519
Instrumental Contest" 1935 [hereafter CWYPF, "Contest" (1935)], 5, 12, in the
Lillie Carroll Jackson Civil Rights Museum; Afro-American, November 3, 1934.
(8) Evening Sun, November 7, 1934, gave the near final returns for Broadus
Mitchell of 4,674 as against only 413 for the CP's gubernatorial candidate, Bernard
Ades; Evening Sun, November 28,1934 gave the final count, along with the counts
for previous SP gubernatorial candidates: A.L.Blessing in 1920, 2,799;
W.H.Champlin in 1923,1,456; T.G. Dill in 1926,2,495; Elisabeth Oilman in 1930,
4,178; CWYPF "Contest" (1935), 5.
(9) Afro-American. October 27,1934.
(10)Afro-American, Novembers, 1934.
(11) Afro-American, November 1, 1934.
(12) Afro-American, October 27, November 11, 1934.
(13) See, for example, the report on the Naomi Riches campaign in the Sun, July
26,1934.
(14) Afro-American, February 2, 1935; Sun, February 1,1935, however, in its report
on Oilman's campaign and program, cites no points around racism.
(15) Sun, June 23,1935, reported that Trager was leaving town.
(16) Interview with Frank Trager by Roy Rosenzweig, May 17,1973.
(17) Sun, February 2,1934; Roy Rosenzweig, "'Socialism in Our Time'; The
Socialist Party and the Unemployed, 1929-1936," Labor History, 20 (Fall 1979), 501.
(18) Rosenzweig, "Socialism," 502; "The Constitution of the People's
Unemployment League of Maryland, Incorporated," November 1937, in the
Vertical Files, Enoch Pratt Free Library.
(19) Sun, December 7,9,11,1935, September 12, October 16,1936; Jo Anne E.
Argersinger, Toward a New Deal in Baltimore; People and Government in the Great
Depression (Chapel Hill: 1988), 136.
(20) Rosenzweig, "Socialism," 500-501.
(21) Sun, June 19,24,1939, June 16, July 14,1940.
(22) Interview with Juanita Jackson Mitchell (session 1), February 20,1987,
(session 2), March 19,1987, (session 3), August 5,1987; Juan Williams, "Marshall's
Law," The Washington Post Magazine, January 7,1990,15-19; see also chapters 6
and 7 above.
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