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F t t ‘ __Pawe Two DAILY WORKER, NEW _YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1930 STAND READY FOR MASS VIOLATION OF INJUNCTIONS! SMASH BOSSES WEAPON! MASS MEETINGS RALLY WORKERS = | ] TO SMASH BOSSES’ INJUNCTIONS | Speed Shop Organization; Be Ready for Call) to Mass Picket at Zalgreen Cafeteria! ails That Pickets Already Put} Faker Epstein W Him $4,000 in Debt; Boasts of Police | NEW YORK.—Between 2,000 ands 3,000 w thered in an open air mee y at 29 Street| and in the fur market June Croll and other ne the fight against The meeting was called h the Injunctions Com- the Trade Union Unity i will be followed by other nd by mass picket demon- n violation of the injunc- een cafeteria on 34 St r meeting to- nd Bight 5-MONTH BABY DIES OF HUNGER mittee of Council Twin Brother Nea _ Death | Nav. 9--One of the y the bo: of the un employment situation affecting over 9,000,000 workers and their families , Was published as a ember 7 issue of the Detroit News. ‘The story deals with the death by starvation of the five months old| child of a jobless worker while doc-| tors are trying to save the life of| his twin brother, who is near death as a result of his father's inability to find work. | injunction to preserve the 12-hour Avenue, and one tomorrow at 39 St. | and Sixth Ave. After that, there will be others. | Organize! Be Ready! The committee calls again on all workers who want to save their right to strike to organize in the shops, register their forces with the Smash the Injunctions Committee at 16 W. 21 Street, and be prepared at a mo-j ment’s notice from the Committee to come out in mass violation of the injunctions. The fight centers just now around Zelgreen cafeteria and the whole police, A.F.L. and bos- ses’ organizations stand behind the day in that cafeteria. Injunctions, | prohibiting picketing, are used now in all strikes, and a lot of blanks for injunctions lie ready to serve in the coming dress strike Open mass violation is the only way to defeat this scheme of the bosses, and it is every w er’s fight Epstein Howls. That the mass picketing so far} at Zelgreen’s has hit the enemy hard is shown by the speech of Irving Epstein at the last meeting of the Central Trades and Labor Council. Epstein is the business agent of Local 302 of the A.F.L. Hotel and Res- taurant Employees. He told the other boss agents at} the council meeting that the “mass | picketing during the noon hour be | fore Zelg: cafeteria had cut down} the patronage and put the AF.L.| union $4,000 in debt. He boasted that he got the injunction for the | boss against the pickets, and said Other Thousands Starving. ‘The Detroit News story deals with) only one family, while thousands of families throughout the country are | in desperate plight. The story at-| tempts to condone the death of this; working class baby by making it ap-| P pear that he is a victim of “indus-| trial depression” the Detroit News| covering up the fact that jobless in-| surance paid by the state and the bosses could have saved the life of this and countless other working class babies dying or facing death by starvation. “George Alger is being buried to-| day, a martyr to {industrial depres- sion. Physicians are trying to save) the life of his twin brother, Thomas, who is threatened with the same fate | that George has met. | “The brothers were born less than five’ months ago to Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Alger... .” | The story then gives a picture of the sufferings of the family, of the many but vain efforts made to get| work, of the sale of everything they hhad to buy milk for the babies and food for themselves, and of their un- | successful efforts to get aid from the | charitable institutions to whom the bosses and their government direct! starving workers. *. . . When all saleable assets had | been turned into cash, all cash ex- pended and credit exhausted, there | was nothing for the father and| mother to do but apply to the county superintendent of the poor for food for themselves and their four chil- dren, Jack, 3 years old, Mary, 2, and the twins. “Presently the twins fell ill, and| Mrs. Alger took one of them to Dr.| Fred Drolett in Lansing. Dr. Drolett | diagnosed the illness as malnutrition and refered the case to the Social Service ‘Bureau, which in turn noti- | fied the Greater Lansing Visiting Nurses’ Association. Mrs. Lila Wat- s0n, a representative of the associa- tion, went to the Alger home with Drolett last Friday. They took one of the babies to the Edward W. Spar- row Hospital #1 Lansing immediately and returned for the other Saturday morning. “At the hospital milk was available in generous quantities, but for George it e-me too late, He died Wednes- day morning. “It would have been much better to die myself than see him starve he*-~> my eyes, says his mother, “but what was I to do?” The paper adds, “Alger continues his heavy-footed search for employ- ment.” Workers! Fight for unemployment insurance. Force the bosses and their government to give real relief to the unemployed! Fight against the hunger committee of Hoover. Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- ling Daily Workers. Come up and we will explain, 35 East 12th St. Labor and Fraternal All notices for this column can | that his ! Quinn, | Fakers. Ss was right and just, ~|wanted a job in the United States union, through secretary of the Central Trades anu) Labor Council, had arranged for “ad- equate police protection.” “They have needle workers, marine workers and all kinds of their people | picketing our cafeteria in mass form- | ation,” said Epstein. “They parade | with placards bearing the words: Organize in the Shops! : Comes From the Trade Union Unity Council! Act When the Call THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER Jb Need THe Money SE "BRIN fy, [NESE Back PROSPERITY CARD, We eat RALLY TO SAVE GUIDO SERIO Council of Foreign Born Calls on All | | NEW YORK.—Protesting the im- prisonment of Guido Serio at Ellis Island and the Department of Labor's decision to deport him to Italy where he is facing a Certain death for his anti-fascist activities, | |the International»Labor Defense is |receiving resolutions and protests from organizations in many ess, of the country. The Council for the Protection of | the Foreign Born denounces in vig- orous language the attempted mur- der of this worker for his militant activity in the working class move-| ments in Italy and America. A} statement issued by R. Saltzman for the Council for the Protection of the | Foreign Born says in part: | All In Danger. | “If the immigration officials will be permitted to victimize and hound | ;cause of their effective and iiwelli- ATTENTION! The District Daily Worker of- fice will be located on the 5th floor of the Workers Center, 35 East 12th St., beginning Wednes- day morning. Telephone Algon- Units will get their quin 5707. bundles until 9 a. m, in the vacant store by ringing elevator bell After 9 a. m. on the 5th floor. The editorial offices and the na- tional office of the Daily Worker will be on the 9th floor as here- tofore. LASCAR FIREMEN REVOLT ON SHIP Discriminated Against, | Fight Officers NEW YORK. |Indian) stokers and oilers on the | British steamer Irisbank revolted against rotten food and refusal to | foreign born workers like Serio be-| allow them to go ashore while the ship lay in harbor here Saturday. Smash Injunctions and the A.F. of L./gent resistance to impossible eco-|They demonstrated, and before being We are taking the proper|nomic conditions existing in the | Subdued by the armed officers, and steps to deal with them and are} United States, then the rest of us| White members of the crew driven spending all our resources in fight- | who happen to be born in some for- into the fight by the officers, they ing them back. If ever an injunc- it is this | | one.” Smash the Injunction! The police and sluggers, the A. F.L., brought down have been most | brutal, and many pickets have beert arrested, but the Smash the Injunc- tions Committee of the T.U.U.L. is| determined to defeat such open| brazen traitors to the workers as Epstein, and calls on all workers to} be ready and organized for the next mass picketing. An open forum tomorrow at Bryant Hall, 2 p.m., is called, to rally all workers, jobless especially, to fight the injunctions. All militant work- ers should do their proletarian dfty and be present 100 per cent at the special meeting called by the Trade Union Unity Council WIR in Campaign for N. Y. Scout Camp) NEW YORK—As a further stage | in the campaign to raise a $10,000| fund, in order to increase the accom- modations from 400 to 1,000 worers’| children in the W.LR. Scout Camp next summer, a huge Bazaar is being arranged under the joint auspices of the Workers’ International Relief, lecal New York and the United Coun- cil of Working-Class Women, on January 2nd, 3rd and 4th. ‘This bazaar, with a special and absolutely original features, will be| one of the most colorful affairs of the season, The Bazaar Committee will hold a broad meeting on Wednesday, 8 p. m., November 12th, at the new headquarters of the Local W.LR., 131 West 28th St., Ist floor. All working-class organizations are urged to send representatives to this meeting, to prepare for the Bazaar. JOBLESS FORD WORKERS GIVE THE LIE TO FORD DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 10.—A year ago Henry Ford said anybody who could get one. Last summer, on sailing to Europe, he said that the industrial depression would be over by October, although later he repu- diated that statement. Ford should have seen the mob of 20,000 jobless workers who crowded about the house of another unem- ployed worker, the vittim of a prac- tical joke by a friend. He had in- serted a classified in a Detroit paper that 500. laborers were wanted at his friend’s house. be Activities, be run only for three days includ- ‘ng the date of the affair, due to the enormous amount of notices handed in. Meatenl, Workers to hear report Dele- RALL.U. Congress matt ay rection to be held Wednes- hg RY 2, 8 p, m. at 16 W. ) medical workers are urged er Tne report from the Red In- tional of Labor Unions. ‘The National Unsiavloyment Insur- ce Camprign Conference take place Tuesday, 1 p. m., 21 St, top floor, on Paper eee menee Nov. 16, m.. Workers Center, Ait Party functionaries responsible for shop paper work expected to be present. Cae ee: Seciton 4, Attention Special meeting Unit Daily Worker agents Thursday, 8.20 p. m. at 308 Lenox Ave, Attendance urgent. PSL CN Snm_Nessin to Svenk fourth At East New bhi Workers Club, Wednesday, Nov. 8 p.m. at 624 Vervont Ave, ‘Bubsect—1. wD. A jeign country may just as well extend | our wrists for the police handcuff | and our bodies to the prison wardens. | We shall resist the encroachments of the immigration department upon the foreign born and we shall fight heir right to resist boss rule and ex- ploitation by the employers. The Serio case is in realty a test and we jcall upon all foreign born workers to | support the International Labor De- |fense in their fight to save the-life of Serio.” Appeal Case. Many other organizations have ser* in their protests with a con- tribution to the I. L. D. to help de- fend this worker. A decision is ex- pected any day as an application for a habeus corpus to stop Serio’s de- portation and permit “voluntary de- parture” is before Federal Judge Wm. Bondy. The case has Been argued by Carol Weiss King, attorney for the International Labor Defense, last | week, after the Department of Labor gave its final decision to send Serio |to Italy to face a certain death for his working class activity. COP AIDS SHOE BOSS WAGE CUT TRICKERY NEW YORK.—Every day shoe, and slipper workers report new wage | cuts to the headquarters of the In-| dependent Shoe Workers Union. Every time new work is given out) it is accompanied with an attempt by the bosses to cut the prices and | increase the production. In the Tall & Gorden shop in> Brooklyn the boss demanded another wage-cuts of 15 per cent and in or- der to fool the workers it had been | arranged that while the boss was | talking to the workers asking them to willingly take a wage cut (which the workers refused) one of Mayor Walker's club swingers came in with an unemployed shoe worker supposed | to be a cutter, but who did not even know what a cutter’s knife looked like, and asked the boss to please give this long unemployed and hungry worker a yjob, saying that the man would be glad to work for $2 a day. ‘The boss with tears in his eyes told the cop that he had no work just now, but would surely give him a job in a day or two. After the two had gone the boss turned to the workers with a big smile on his face and shouted: “See that, hear that, I'm offering you $4 a day and I can get them for $2. Why look here boys, my wages are cut too, last year I drew $300 a week, now I only bri $150 a week!” This is just one of the tricks the bosses employ. Every Shoe Worker should attend the next membership meeting of the Independent Shoe Workers Union, that will be held at the union head- quarters, 16 West 21 Street, Thurs- day, at 8 p.m. sharp, ‘The Daily Worker melts a million steel wills into one battering ram daily. | |had put the second engineer in the hospital so that he had to be left behind when the ship sailed. They also gave a good account of them- selves to other officers. George Mink, chairman of the na- tional executive committee of the Marine Workers Industrial Union stated yesterday that the Lascars are becoming a most militant section of the British seamen. other colonial workers, badly discrim- inated against. The M. W. I. U. par- ticularly stands for union of white | and colored workers against the oppressors of both. Spe- cial reference is made to the need of organization of colonial seamen in the recent call of the provisional committee for a world congress to establish a new International of Sea- | men and Harbor Workers. [S.A. WOULD CON- SCRIPT SEAMEN of Boss Government (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—Today all is quiet on the waterfront and the ships that ence ploughed the sea in search of | profits for the shipowners are now ‘laying tied to the dock with their | | crews being laid off until shipping gets better. The shipowners are | building new fast ships that will be able to compete with other capitalist countries in transporting cargoes |from one country to another. All these vessels are being built under |the government contracts, which| means that all the shipowners have to do is to pay for one-third of the actual cost, they are then given the mail contracts which will bring them every year enormous profits from one year to another. All these ships are built so that they can be turned into men-of-war within a few hours notice. All this silly talk about disarmament when in reality the country is preparing for another war which isn’t so very far off from the latest indications that are today taking place under the people’s very eyes. The proposal brought forward by the International Seamans Union to the American government that the seamen should all belong to the (naval reserve is just another indica- tion that another war is about to take place. This proposal is brought forward by officials who themselves are only tools for the capitalists that control this country with the object of relieving the unemployment in the marine industry, also as another ef- fective weapon in the hands of the capitalist class in event of a strike for better living conditions, etc, The tying up of these ships has thrown hundreds of thousands of marine workers out of employment with the prospects of not getting a job at all and this means that all these workers are not going to com- mit suicide but rally to the banner ‘They are, like) in the fight | Aid War Preparations) | | PORTLAND, Nov. 9. — The bosses’ campaign of terror against Portland workers daily increases ih savage in- | tensity. The worker Ben Boloff, a former member of the Communist Party, who was arrested here last Saturday by the two prize agent-provocateurs, O'Dale and Bacon, was up for trial yesterday charged with state vag- | rancy, The International Labor Defense | lawyer, Irvin Goodman, openly de- | jMounced the capitalist judge in the city court, telling him: “You have sent numerous workers | two police agents and by now you, Comes. THAT Wikn) SOLVE GHE LABOR): —Don’t Stand For It!— iA aks Do! CHORES Yaat| Wikk SOLVE UNEMPLOYMEYY y “SNOW. Problem L, WE'LL PUT C You To Alen? “THE Smeets FG Tae 6I UNEMPlLoya INSURANCE, By RYAN WALKER. O NT hore | bs | LINE | HT Ne Ye WORKERS PROTEST CALLS HAND OF PORTLAND CAPITALIST COURT ‘Judge Hesitates to Convict Worker Arrested on) Evidence of Notorious Stool Pigeons can tell that they are carrying on a malicious campaign against work- ers sofas to draw their monthly blood money.” The court was crowded with work- ers who showed their approval of this statement and their resentment against the bosses and their stool pigeons. was afraid to hand out his usual class } justice and declared the case post- | poned until Thursday for study.” This is the result of the mobiliza- tion of the workers under the leader- “more |ship of the 11.D. and demonstrates | Militarize the youth. the need for mobilizing the working- | —Forty Lascar (East to jail on the statements of these | class against the use of the capital- ist courts against militant workers. MEET TO HONOR CH. MARTYRS Defense Outlines Need of Organization NEW YORK.—To commemorate | the anniversary of the men who| were pioneers in the revolutionary | labor movement in America and were | {executed for their activity for an/ eight hour day, the Haymarket Mar- | tyrs will be honored at a meeting | | to be held under the auspices of the | district office of the International Labor Defense at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St., Thursday evening. at 830 p.m. J. Louls Engdahl, general secretary | of the IL.D., Joseph Brodsky, aa torney for the organization in many famous labor cases, and Charles Ne- meroff, district organizer, will be the { speakers. The ILD. says: “Ihe American workers have been taught that it is | imperative in their struggle with. their employers to form a strong de- fense organization to defeat the le-| galized murders by the courts. The | International Labor Defense is in | the forefront defending all persec- uted workers in America.” At the meeting there will be a ; Month Plan as proposed by the Na- | tional Executive Committee of the LL.D. SEND REBELYOUTH TOINSANE ASYLUM | PORTLAND, Nov. 9.—Mike Kuli- | Koff, an 18-year old young worker, |was arrested here for singing revo- lutiqnary songs to schoolmates in Washington High, When the government authorities | found it impossible to deport him and decided it was inadvisable to press criminal syndicalism charge, they railroaded him to the insane asylum. The International Labor Defense is arranging protest meetings against | this outrage. In the meantime, John Moore, Paul Manter, defendants in Portland criminal syndicalism cases, who were out on bail, have been rearrested on vagrancy charge. Austrian Workers Strike Against Cuts VIENNA.—According to a delayed report, the workers of a timber fac- tory in Schipad in Drvar went on strike on the 7th of October against @ wage cut of 10 per cent. One thous- and workers left the factory in a body and elected a strike committee. The strikers refuse to recognize the reformist trade union officials as their leaders and declare that they will not feel themselves bound by any agree- ments these leaders may make with the employers. for better conditions on the job and for immediate relief for the unem- ployed marine workers. Join the |PANCE FOR “ORGANIZE AND STRIKE FUND” NEW YORK.—Workers of New | York will be assured a good time at| the Trade Union Unity Council en-/} tertainment and dance to be held Nov. 14, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. Tickets for the affair are 50 cents and every penny piled up at the dance will go to the Or- ganize and Strike Fund the Trade Union Unity Council is raising to fight injunctions, the speed-up and wage cuts, The Ukrainian chorus will furnish! @ program of songs and the famous| Cascar’s Harlemites will provide mu- sic for dancing. Get your tickets at the Workers Book Shop, 50 E. 13th St., and T. U. U. L. office, 16 W. 2ist St. ‘WOMEN FOOD FOOD WORKERS CALLED TO HEAR KAPLAN NEW YORK.—All women working in the food industry, whether or- ganized or not, are invited to a meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m, at 16 West 21 Street. Rose Kaplan, wo- men’s delegate from the food work- | | ers to the Fifth World Congress of | the Red International of Labor. Un- general discussion of the Eight i088 and to the Food Workers In-| ternational Conference this year will report. The meeting will take up the organization of a women’s de- partment in the Food Workers In- dustrial Union. Bring every woman | working in an open shop that you | can! Get your organization he- hind the Daily Worker Drive for 60,000! EAT THE BEST AT THE HONEY DEW CAFETERIA Incorporated Fourth Ave., Cor. 12th Street HOME-MADE MEALS You can select the best food: have a great variety, We are sure you will like our cooking HONEY DEW CAFETERIA 4th Ave, Cor. 12th St., New York City Incorporated A GROUP OF CARPENTERS Leaving for the Soviet Union within 4 weeks, with a com- plete set of modern machin- ery, need a few more expe- rienced ‘carpenters, machine ends and stickers. Applicants must donate their share towards the buying of machinery. Write or call for information to Theodore Lieberman, 509 E. 77th Street, New York City. ROOMS | In face of this, the judge | | THE GREEKS HAD Trenton Workers for Real Jobless Relief; Support the T.U.U.L. TRENTON, N. J.—One hundred fifty workers enthusiastically ap- plauded when Max Harris, organiza- | tional secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, appealed for support | against the present capitalist prepar- jations for war against the Soviet Union. Harris exposed the role of | the capitalist emissaries to the pres- jent Geneva preparatory conference; as another step forward in the cam- | | paign against the Soviet Union. J. Wishnevsky, former Communist candidate for Congressman explained detail the fake gestures of the present city administration. | jin | D. Cohen in the course of his speech revelead the fact that further steps are being taken by the school authorities in their campaign to Military train- ing in many schools and colleges were compulsory and students who re- fused to take the training were faced with expulsion, ‘READING TOILERS YELL FOR STRIKE U.T.W. Still Trying to Keep Them Quiet READING, Pa., Nov. 10.—Textile | workers filled the Orpheum Theatre yesterday and demanded strike ac- tion against the 30 per cent wage cuts ordered at Berkshire Mills, the | largest concern here, and the similar cuts in other mills. They shouted for a general strike. Councilman Jesse George, Chair- man Claahan, Hoffman, organizer of the United Textile Workers, and their men, Smith and McKeown all argued for cooperation between the employers and the workers to avoid a strike. handbill issued by the U.T.W. urging the employers to help them by post- poning the wage cut. The situation is very tense here. Sentiment for strike is strong be- cause of the series of wage cuts, | and the appeal of the United Textile | Workers to the mill hands that they | i} should all join the U. T. W. and prevent a strike (!) does not get far. | Wage cuts and strike threats still stand at the Rosedale Knitting Mills, second largest here, and at the Nolde & Horst mill. The Berk- | shire Mills are the biggest, their cut This is in line with the| SOCIALIST, A.F.L. STRIKE AT USS Conference os Aid Sabotage, Nov. 23 NEW YORK.—The special meet~ ing by which the socialist party and the Trades and Labor Council do their bit in the campaign to make war on the only Workers’ State, the Soviet Union, did not take place yes- terday but has been postponed to Nov. 23, 2 p. m., in the aristocratic Hotel Pennsylvania. The meeting was called at the or- ders of the Menshevik circles in Ber- lin, to save the lives if possible of the sabotage ring in the Soviet | Union. A number of specialists, high in the ald regime and given impor- tant posts in the industries of the U. S. S. R., were recently discovered to be systematically trying to wreck Soviet industry in order to bring back the landlords and capitalists. The Mensheviks, Russian monar- chists, American socialist party and Trades and Labor Council unite to |hold this meeting in New York, “against capital punishment in Rus- |sia,” and in defense of the chief others. The socialists agreed before the election to send Norman Thonias, Heywood Broun, Vladeck and others to the conference, but kept the fact secret because of the elections. The stupid Novoye Russkoye Slovo, Rus- sian monarchist paper allied witn the socialists in this conference, blurted out the story several weeks ago. The Daily Worker ntelts a million steel wills into one battering ram to smash the boss system. On to 60,000. Be a Daily Worker worker daily. Don’t miss full circula- tion tables each Wednes- day in the Daily Worker. was 30 per cent, and it is here that the U.T.W. concentrate their most treacherous attention. Berkshire makes “As You Like It” hosiery. | Hoffman, of the U.T.W. says he will leave the situation up to Hoover, and governor Fisher. The National Tex- tile Workers Union stands by the policy of “Organize and Strike Against Wage Cuts” and advises the Reading workers accordingly. 46th St. GLOBE & Bway io: THE CAT CREEPS with Helen Twelvetrees, Raymond Hackett and Neil Hamilton Mts CAMEO 273%, [NOW & Biway ALL TALK AND SOUND THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST with Ann Harding, James Rennie try Bannister’ A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOH AKINS SAM H. HARRIS Thea,, 42d St. W. of B’y Eveniog 8:50, Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EDGAR WALLACE’S PLAY ON THE SPOT with CRANE WILBUR and ANNA MAY WONG ACK'S FORREST THEA. Evs, 8:50, Mts, W. & 8, 2:30 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THE HIT YOU HEAR ABOUT 44TH STREE Tyee, W. of Biway Eves, 8:40. — Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:40 400 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy fit with ROGER PRYOR MASQUE 45th St.7"e%zninge at 8:00", Mate, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 IVIC REPERTORY %th St si» Av. of the Marine Workers Industrial} Marine Workers Industrial Union Wi ncdhcobi ibe dea: rag pe : } Union, the only union that is today!and help get better conditions for SINGLE MAN WISHES to share 3-r0om| | EVA LE GALMIENNE, Director organizing the unemployed, and the yourself. A rnd haa ure Ah be a. ‘a, ‘onigh: ROMEO AND JULIET employed into one solid body to fight IR [Esa Toth “or, Nal, ‘Apartieat 86 waeatewe BoxOthat-nnelllseweat - ' ‘ San aEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE me * Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK #4 45th St West of Broadway Evs. its. Th, & Sat. 2:50 43rd St. and 6th HIPPODROME — {3F4,8t, an BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK LOWELL SHERMAN in RKO Radio's ‘THE PAY OFF’ with Marion Nixon ners NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! RKO ACTS Cab Calloway & Orchestra Lewis & Ames Billy Dooley&Co. Alexander and Santos O'Neil & Manners BRENT LOUIS WOLHEIM Joel McC: Jean ur in REX BEACH'S Prospects 1eist RKO ACTS Primrose Semon Matt Shelvet's Dance Parade Edgar Bergen and Co. Tempest and Dickinson Enos Frazere KNUTE ROCKNE “F ALL” |sabotagers, Professor Kondratiev and — wa mii eig dre ins en) wi ar bu for me pu ou su ou gu tel po f