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Shorts Topics of the Day Pathe News It's Timely Milligan Mushes Into Wedlock on Celebration Day Dog Drive\'—/{viation Man Weds Childhood Sweet- heart Here Tuesday Fred Milligan, the dog {urned aviator, who played such an important part in ~yesterduay’s air mail celebration, made a really memorable occasion of the day by skipping his scheduled ride with the first load of air mail to Fair- banks — and was married a few hours later. The bride Florence Mead San Francisco, who arrived in Ju- neau yesterday morning on the mer Alaska. She and Milligan childhood sweethedrts. They were married ifi U. S. Com- missioner Felix Gray's court at 5 FiCTURE Robert YOUNG Billie Burke ¢ Reginald Owen esinger and Bradbury Foote * Directed Play by Tess Si ey Al Produced by Joseph L. Mankiewicz by Dorothy Arzner * afternoon with Louis Delebecque yesterday Mrs. o'clock Mr. and attending A dinner party was given later in the evening in Percy's Cafe, with tions of Percy Reynolds presented the bride with an orchid corsage and the “PAA crowd” gave a mixmaster. Guests present were Mr, and Mrs. Delebecque, Mr. and Mrs. O. J Johnson, of Fairbanks; Mr. and Mrs. L. F. McCrary, Al Monsen 1d Gene Meyring and the bride and groom The couple will make their home in Fairbanks where Mr. Miiligan is airport mana for PAA. They flew north, this merning 5 - - LUNCHEON PARTY ‘GIVEN TODAY FOR MRS. JOHN GLASSE Twenty guests were assembled for luncheon today complimenting Mrs. John A. Glasse, who with Rev Glasse and their three children, will leave Sunday on a trip to Philadel- phia. going south aboard the Prin- cess Louise. The luncheon pa was given by Mrs. A. E. Karnes and Mrs. George Folta at the Folta residence. Tulips and narcissus in white and yellow formed a table setting, and sewing marked the afternoon. de musher is of Hirath Walker's DeLuxe Rye or Bourbon whiskies are Bottled-in- Bend and are 3 Years Old. Available at popular pyices. Ask your dealer! adv. SEE THESE NEW THREE THRIFTY FEATURES! 1 .Tel-a-cook lights. Inform you, instantly when and - where the current is on. A new exclusive G-E feature. 2. Select - a - Speed Calrod Cooking Unit. Five cooking heats from one unit with one switch. 3. Triple-Oven. Three ovens in one. Speed oven for shelf cooking 400° in five minutes. Saves up to 40% in current. Extra large master oven. Generous size super broiler. Mrs. Alaska— Here's Your New Range! You've wanted a new range, Mrs, Alaska—a brilliantly, beautiful range that cooks foods better and requires less of your time and effort than old- fasioned methods. HERE IT IS—the NEW General Electric! NEW in Styl- ing. NEW in Automatic Features. NEW in downright Dollar for Dollar Value. YOUR NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC RANGE WILL BE HE BEST INVESTMENT YOU'LL EVER MAKE! SOLD ON CONVENIENT TERMS. ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1938. . JOAN CRAWFORD STARRED IN THE ‘BRIDE WORE RED' Popular Picture Plays To- night and Tomorrow at Capitol Theatre “The Jean > Ca Bride Wore Red,” s srawford, op ol Theatre for a two-day the attractive star as are the competent and Robert Young, both hly expert in their With ng cho! T of entertaining Dorothy Arzer, only woman director. wa and her initial effort Goldwyn-Mayer assu according to crit wherever the pict shown Miss Orawford plays oSt colerful and dramatic role of her areer as Anni, a cabaret entertain- er who omes a grand lady a month by the chance of fate. Tone, whose first reen success W scored as Miss Crawford's rejected suitor in “Dancing Lady wins at last in a cinematic love affair with the star as the ant and v cal Giulio. Young i his acting opportunity as a weal thy nobleman Reginald Owen as a pompous retired Admiral and Billie Bur as the Contessa di Meina, a new comedy m, ably I i the porting cast. In prominent tured roles are Lynn ‘Carver as Maddelena, Rudi's fiancee, who is jilted for Anni; George Zucco as Count Armal who takes Anni out of a front and makes her ety belle a joke on Rudi; Dickie Moore Pietro, one of Giulio’s many relatives men Hollywood": in charg Me! futur for her commer been the fo! msi- given finest Rudi sup- fea- as - POISON SCENE IS THRILLING INMOVIE PLAY But There Are Two+Amaz- ing Reasons Resulting from “Invention™ By ROBBIN OCONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Ma take a drug called | sensations will' be ammzing. Edward G. Re to his vietim, having just | Humphrey Bogart with for a scene in “The Amazing Dr. Clitter- house.” It was a curiou cene, be - A close-up of Robinson on- tifically intent on the “dying man the scene operated without nefit of Bogart, whose lines were read by the dialogue director. After a good stiff drink of this ‘paradol,” however, this is what happens: The room’s walls shrink, vou u - die your before detailed poisoned yinson it €s. B VIA THE IT COSTS NO MORE. LOWEST FARES APPLY Observation-club car, compartment, drawing-room and bed room cars, modern tourist sleepers, luxury lounge coaches. New de luxe 48 seat dining car serving delicious low price meals. For further information inquire of your nearest steamship office ravel Bureau, or R. E. Carson, General Agent : White Bldg., Fourth Ave. and Union St., Seattle, Wash. e any ‘DD’ STANDS FOR youthful child-star Deanna Durbin (right) and for French actress Danielle Darrieus, introduced to each other on film lot by their mutual director, Henry Koster. “MELODY FOR - TW0" COMES T0 COLISEUM Radio Stars Are Featured m ])()l)ll]ill' Mll.\'i\’(ll Production Tin Pan Alley, night clubs and radio stations figure minently in the ckground of felody For Two,” new Warner Bros.’ musical production with James Melton, famed air-singer, and Patricia El- lis playing the principal roles. The picture plays tonight and tomor- row at the Caliseum Theatre. The story, much stronger than most musicals, concerns the love affair between a singing orchestra leader and his young woman solo ist, their separation through a mis- understanding which all but ruin: the man, his comeback by adapt- ing the seductive swing rhythm to the ballroom, and a spirited com- petition staged between his orches- tra of gorgeous blondes and the girl friend’s band of young men musi- cians over the radio. Melton, of course, has the leader- singer role, Miss Ellis is his girl friend who later becomes his gre est professional rival, and Miss Shaw is a torch singer who takes over Mel- ton’s affections after he and Miss Ellis go their different ways. Fred Keating also is a member of the cast, enacting the role of a comedy manager. Marie Wilson is a bull fiddle player, and Charles Foy is a hoofing press agent Craig Reynolds plays the part of| a gossip columnist, t -se JANETTE SEGGIE IS MARRIED TO MR. GALLEMORE Ceremony Is Performed by Rev. Glasse in Gov- ernor’s House BRONZE BY BLOND Elecfra” Waggoner "(above), Texas heiress, attracts attention in her “one-man” show of sculpture in New York. She calls the bronze “The Golden Spear.” i s contracts in size, the that Robinson rumbling in his than Bogart, this on testimony dying from don't uch drug Schulman, coined mustn't object Pirst, eems 1o hears a ars, and then of Bogart—you good.” All this is every victim more about uppos ccond, paradol film's medi word-—because people ideas. amerman on (1 Gaudio, who's beer since the Biograph Italian-orn, and there’s s of it in his spe not much, | which ought to make this funnier: Tony was behind the camera when Greta took her first Hollywood . and he shot her first two pic- s here. Tn those silent days the even though ther and Garbo's E h was mostly Swedish. Well Tony left M-G-M, { he hadn't seen Greta i1 those until the day he visited her st while she was making| Conquest.” She greeted iriend; and then ment cried: “Ah to be isn't any Leo M. (viser movie: d there Dr amazing for two rea- t al film is hooting ds Tony In the presence of fifty friends as- sembled in the ballroom of the Governor’s House last evening, Miss Janette Colville Seggie, daughter of Mr. and M Peter Seggie of Nanaimo, B. C., became the bride of Mr. Willard Alexander Gallemore The Rev. John A. Glasse officiated at the ceremony. Given in marriage by Gov W. Troy, the bride wore a gown of ivory satin, distinguished by an Elizabeth style collar, long sleeves, and a train. Her veil was fashioned with a coronet head band, and fell like an old|in soft folds over the long train some amaze- Pink roses formed the bridal bou- Tony! You|auet. peak wit ha d Mrs. Gertrude Naylor No Recession For Them | matron of honor, dressed it They say there’s a recession here=|of flame lace, while Mark Storms but F MacMurray and|Wwas the best-man for Mr. Gallemore. Fairbanks, Jr haven't | Mrs. Jack Metzgar played the wed- rd of it. MacMurray technically ding march. at- once. Barely| Following the ceremony, the bride Grove” in time @bd bridegroom received congrat-| with ulation from the many friends in he's | attendance, and in the dining room al-|the large and beautifully decorated bridal eake was cut. | Mr. and Mrs. Gallemore left this| morning with Pilot Simmons of | Adaska Air Transport for Hirst | Chichagof where Mr. Gallemore is employed at the Hirst Chichagof' mine and where they will make their home, - ) | The bride, who came to Juneau last May, has been a nurse at St Ann’s Hospital for the past year. She was graduated from St. Joseph's Hospital dn Vietoria with the class of 1934, Mr. Gallemore, a graduate of the MissouriSehool of Mines and Metal- urgy, came to Alaska from his home 7 in Rogers, Arkansas, five years ago. Baskets, plain and leather i o [ bound S TRIPPING | Mr. and Mrs. Lester Gore | passengers on the North Sea a round trip from Ketchikan ‘snka and return, ‘though they haven't come to his scenes yet. . . And Fairbanks, doing| ia $100,000 job with Danielle Dar- rieux in “The Rage of Paris,” does | nighf work on the re-takes of “Hav- ,ing Wonderful Time, ch, But tur players read lin weren't mikes John n years him in but % the gown bouts, Douglas is in three films ishes ‘Co‘coanut to go into “Sing You Sinners” Bing Crosby, and ull the time the lead in “Men With Wings,” A FISHING TRIP is something to look forward te. Getting your outfit and tackle together is half the fu A visit to our TACKLE I ght you, ERYTHIN successful is Stripping Rods from $3.75 up Steel Telescope Rods from $2.25 fir P/ to make the trip are | for | to| Reels for Salmon or Trout streams on this side of the Yukon,!| Seattle, Juneau’s Greatest Show Value Some Like It Sweet! Some Like It Hot! This Has Both It's the Mosta of the Resta! LTON + PATRICIA ELLIS | KEATI CELLAWINIFREDSHA W “XOUils-KINS, B0 M, K JEROME JAMES MARIE WILSON § Lgig nu}.»' 1 {: I"UVK ,.\l)lll D ENJOYMENT Comedy. “artoon —Sportlight Latest in News THE COLISEUM THE SHORT SUBJECTS Mrs. Florence Orr and her children Bitter custody fight between Mrs. Florence Orr, Beverly Hills, Cal., realtor, and her husband over their two children, Willard I1I, 9, and Priscilla, 8, ends in kidnaping charges filed in Chicago against Mrs. Orr by her husband. Mrs. Orr, shown in Los Angeles with her chil dten where she voluntarily surrendered, denies the kidnaping charges in which the husband says his wife “forcibly and zecretly confined and imprisoned” the children and carried them out of Illinols. Mrs, Orr maintains that under the conditions of her California divorce she was given custody of the children. LARGE AREA UNEXPLORED IN INTERIOR For some unknown reason, pros- pectors never have paid much at- tention to the Black River region, easterly from Circle and the Fort Yukon, but there should be good chances there, in the opinion of John Druck, veteran trader from that area, now visiting Fairbanks, says the News-Miner Mr. Druck’s home is at Fishhook | MRS. H. G. WILCOX Village, 60 miles from Fort Yukon, on the Black. The Black River mak-| Mrs. M. E. Upper, mother o6f Mrs. es a long sweep in the region and|H. G. Wilcox, arrived aboard the flows into the Porcupine above Fort North Sea to visit with the Wilcoxes |for the summer. Coming here from her heme in Mrs. Upper is visiting in but none to speak of on the easter-|Juneau for the first time. She will ly side, or toward the Black,” said/be with the Wilcoxes at Point Mr. Druck, “and I have seen few, if | Louisa where they have taken a any prospectors there for years.” |cabin owned by Norman Cook. Furs are scarce in the Black Riv- * >, —— er area this season, according to Mr. “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. “The Talk of the Town” Druck. He mushed his dog team from his home to Fort Yukon, and from there flew to Fairbanks with | Pilot Jimmy Dodson. He is here to | have his eyes treated, and is ac- | companied by his young son. They plan to return to Fort Yukon in a day or two, after which they will return to their home on the Black by trail. “Everyone in our section of the country has a radio,” said Mr. Druck, “and we greatly enjoy get- ting the news and other programs on the air.” |MRS. M. E. UPPER ‘ VISITS DAUGHTER, has been found in many HEAVY FUEL OIL AND “ "< DIESEL OIL BURNERS —Sold Exclusively by— Rice & Ahlers Co.-Phone 34