampa Police Try To Smash Picket Line,” Dec 12 1931, 2

“Defy the Tampa Injunction!” Dec 19 1931, 4


Regional Conference of Mexican Workers:
Eyes on the World, Dec 1936, 16
Rehaboth, Ala.:
“Ala. Farmers to Follow Militant Ark. Action,” Mar 7 1931, 3
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