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— THEATRE TONIGHT is the NIGHT SPENCER ~ WENDY TRACY BARRY “Ir’s (ilnSmall World” Midnight Preview “LOVE IN BLOOM” SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOULG- LAS! Daily at 1€:00 a.m. cna 2:30 pm. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442. adv. DOORS — WINDOWS Buy direct from manufacturer an¢ SAVE § § § Doors—2-6x6-6, one panel Doors—2-8x6-6, one panel, 1 lght ...... Windows—24x24, 2 light Cellar Sash—34x19, 3 light $2.75 $3.85 §1.70 $ .97 Complete Millnork service. Cabinet Work. Sash. Doors. Frames Finish and Common Lumber. Hardware veneer Panels Write for our new catalog MILLWORK SUPPLY CORP, 2221 - Ist SOUTH ey Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front St. Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery searrie [ FIRST SHRINE DANGE 0 BE BIVEN NOV. 1 Entertainment Committee Named to Have Charge of All Winter Affairs Social activities of the Juneau Shrine Club for the approachia3 season were announced today. Judge George F. Alexander, Presi- dent of the club, recentiy appointed an Entertainment Committee for the club’s activities which will -also di- rect the season of Shrine dances. Walter P. Scott is Chairman of the committee and he will be assisted by George A. Parks, Homer G. Nordling, Dr. George F. Freeburger, Simpson J. MacKinnon, John H. ‘Walmer and J. W. Leivers. | The Shrine dances during the sea- son will be held in the Scottish Rite Temple ballroom on Saturday nights. The first affair will be Saturday, November 16. Subsequent dates will be December 14, January 18, Feb- ruary 22 and March 14. | The orchestra, directed by Clar- ence Rand, has been engaged for the season. Dancing will be from 9:30 to 12:30 o'clock. Invitations are to be printed and will be mailed out within a week In addition to the Shrine dances, the Entertainment Committee also plans several occasions of dinners {and dances for Shriners and their | families only. e, — DRAMA CLUB MASQUERADE HELD TONIGHT ;’Parish Hall—fl[ Be Scene | of Festive Gathering —Curfew at 12 | To the Drama Club, and all in- | vited guests who will be present at the gala Drama Club hallowe'en masquerade at 9 o'clock tonight in MUSICAL REVUE TOBEOFFERED BY GLEE CGLUBS ‘Gypsy Rendezvous,” with Song, Dance and Color Scheduled Tomorrow The “Gypsy Rendezvous,” musical | review by the Juneau Grade and High Schools, assisted by the School Band, will be presented in the Grade School Auditorium tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. With a cast including nearly 100 students, in lively and beautiful scenes held together by the gypsy motif, the show will undoubtedly prove a tribute to the fine work of | the students and Miss Ruth Coffin, glee club instructor, under whose direction the “Gypsy Rendezvous” is presented. Among the most important of the characters are the following: For-| tune Teller: Leona Saloum; Gypsy | Entertainers: Phyllis Jenne, Sybil | Godfrey; Gypsy Dancers: Doris Mc- Eachran, Mildred Webster; English |Count: Ed Bowden; Gypsy Comics: | Grant Ritter, Dutch Behrends; Gyp- sy Dreamer: Jchn Krugness; The Colonel: Walter Scott: Southern | Belle: Katherine Torkelson; South- lern Swain: Fletcher Brown; Gypsy | Hag, Marguerite Protzman; Flower Venders: Birdie Jensen, Corinne Duncan; Gypsy Fiddler: Harold Hanson; Gypsy Minstrel: Rudolph Edmonds; Passerby: Lyman Snow; ;Singlng Waitress: Patricia Harland; Gypsy Tumblers: Bill Jorgensen, (Bob Scott, LeRoy Vestal, Robert | Satre, Carl Click, Bob Phillips; Gyp- | | sy Skippers: Adrian Glass, Maxine | Nostrand. | Mr. and Mrs. @arl A. Morlok are at- | |tending their first kindergarten | |course. Their names are Edna A., By WILLIAM R. MULLER LANSING, Mich, Oct. 31.—The Morlok qquadruplets have gone out into the world but if they want to be movie stars they will have to wait until they are old enough to chorus their own “yes.” For almost four hours each day, the blond, hazel-eyed dawghters of ->eo |Sarah B., Wilma C., and Helen D. The parents have been asked to 575 Youngsters on Hand| allow screen tests of the children but have refused. Mrs. Morlok is firm | the Parish Hall, comes the last-min- ute warning of the Committee-in- Charge that everyone must wear a mask. x The rule of no admission to the e SRR & Hardwood Floors to, guests are warned, even. if it at Capitol and Coliseum as Chamber Guests The free tickets for admission Capitol and Coliseum theatres last ! Waxing Polishing Sanding PHONE 582 GARLAND BOGGAN | | | | o —r necessitates domino sales, just out- | night, which were distributed to the side the door. children of Juneau through the The masquerade is free of charge | Schools by the Juneau Chamber of to all mepbers and their guests, and | Commerce and the Juneau Empire will begin at 9 o'clock. Because cur- | Theatres, proved to be overwhelm- few is ab 12, guests are urged to in&ly popular. Five hundred and sev- {in her insistence their fame shall |not be commercialized and Papa Carl | backs her up. | “If the children ever want to g6 on the stage, they can do so when unmasked will be rigidly adhered |0 @ special Hallowe'en show at the | o a6 01d enough to make their | own choice,” Mrs. Morlok explaing. “Right now, it's hard enough for us |to let them go around the corner 8" school.” | The ABCD Babies | To the mother, who has had them | constantly at her side since they H.S. GRAVES “The Tlothing Man” | come promptly, although those wish- ing to attend the Silver Night show Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx T'~thing | | There will be fortune-telling, danc- | Iing and refreshments — and then % more dancing. | | Prizes will be given for costumes. | ——- e | LADIES’ GUILD WILL MEET Mrs. Sam Feldon will be hostess | rtomorrow afternoon to the Ladies' | | Guild of the Holy Trinity Episcopal | | | Chureh at the regular meeting in | 4 | Trinity Hall at 2:30 o'clock. A des- | sert luncheon will be served and a light program offered. All members are urged to attend. | e |SPECIAL DELIVEZ> TO DOUG- LAS! Daily at 10:00' a.m. and 2:30 ip.m. “elly Blake's SPECIAL DE- adv, WARRACK Construction Co. | Jumean Prone 487 | | = | { CONSTRUCTION CO. Phone 107 = Juneau EIVERY—Phone 442, Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets | IDEAL PAINT SHOP | If It’s Paint We Ha e It! | FRED W. WENDT | | PHONE 358 PHONE 549 | | I o FLAUNT AND TAUNT! THE SPOOKS at our Hallowe’en Party DANCE IN THE TERMINAL'S “SPOOK HOLLOW’ BALLROOM and FAVORS join in the fun tonight at the... EVER-POPULAR inal Cofe sxeov el enty-five children with tickets were | admitted to the two theatres, and companied by their older brothers and sisters, according to C. D. Beale, Theatre Manager. The free show was provided in an resulting from Hallowe'en pranks. HALIBUT PRICE are welcome to come afterwards. | At least one hundred more, who were [ below the age requiring tickets, ac- | | attempt to lessen property damage | HIGH IN SOUTH SEATTLE, Oct. 31.—There were no sales of halibut here today. Halibut sales this month, in Se- attle, totaled $246,297 for 2,294,300 pounds. ‘This represents an average of 10% cents a pound which is six-tenths of a cent per pound above October last year. ———o— — Daily Empire Wani Ads Pay! TONIGHT . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE; THURSDAY, OCT. 31; 1935. - Morlok Quadruplets Start “Developing Traits” But Mother Su ys There’ll Be No Screen Tests The Morlok gquadruplets are growing up and although they still are so identical it is next to impos- sible for strangers to identify them, their mother insists that they are developing very individual traits. Left to right, they are Helen D., Wiima B, Sarah C. and Edna A. Hospital, May 19, 1930, sharing her babies with the world, even if it’s one. “The most interesting thing about only for four hours’ school a day, is|being the mother of quadruplets,” says Mrs. Morlok, “is watching (o) firm and the Foss Construction Com- proving a sharp experience. She fears that school somehow may separate them from each other and from their family. “I want them to look just differ- ent enough so that Carl and I can tell them apart,” Mrs. Morlok says. But she admits that her four per- fectly normal and healthy daughters are developing individual traits. She points out those differences to her- self from day to day. When the children were born, nurses at the hospital labeled them A, B, C, D, in the order in which they arrived. Mrs. Morlok appended ’ the initials to their first names. Edna A. has become the leader in all their games and lessons, Mrs, Morlok says. It is Sarah C. who is the'mother to the other three, who ¢omforts them when they cry, who Act§ as"the balance wheel afd smooths over difficulties Wilma B. is the comic character of the four, and from her flow most of the witty sayings which the fam- were born in Edward W. Sparrow;ily ;epeats, Helen D. is the sensitive see what will happen next between them.” Edna A. dictates the color scheme of the dresses the girls wear—and she prefers red. Wilma B. likes green, Helen D, blue, and Sarah C., orange. However, the girls refuse to dress differently, or to wear different shoes, or to leave the house without all going at once They are agreeable to having tooth brushes in different shades and car- rying handkerchiefs with differing patterns, but that ends the conces- sions to differences in outward ap- pearances. If one of the quadruplets wears a hole in her stocking and needs & CHAMPAGNE FOR BREAKFAST IS AT COLISEUN New Film Features Young Players in Three-Corn- ered Madcap Romance “Champagne For Breakfast,” good humored comedy with all the spark- ling freshness of the beverage whose name it bears, opens tonight at the Coliseum Theatre. Mary Carlisle, Hardie Albright, Joan Marsh, and Lila Lee are fea- | tured and their interpretatior: of the madcap, three-cornered romance is delightful and intriguing. Lively acting, finished in every de- tail, brings each one of the players a decided step nearer to that big star rating. The olimax comes as a distinet, but antirély entertaining, surprise. | The novel finish tops it off to put the cork back on this bottle of bub- bling filmfare. Also in the picture, and contribut- ing much to its entertainment, are Bradley Page, Adrian Rosley, Vince Barnett, Wallis Clark, Edward Mar- tindel, Lucien Prival, Clarence Wil- ron, Harry Woods, Tammany Young, |Jack Gray and Will Stanton. JUNEAU FIRMS TO BID FOR PWA JOB Cordova plans for use of its re- cently allocated PWA funds will in- clude repairs to the school and in- stallation of a sewer system, said Nelson I. Beers, engineer and archi- tect of the fir mof Stratton and Beers, today, in revealing that his ANDY CLYDE in “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp” TRAVEL CARTOON pany are jointly engaged in drafting plans to be submitted in bidding for the work on the project. Bids are expected to be closed shortly. Fossil centipedes occur in amber of the Qligocene age. ruplets about the grounds while at play. The quadruplets had been CAMPFIRE LUNCHEON PLANNED BY CLASS trained to read the alphabet and print it before going to school. Since each wishes to be like the others, a| A campfire luncheon, in which var- keen sense of competition develops|lous food menus adaptable to camp when one learns a new thing before facilities will be prepared and sam- the others. The children have never had a serious illness, or a serious injury, | pled, is planned by the Girl Scout deaders’ Training Class, which met yesterday in the Northern Light new pair, the other three want new | although Helen D. spent'a few days Presbyterian Church parlors for its’ ones, too. If one has a cold, all seem to cateh it. If one plays outdoors, all must play witlt her. 3 A Sensation at School Their entrance to kindergarten was a near-sensation. Little play- mates squeezed to sit between or beside them and followed the quad- [Seagram-Distillers Corp.—Distillery: Lawrenceburg, Ind. ~—Executive Offices: New York in an “incubator” after her birth. | regular business session under di- Morlok is busy direeting his cam- | Fector of Miss Betty Schoettler. paign for re-lection as City Com- The campfire luncheon will be held stable. In previous years, Lansing Next Wednesday noon at the home of voters have considered the “quads” | Mrs. Robert Rice. four good reasons why he should e hold a public job. Morlok considers | spECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- them excellent reasons, since the LAS! Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 only income the family has is his pm. Kelly Blake's SPECIAL DE- constable's salary. 'LIVERY—Phone 442 adv. DON'T WAIT T0O LONG! Drive in today and let us give your car a complete winter . overhauling. Shift the worry ! to our shoulders! ‘ Full Anti-Freeze Service | Lonnors Motor / ,_ \ OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Phone Single 0-2 rings ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected Dave Housel, Prop. e S P—— INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska Established 1898 @ e e . WINDOW CLEANING Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Cerner Second and Seward