?
STARTING
TONIGHT
PALACE
STARTING
TONIGHT
TALKING REPORTER
All Talking
All Singing
All Dancing
The Shannons
of Broadway
W hat a Picture!
YEA, HO! Here they are — with all the wise
cracks and humorous situations that kept them
on Broadway for thirty-nine weeks! Who?
The Gleasons
J AMES and
LUCILLE
100 Per Cent With CHARLES GRAPEWIN, MARY PHILBIN
TALKING! • and JOHN BREEDEN
NOTE
There’s not a comedy team on or off Broadway—
That can hold a dimmer to THE GLEASONS—acting and
dialogue are gorgeous in this phonoplay.
THE MANAGEMENT.
■
10—25—75 cents—Loges SI.00
Soon—“DIXIANA”—with Bebe Daniels
PHONES 83 OR 85
‘The Store That Pleases”
THE SANITARY GROCERY
Daily Cross-woni Puzzle
ACROSS
I 1. Stop nmJ re
fuse tu co
i 5. South A merl
on it wood
8. 1‘uhlle wo Ik
12. County In
Ohio
13. Male sheep
, 11. \neul solo
lb. Iteloiigiiig to
mo
, 16. opposed man*
j fully
I 18. Feminine
I n a m e
i 20. Waistcoat!
colloi|.
21. Expressions
of eon tempt
23. Territorial
division of
Den mark
26. Iftfecfc letter
2!l. A u rielo
| X». Weird
I 32. Iteturn
; 3b! Amid S
36. Em a tide
37. Series of
tennis cames
; 38. rarpenter’s
tool
3!>. Smoothed
42. And teu:
6 uff lx
Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle
aNBoases
DBS L E D|
4Z. Considers
47. Articles of
furnltiiro
r>t. Depravity
32. S it lit I© In
visible ema
nation
fid. Female deer
64. Ten: prefix
35. Hevcrnpe
66. Affirmation
57. Obstruction
DOWN
1. Inner part of
the chancel
2. Dry
I. system of
tra asportation
4. Itottomt of
vessels
6. Sphere
6. Sculptor
7. Mohninmcdan
noblo
8. t pright pole
on a hont
9. Knack •
10. Chtrutil
11. Hoy
17. Acqnlesced
19. Powers
22. Take food
2:t. Hod of war
24. Deep mud
25. Trial
26. Notable
periods
27. A era ml son of
A bra ha m
28. Acknowledge
openly
31. Nj m hoi for
ethyl
33. In: prefix
31. Dnclic form
of John
36. Former presi
dent
40. Full of lull
eoarse grasses
41. Acts
42. Former
emperor
44. Itcmilar
4 5. Mineral
46. Dross of mftn!
47. Touch lightly
48. ltegret
46. Refore
50. Ocean
EVE SPECIALISTS
Dr. J. W. Edmunds. Eye Spec
ialists, whose permanent office it
at 703-4 Liggett Building, Seattle
and who has actively developed his
mining property near Moose Pass
Alaska, for the past nine years.
He is one of the leading eye
specialists of Seattle, has many
patients in Juneau and will be
in Juneau at the Gastineau Hotel
about Nov. 11th to 18th. This is
a rare opportunity to have your
eyes properly fitted with spectacles
and to select some new elegant
designs in frames. —adv.
Daily Empire Want Ads Pay.
I
Grand Opening
THE NEW
Ball Room
Saturday
Noiv the Largest in the
rar
• rtif’i
THE ELKS’ DANCE COMMITTEE CORDIALLY INVITE
YOU TO ATTEND THIS OPENING
ALSO JUNEAU’S BEST DANCE COMBINATION
*L *■
.“Going places, doing things, is all
| the rage,” says Puff.
i "That’s why I left the pig pen flat
! —I must be up to snuff.”
.Today our hero goes to court with
i Justice Kangaroo
And hears the trial of Mr. Ox for
1 using “whom" for “who.”
LAST RITES ARE HELD
FOR H. J. MILBOURN
! Funeral services for the late Hanl
ey J. Milbourn, Juneau pioneer,
' were held this afternoon in the
Northern Light Presbyterian
(Church. Rites were conducted by
the pastor, the Rev. C. C. Saun
ders. Vocal selections were ren
dered by Mrs. Crystal Snow Jenne
and Max Pitshmann. Organ accom
paniments were by Mrs. G. E.
Krause.
The pallbearers were Judge James
Wickersham, Lockie MacKinnon, J.
D. Williams, John Barnes, Elmer E.
Reed and James York.
There were many beautiful floral
tributes.
Interment, directed by the Charles
W. Carter Mortuary, was in Ever
green Cemetery.
SHRINE DANCE IS
ENJOYABLE EVENT
The first dance of the season giv
en last night by the Shrine Club in
the Scottish Rite Temple was a
most successful social affair and
opened the winter events of this
popular organization. From early
until the last dance, the spacious
floor was well filled with dancers
and many pretty costumes were
worn by the ladies. Refreshments
were served in the banquet room.
RUSSIAN STEAM
BATHS
Situated directly back of Alas
kan Hotel on Gastineau Ave.
Look for the Green House.
Open Wednesdays and Satur
days between 1 p.m.
and 1 a.m.
MRS. EMILY SORRI,
Proprietor
-4
H STARTING
= SUNDAY
COLISEUM
HERE’S FUN FOR YOU!
□
7:30—9:30 M
Join in the Whoopee with
30 Famous Stars!
RICHARD ARLEN
Idol of young America. Sped, to
fame In "Wings''—speeding ever
since.
CLARA BOW
Red-headed Queen of "It." Here
she is, being nautical but nice.
CLIVE BROOK
Doing a superb burlesque cf
himself as Sherlock Holmes.
RUTH CHATTERTON
First Lady of the Screen! Sing
ing a clever character song.
GARY COOPER
"The Virginian,” himself, capi
vating in a costume sketch with
three charmers.
SHEETS GALLAGHER
Laff King of filmdom .. .wowed
you in "Fast Company" and
“Honey."
HELEN KANE
The original “Boop-boopa-doop"
girl. A panic in The School
room.
ABE LYMAN
—and His Band, of course, pour
ing out their golden melodies.
ZELMA O’NEAL
Inaugurated the “Varsity Drag."
Breaks into a new dance and
filmdom here.
BUDDY ROGERS
America’s Boy Friend, crooning
and loving as nobody else can.
GEORGE BANCROFT
“The Mighty" “Thunderbolt” of
dynamic he-man acting, in a
novel comedy skit.
EVELYN BRENT
Siren of "Slightly Scarlet,"
swapping slaps and comedy with
Maurice Chevalier.
NANCY CARROLL
America's “Sweetie," showing
that she can be even sweeter
than “Honey.”
MAURICE CHEVALIER
Big happiness boy from the
world's charm capital, doing two
original songs.
LEON ERROL
Original tanglefoot man, mas
tering all but his own feet as a
master of ceremony.
HARRY GREEN
"The Kibitizer,” as “Isadore the
Toreador" in a gorgeous com
edy-song-dance scene.
DENNIS KING
"The Vagabond King" radiates
new singing power here in an
amusing novelty scene.
JACK OAKIE
Screendom's leading exponent
of the Great American "Wise
Crack,” shines as an M. C.
WILLIAM POWELL
made Philo Vance a household
word. See him kidding his own
portrayal.
and More
LAST TIMES
TONIGHT
BURNING UP
1
Aian^lQou
The world’s series gave a con
zincing demonstration of the fash
on in which good pitching can
;heck the talk about the “lively
jail."
The sphere may be lively enough,
}ut Grove and Earnshaw for the
Vs, Hallahan, Haines and Grimes
for the Cardinals, turned the se
■ies into a succession of old-fash
cned “pitchers’ duels,’’ The long
range-firing was effective in. spots,
jut not In the least consistent.
The uspposedly heavy hitting A's,
n the three straight games at St.
Louis, scored in only two out of
17 innings, averaging less than six
aits per game.
“That ought to show ’em we
aaven’t inoculated the ball," re
narked Tom Shibe, president of the
Mhletics and also head of the com
pany that manufactures all the
major league baseballs.
“Talk of the National league ball
jeing any livelier than the Ameri
:an brand is Just an example of
ignorance. The only difference be
:ween the two is in the color of the
stitches and the stamping.
“There has been no substantial
change in the type of manufacture
since the cork center was introduced
in 1910.’’
The Shibe family has been mak
ing baseballs in Philadelphia for
about 60 years. Thomas S. Shibe
and his brother, John U.. have car
ried on the business organized by
their father, Benjamin Shibe, who
handled a club in the Quaker Cit
known as the “Athletics’’ years be
fore ho was induced by Connk
Mack to go into partnership in thf
formation of the new Americar
league club of Philadelphia in 1901
The Sliibes manufactured crlckel
balls before they found a domanc
for the production of baseballs
Cricket was one of the most popu
lar sports around Philadelphia 2i
to 50 years ago. Newspapers carrlec
more box scores of cricket inatche;
than they did of baseball games
but the English sport has since lost
most of its following there. Never
theless what are now the leading
golf and tennis centers still art
known as the Merlon, Philadelphia
and Germantown Cricket clubs.
Bobby Jones won his first and
fifth national amateur golf cham
pionships at the Merior. Crickei
club. Bill Tilden a member of th<
Germantown Cricket club, playec
some of his greatest tennis on tht
turf courts there in the Davis Cut
challenge rounds from 1923 to 1927
This column's recent tabulatior
of the 1930 golf record of the
Great Jones inadvertently omlttec
one of the chief features of hi;
march through the British amateui
field.
It was the fourth round vlctorj
of the American over the defend
ing British champion. Cyril Tolley
who lost on the 19th hole wher
Jones laid him a stymie.
This exciting battle was sand
wiched between the defeats Jonei
handed to Shankland in the thirc
round and Watt in the fifth.
Albert de Luze. president of th<
French Court Tennis federation, ha:
traced the history of tennis back tc
Ferhsia of the fourth centun
when the game was called “Tchi
gan."
AIR SERVICE WILL LINK
ENGLAND AND CAPETOW?
CROYDON AIRPORT, Eng., Nov
8.—Scheduled airplane service be
f tween here and Capetown, Sout
Africa, will be inaugurated early
next year, Colonel J. Barrett-Len
nard, director of the Imperial Air
ways, Ltd., has announced.
As planned the flight is to be
made in 11 days of eight hours
flight, cutting the time from 17
days as now required by steamer.
In connection with the projected
route, Imperial Airways announced
that 11 huge four-motored ships
were under construction.
-» ♦ ♦-—
$4,000,000 CITY AIRPORT
- STARTED BY BALTIMORE
BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 8.—With
! about $2,200,000 already spent, Bal
timore expects to be using its $4,
000,000 municipal airport within
two years.
Built largely out of land reclaim
ed from a salt-water creek, the
airport will be among the nation's
best, according to tentative plans.
It will include 380 acres (ulti
mately 1,000* and have one runway
4.500 feet long, with a minimum, of
3.500 in other directions. It is only
10 miles from the heart of the
city with two routes for fast motor
traffic.
BEER FACES K. O. BY
MILK IN SWISS ARMY
BERNE, Nov. 8—Beer drinking
in the Swiss army, already groggy
before the determined attack of
“Suessmost," (unfermented cider*
is to be given the knockout blow by
milk if the military authorities car
ry out present plans.
A contract was signed between
the government and the United
i Swiss dairies, whereby the latter
furnished the army canteen at the
autumn maneuvers "with as much
pasteurised milk as the soldiers
can drink.”
The milk, was served in handy
paper containers and kept scrupu
lously clean.
North Carolina farmers plan to
burn all cotton sulks this season
tas a boll weevil control measure.