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


Ruth, Jack: “Jailed 17 Times For Selling Anti-Long Book,” Jun 1935, 1 Rutherford County, Tenn



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Ruth, Jack:
“Jailed 17 Times For Selling Anti-Long Book,” Jun 1935, 1
Rutherford County, Tenn.:
“Oral Confession Claimed,” Dec 1934, 3
Rutherford, S.C.:
“Broke--Farmer Hangs Self,” Nov 29 1930, 2
Rutherfordton, N.C.:
“Starving Farmer Kills Self,” Mar 28 1931, 4

“Mill Workers Forced to Pay For Machinery,” Aug 22 1931, 3


Rutherland, E.W.
“The United Front in the South,” Jan 1935, 1
Ryan, C.A.:
“AF of L to Help Organize Agricultural Workers,” Jan 1937, 5
Ryan, Joseph F.:
“Longshoremen And Builders Fight Hunger,” Mar 5 1932, 3

“Strike Sentiment On Mobile Docks,” Nov 1934, 4

“Gulf Maritime Workers Strike,” Dec 1936, 1

“The Only Road,” Mar 1937, 15


Ryan, Marcelle:
“AF of L to Help Organize Agricultural Workers,” Jan 1937, 5
Ryder, Hugh:
“Kidnap, Beat Leaders; Gun Thugs Patrol Roads To Stop Pineville Meet,” Jan 30 1932, 1
Ryder, Tesa:
“Convicted Of Sedition,” Feb 14 1931, 3
-S-
Sabraton Mill:
“More Speed-Up,” Jan 10 1931, 4
Sacco, Ferdinando Nicola:
“Pledge At Sacco-Vanzetti Meets Save Atlanta Six,” Aug 30 1930, 1

“Mass Demonstration August 22,” Aug 15 1931, 1

“Demonstrate On August 22,” Aug 22 1931, 1

“Camp Hill Cropper At Chattanooga Meet,” Aug 29 1931, 1

“We Defy Harlan Censors,” Sep 19 1931, 4

“I.L.D. Broadcasts Call From Prison,” Oct 3 1931, 2

“Communism Stronger Each Year, Says Prof.,” Feb 20 1932, 3
Sacramento, Calif.:
“Mass Demand Of Jobless Grows Daily,” Nov 8 1930, 1

“Many Hunger Marches Thru Out Country,” Jan 17 1931, 1

“Hunger Regime Refuses Hear Our Demands,” Feb 14 1931, 1
Saffren, Clara:
“Scab Mine Union Officers Aid Cops,” Dec 26 1931, 1
St. Clairsville, Ohio:
“Steel Barons Reopen Case Against Reds,” Nov 22 1930, 2

Caption, “40,000 Miners Fighting Starvation,” Jul 4 1931, 4

Caption, “Arrested On the Picket Line,” Jul 11 1931, 4

“Grand Jury Frees Murderer,” Oct 10 1931, 4


St. Francis, Ark.:
“Red Cross Helps Planters Build Peonage In Ark.,” Feb 7 1931, 1
St. Genevieve, Mo.:
Lynch Law At Work, Oct 18 1930, 2
St. George, S.C.
“Aid For Southern Worker Not Coming Fast Enough,” Dec 20 1930, 1

“Another White Worker Says ‘Misled CRS” Is All Wrong,” Dec 20 1930, 4


St. John’s Church:
“Call State-Wide Ala. Meeting To Fight Lynchings,” Sep 20 1933, 1
St. Joseph’s Infirmary:
“Made Sick By Poor Ship Food,” Nov 15 1930, 3
St. Joseph, Mo.:
Lynch Law At Work: St. Joseph, Mo., Dec 27 1930, 2

Lynch Law At Work: St. Joseph, Mo., Jan 17 1931, 2


St. Landry farm:
“Resettlement Ousts Louisiana Farmers,” Dec 1936, 7
St. Landry Parish, La.:
“Organize Farmer-Labor Cooperative Plan,” Dec 1936, 6

“Farm: Farmers Union Protests Evictions by Resettlement,” Mar 1937, 13

“Cotton Row,” Mar 1937, 13

“Farmers Need Wagner Act,” Jun 1937, 8


St. Louis, Mo.:
“Fight Lynching,” Sep 20 1930, 4

“Call Southern Anti-Lynching Conference,” Sep 27 1930, 1

“Lynch Law at Work,” Oct 11 1930, 2

“State Lynch Law Condemns Tom Robertson,” Oct 18 1930, 1

“Expect Huge Anti-Lynch Conference in Chatta.,” Nov 8 1930, 1

“54 Delegates From 3 States Present; Send 9 to St. Louis,” Nov 15 1930, 1

“Eyes On St. Louis,” Nov 15 1930, 4

“Notice!” Nov 22 1930, 4

“Plan Nation Fight For Negro Rights,” Nov 29 1930, 1

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

“Lynch Law Justice,” Dec 13 1930, 1

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

“Hunger Marchers Demand Relief In Many Cities,” Jan 31 1931, 1

“Mrs. Mary King Peavy Shows Her Treachery,” Jan 31 1931, 4

“Not The Way,” Mar 7 1931, 2

“Strikers Fight Battle,” Mar 28 1931, 3

“Parade Welcomes Mrs. Patterson,” May 2 1931, 1

“Four Main Columns Will Reach Capitol Dec. 7th,” Oct 24 1931, 2

“Preparing To Take Demands To Washington,” Oct 31 1931, 1

“Swift Cuts Wages,” Dec 5 1931, 3

“Pencil Concern Comes To Tenn. For Low Wages,” Dec 26 1931, 1

“Frisco Ry. Pay Cut,” Feb 6 1932, 2

“Scottsboro Defense Committee,” Feb 1936, 6

“Squatters Win Demands,” May 1936, 2
St. Louis-San Francisco Railway:
“Kill Jobless Negro,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Frisco Ry. Pay Cut,” Feb 6 1932, 2


St. Paul, Minn.:
“Many Hunger Marches Thru Out Country,” Jan 17 1931, 1

“Hunger Regime Refuses Hear Our Demands,” Feb 14 1931, 1

“North Dakota Farmer Exposes Lemke’s Role,” Jul 1936, 4
St. Petersburg, Fla.:
“Bank Closes, Workers Lose,” Apr 25 1931, 2

“400 Cigar Workers Cheer I.L.D. Speaker,” Jun 20 1931, 1

“Fla. Bosses Try To Stop Organizing,” Aug 8 1931, 2

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

Important News In Short: Jacksonville, Fla., Jun 1935, 6
St. Simon’s Island, Ga.:
My Life, Dec 20 1930, 4
St. Vincent Millay, Edna:
“Smash Harlan Censorship,” Oct 17 1931, 3
Salem, N.C.:
“Wants Free Hand In Lynchings,” Jan 2 1932, 4
Saler, Ernest:
“New Orleans Police Arrest Ten Workers,” Sep 26 1931, 1
Sales Tax:
“Graves Breaks Pledge Levying Sales Tax,” Feb 1936, 8

“Who Pays The Sales Tax?” May 1936, 4

“Grid for Battle Against 3% Tax Graves Wants,” Nov 1936, 4

“La. Sales Tax Up 2%, Consumers Protest Bitterly,” Nov 1936, 4

“Sales Tax Passed In Alabama,” Jan 1937, 7

A Page For Southern Women, Mar 1937, 14

News of the Month in the South, “Alabama Gets New Sales Tax,” Apr 1937, 13

Editorial cartoon, May 1937, 2

A Page For Southern Women,” May 1937, 14
Salisbury, Md.:
“Negro Worker Lynched For Demanding Pay,” Dec 12 1931, 1

“Smash The Lynching Campaign,” Dec 12 1931, 4

“Ritchie, Maryland’s Lynch Governor, Defends Murderers of Matt Williams,” Dec 19 1931, 4

“Burn Baltimore Papers,” Jan 2 1932, 3

“Trace Lynch Rope To Fire Station,” Jan 16 1932, 2
Salisbury, N.C.:
“A.F. of L. Fakers Convene,” Aug 30 1930, 1

“34 Are Lynched In 9 Months,” Oct 4 1930, 4

“Tinsel To Eat,” Dec 27 1930, 2

“Southern Textile Workers Strike As Code Brings Pay Cuts,” Aug 15 1933, 1

News of the Month in the South, “Negro Youth Conference Extends Work Through South,” May 1937, 12
Salvation Army:
“Jail Jobless To Build State Road,” Jan 17 1931, 3

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“Salvation Army Urges Slavery For Jobless,” Sep 19 1931, 1

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

“Salvation Army Captain Tries to Fool Ex-Soldiers,” Oct 3 1931, 3

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

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

“Peterson Jury Cannot Agree; Another Trial,” Dec 19 1931, 2

“Feb. 4 Day Of Demonstratn’ Of Unemployed,” Jan 2 1932, 1

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

“Unemployed Of South To Act On February 4th,” Jan 16 1932, 2

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


Samoset, Ala.:
“Slashing Wages In Walker County Mines,” Nov 15 1930, 3
Samoset Cotton Mills:
“Mill Closes Down,” Jun 1936, 5

Trade Union Topics, Sep 1936, 2

“Organizer Framed for Murder,” Sep 1936, 3

“Court Frames Organizer; Gets 10 Years,” Dec 1936, 16

“Samoset Mill Claims Second Labor Victim,” Jan 1937, 8

News of the Month in the South, “Mistrial In Homer Welch Case,” Apr 1937, 11

News of the Month in the South, “Talledega [sic] Cotton Mill Raises Wages 10 Per Cent,” May 1937, 11
Sampson, Flem D.:
“Troops Enforce Injunction Against Striking Ky. Miners,” May 23 1931, 1

“Jail Miner On Frame-Up Then Burn His Home,” Oct 10 1931, 1

“W. Va. Miners Organizing,” Dec 26 1931, 1

“Offer Reward For Jackson Dead Or Alive,” Mar 5 1932, 1


Samuels, Alex:
“Workers Fight On In Orleans Strike,” May 16 1931, 2
San Antonio, Tex.:
Our Sustaining Fund, Jan 17 1931, 2

“400,000 Thruout [sic] Land In Jobless Demonstrations,” Mar 7 1931, 1

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

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

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

Lynch Law At Work: San Antonio, Tex., Jul 11 1931, 2

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

“Girls in Fincke Cigar Co., Texas, On Strike For Decent Conditions,” Aug 31 1933, 2

“Fincke On Strike Again; Boss Broke His Promises,” Sep 20 1933, 2

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

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

“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” Oct 1934, 1

Important News In Short: San Antonio, Tex., Oct 1934, 3

Important News In Short: San Antonio, Tex., Dec 1934, 6

“Texas Sheriff Jails Hundreds of Jobless,” May 1935, 2

“Texas Pecan Pickers Fight For Code Wage As NRA Stalls And Bosses Pay 15¢ A Day,” Jan 1935, 2

“Pecan Shellers Strike Again in San Antonio,” Mar-Apr 1935, 2

“Unemployed Aid Striking Girls,” Jun 1935, 5

“Texas Garment Workers Strike,” May 1936, 3

News of the Month in the South, “San Antonio W.A. Starts Organization Drive,” May 1937, 12


San Francisco, Calif.:
Our Sustaining Fund, Jan 24 1931, 2

“Hunger Marchers Demand Relief In Many Cities,” Jan 31 1931, 1

“400,000 Thruout [sic] Land In Jobless Demonstrations,” Mar 7 1931, 1

“2,500 Join Protest in San Francisco,” Jul 18 1931, 1

Untitled, Sep 5 1931, 2

“Four Main Columns Will Reach Capitol Dec. 7th,” Oct 24 1931, 2

“Fakers Force Pay Cut,” Jan 9 1932, 2

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

“Walker Failed to Get Mooney To Give Up Labor Activities,” Jan 16 1932, 1

“South Rallies For Kentucky Strike Relief,” Jan 30 1932, 1

“Tom Mooney’s Mother Pleads For Prisoners,” Mar 5 1932, 2

“I.L.D. Foils Legal Trick To Murder Scottsboro Boys,” Mar 25 1934, 2

Important News In Short: San Francisco, Calif., Oct 1934, 3

“Red Scare Raised As Union Big Shots Work With Bosses,” Oct 1934, 3

Important News in Short: San Francisco, Calif., Nov 1934, 4

Caption to photo of Harry Bridges, Dec 1934, 1

“Reds Blamed For Earthquake,” Dec 1934, 2

Important News In Short: San Francisco, Calif., Mar-Apr 1935, 6

Important News In Short: San Francisco, Calif., May 1935, 4

“AF of L to Help Organize Agricultural Workers,” Jan 1937, 5


San Jose, Calif.:
“In Land Of Free,” Dec 6 1930, 1

“Laundry Workers Strike,” Sep 1936, 5


San Quentin Prison:
“Building The Southern Worker,” Oct 11 1930, 2

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

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

“I.L.D. Broadcasts Call From Prison,” Oct 3 1931, 2

“Herndon Sees Mooney In San Quentin,” Feb 1935, 3

Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., May 1935, 4


Sand Springs, Okla.:
“They Didn’t Know,” May 1937, 15
Sanders, Joseph W.:
“Mobile Workers Win Demands After Splendid Struggle,” Jun 10 1933, 1

“Mobile Strikers Spurn Red Scare,” Oct 1934, 5

“Seeks Freedom For Framed-Up Youth,” Jan 1936, 1
Sanders, Charlie:
“Masked Cops Beat Negroes And Strip Girls,” Dec 1934, 3
Sandino, Augusto Cesar:
“Fight Yankee Imperialism,” Apr 18 1931, 2
Sandlin, J. Street:
“Sheriff Shoots Scottsboro Boy,” Feb 1936, 1
Sandy Ridge, Ala.:
Lynch Law At Work: Hayneville, Ala., Aug 15 1931, 2
Sanford, Edward:
Important News In Short: New Orleans, La., May 1935, 4
Sanford, W.H.:
“Barton is Freed By State Court,” Dec 1936, 7
Santa Fe, N.M.:
Important News In Short: Santa Fe, N.M., May 1935, 4
Santa Ana, Calif.:
“Labor Pickets Church,” Sep 1936, 6
Santa Claus:
“Wallops Santa Claus,” Dec 19 1931, 4

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


Santa Fe Railroad:
“Deport Mexican Who Worked Too Hard,” Mar 28 1931, 3
Santa Rosa, Calif.:
“Wasted Militancy,” Dec 20 1930, 2
Santiago, Cuba:
“Police Fire on Unemployed,” Jun 20 1931, 1
Santo Domingo:
“Nanking Govt. Troops Flock To Red Army,” Jan 30 1932, 4
Santos Fish Company:
“Defeat Wage-Cuts On Galveston Shrimp Docks,” Jul 4 1931, 3

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


Saratoga Victory Mills, Inc.:
Untitled, Oct 1934, 3
Sartain, R.H.:
“Ala. Farmers Union Convention Votes State Organization Drive,” Dec 1936, 7
Savannah, Ga.:
“Kills Son To Avoid Slow Death,” Dec 6 1930, 1

Lynch Law At Work: Savannah, Ga., Feb 14 1931, 2

“More Rayon Slaves,” Mar 7 1931, 3

“Central RR of Georgia Cuts Wages of All,” Dec 19 1931, 1

“Southern Vets Start On Way To Capitol Demanding Bonus,” Feb 1935, 2
Savannah, Tenn.:
“Farmers In Gun Fight For Bread,” Jan 3 1931, 1
Savedra, Adolfo:
“Girls in Fincke Cigar Co., Texas, On Strike For Decent Conditions,” Aug 31 1933, 2
Savona Mill:
“After Elections More Lay-Offs,” Nov 29 1930, 3

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

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

“Textile Mills Lay Off Hands,” Jan 10 1931, 2

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

“Closed Savona Mill Evicts From Houses,” Feb 14 1931, 3
Sawyer, Phillip:
“What Social Security Act Really Means,” Jan 1937, 11
Sayles Finishing Company:
“We Shan’t Forget,” Oct 1934, 2
Sayreton Mines:
“Work In Water At Sayreton Mines,” Nov 15 1933, 3
Scarborough, Ben:
“White Legion—Fascist Spy Gang Against Workers,” Jul 1934, 1
Scarlett, Rev. William:
“Scottsboro Defense Committee,” Feb 1936, 6
Shaefer, W.C.:
“Houston TUUL Continues Work Despite the Attacks of Police,” Oct 4 1930, 2
Schafer, A.L.:
“A.F. of L. Sells Out Danville Strike; Workers Blacklisted,” Feb 7 1931, 1
Schafer, N.D.:
“Lynch White Boy In North Dakota,” Feb 7 1931, 2

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


Scheiffelin, Col. William Jay:
“Scottsboro Defense Committee,” Feb 1936, 6
Scholtz, T. F.:
“Landlords Jail Four,” Jan 1935, 1
Schoolfield Cotton Mills:
“Danville Textile Mill Has Stretch-Out,” May 1935, 5
Schoolfield, Va.:
“Troops Called Into Danville,” Dec 6 1930, 1

“Use Tear Gas On Danville Mass Pickets,” Dec 13 1930, 1

“Spinners Do Doffing,” Aug 15 1931, 3
Schools:
“No School, But Labor,” Sep 20 1930, 1

The Reds Say, Sep 27 1930, 4

“From Childhood To Manhood,” Oct 25 1930, 3

My Life, Oct 25 1930, 4

My Life, Nov 1 1930, 6

“Opium For Children,” Jan 10 1931, 4

“Education For All,” Jan 31 1931, 3

“Mrs. Mary King Peavy Shows Her Treachery,” Jan 31 1931, 4

“Negro Teachers Get $34 Mo.,” Feb 21 1931, 2

“Barbarity of Capitalism,” Mar 7 1931, 4

“Discharge Teacher for Red Views,” Mar 14 1931, 4

“White Rulers Deny Negroes Schooling In Black Belt,” Mar 28 1931, 2

“Another Jim-Crow Law In Atlanta,” Apr 4 1931, 2

“Brutal Treatment in Alabama State School,” Apr 4 1931, 3

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

“Win Fight For Better School,” Jun 6 1931, 4

“Conference To Demand Schools,” Aug 29 1931, 1

“Ala. Teachers Get 10 Percent Pay Cut,” Sep 26 1931, 1

“Illiterate Alabama to Close More Schools,” Oct 10 1931, 4

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

“Jim Crow School Treats Children Worse Than Dogs,” Oct 17 1931, 3

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

“Bread Line For Teachers,” Dec 5 1931, 1

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

“Ill. Schools Close,” Dec 26 1931, 3

“Victims of Tampa Red Raids Sue for $12,000 Damages,” Jan 2 1931, 1

“National Relief On For Kentucky Striking Miners,” Jan 16 1932, 2

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

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

“Kentucky Schools May Close,” Jan 30 1932, 4

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

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

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

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

Important News In Short, “Students to Strike Against War,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6

“Young Farm Worker Wants School—Not Slavery,” Mar-Apr 1935, 7

Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., May 1935, 4

“Fighting Ring Corner For Southern Women,” Jan 1936, 3

“The Bankers Have The Key!” Mar-Apr 1936, 1

“WPA Children Go Hungry to School,” Mar-Apr 1936, 6

“American Youth Act: Amlie-Benson Bill,” Mar-Apr 1936, 7

News In Brief: Memphis, Tenn., Mar-Apr 1936, 8

“Facts To Know,” May 1936, 6

“Negro Girl Describes Jim Crow School,” Jun 1936, 7

“Health Low Wealth High In Carolina,” Jul 1936, 3

“No Help Given Rural Schools,” Nov 1936, 4

“Schools in Miss. To Be Cut Short,” Nov 1936, 5

A Page For Southern Women,” May 1937, 14

Untitled editorial cartoon, Jul 1937, 15

“School’s Our Right,” Jul 1937, 15


Schlasburg, William:
“Would Auction Self,” Jan 30 1932, 2
Schwab, Irving:
“Boys Denounce NAACP; Want Real Defense,” Jan 9 1932, 1

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

“Court System Of All South Under Attack,” Feb 6 1932, 1

“Tuscaloosa Lynch Officials Drive Out Lawyers For I.L.D.” Aug 15 1933, 1

“‘Forces Of Law’ In Alabama Are Parties To Savage Lynchings,” Aug 31 1933, 1
Scissors Workers Union:
“Workers Insurance Congress Unites Thousands in Washington: White, Negro Workers And Farmers Send Delegates From South,” Jan 1935, 1

“The United Front in the South,” Jan 1935, 1

“Durr May Have To Leave Town on Wave of Workers’ Anger At Lyncher Writings,” Jan 1935, 2

“Scottsboro Mother,” Jan 1935, 2

Important News In Short: Oxford, Miss., Jan 1935, 4
Scooba, Miss.:
Lynch Law At Work, Sep 20 1930, 1

“34 Are Lynched In 9 Months,” Oct 4 1930, 4

Lynch Law At Work: Scooba, Miss., Aug 15 1931, 2
Scott, B.A.:
“Miners Starve In Serfdom In West Virginia,” Apr 11 1931, 2
Scott, Harvey:
Important News in Short: Greenwood, Ark., Nov 1934, 4
Scott, Miss.:
“Cotton Row,” Mar 1937, 13
Scotts Run, W. Va.:
“New Magazine Will Give Lead to Workers in Class Struggle,” Dec 12 1931, 4
Scottsboro Aid Committee:
“Herndon Attorney To Speak in B’ham,” Jun 10 1933, 4
Scottsboro, Ala.:
“Set Trial On Fair Day To Assure Mobs,” Apr 4 1931, 1

“Protest Against Lynch Terror,” Apr 4 1931, 1

“Charges Against Negroes False, Lynch Law Reigns,” Apr 11 1931, 1

“Lynch Law and Starvation,” Apr 11 1931, 4

“Organize L.S.N.R. at Pell City,” Apr 18 1931, 1

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

“‘All Legal Forms Strictly Observed’,” Apr 18 1931, 4

“The Scottsboro Facts,” Apr 25 1931, 4

“The Issues of the Scottsboro Case,” Apr 25 1931, 4

“Parade Welcomes Mrs. Patterson,” May 2 1931, 1

Caption, “Refuses To Act,” May 2 1931, 1

“German Workers Wire Protest on Scottsboro,” May 9 1931, 1

“Scottsboro Protest Pours In From All Parts of Country,” May 9 1931, 4

“Bosses Protect White Women?” May 16 1931, 3

“Organize Scottsboro Defense Committee!” May 16 1931, 4

“Thousands In Protest March In New York,” May 23 1931, 1

“Setting Him Right,” May 23 1931, 4

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

“Lynch Justice At Scottsboro—Starvation At Stockam [sic] Pipe,” May 23 1931, 3

Caption, “Make Life Easier For Them,” May 23 1931, 4

“Legally Lynch Negro Worker In Elberton, Ga.,” May 30 1931, 1

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

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

Captions to photos, “Scottsboro Scenes,” May 30 1931, 4

“‘Peace And Harmony’ of an Electric Chair,” Jun 6 1931, 4

Staff box, Jun 13 1931, 4

“Chatta. Tag Day June 20th, 21st For Scottsboro,” Jun 20 1931, 1

“German Workers Protest Scottsboro Legal Lynching,” Jun 20 1931, 1

“Capitalist Courts in South as Lynch Agency for Mill and Land Owners,” Jun 20 1931, 4

“Notice!” Jun 27 1931, 1

“Mrs. Montgomery Speaking In Charlotte; Committee Challenges Others,” Jun 27 1931, 2

“Int’l Protest On Scottsboro,” Jul 11 1931, 1

Subscription blank, Jul 11 1931, 2

“Huge Demonstration in Chicago,” Jul 18 1931, 1

Subscription blank, Jul 18 1931, 2

“International Solidarity,” Jul 18 1931, 4

“Scottsboro Protest In U.S.S.R.,” Jul 25 1931, 1

Subscription blank, Jul 25 1931, 2

“Scottsboro Interrupts Show In Moscow,” Aug 1 1931, 2
“The Civilization They Tell us To Defend,” Aug 1 1931, 4

“Negro Judases and A.F. of L. Fakers Join Hands With Boss Class,” Aug 8 1931, 4

“Charlotte Meet Hits Murder of Chicago Workers,” Aug 15 1931, 2

“Black Judases in the Lynch Mob,” Aug 15 1931, 4

“Hit Chicago Massacre In Many Meets,” Aug 22 1931, 1

“The Southern Worker Reaches One Year,” Aug 22 1931, 2

“Camp Hill Cropper At Chattanooga Meet,” Aug 29 1931, 1

“Greetings From Y.C.L., District No. 17,” Aug 29 1931, 4

“Free Braxton On Bond; Legion In Anti-Red Drive,” Sep 5 1931, 1

Lynch Law At Work: Anniston, Ala., Sep 5 1931, 2

“‘White Man’s Nigger’ Creed,” Sep 5 1931, 4

“Tell Clara Holden To Get Out Or Be Killed,” Sep 12 1931, 1

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

“Help in the Fight to Keep The Southern Worker Alive,” Dec 5 1931, 2

“Southern Commission Exposed as Aid Of the Bosses in Lynch Terror Drive,” Dec 5 1931, 2

“Demand Release of Boys From Kilby Death Cells,” Dec 26 1931, 1

“Boys Denounce NAACP; Want Real Defense,” Jan 9 1932, 1

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

“Harry Simms Murdered By Gun Thug,” Feb 20 1932, 1

“Murder Charges Hurled Against Judge, Sheriff, Deputies Of Tuscaloosa County By I.L.D.,” Sep 20 1933, 1

“Twenty Negroes Burned Alive In Prison Truck,” Feb 1936, 1


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