Federation of Architects, Engineers, Chemists and Technicians:
“Workers’ Congress To Washington Supported By Southern Masses As Unions Back Insurance Bill,” Dec 1934, 1
Federation of Workers Leagues:
“Facts Show 9 Negro Boys Innocent; Protest Grows,” Apr 25 1931, 1
Feldman, Jean:
“400,000 Thruout [sic] Land In Jobless Demonstrations,” Mar 7 1931, 1
Fellows, Tom:
A Page for Southern Women, “UMW striker,” Jun 1937, 8
Fellowship Forum, The:
“Racketeers in Patriotism,” May 1937, 6
Fellowship of Reconciliation:
“Southern Commission Exposed as Aid Of the Bosses in Lynch Terror Drive,” Dec 5 1931, 2
Fentress Coal and Coke Co.:
“Strikes At Belton And Seneca,” Jun 10 1933, 2
Fentress County, Tenn.:
“Tenn. Miners Ready for General Strike,” Jun 13 1931, 1
“Union Miners Attacked in Fentress Co., Tenn.,” Jul 1937, 12
Ferber, Edna:
“Decadent Ruling Class Youth,” Sep 26 1931, 4
Ferguson, Miriam:
“T.E. Barlow, Martyred Leader Of The Southern Workers,” Nov 15 1933, 4
Ferguson, Romaine:
“Fight Lynching,” Sep 20 1930, 4
Fincke Cigar Company:
“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
Fincke, Ed:
“Fincke On Strike Again; Boss Broke His Promises,” Sep 20 1933, 2
Findlay, Julius:
Lynch Law At Work: Greenville, S.C., Sep 5 1931, 2
Findley, James E.:
“Chattanooga Bar Head Lauds The Soviet Schools,” Nov 7 1931, 2
Finland:
“Smash Bosses Terror March 28th,” Mar 21 1931, 1
“Wall Street’s War Game,” Oct 3 1931, 4
“Workers Of South Must Carry Out Mass Fight Against War Plotters,” Oct 31 1931, 1
“Yank Bandits Back Warfare In Manchuria,” Dec 5 1931, 1
“Hatch Murder Plot For War Against USSR,” Jan 2 1932, 1
Finnish Labor Club:
“No Place For Race Prejudice,” Mar 7 1931, 1
Finnish Women’s Club:
“Farewell Banquet,” Nov 7 1931, 4
Finnish Workers’ Hall:
“Farewell Banquet,” Nov 7 1931, 4
Fire departments:
News In Brief: Memphis, Tenn., Feb 1936, 4
News Notes: Memphis, Tenn., Mar-Apr 1936, 7
Fire Fighters International Association:
“AF of L Reactionaries Block Support of Scottsboro Boys,” Jan 1937, 4
Firestone, Harvey S.:
“Less For Whom,” May 9 1931, 3
Firestone Rubber Co.:
“Mrs. Mary King Peavy Shows Her Treachery,” Jan 31 1931, 4
“Garvey Exposed As Swindler,” Apr 11 1931, 1
First National Bank of Montgomery, Ala.:
“Ala. Miners Down Tools, Defy Strike-Breaking Order Of N.R.A. Board,” Mar 25 1934, 1
Fish Committee:
“A.F. of L. Fakers Convene,” Aug 30 1930, 1
“Fish Trails Reds South,” Oct 25 1930, 1
“Fish Begins Work in Chattanooga,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“Urge T.C.I. Terror For Communists,” Nov 22 1930, 1
“Negroes Suffer Most In Crisis,” Nov 22 1930, 1
“B’ham Police Renew Effort to Oust Reds,” Dec 6 1930, 2
“Workers Pay For Charity Out of Starvation Wages,” Dec 6 1930, 3
“Reds Fish Missed,” Dec 13 1930, 2
“Negro Faker In Anti-Red Drive,” Jan 31 1931, 1
“Ready To Stop Danville Relief,” Jan 31 1931, 1
“N.T.W.U. Exposes Danville Sell-Out,” Feb 14 1931, 4
“Cops Must Admit Reds Growing In Charlotte Area,” Feb 21 1931, 4
“House Launches Attack Against Foreign-Born,” Feb 28 1931, 2
“Jail Red Union Leaders In New Orleans Strike,” Mar 21 1931, 1
“Party Recruiting Drive In District No. 16,” Jan 16 1932, 4
Fish, Hamilton, III, also Fish, Hamilton, also Fish, Hamilton, Jr.:
“Bosses Cry For War On U.S.S.R.,” Oct 4 1930, 1
“Fish Trails Reds South,” Oct 25 1930, 1
“Fish Flops Around In Stale Water,” Oct 25 1930, 3
The Reds Say, Nov 1 1930, 6
“Fish Begins Work in Chattanooga,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“Urge T.C.I. Terror For Communists,” Nov 22 1930, 1
“The Fish Committee,” Nov 22 1930, 4
“Reds Fish Missed,” Dec 13 1930, 2
The Reds Say, Jan 3 1931, 4
“Attack Communists,” Jan 17 1931, 2
“‘Outlaw Reds’ Says Ham Fish,” Jan 24 1931, 2
“Jailed Jobless Leader Says Must Build Southern Worker,” Jan 31 1931, 4
“Is This Convict Labor Mr. Fish?” Mar 28 1931, 4
“D.A.R. Fears Communists; Call For Police,” May 2 1931, 3
Fisher, Jules:
“Jailed 17 Times For Selling Anti-Long Book,” Jun 1935, 1
Fisher Body Corp.:
“1,500 Atlanta Auto Workers Strike,” Jan 1937, 6
Caption, Mar 1937, 12
Fisk University:
“Scottsboro Deaths Halted By I.L.D., Mothers Berate Liebowitz [sic],” Dec 1934, 1
Caption to photo of James W. Ford, Nov 1936, 3
Fitzgerald, H.R.:
“Danville Strikers Fight On,” Dec 20 1930, 1
“Danville Mills Evict Strikers From Co. Homes,” Mar 7 1931, 1
Five Year Plan:
“5-Year Plan Continues Work of Lenin In Soviet Union,” Jan 17 1931, 4
“Pledge Speed Up 5-yr Plan at Soviet Meets,” Jan 31 1931, 2
“Hatch Murder Plot For War Against USSR,” Jan 2 1932, 1
Flat Creek, Ala.:
“Slashing Wages In Walker County Mines,” Nov 15 1930, 3
Fleener, Joe:
“Deputy Murders 3 Harlan Miners,” Sep 5 1931, 1
Fleger, F.E.:
“Racketeers In Patriotism.” May 1937, 6
Fleming, Tom:
Lynch Law At Work: Elizabethton [sic], N.C., Nov 1 1930, 2
Flenn, Robert:
“Work Like Mules in Steel Trusts Ala. Coal Mines,” Dec 5 1931, 3
Fletcher Mill:
“20,000 Alabama Textile Workers Strike, Picket,” Sep 1934, 1
Fletcher, Shelby:
“Gangs Terrorize Farmers Who Won’t Plow Under; Landlords Pocket Profits of Destruction,” Aug 15 1933, 2
Flint, Mich.:
“What About Sit-Down Strikes?” Mar 1937, 5
Flipper, Carol:
“Gorman Says Will Break Next Danville Strike,” May 30 1931, 1
Florence, Ala.:
Lynch Law At Work: Florence, Ala., Nov 1 1930, 2
“Not Worth Picking,” Dec 6 1930, 2
“A Vicious Sentence,” Apr 25 1931, 1
Lynch Law At Work: Florence, Ala., Aug 29 1931, 2
“20,000 Alabama Textile Workers Strike, Picket,” Sep 1934, 1
“Alabama Labor At The Crossroads,” Mar-Apr 1936, 2
“Mill Strikers Slept On Railway Tracks to Keep Cars Still,” Mar-Apr 1936, 6
“State Bodies Vote for Industrial Unionism: U.M.W.A. Leads In Battle For Progressive Measures At Tenn.-Ala. Conventions,” May 1936, 1
Trade Union Topics, Jun 1936, 2
Florence, Italy:
Important News In Short: Abyssinia, Mar-Apr 1935, 6
Florida Booster:
“Scottsboro Conferences in 12 Cities,” May 16 1931, 4
Florida Citrus Exchange:
“Florida Citrus Workers Strike Against Pay Cut In Spite Of Misleaders,” Jan 1935, 5
Florida Federation of Labor:
News of the Month in the South, “Fla. Federation Starts Organizing Citrus Workers,” May 1937, 13
Florida State Federation of Workers’ Leagues:
“Workers’ Congress To Washington Supported By Southern Masses As Unions Back Insurance Bill,” Dec 1934, 1
Florida State Insane Asylum:
“Negro War Vet Tells Of ‘Glorious’ War,” Jul 18 1931, 1
Floyd City, Ky.:
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
Floyd, Claude:
“Warfare For Bread On Farms,” Jan 24 1931, 1
Floyd, Hal:
“Unemployed of Knoxville In Relief Drive,” Feb 20 1932, 2
Floyd, Harriet:
“Belle Martin Is Arrested On WPA Picket Line,” May 1936, 3
Floyd, William:
“McCleny Turpentine Operators Charged with Peonage,” Jul 1937, 13
Fluker, L.S.:
Important News In Short: Montgomery, Ala., Sep 1934, 3
Flynn, Will:
Lynch Law At Work: McGehee, Ark., Sep 19 1931, 2
Fontaine, Margaret:
“Spread Strike As Thugs Raid Union Center,” Jan 9 1932, 1
“Jail Defense Attorney On Arrival In Ky.,” Jan 16 1932, 1
Fontanelle, L.T.:
Lynch Law At Work: New Orleans, La., Aug 15 1931, 2
Fontenot, Louis:
“Resettlement Ousts Louisiana Farmers,” Dec 1936, 7
“Cotton Row,” Mar 1937, 13
Foraman, A.M.:
“Workers Get Candidates On Ballot, Fight Terror in Campaign,” Nov 1934, 1
Forbes, George:
The Reds Say, Sep 13 1930, 4
“Forced Labor in the United States”:
“‘Everything’s Lovely,’ Says Tennessee’s Prison Head!” Aug 31 1933, 4
Ford, Henry:
The Reds Say, Sep 27 1930, 4
“Who Is Starving?” Apr 18 1931, 4
“Jim Crow Relief For The Unemployed of Tampa, Fla.,” Sep 19 1931, 3
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
“Harlan County Thugs Take Moreland for Ride,” Oct 24 1931, 1
“Secret Jailing of Miners Is Exposed In Ky.,” Oct 24 1931, 3
“Soviet Young Workers,” Nov 7 1931, 4
“W. Va. Miners Organizing,” Dec 26 1931, 1
“Internation’l Workers’ Aid Issues Appeal,” Jan 2 1932, 1
“Spread Strike As Thugs Raid Union Center,” Jan 9 1932, 1
“Big Campaign In N. Orleans For Ky. Miners,” Feb 6 1932, 3
“The Murder of Harry Simms a Challenge to the Working Class,” Feb 20 1932, 4
Red Rhymes, Aug 31 1933, 4
Red Rhymes, Sep 20 1933, 4
“N.R.A. Brings Fast Pace, Less Pay To Boothton Miners, Nov 15 1933, 3
“Workers Oppose Deputy Gunman,” Feb 1935, 2
“’My Old Kentucky Home’ of Miners and Unemployment in Harlan County,” Dec 1936, 12-13
Ford, James W.:
“Scottsboro Deaths Halted By I.L.D., Mothers Berate Liebowitz [sic],” Dec 1934, 1
“Police in Brutal Attack,” photo, Mar-Apr 1935, 2
“Communist Leader Tours South,” Mar-Apr 1935, 7
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Jun 1935, 6
“Communist Party Holds National Convention,” Jun 1936, 7
“Browder, Ford Nominated by Communists,” Jul 1936, 1
Caption, “Negro Leader Calls for Unity Of Action,” Jul 1936, 4
“The Communist Ticket,” Jul 1936, 8
“Vote Communist,” Nov 1936, 1
Caption, thumbnail biography, Nov 1936, 3
“Yes, Communists Run James Ford, Republicans Told,” Nov 1936, 3
“Communists Come Through Election with Increased Vote,” Dec 1936, 8
“Mobile’s Scribes and Pharisees,” Dec 1936, 12
Ford Motor Co.:
“Workers Thruout [sic] World Demonstrate August 1st,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“Will We Permit Third Winter of Starvation?” Aug 8 1931, 4
Ford Ridge, Ky.:
“Ky. Miners Find That ‘New Deal’ Means Pay-Cuts,” Sep 20 1933, 3
Ford, Will:
Lynch Law At Work: Memphis, Tenn., Dec 20 1930, 2
Ford, W.L.:
Lynch Law At Work: Raymond, Miss., Aug 16 1930, 3
Fordson Co.:
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
Foreign Affairs Committee, U.S. House of Representatives:
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Mar-Apr 1935, 6
Foreman, Ark.:
Lynch Law At Work: Foreman, Ark., Oct 4 1930, 2
Forest Chemical Products Company:
“Hitch Men To Plows In Red Cross Fields,” Sep 20 1933, 3
Forrest City, Ark.:
“Terror Fails to Break Cotton Choppers Strike,” Jun 1936, 5
“S.T.F.U. Appeals to LaFollette to Investigate Ark,” Jul 1937, 13
Fornication laws:
“Chatta. Trial Set March 19,” Mar 14 1931, 1
“Chattanooga Trial Set March 31,” Mar 28 1931, 1
Forsman, A.M.:
“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” Oct 1934, 1
Forsyth, A.R.:
“Deputies’ Fire Kills 2 Miners; Wounds Many,” Oct 1934, 1
Forsyth County Medical Society:
“Doctors Get Theirs,” Dec 6 1930, 4
Forsyth County, N.C.:
“Doctors Get Theirs,” Dec 6 1930, 4
“The Stuff Boss Justice Is Made Of,” Dec 20 1930, 2
Forsythe County Welfare Department:
“N.C. Firms ‘Do Their Part’ By Cutting Wages, Aug 31 1933, 3
Forsyth Furniture Lines:
“Winston-Salem Notes,” Dec 20 1930, 2
Ft. Collins, Colo.:
“AF of L to Help Organize Agricultural Workers,” Jan 1937, 5
Ft. Deposit, Ala.:
“Cops And Klan Found Guilty In Florida,” Jun 1936, 3
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.:
“400 Cigar Workers Cheer I.L.D. Speaker,” Jun 20 1931, 1
“Fla. Bosses Try To Stop Organizing,” Aug 8 1931, 2
“‘Hobo Express’ a Way To Evade the Fight,” Sep 19 1931, 3
“Strike Wave Sweeps South,” Jul 1934, 1
Ft. Meade, Wash.:
“Crooked Bishop’s Pal Gets Govt. Parole,” Oct 17 1931, 4
Ft. McPherson, Ga.:
“Red Scare Raised As Union Big Shots Work With Bosses,” Oct 1934, 3
Ft. Myers, Fla.:
“Injured Worker Gets No Compensation,” Sep 20 1930, 3
“Jim Crow Relief For The Unemployed of Tampa, Fla.,” Sep 19 1931, 3
Ft. Payne, Ala.:
“Scottsboro Conferences in 12 Cities,” May 16 1931, 4
Ft. Sam Houston, Tex.:
“Army Recruiting Officers Round Up Boys On Soup-Lines,” Sep 20 1933, 3
Ft. Smith, Ark.:
Lynch Law At Work: Ft. Smith, Tex. [sic], Dec 20 1930, 2
“Workers Insurance Congress Unites Thousands in Washington: White, Negro Workers And Farmers Send Delegates From South,” Jan 1935, 1
“Lewis Trys [sic] Expel Militant Arkansas Miner From Union,” Feb 1935, 4
Ft. Valley, Ga.:
“Lynch Law at Work,” Oct 11 1930, 2
Ft. Worth, Tex.:
“10 Cents An Hour!” Oct 4 1930, 3
Lynch Law At Work: Ft. Worth, Tex., Jan 10 1931, 2
“Kill Worker On Ft. Worth ‘Relief’ Job,” Jan 10 1931, 3
“Long Hours, Low Pay,” Jan 17 1931, 3
“Jail Leader As Hungry Man Dies,” Mar 14 1931, 3
“Arrest 28 In Fort Worth Eviction,” Jul 12 1933, 2
“Plowing Under Puts Tenants Deeper Into Debt; Mortgaged Farmers Fear Foreclosure in Fall,” Aug 15 1933, 3
“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
“CWA,” Jan 20 1934, 2
Caption to photo of T.E. Barlow, Jan 20 1934, 2
“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” Oct 1934, 1
Foster, Bennie:
Caption, Jan 20 1934, 1
Foster, Henry B.:
“‘Forces Of Law’ In Alabama Are Parties To Savage Lynchings,” Aug 31 1933, 1
“These Three Men Are Parties To A Foul Murder: Demand Their Arrest,” Aug 31 1933, 1
“Rise In Mighty Protest Against the Savage Tuscaloosa Lynching,” Aug 31 1933, 4
“Murder Charges Hurled Against Judge, Sheriff, Deputies Of Tuscaloosa County By I.L.D.,” Sep 20 1933, 1
Foster, John:
“Warrants Try Outlaw Reds, Workers’ Paper,” Sep 1934, 1
“Cropper’s Strike Wins Big Gains Despite Terror,” Jun 1935, 1
Foster, Willie:
“S.T.F.U. Meets In Arkansas,” Jan 1936, 4
“The Black Legion,” Jun 1936, 8
Foster, William Z.:
“Jailed Jobless Leaders Greet Southern Worker,” Sep 6 1930, 1
“Demand Release to Save Minor,” Oct 18 1930, 1
“Rule Death Law Valid In Atlanta,” Oct 25 1930, 1
“Answers A.F. of L. Flogging In Miami By Joining Communists,” Oct 25 1930, 4
“Big Election Gains by Reds Throughout Land,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“The Elections,” Nov 15 1930, 4
“Hunger Marches Demand Cash Relief From the City Councils,” Jan 24 1931, 1
Contributor, “Send Delegates To Pittsburg,” Jul 4 1931, 1
“Start Drive To Organize R.R.’s,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“Strike Against Wage-Cuts,” Oct 3 1931, 4
“Southern Steel Workers Following the Lead of Pittsburg Conference,” Oct 10 1931, 1
“Textile Mill Workers Scorn Bosses’ Terms,” Oct 24 1931, 1
“New Magazine Will Give Lead to Workers in Class Struggle,” Dec 12 1931, 4
“Tom Mooney’s Mother Pleads For Prisoners,” Mar 5 1932, 2
“Communist Party Holds National Convention,” Jun 1936, 7
“The Steel Drive,” Jul 1936, 8
Fountain, Leo:
“Alabama Rulers Push Plan For Legal Massacre February 9; I.L.D. Sends Protest Delegation to Montgomery,” Feb 10 1934, 4
Fourmile, Ky.:
“Offer Reward For Jackson Dead Or Alive,” Mar 5 1932, 1
Fowle, Rev. Dr. James L.:
“Tennessee W.P.A. Workers Unionize,” Jan 1936, 1
Fowler, David:
“Ark. Locals In Fight On Lewis Machine,” Mar 25 1934, 3
“Lewis Trys [sic] Expel Militant Arkansas Miner From Union,” Feb 1935, 4
Fraenkel, Osmund:
“Scottsboro Deaths Halted By I.L.D., Mothers Berate Liebowitz [sic],” Dec 1934, 1
“New Efforts to Free Scottsboro Boys Made by I.L.D.,” May 1935, 1
France:
“Workers, Peasants Of China Set Up Own Rule,” Aug 16 1930, 2
“Defend The Soviet Union! Vote Communist!” Oct 18 1930, 4
“Studying With The 8,000,000,” Nov 1 1930, 6
“French Sailors Mutiny Against Rotten Food,” Nov 15 1930, 3
“Prevent the War of Invasion!” Dec 13 1930, 4
“Demonstrate For Defense Of Soviets,” Dec 20 1930, 1
“Lenin—Inspiration of Southern Toilers,” Jan 17 1931, 4
“Clashes In Europe On Feb. 25,” Mar 7 1931, 1
“Workers Hail Paris Commune,” Mar 21 1931, 4
“Try Leaders of Native Revolt In French Guiana,” Apr 4 1931, 2
“Jim Crow Rules In Army, Also,” Jun 6 1931, 4
“Indo-China Natives Fight for Liberation,” Jun 13 1931, 2
“Revolt In The Belgian Congo Spreads,” Jul 11 1931, 3
“Negro War Vet Tells Of ‘Glorious’ War,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“U.S. Pushes War Alliance In German Crisis,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“London Meet Plans War On Soviet Union,” Jul 25 1931, 1
“Red Cross Refused To Treat Negro Wounded in World War,” Jul 25 1931, 4
“The Civilization They Tell us To Defend,” Aug 1 1931, 4
“War Veteran Sounds A Warning,” Aug 1 1931, 4
“If It’s War, Let It Be Our Own,” Aug 8 1931, 3
“Stop No. Sea Practice And Sing Red Flag,” Sep 26 1931, 1
“Workers Of South Must Carry Out Mass Fight Against War Plotters,” Oct 31 1931, 1
“Yank Bandits Back Warfare In Manchuria,” Dec 5 1931, 1
“Politicians In Panic Try To Evade Issue,” Dec 12 1931, 1
“Japan Bandit Raids Upheld By League, U.S.,” Dec 19 1931, 1
“New Stage in War Against China and the Soviet Union,” Dec 26 1931, 4
“Hatch Murder Plot For War Against USSR,” Jan 2 1932, 1
“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
“Pineville Gang Steals Food; And Slugs Two,” Feb 20 1932, 1
“Draft Blanks Being Printed For New War,” Mar 5 1932, 4
“Hitler Moves To Start War In Europe,” Mar-Apr 1936, 1
“Communists and Socialists Gain in French Elections,” May 1936, 4
“Italy, Germany Support Rebels,” Dec 1936, 15
Eyes on the World, Dec 1936, 16
“Tide of Battle Turns in Spain,” Jan 1937, 14
Eyes On The World, Jan 1937, 15
France, Royal W.:
“Jacksonville, Fla. Rallies Support for Spain,” Mar 1937, 12
Franco, Francisco:
“Italy, Germany Support Rebels,” Dec 1936, 15
“Defend Democracy,” Jan 1937, 2
Eyes On The World, Jan 1937, 15
“Tide of Battle Turns in Spain,” Jan 1937, 14
The International Scene, Jul 1937, 10
Frank, Leo:
“Tammany Roosevelt ‘Winning South’,” Oct 31 1931, 4
Frank, Richard:
“The Baptists Have Fighting Traditions,” Jan 1937, 15
Frank, Waldo:
“Pineville Gang Steals Food; And Slugs Two,” Feb 20 1932, 1
“Evans, Editor of Rat Sheet, Tells New Lie,” Feb 20 1932, 1
Frankfield, Phil:
“Scab Mine Union Officers Aid Cops,” Dec 26 1931, 1
Frankfort, Ky.:
News In Brief: Frankfort, Ky., Jan 1936, 3
Frankfort, Va.:
“Bloody Lynch Law Toll Mounts For This Year,” Sep 5 1931, 2
Franklin, Charles:
“Fla. Citrus Workers Win Strike Despite Terror, Traitors,” Feb 1935, 5
Franklin Coal Mining:
News of the Month in the South, “Alabama Industry Arms Against Unions,” Apr 1937, 11
Franklin County, Ill.:
“Scab Mine Union Officers Aid Cops,” Dec 26 1931, 1
Franklin County, Tenn.:
“Red Vote In Tennessee To Reach 2,000; Party Backed Thruout State”,” Nov 15 1930, 1
Franklin, La.:
“La. ‘Sugar Bowl’ Workers Get 70¢ a Day in Scrip,” Mar-Apr 1936, 5
Franklinton, La.:
“Negro Wounded, Dies In La. Jail,” Sep 1934, 2
“Landlord Lynch Mob Kills Negro in Jail,” Feb 1935, 2
Frazier, Charles:
The Reds Say, Sep 13 1930, 4
Frazier, W. J.:
“Hosiery Drive Starts in South,” Jan 1937, 8
Frazier-Lemke Farm Mortgage Refinancing Bill:
“T.C.I. Using Company Unions To Fight Unemployment Tax,” Feb 1936, 2
“Workers’ Social Insurance Act,” Feb 1936, 2
“Farm Leaders Hit Reduction In Crop Acres,” Feb 1936, 4
“Farm News,” Jul 1936, 5
Cotton Row, Nov 1936, 5
“Land for the Landless,” Mar 1937, 7
Frazier-Lundeen Workers’ Social Insurance Bill: see Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance
Fredericks, H.:
“Cropper Gypped Out Of $50 For Destroyed Crop,” Aug 31 1933, 3
Fredericksburg, Va.:
Important News In Short: Norfolk, Va., May 1935, 4
Free Tom Mooney Congress:
Caption to photo of Tom Mooney, May 20 1933, 4
Free Tom Mooney Councils:
Caption to photo of Tom Mooney, May 20 1933, 4
Freehold, N. J.:
“AF of L to Help Organize Agricultural Workers,” Jan 1937, 5
Freeman, Va.:
“Fifty Cents A Day High Negro Wages In Brunswick, Va.” Jan 1936, 5
Freethought League of North America:
“Facts Show 9 Negro Boys Innocent; Protest Grows,” Apr 25 1931, 1
French Equatorial Africa:
“Oppressors Wiping Out Native African Peoples,” Aug 15 1931, 4
French Guiana:
“Try Leaders of Native Revolt In French Guiana,” Apr 4 1931, 2
French Hospital:
“Expose Murder of Negro in N. O.,” Jun 10 1933, 4
French, Larry:
“Answer Carpetbaggers,” Apr 1937, 2
“Harlan Cracks Open,” Jun 1937, 6
“Land of Builders,” Sep 1937, 14
Frey, John P.:
“AF of L Reactionaries Block Support of Scottsboro Boys,” Jan 1937, 4
Frick, Ford:
“Negroes Forge Ahead In Sports,” Jan 1937, 10
Frick Coke Co.:
“More Miners Get Wage Cuts,” Oct 24 1931, 1
Friedman, Saul:
“Aid For Southern Worker Not Coming Fast Enough,” Dec 20 1930, 1
Contributor, “Another White Worker Says ‘Misled CRS” Is All Wrong,” Dec 20 1930, 4
Friend, William H.:
“Richmond Jobless Demand Relief For School Children,” Nov 1934, 2
“Overflow Meet in Va.,” Feb 1935, 2
Friends of Soviet Russia:
“England’s Irish Butchers Decree Death For Political Opponents,” Oct 31 1931, 3
“Plenty of Jobs,” Mar 5 1931, 1
Frost, Harold:
Staff box, May 20 1933, 4
Staff box, Jun 10 1933, 4
Staff box, Jul 12 1933, 4
Staff box, Aug 15 1933, 4
Staff box, Aug 31 1933, 4
Staff box, Sep 20 1933, 4
Staff box, Nov 15 1933, 4
Staff box, Dec 20 1933, 4
Staff box, Jan 20 1934, 4
Staff box, Feb 10 1934, 4
Staff box, Mar 25 1934, 4
Fruitdale, Ala.:
“Starvation Across 2 States,” May 9 1931, 4
Fugate, Chester:
“34 Are Lynched In 9 Months,” Oct 4 1930, 4
Fuller, Paul:
“Such Fakers For Bosses’ Candidates,” Nov 1 1930, 5
“Textile Strikes Sweep South As N.R.A. Brings Pay-Cuts, Stretch-Out,” Nov 15 1933, 1
“Another Mill Cuts Wages,” Oct 10 1931, 4
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