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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Birmingham Board of Education:
“I.L.D. Rouses Fight Against Rapist Stool,” Nov 1934, 3
Birmingham Building Trades Council:
“A.F. of L. Fakers Lead in Hounding Negro Employee,” Jan 20 1934, 2

“45,000 Workers Cut from WPA In Ala. April 1,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4


Birmingham City Commission:
“The Birmingham Bosses Wage-Cutting Fund,” Jan 17 1931, 4

“Prohibit Distributions,” Jan 17 1931, 4

“Fight Evictions In Birmingham,” Jan 24 1931, 1

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

“White Legion—Fascist Spy Gang Against Workers,” Jul 1934, 1
Birmingham Civic Auditorium:
News of the Month in the South, “Birmingham W.P.A. Workers Protest Cuts at Mass Meeting,” May 1937, 12
Birmingham Civil Service Board:
News of the Month in the South, “Policeman Stapp Fired by Civil Service Board,” May 1937, 13
Birmingham Department of Public Welfare:
“White Legion—Fascist Spy Gang Against Workers,” Jul 1934, 1

“Relief Cut Off; Disease, Hunger Rampant in Ala.,” Mar-Apr 1936, 1


Birmingham Electric Company:
“Workers Fight B’ham Terror,” Sep 12 1931, 3

“Rank & File Raps Community Chest As Boss Racket,” Nov 1934, 2

“Nothing Too Low For Bosses Against Toilers,” Feb 1935, 1

“Try To Segregate Negroes In Busses,” Nov 1936, 4


Birmingham Flag Company:
“Steel Men Join Union Fast, CIO Leader Reports,” Nov 1936, 1
Birmingham Gun Club:
“Lynch Posse On Hunt For Negro In Birmingham,” Apr 11 1931, 2

Lynch Law At Work: Birmingham, Ala., Sep 19 1931, 2


Birmingham Labor Advocate:
The Reds Say, Nov 22 1930, 4
Birmingham Laundry:
“More Pay? ‘Bad Nigger,’ Says Boss, ‘Fired!’” Oct 4 1930, 3

“Laundries,” Jan 20 1934, 2


Birmingham News, The:
“Club Worker Asking Pay,” Oct 4 1930, 3

“Another Traitor Comes To Offer Help to Bosses,” Dec 13 1930, 2

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

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

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

“Scottsboro Conferences in 12 Cities,” May 16 1931, 4

“Communism Stronger Each Year, Says Prof.,” Feb 20 1932, 3

“Rape Frame-Ups Sweep South,” Dec 1934, 3

“Communists In The Labor Unions,” Dec 1934, 6

“Alabama Lynchers Don’t Count The Dead,” Jan 1936, 4

Trade Union Topics, “White Legion Being Revived,” Nov 1936, 2
Birmingham Ordinance District:
“War Plans In Birmingham Link Up Shops,” Oct 3 1931, 1
Birmingham Park Board:
“B’ham City Relief Cut As Plants Shut Down,” May 16 1931, 3

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


Birmingham Police Department:
“Student Sees Increasing Fascism,” Jul 1934, 3
Birmingham Post, The:
“Not April Fool For Jobless—But Misery,” Apr 11 1931, 4

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

“Talk of Mutiny In Alabama Prisons,” Jan 2 1932, 2

“Negro Worker Murdered By Birmingham Police,” Feb 1936, 7

“C.P. Leader Answers Lies Against USSR,” Jul 1936, 6

“What About Sit-Down Strikes?” Mar 1937, 5


Birmingham Stove and Range Company:
News of the Month in the South, “Steel Workers In Second Sit-Down Strike,” Mar 1937, 11

News of the Month in the South, “12,000 Birmingham Steel Workers Get Union Recognition,” May 1937, 11


Birmingham Tank Company:
“Steel Men Join Union Fast, CIO Leader Reports,” Nov 1936, 1
Birmingham Trades and Labor Council:
“Negro Judases and A.F. of L. Fakers Join Hands With Boss Class,” Aug 8 1931, 4

“White Legion—Fascist Spy Gang Against Workers,” Jul 1934, 1

“Rank & File Raps Community Chest As Boss Racket,” Nov 1934, 2

Important News In Short: Birmingham, Ala., Mar-Apr 1935, 6

“Farmers Condemn Bankhead and AAA,” Jan 1936, 3

“Trades Council Attacks Governor On Sales Tax,” Feb 1936, 1

Trade Union Topics, Feb 1936, 2

Trade Union Topics, Jul 1936, 2


Birmingham Truth:
“Expose Lies in ‘B’ham Truth’ on Scottsboro,” May 30 1931, 2
Birmingham World:
“Call State-Wide Ala. Meeting To Fight Lynchings,” Sep 20 1933, 1
Birminghamport, Ala.:
“Tennessee Coal and Iron Getting Ready for War,” Feb 20 1932, 2
Birth of a Nation”:
“Movie Whips Up Lynch Spirit,” Mar 28 1931, 4
Bismarck, N.D.:
A Communist To A Farmer, Nov 1 1930, 4
Bittner, Van A.:
“5-Day Penalty for Mining Rock,” Aug 30 1930, 3

“Miners To Picket White House, Hit Gov.; UMW Scabs,” Aug 1 1931, 1


Black, A.:
“Jail Speakers At Y.C.L. Meet,” Jul 18 1931, 2
Black Belt:
“Plan Nation Fight For Negro Rights,” Nov 29 1930, 1

“The Poor Farmer Bears the Burden,” Nov 29 1930, 4

“KKK Has Hard Job Fooling the Workers,” Dec 6 1930, 2

“Demands Death Penalty For Killers of Gates In Atlanta,” Dec 6 1930, 2

“Fakers Seek To Stop Anti-Lynch Fight,” Jan 3 1931, 2

“Farmers Want Red Organizers,” Feb 28 1931, 1

“The National Revolutionary Struggle of the Negroes,” Feb 28 1931, 4

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

“The Revolutionary National Struggle of the Negroes,” Mar 7 1931, 4

“Guilty Of Race Prejudice,” Mar 14 1931, 1

“Propose Laws To Stop Farmers and Workers From Organizing,” Mar 14 1931, 1

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

“Outlawing Communist Party in Alabama,” Mar 14 1931, 4

“Smash Bosses Terror March 28th,” Mar 21 1931, 1

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

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

“Cut Farm Wages To 25 Cents In Ala. Black Belt,” May 16 1931, 1

“Boy’s [sic] Parents To Be At Scottsboro Conference,” May 30 1931, 1

“Conference Denounces Traitors To Nine Boys,” Jun 6 1931, 1

“Y.C.L. Convention Shows Youth Task,” Jun 20 1931, 4

“Croppers Resist Cutting off Food,” Jul 11 1931, 1

“White and Negro, Fight Starvation on Farms,” Jul 25 1931, 4

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

“Wants Free Hand In Lynchings,” Jan 2 1932, 4

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

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

“What We Stand For,” May 20 1933, 1

“Write as You Fight,” May 20 1933, 3

“We Are Not Taking This One Lying Down,” Jun 10 1933, 4

“The Story Of My Life,” Sep 20 1933, 4

“The Russian Revolution—And Us,” Nov 15 1933, 4

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

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

“White Legion—Fascist Spy Gang Against Workers,” Jul 1934, 1

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

“Sharecroppers Win Strike Gains As Whites and Negroes Unite,” Oct 1934, 1

“The Textile Strike ‘Victory’,” Oct 1934, 6

“Nov. 7, Date Russian Workers Took Power In 1917, Observed In South,” Nov 1934, 2

“United Front Burning Need In Fight Against Hunger and Terror, Say Communists!” Dec 1934, 4

“Organize Against Slave Conditions In The Black Belt,” Dec 1934, 5

“United Front Mass Meetings Mark May 1 As Southern Toilers Join World Labor,” May 1935, 1

“Cropper’s Strike Wins Big Gains Despite Terror,” Jun 1935, 1

“I.L.D. Gains Removal From Death Cell For Patterson,” Jun 1935, 4

“Alabama Lynchers Don’t Count The Dead,” Jan 1936, 4

“45,000 Workers Cut from WPA In Ala. April 1,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4

“Why Poll Tax Reform?” May 1936, 8


Black, C.J.:
“The Bessemer City Strike,” Aug 30 1930, 4
Black, Hugo:
Build the New South: Alabama, Apr 1937, 2

Review of the Month, Sept 1937, 2


Black Hundreds:
“After Hoover, The Blackshirts,” Oct 18 1930, 1
Black, John:
“We Shan’t Forget,” Oct 1934, 2

Important News In Short: Norfolk, Va., May 1935, 4


Black Legion:
Photo caption, Jun 1936, 1

“Night Riders Charged With Death of Worker,” Jun 1936, 1

“The Black Legion,” Jun 1936, 8

“Organize Steel: Who Advocates Terror?” Jul 1936, 8

“Browder Exposes Slander Against Communists in Speech at Virginia U,” Sep 1936, 1

“Dread Death Planned By Black Klan,” Sep 1936, 3

Trade Union Topics, “White Legion Being Revived,” Nov 1936, 2

Black Mountain Coal Co.:
“Form Mine Committee At Exeter,” Apr 11 1931, 1

“Frame 13 Strikers For Mine Guard Death In Harlan, Ky.,” Apr 25 1931, 2

“Ky. Miners In Sharp Struggle,” May 9 1931, 1

“Troops Enforce Injunction Against Striking Ky. Miners,” May 23 1931, 1

“Operators Indict 28 Harlan Miners in Murder Frame-Up,” May 30 1931, 1

“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1


Black Sea:
“Intervention; - It’s [sic] Meaning,” Dec 13 1930, 4
Black Shirts: see American Order of Fascisti:
Black Star Coal Co.:
“How the ‘Black List’ Works In Kentucky Coal Regions,” Oct 10 1931, 1
Blacklisting:
“A.F. of L. Sells Out Danville Strike; Workers Blacklisted,” Feb 7 1931, 1

“Try To Frame Militant In Elizabethton,” Feb 7 1931, 2

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

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

“How the ‘Black List’ Works In Kentucky Coal Regions,” Oct 10 1931, 1

“Call To Action Against Harlan Thug Rule and Mass Starvation,” Dec 12 1931, 1

“General Strike is Prepared to Defeat Starvation Rule and Drive Out Bosses’ Gun Thugs,” Dec 19 1931, 1

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

“Demands on Which Harlan-Bell-Tenn. Strike Called,” Dec 26 1931, 2

“Atlanta Textile Worker Wants Paper Spread,” Jun 1935, 5


Blacklock, J. V.:
“We Shan’t Forget,” Oct 1934, 2
Blackmont, Ky.:
“How the ‘Black List’ Works In Kentucky Coal Regions,” Oct 10 1931, 1
Blackwell, Ark.:
“We Suit His Calibre,” Jan 1937, 16
Blackwell, C.:
Lynch Law At Work: Baton Rouge, La., Nov 22 1930, 2
Blackwood, Ibra Charles:
“Textile Strikes Sweep South As N.R.A. Brings Pay-Cuts, Stretch-Out,” Nov 15 1933, 1

“Textile Workers Attacked,” Jul 1934, 1


Bladenboro, N.C.:
“Gun Thugs Crush Bladenboro Strike Against Wage Cut,” Feb 20 1932, 2
Blagden, Willie Sue:
Caption, Jul 1937, 13

“Negro Union Leader Describes Beating,” Jul 1937, 13


Blair, John Henry:
“AF of L Called in Troops; Miners In Mass Protest,” May 16 1931, 1

“Operators Indict 28 Harlan Miners in Murder Frame-Up,” May 30 1931, 1

“Miners Ask Help In Harlan Strike,” Jun 6 1931, 1

“Miners Prepare Strike In Ky. Despite Thugs,” Aug 1 1931, 1

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

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

“Machine Guns Ready, Trained On Miners,” Aug 22 1931, 1

“Miners Face Gunmen To Hear Report NMU Unity Conference,” Aug 22 1931, 3

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

“‘Law and Order’ in Harlan County,” Aug 29 1931, 4

“Deputy Murders 3 Harlan Miners,” Sep 5 1931, 1

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

“Rabid Judge Directs Fight For Owners,” Sep 12 1931, 1

“Defeat Raid Against Homes by Mass Action,” Sep 19 1931, 4

“Hundred and Twenty-Five at Conference,” Sep 19 1931, 1

“Lane Turns Over Harlan Members,” Sep 19 1931, 1

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

“Miners Getting Ready To Launch Big Fight,” Sep 26 1931, 1

“Arrest Kimbel In Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 4

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

“Sick Workers Hail Fighting Paper Of Southern Masses,” Oct 10 1931, 2

“T. Meyerscough [sic] And Jim Grace Taken For Ride,” Oct 10 1931, 1

“Straight Creek Mines Resist Wages Cutting,” Oct 17 1931, 1

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

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

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

“Harlan Miners Prepare Fight Again't Terror,” Dec 5 1931, 1

“Mass Action Wins Defense for Jones,” Dec 12 1931, 1

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

“Fascism Came To Miners of Harlan, Ky.,” May 1936, 6


Blakely, Norman:
“Reveal Torture On Chain Gangs,” Dec 6 1930, 2

“Ruling Class Takes Another 17-Year-Old Negro Boy’s Life,” Jun 6 1931, 4


Blalock, Edgar:
“Sheriff Shoots Scottsboro Boy,” Feb 1936, 1
Blanchard, Okla.:
Lynch Law At Work: Blanchard, Okla., Dec 27 1930, 2

Bland, O.C.:
“Two Centralia Prisoners Out After 12 Years,” Jan 9 1932, 2
Blawnox, Pa.:
“Denied Hospital Treatment,” Oct 31 1931, 4
Blaylock, Florence:

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


Blease, Cole:
The Reds Say, Sep 6 1930, 4
Block, Elsa, aka Elizabeth Lawson:
“Jail 4 Workers in Chatta., Call City Hall Meet Feb. 25,” Feb 14 1931, 1

“Chatta. Trial Set March 19,” Mar 14 1931, 1

“Vote For Workers Men In the Chatta. Elections!” Mar 14 1931, 1

“Arrest M. Coads, Negro Candidate, Trial Thursday,” Mar 21 1931, 1

“Smash Bosses Terror March 28th,” Mar 21 1931, 1

“Chattanooga Trial Set March 31,” Mar 28 1931, 1

“Tenn. Prisons Hell Holes Report Shows,” Mar 28 1931, 1

“State Mobilizes Forces To Jail Jobless Leaders,” Apr 4 1931, 1

“Comrades Tell of Relief Fight, Communist Party,” Apr 11 1931, 1

“Capitalism versus Communism,” Apr 11 1931, 4

“Hit Chatta. Boss Terror Again,” Apr 18 1931, 1

“Chat. Comrades Win New Trial,” Apr 25 1931, 1

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

Contributor, “Diet, Not Climate, Responsible for Disease Says Southern Writer,” Sep 1936, 5

Contributor, “South’s Starvation Wages Responsible for ‘Germ of Laziness,’ Declares Writer,” Oct 1936, 4

Contributor, “Diseases in South Result of Low Living Standard,” Nov 1936, 7

Contributor, “She Never Lost A Passenger,” Jan 1937, 14
Block, Ana:
“Pickens Hounded Out Of Meeting By Angry Workers,” Jul 18 1931, 2
Blocton, Ala.:
“‘Forces Of Law’ In Alabama Are Parties To Savage Lynchings,” Aug 31 1933, 1
Bloor, Ella Reeve:
“Communist Party Holds National Convention,” Jun 1936, 7

“Browder, Ford Nominated by Communists,” Jul 1936, 1

“Mother Bloor Applauded in Tennessee,” Sep 1936, 5
Bloomfield, Sidney:
“Build The Southern Worker,” Oct 18 1930, 2
Blount County, Ala.:
“45,000 Workers Cut from WPA In Ala. April 1,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4
Blountstown, Fla.:
“Lynch Two Negro Workers In Fla.,” Sep 5 1931, 2
Blow, Peter E.
“Armed Thugs Hold Up Highway Com.,” Feb 20 1932, 4
Blue Bell Overall Co.:
“Overall Factory Starves Workers,” Feb 1936, 4
Blue Buckle Overall Co.:
“61 Cents For 36 Hours Work,” Aug 15 1931, 3
Blue Diamond Coal Co.:
“Company Thug Killed As He Attacks Men,” Jan 9 1932, 4
Blue Mountain Mill:
“Googe Betrays Blue Mountain Strike To Boss,” Jun 10 1933, 2
Blue Springs, Ala.:
“Poor Farmers Shot Down By Landowners,” Dec 6 1930, 1
Blum, Leon:
Eyes On The World, Jan 1937, 15
Blumenthal Mills:
“800 Weavers In Conn. On Strike,” Mar 14 1931, 2
Blytheville, Ark.:
“Strange? No, System Makes Starvation,” Feb 28 1931, 4

“Execution Stay Is Won In Ark. Rape Frame-Up,” Jun 1935, 4

“Jailed 17 Times For Selling Anti-Long Book,” with photo, Jun 1935, 1

“S.T.F.U. Appeals to LaFollette to Investigate Ark.,” Jul 1937, 13


Board of Agricultural Economics:
“U.S. Farm Expert Lies About Farm Wages,” Mar 28 1931, 3

Boas, Franz:
“Smash Harlan Censorship,” Oct 17 1931, 3
Bogalusa, La.:
“$1.50 A Day Rotten Work In Miss. Sawmills, Railroad,” Sep 27 1930, 3
Boissevain Mine:
“38 Virginia Workers Die In Mine Blast,” Mar 5 1932, 3
Bolick, C.W.:
“U.T.W. Tries To Hide Strike Lies,” Feb 21 1931, 1
Bolivar, Tenn.:
Lynch Law At Work: Bolivar, Tenn., May 23 1931, 2
Bolshevik Revolution: see Russian Revolution

Bolshevism:


The Reds Say, Oct 4 1940, 4

“Blackshirts Balked By Workers in Charlotte” Oct 25 1930, 2

“Build The Southern Worker Drive,” Nov 1 1930, 2

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

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

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

“On The Path Of The Bolshevik Revolution,” Nov 8 1930, 4

Advertisement, “Heresy:” Dec 6 1930, 3

The Reds Say, Dec 13 1930, 4

“Lenin Memorial Meetings,” Jan 17 1931, 1

“Lenin—Inspiration of Southern Toilers,” 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

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


Bolton, Miss.:
“Lynch Wave On Increase,” Sep 1934, 2
Bombay, India:
“Indian Workers Fight On,” Jan 31 1931, 3
Bombings:
“Kill 1, Wound 4, Jail Communist Organizer,” Aug 15 1931, 1
Bonaparte, Louis:
“Workers Hail Paris Commune,” Mar 21 1931, 4
Bonds, Richard:
News In Brief: Memphis, Tenn., Feb 1936, 4
Boone, N.C.:
“Drunk Bosses Beat Prisoners,” Sep 13 1930, 1
Booth, Roy:
“Reveal Flogging Compact in Fla.,” Apr 11 1931, 3
Boothton, Ala.:
“N.R.A. Brings Fast Pace, Less Pay To Boothton Miners,” Nov 15 1933, 3
Boraski, Mike:
Caption to photo of housing, Mar 25 1934, 4
Borders, A.F.:
“Googe Betrays Blue Mountain Strike To Boss,” Jun 10 1933, 2
Borenstein, Samuel:
Vote Communist!, Oct 4 1930, 1

Register!” Oct 18 1930, 4

“Our Candidates,” Nov 1 1930, 1

“Vote Down Fake Relief Plan In Tenn.--Vote Red,” Nov 1 1930, 5

“Red Vote In Tennessee To Reach 2,000; Party Backed Thruout State”,” Nov 15 1930, 1

“Reds Polled 3,392 Votes In Tennessee,” Dec 27 1930, 1

“Persecute Communist,” Apr 4 1931, 2
Borich, Frank:

“Miners! Unite And Fight!” Jul 4 1931, 1

“Tennessee Miners Organizing in N.M.U.,” Oct 10 1931, 2

“Miners’ Union Protests Sell-Out of Lawrence Textile Strikers,” Dec 12 1931, 4

“New Magazine Will Give Lead to Workers in Class Struggle,” Dec 12 1931, 4

“General Strike is Prepared to Defeat Starvation Rule and Drive Out Bosses’ Gun Thugs,” Dec 19 1931, 1

“Conference To Spread Strike On January 17,” Jan 9 1931, 1
Boring, Rand:
Contributor, “Tenders of Low-Flaming Fires,” Jul 1937, 15
Bosch, John:
“Farm Leaders Hit Reduction In Crop Acres,” Feb 1936, 4
Boston Common:
“Pledge At Sacco-Vanzetti Meets Save Atlanta Six,” Aug 30 1930, 1

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

“Demonstrations Round World,” May 9 1931, 1
Boston Guardian:
“Scottsboro Conferences in 12 Cities,” May 16 1931, 4
Boston, Mass.:
“Pledge At Sacco-Vanzetti Mass Meets Save Atlanta Six,” Aug 30 1930, 1

Untitled, Sep 13 1930, 4

“AF of L Holds The Vilest Anti-Labor Convention,” Oct 18 1930, 1

“Hoover, Law and Order, Booze and Communism,” Oct 18 1930, 2

“Raise A Mailed Fist Over King’s Mountain!” Oct 18 1930, 4

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

Our Sustaining Fund, Jan 24 1931, 2

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

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

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

“Demonstrations Round World,” May 9 1931, 1

“Pickens Hounded Out Of Meeting By Angry Workers,” Jul 18 1931, 2

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

“Boston Dress Strike,” Oct 24 1931, 3

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

“New Magazine Will Give Lead to Workers in Class Struggle,” Dec 12 1931, 4

“Boston Banks Crash,” Dec 26 1931, 2

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

“‘Crush Our Present Weakness Through Revolutionary Competition’ Says Charlotte District Y.C.L. in Challenge to the Boston District,” Feb 6 1932, 4

“District No. 16 Communist Party Challenges District No. 17 in Drive For New Members,” Feb 6 1932, 4

“Communism Stronger Each Year, Says Prof.,” Feb 20 1932, 3

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


Boulder Dam:
“Many Unemployed, But County Uses Chaingang,” Apr 25 1931, 3
Bouton, Charles C.:
“Arkansas Conditions Worst In History,” Jan 17 1931, 4
Bowen, J.R.:
“Pickens, In Chattanooga, Cries ‘Lynch’ For ‘Reds’,” Jun 13 1931, 1
Bowling, B.:
“Will Demand New Trial For Framed Share-Croppers,” Aug 15 1933, 1
Box, William:
“WPA Strikers in Alabama Win Partial Demands,” May 1936, 1
Boy Scouts of America:
“Young Toilers and Elections,” Nov 1 1930, 5

“No Rubbish, Please!” Nov 29 1930, 2

“Frozen Children Get No Aid,” Dec 6 1930, 1

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

“Defy the Tampa Injunction!” Dec 19 1931, 4
Boyd, Archie:
“Mine Explosion Kills Six Miners,” Jan 30 1932, 4
Boyd, Caswell:
“Kidnap, Beat Leaders; Gun Thugs Patrol Roads To Stop Pineville Meet,” Jan 30 1932, 1
Boyd, Foster:
“Mine Explosion Kills Six Miners,” Jan 30 1932, 4
Boyd, Romaine:
“White Legion—Fascist Spy Gang Against Workers,” Jul 1934, 1
Boyken, S.F.:
“Racketeers in Patriotism,” May 1937, 6
Boykin, John A.:
Important News In Short: Atlanta, Ga., Feb 1935, 4

“Eighteen Held on Herndon Law in Atlanta Jail,” Jun 1936, 1

“The Insurrection Law,” Jun 1936, 8
Boylston Crown Mill:
“Speed-Up In Dalton Mills,” Sep 13 1930, 3
Boynton, E.:
“Halt Evictions In Chattanooga,” Oct 17 1931, 4
Boys’ Clubs:
“Defy the Tampa Injunction!” Dec 19 1931, 4
Brabston, T.G.:
“Nothing Too Low For Bosses Against Toilers,” with photo, Feb 1935, 1
Bracey, Ed:
“Alabama Lynchers Don’t Count The Dead,” Jan 1936, 4

“S.T.F.U. Meets In Arkansas,” Jan 1936, 4


Bracketville, Tex.:
“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” Oct 1934, 1
Braddock, James:
“Winnah and New Champ,” Jul 1937, 4
Bradford, Ala.:
“Ala. Miners Down Tools, Defy Strike-Breaking Order Of N.R.A. Board,” Mar 25 1934, 1
Bradford Brown Educational Co.:
Advertisement, “Heresy:” Dec 6 1930, 3
Bradford, Gaines T.:
“All-South Conference Called On Lynching, For Union Rights,” Jan 1935, 2

Caption, “All-South Meet For Union Civil Rights Called As Fight On Sedition Bills Grows,” Mar-Apr 1935, 1


Bradford, William:
Lynch Law At Work: McGehee, Ark., Sep 19 1931, 2
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