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NI Special Concert Sunda tone of Charles Wak “Legend of the Ca Kriesler. Y I I’IFT()I{I ions from Victor Records—7:00 to 7: “From the Land of the Sky Blue Water” (From Four American Indian Songs) sung by Alma Gluck. 3. “At Dawning,” sung by John McCormack. ON THE PALATONE ’\] ACE ()R( Hl\‘TR\ I’l \\ fllllllllllllllllll“llllllllllllllllillIIlIIllIIIlIIIIIIII1|IIIIIHIIIIHIIIH|IIIIII|IIIllIIIIII [Tw 1l SUNDAY MATINEE 2 and NIGHT ONLY Night on the Pala- Cadman’s Com- 0. nyon”—violin by Fritz v efield MU BT T THH B TH T TR T P OR QH()V& 3 AL NEW'S JOHN \\nh Clive Brook, Casson Ferguson JOY MURPHY an LAST 4 ?t(ullmg Revelation of llarrzed erp' n 4 T'TOLD YOI SQ” 10- 25 40, Loges 50 conts' 2 TIMES TONIGHT “’IIIF SIIIFII) OoF H()\()I"’ C. FLINN PRESENTS Illillllllll!lll"llllllIllllllllllllllllliil I Lilyan Tashman, d FAY TINCHER MONDAY NIGH Cadman, Beeler, mezzo soprano, ur and Professional Women’s composer-pianist, T — Recital by Charles Wakefield assisted by Florence nder auspices of Business Club of Juneau. IllllIIII|lIIIIII|IlIIiIIIIIIIIIIllIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIiIIIIIIII|iIIlIIhIlIIIIIllIIIIIII ! Attractions | At Theatres o s Claude is the maid. | “SHIELD OF HONOR” [k} LAST TIMES AT PALACE B Neil. Hamilton, who portrays a feature role in “The Shield of Hon- | or” the Universal production whichl is now holding the screen at the Palace for the last time tonight,; has a camera complex. He has ing his unique collection of photograph-1 ic contrivances many still cameras, 2 number of graflex cameras, a| small “button-hole” camera, cameras and numerous other in- struments used in the art of pho-| tography. The cast of “The Shield | of Honor,” also includes such play- trs as Ralph Lewis, Dorothy Gulli-| ver, Fred Esmelton, Joe Girarq, | Nigel Barrie and a host of others. [ | REALISM IN “TIN | GODS” CAUSES FLOOD [T Realism is all right in its place but—it should know where its place is! | For instance, while “Tin Gods,” ‘Thomas Meighan's latest picture, which arrives at the Coliseum Sun- day, was being shot in Paramount's' eastern studio, a «call had to be sent to the Astoria fire and street cleaning department for help. It happened this way. A moun- tain torrent built- on an exterior set. was arranged by Director Allan Dwan so that the water would drain off into a gutter outside the studio. The river poured, but—the sewer refused to function. Soon, Sixth Avenue and the adjacent streets resembled nothing so much as an American Venice. It seemed as though the mountains might start floating off the lot with Tommy/ and Renee Adoree as their unwill- ing passengers. ‘Then—and only then—were the alarms turned in. After several hours, with the aid of both street cleaning and fire de- partments, the clogged streets were once more opened to traffic. Aileen Pringle and Renee Adoree are featured in “Tin Gods.” It was , Williams; box | | the players amounts to as much as | that of a larger cast. | Leatrice Joy plays the starring| role of Mary Martin Williams; Clive | Brook supports Miss Joy as Peter Lilyan Tashman has the second feminine lead as Narcissa Williams; Bertie Waring is played by Casson Ferguson and Toby Manager Spickett has | several Victor records of Cadman’s compositions and these will be play- {ed on the Palatone Sunday night for the concert from 7 to 7:20. The orchestra will play for both shows. .- Ice cream, brick or bulk. Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. —adv, Try the Five o0'Clock Dinner Specials at Mabry's. —adv. — .o Try a TOASTED SANDWICH &t ithe Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. ady SUMMONS No. 2868-A In the District Court for the Ter- ritory of Alaska, First Division, at Juneau. ADMIRALTY ALASKA GOLD MINING COMPANY, A COR- PORATION, Plaintiff, vs. K. R. PAYKULL, Defendant. The President of the United States of America, to the above named defendant, GREETING: | You are hercby summoned to jappear in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, First Di- vision, at Juneau, within thirty days after the last publication of {this summons, namely, within thir- ty days after the 27th day of April, 1929, in case this summons is pub- lished, or within forty days after the date of its service upon you, in case this summons is served upon You personaily, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff on file in sald court in said above entitled action. The plaintiff in said detion, d mands the following relief, to-wi Plaintiff demands judgment against the defendant for the sum of Nine Hundred Three and 10/100 Dol- lars, $(903.10), with interest at 8% per annum from April 1, 1923, and for its costs and disbursements herein. And in case of your faflure to appear and answer the plaintiff's complaint at the time and place above mentioned, judgment will be entered againsy you for the relief adapted from William Anthony McGuire’s stage play. demanded in its complaint and as herein before mentioned. The order for the publication of “FOR ALIMONY ONLY” I | AT PALACE SUNDAY | P »n The smallest cast vet filmed on the Demille lot! But it is one of the most expensive. There are only five members of importance in the cast of the Le- nore J. Coffee original srceen play, “For Alimony Only,” which was di- rected by Willlam de Mille, and wmnemuwmemm Sunh!, d salaries w2 |this summons was made by the court on the 22nd day of March, 1929. IN WITNESS Whereof I have Ilfilll!lllllllllll IfillllllllllIllIIIll!lllllllll"llll!l!lIllllllllllIIIIIIIIllllllIIIlllllI!lll!illllll}llllll i IHIillllllllllll‘"‘llilllI|"IIIIIIHH | secured THE DAILY ALASKA FMPIRE SATURDAY APRIL 6, 1929 0 ARTISTS - APPEAR HERE NEXTMONDAY |Cadman and Floxenrc Beel- er Coming—Made Big Hit at Ketchikan Charles Wakefield Cadman, pian- |ist and composer, and Florence Bel- ler, leading mezzo contralto of the Pacific Coast, will appear in a re- cital at the Palace theatre next! Monday evening and also Tuesday afternoon. The two artists will ive on the Admiral Evans fr burg. They gave concerts in ikan and the following cable- gram received by Miss Caroline | Todd from Dr. Ra Lillmn Carlson, tells the story in its “Cadman-Beeler (‘Dncmh tremen- dous success. Packed school audi: torium at children’s matinee besides two evening recitals. Madame Beeler best soloist ever here and Cadman’s Indian flute number alone worth borrowing money to | hear. Artists were endorsed by | Rotary, Cyro and Commercial Clubs.” One composition Mr. Cadman will | present here was inspired from a | lezend told to him by an Alaskan fisherman. ¢ i The program for both concerts here will consist of groups that all classes can enjoy. Both Mr. Cad- man and Madame Beeler have a faculty of presenting numbers which please the masses and not a select few. Tickets for the recitals are on |sale at the Butler-Mauro Drug Store, Burford's Corner, Hayes Curio Store, Winn's Hat Shop, Zynda Ho- tel, Mabry’s Cafe and Jarman's Those who purchased tickets for the postponed concert last year will be admitted on the same tickets {or refund will be made, the com- mittee announces. - THANE SCHOOL VISITS MPIRE, OTHER PLACES A dozen or more chxldu\n aging from six years up, swarmed into the Empire office about 1:30 o'clock | today, and, chattering gaily, watch- ed the I ypes running and gazed curiously about the shop where the | ‘[m])(‘r made up, then visited the| | press room he group was made | |up of the entire Thane school and | was chaperoned by Mrs. Volyan,| teacher. | youngsters are also | The school | visiting the District jail, the U. S.| District Court, in session now, the | Alaska M im and J. P. Ander- son’s flower show, while on their tour of inspection in Juneau. oo — BENEFIT CARD PARTY A benefit card party will be given | in Moose Hall by Chapter 439, for | a Legionnaire, on Thursday night,]| April 11. Bridge, whist and pinocle will be played. 1000 cubic inches ol ‘of coal London loses through the | into clock, /olving once in 2 | Teacher Association recently; 3 |Fred Long, Vice-President and Miss SCIENCE MOVES AGAINST GREAT FOG OF LUNI]I]N Air I\nmsh\ Renews Flght —Condition Is Blamed fO\' D]F?’HS(‘S LONDON, March 6.—The British Air Ministry has ren-wed its fight against London fogs, .which are| blamed for being t requent cause of rickets and tuberculosi: r. J. 8. Owens, Superintendent | of the Air Ministry Ad Com- | mittee on Atmospheric Pollution. | has discovered that during a bad| fog there are between 800,000 and 1,600,000 particles of soot crammed into every cubic inch of air over | London. Each persons breathes f about 30,- air every hour. under bad fog This means that conditions nea: every son in central London inhales from 24,- 000,000 to 45,600,000 particles of soot in an hour. Rays Shut Out “The shutting out of the ultra- violet rays of the sun is the worst and most harmful feature of air | pollution,” Dr. Owe X "It is the frequent cause of rickets and tuberculosi: On a winter’'s morning 280 tons of soot are produced in three hours over London by domestic fires. Half a pound of soot pollution per mil- ubic yards is enough to elim- inate practically all the ultra-violet 1ays which would otherwise be com- ing through. Burning 17,000,000 tons smoke pall mixed in the seasonal fogs 50 per cent of the winter sun- shine it would receive and 50 per cent of the winter light, accord- ing to Dr. Owens. Air Pollution The density of pollution is asured by an intricate clockwork e. A disc of white filter paper, in diameter, divided 24 sections like the face of a is fixed on a turntable re- 4 hours. obtained in this show that the impurity varies every hour. In London the atmosphere thickens about m,, when do- mestic fires are lit, and it is at its densest about three hours later. After this it clears adually, but there is a slight increase in density about 6 p. m. On Sunday morning [the period of maximum density is one hour later. e T Mrs. William Bergen was President of the Cordova Part Records way | T a elected nt- M Dorothy Aalbu, Secretary - Trea urer. - e NOTICE Moose Memorial Services will be held at Moose Hall Sunday evening {April 14, at 8 p. m. All members urgea to attend. adv | —————— Fresh roasted peanuts and pop- corn. Juneau ch Cream Paxlors TWO ROADS One Easy, Other - COLISE SUNDAY and MONDAY 7:30—9:25 THOMAS MEIGHAN RENEE‘Al)()REE~—A",EEN PRINGLE ALLEN DAWN PRODUCTION “Tin Gods” LATEST in WORLD EVENTS Afid: the Added | Educational Comedy “ATTA BOY” Of Course— DICK McGINNS at the “KIMBALL” Saturday Only BOB C USTER in “Border Whirlwiml” NOTICE TO PAY SCHOOL TAX NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been duly wppointed School Tax Collector for Juneau, Alaska, in conformity with hapter 29, Alaska Session Laws, 19, All male persons between ges of twenty-one and fifty years, ept soldiers, sailors in U. S or Revenue Cutter Service, olunteer firemen, paupers and in- e persons, are subject tax im of Five ($5.00) Should m .or prior n April, 1929, the to Dollars you be living in Alaska n said tax shall be and shall be delinquent after May 18 1929. Should you arrive in Al nentioned, tax will be -delinquent thirty (30) days after your arrival,| )¢ within ten (10) days after notice s given you. All persons, firms and corpora- tions employing labor shall ish list of employees to collector and authorized by law to de- duct amount of tax from wages of employees. Fines and imprisonment are pro- vided by the Act above quoted for those who fail or neglect to pay tax or furnish list of employees. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, April 6, 1929, H. R. SHEPARD, School Tax Collector for Juneau, Alaska. First publication, April 6, 1929. Last publication, April 27, 1929. B s FOURS ‘We are now ready to alter or make up your furs. Goldstein’s Emporlum adv. Cohan, beiow, snd Mazy Pickford, ri lightfully as she can, a“e some of Where are the incomes of yester- year, when a top-notch actor pulled down a “cool” ten grand for a hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said court, at Juneau, Alaska, this 22nd day of March, 1929. (Seal) JOHN H. DUNN, Clerk of Conrt year’s labor? Today there are at least six stage stars whose weekly income is in the thousands and whose finances count over a million dollars. Take David Warfield, whose the- atrical career began quite humbly as an usher 'in a vaudeville house. Marion Davies, left; David Warfield, above; George ight, serving de- | enviable class who the well-known Stage and Screen Stars Rival Wall Street Wth Teir Seven Figured Fortunes stars of screen and stage who have arrived into the POssess more than one million in the _coin of the r.llm. thrilled with tne prospect of a $200Davies is reputed to lead, with a a week engagement. Today he is|fortune estimated at five million reputed the richest actor in the|dollars. They say, however, that world with an estimated wealth of | Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford ten millions. Blackface Eddie Can-!and Charlie Chaplin, are in a fair tor comes second with about half-|{way to eatching up to her. a-dozen millions, while Al Jolson This rough survey does not, of and George M. Cohan are in the|course, ineclude the countless num- three-million class, individually, not | ber of stars, both stage and screen, E. H. Southen, collectively! fa- | who boast six-figure bank accounts. mous interpreter of Shakespeare, is| Woe to any of these who tries to also in the seven-figure gmup Joihe. wod_of clnems, 'mb-my out of a good stiff income to the first Monday | ska later than first date above' furn- ! | KEN CHANGES MIND NEW YORK, april 6.—After he had been ballyhooed as one of the best major league prospects of the hot stove season, Ken Strong, All American football player at New changed his mind about playing pro baseball and de- cided to stick with the college nine. York university, Coming—Very Soon CHARLIE CHAPLIN in “The Gold Rush” IF Cut prices were the prime requisite when buying foodstuffs, you wouldn't care what you ate. —But QUALITY is undoubtedly the most im- . portant factor, with SERVICE second. He is a pitcher. & i —Have you ever stopped to realize that you can HEINZ New Varletles lave a get both QUALITY and SERVICE without a | TASTE. = At your grocers Fresh fraction of a cent being added to the cost of Cucumber Pickles. —adyv. | Have you tried the Five o'Clock iue and payable on said first date Dinner Specials at Mabry's Cafe? your foodstuffs? T ™S CALIFORNIA GROCERY gl T gt spadlh o By PHONE 478—Free Delivery e Try a HOT TAMALE after the |show. Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. —adv. o — - ; = i e nnms Don’t glasses that ioned kind. PHONE 484 | A full line of modern are comfortable and service- able than the old-fash- Worry' We are specialists in duplicating broken lenses —just bring us the pieces! Expert, reasonable work. more R. E. Southwell Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 16, Valentine Building DANCE Moose Hall TONIGHT Lindseth’s Six Piece Orchestra MRS. VANCE—Piano H. LINDSETH—Violin FRED DOEBLER—Banjo BILL HERRIMAN-—Saxaphone HARRY KRANE—Accordian BILL PARKS—Drums and Xylophone Let’s All Go L O T U lllllllllllmllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IflI|lIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllillllllllllll = T DT T T T T T T T L PO SO, A gentleman is received a¢eording to his rance WEAR TAILOR MADE CL And have them made at home. It is ¢heaper to have them made at home than to send outside for them. F. WOLLAND, Merchant Tailor Old Papers for sale at Empire Office WHY WORRY ABOUT FIRE FROM AN OVERHEATED CHIMNEY Chimneys Built of Our Blocks Cannot Overheat We manufacture only one type of chimney block and they make an absolutely firesafe chimney. Each block is 16 in by 16 in. and 8 inches high with a round flue. Each block is tongued and grooved and in each corner is a space which when the blocks are set in, creates a continuous air space the entire height of the chimney — and the tongue and groove set the blocks tightly together—that is why they cannot overheat. Each block is made of the best of materials and well made. DO NOT CRACK the blocks. The heat of the chimney or tlle welght of the blocks wdas L G. E. KRAUSE Manufacturer of Concrete Products i Dealer in Cement, Plaster, Lime, Sand and Gravel and other heavy BUILDING MATERIALS