N&O Index Card Listings

Displaying 1-5 of 5 results.
Strikes and lockouts - Textile industry, 1934
  • Invasion. (ed.) Se.6-34:4.
  • Behind the bayonets (ed.) Be.9-34:4 M.
  • Holding jobs by gunfire (ed.) Se.8-34:4
  • We are on (ed.) Se.11-34:4.
  • Occasion for mourning, (ed.) Se.20-34:4
  • Winant board's plan. Se.21-34:1.
  • Vigilantes (ed.) Se.21-34:4. 5.
  • Seven strikers get sentences. Se.23-34:
  • End to bitterness (ed.) Se.23-34:4 M.
Strikes and lockouts - Textile industry, 1934
  • Strike duty impressions given by Raleig private. Se. 24-34: 7.
  • i->abor leaders charge lockouts as numerous mills fail to reopen. Se.25-34:1.
  • Gorman says conditions bad in N.C. Se. 25-34:1; Se. 26-34:1.
  • Roanoke Rapids unionists take vote on new strike. Se. 27-34:1.
  • Peace believed hovering near in textile area. Se.28-34:1.
Strikes and lockouts - Textile industry, 1934
  • Levinson will aid strikers' appeal. Ag 84-35:12.
  • Asserts courts denying justice to the Burlington dynamiting case. Ag.29-35:1.
Strikes and lockouts - Textile industry, 1934
  • Remove troops from strike duty. Se.38-34:SO.
  • lMew complaints from this state. 0.3-34: 10.
  • Textile strike case in Fayetteville goes to higher court. 0.11-34:1?.
  • Coroner says Stiarapstan not at fault for bayoneting striker. N.15-34:5.
  • Strike expense. 1.23-34:5.
  • Organized labor demands onen hearing of death of striker. D.31-34:5.
  • 11 i e
Strikes and lockouts - Textile industry, 1934
  • Solicitor Carpenter orders pr< sbing of
  • strike death. Jan.15- 35:5.
  • No in dictment in strike death Jan. 19-
  • 35:2.
  • Former strikers ask reir istating at Lex-
  • ington. F.?3-75:7.