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© 1927. by WELL-'™M GLAD- MAGGIE 15 COMIN' TO HER SENSES" 1T's ABOUT TIME SHE LET ME SMOKE) IN THE PARLOR: * THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 6, 1928. By GEORGE Mc I'LL DO THAT: DO YYou REMEMBER HOW | USED TO Cook? LISTEN:DEAR-1 DAW THAT ARTICLE IN THE PAPER ABOUT MICKEY RYAN'S CHOWDER PARTY AND \ WANT YOUL TO GO - rLL GO JLST] TO PLEASE MAGGIE - WILL YOU COOK SOME CORNED BEEF AN CABBAGE. FOR-DINTY AN’ ME? Int'l Featare Service. Inc. Great Britain vights reperved. OH- \WHY DID | WAKE LR? o Marry Waiter LOUGHRAN AND LOMSKI MEET FRIDAY NIGHT Light Heavyweight Cham- pion Is Battling Twice Within Month NEW YORK, Jan Confident that mo man in the 175 pound class can out maneuver his nimble feet or escape his chugging fists, Tommy Lough will toss his light heavyweight title into the Madison Square Garden g for the second time within a month, fomorrow night This is for a 15 round title test | against Leo Lomski, of Aberdeen, ‘Washington. Although among the rib punchers, made a 7 to his title. e LORD DERBY’S HORSES CHIEF STAKE WINNERS LONDON, Jan. 6--With the enil of the English flat-racing season, Lord Derby stands out as the most successful owner, having won more_than $200,000, in stakes with horses of his own breeding. Lord Astor is next, with approxi- mately $150,000 and the Aga Khan third, with $110,000. The champion jockey th year was Gordon Richards, with wins to his credit. A feature of the season was the fact that French bred horses have won more than §150,000. _————~——— DUTCH PROMISE NORMAL PRICES AT '28 OLYMPICS Lomski is huskiest present day Tommy has been 5 favorite to retain 5 AMSTERDAM, Holland, Jan. 6 —There will be no price ‘boosting in the Dutch hotels during the Olympic games next summer if . those in charge of running the international meet can help it. “It has already been determined by officials that the hotel keep- ers in Amsterdam, The Hague, Scheveningen and elsewhere wiil maintain prices at last year's level,” says a communigue of the Dutch Olympic committee. ——————— JACK OF ALL TRADE * The Shop of 0dd Jobs It your pipes freeze up, or for any odd jobs Phone 473, John Holler. —adv. T0 DARKEN HAIR APPLY SAGE TEA Look Youn;_Bring Back Its Natural Color, Gloss and Attractiveness Common garden sage brewed into a heavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant. Just a few ap- plications will prove a revelation it your hair is fading, streaked or gray. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe at home, though, is youblesome. An easier way is to get a bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound at any drug store all ready for use for only 75 cents. This 1s ‘the old- time recipe improved by the ad- dition of other ingred: s While wispy, gray, faded hair is mot sinful, we all desire to re- tain our youthful ‘appearance and attractiveness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth{s Sage and Sul- phur Compound, no one can tell, because it does it so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your halr, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs ‘have disappeared, and, after an- “ other application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant. adv. championship | considerad | Princs’ 164 : a‘woA VETERANS GIVEN RELEAAE;: 'I}ilI.I.EGE FWE IS ON ALASKA Squad of Seven Has Turn out Here — Juneau Schedule Uncertain Seven players, the basketball squad of the Alaska College, ac- companied by Coach K. W. Abel, | I passed through Juneau last night on the steamer Alaska, hound! for Ketchikan where they are heduled to play their first| games in Southeastern Alaska. | Coach Abel had expected to : " {make the trip with eight men,| | ] ; ; i but he lost ome of his squad i {member when he was taken ill with rheumatism The boys on| the team are: Tad Loftus and {Jim Connors, forwards; John; |Smith, center; Donald McDonald; Jand Jack Boswell, guards, and| |Sam Moyer and Howard Romig,| {substitutes. Jim Connors is al |local boy, graduated from Juneau’ |High School last spring, and; formerly was one of the stars on the Juneau High Schoopl five. Shortly after the Alaska. dock-! jed here the team went up to the high school gymnasium and had| ‘neurly an hour’s turnout, shoot. ing and scrimmage. They show- v}pd up well and seemed' little the, jworse ' for a rather rough trip 44— across the gulf. | The dates for the games here ‘f REJECTS CAREER | are uncertain, due to the lapse TO WASH DISHES | |between steamer sailings from} attle. Unless the squad can tch a small boat from Ketchi- {kan to Petersburg and from there to Juneau they wilL remain ;in Ketchikan until the Admiral} Rogers reaches there o week from| road run, Miss May Jones | today ! wrote a SONE. | If they are forced to wait for “Wondering I You Remem. |(the Rosers their schedule of ber,” she called the plece and | 8ames here will ‘e cut short, it “took” the first time it was | 8IvIng them only three games, sung in London. | January 15, 16 and 17 as they b SSbiile Miss: o must take the Alaska for Seward| [ DUt 80 vears old; ¥ | on the later date. In this event had offers to go to London to | the Juneau Firemen, Juneau { continue song writing, but she | High Schcol and Douglas High | nas decided to remain .at | BSchool will probably have ome home and help her mother do | K4 endlL g b ShilaRe iy Tae; Hotpwark: In Ketchikan the college n!uu‘ “* expect to meet the high school, {eity and the Metlakatla fives.| Dribble May {Coach Abel said they might be| able to secure games with Wran-| Be Changed to {gell and possibly Petersburg. Single Bounce | Lack of sufficient guarantees| - prevented the team from con-| URBANA, 1L, Jan. 6.—BlHm- tjnying to Seattle, Coach Abel ination of the dribble in favor gaiq. Games with the University of d single bounce in basketball of washington Freshmen and two| is advocated hy Coach Craig Ruby other schools were arrangcd but| of the University of Illinols In ,¢ jeast four games, with larger| favor of change for the general gyarantees than the schools could| weltare of the game. offer, were necessary before the “My belief In the necessity for trip to the States could be made.| who once played here include Jim|the change is based on the situa-| Hard luck caused the girls to Seaborn, * Vic Des Jardine andltion in the Illinois basketball giuy at home, according to Coach| Denny Breen, St. Paul; Billy Hill|games where stalling back is car-' Apel, For a while they were| of Minneapolis, and Ade Johnson,|ried to excess on small high'going strong, and then a couple Ching's brother, of Duluth, ailischool floors,” sald Coach Ruby.|were taken fll, one girl fell down|just what every cold and catarrh now of the American Hockey As-|“The five man defense proves 0 in her studies and the team be-|sufferer has been seeking. . It's sociation; and Percy Galbraith and |strong dribbling causes talling.”| gan losing. = Playing boys' rules| just splendjd. i L& Mrs. Dorothy Woodman Park- hurst of Boston, widow of Gover- nor Frederick Hale Parkhurst of and Back Bay society has applied for a mar- riage license to wed Cyrus Di- mitri Comninos, young medical student, descendant of Byzantine emperors and now working as head waiter in a Back Bay safe. { Maine, e eader, e = .__..:.wa.w...‘.:'.:o..,. pre S —— | S R at | Bob Shawkey, pitcher, and Dutch Reuther, (inset) have been given un- | | . conditional releases by the New. York Yankees, Both of these men have * been eonsidered among the best pitchers in baseball. created an obstacle as it would have been necessary for thefn to learn the girls' rules had they played the high echools in South- eastern Alaska. e HGCKEY “CAPITAL” LOSES PRESTIGE LETH, Minn, Jan. 66— | Hockey, sweeping the country, has |had its unparalleled growth at | considerable expense to this little iron mining city of 7,500 popula. tion. Once the home of Ching John son, brilliant defense man of the New York Americans, and othei {blade stars of remown, this city ,was the hockey capital of tHe | northwest a few years back whe:a the game was on a more or less amateur basis. : Eveleth held a berth in the old | American Amateur Hockey League talong with Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Duluth and St. Paul and a spa- cious hippodrome built by popu- lar subscription seldom lacked capacity crowds. But professional hockey came and with its attractive salaries and expensive organizations final- ly set a pace beyond the reach of even this ambitious place. The ‘greal Ching left, but Eveleth still | struggled for its place in the PONTYPOOL, Wi 6—Inspired by the | the rails” which she so often heard her father talk about fler he came in from his rail- Capt. C. T. Peterson, president of the Northern Whalir and Trading Company, accompanied by his wife, is a Seattle passen- er from Anchorage on the Alaska. LET Almqulst Fress Your B8uit. We call and deliver. Phone 528. [RSR————— - NOSE CLOGGED FROM A COLD OR CATARRH a Cream in Nostrils To pen Up Air Passages. R Appls Ah! What relief! Your clogged nostrils open right up, the air passages of your head are clear and you can cathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, mucous discharge, headache, dryness—no struggling fer- breath at night, your cold or catarrh is gone. Don't stay stuffed up! Get a small bottie of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antis- eptic cream in your nostrils, let it penetrate through every air passage of the head; soothe and heal the swollen, inflamed mu- cous membrane, giving you in- stant relief. Ely’s Cream Balm is hockey sun. It joined with Hibb- ing, 30 miles distant, for an inter- city entry in the league. Bat that, too, failed. Besides Johnson, other stars PLAY TONIGH Fiiben dwd Hilltoppers. s Cross Channel to Mix with Island Teams Two of the best basketball i games of the present season arc promised fans who go to Douglus tonight to see the Firemen and | Douglas High. School fives play | for the first time this season and the Juneau High School an! | Douglas Kagles play a return { game, both contests to be playad I'in the Natatorium | The opening tilt will be played | by the Firemen and the High i School. Both of these teams have { showed up well in previous games, | the Firemen having downed the agles 31 to 14 and the Juneaa Hilltoppers 39 to 17, while the Islanders have won over th2 agles 17 to 16 and the Hilltop- | pers 27 to 7. The team emersging | victorious will be temporarily on | top of the heap among the Chan- ‘nel teams. | Coach Waid's Hilltoppers show- |ed up well in their last gamc, | when they defeated the Eagles 17 | to 13 last week. They will enter i the fray with virtually the same lincup as in that game, the only | doubt being as to the man who | will fill the center berth. J | Orme and Livie will start as for | wards, Berrgren and Burke as guards, and either Neilson, Petor son or F. Orme as center | A new lineup will used by the emen, because of the tem porary loss of Hollmann, who is unable to cross the Channel with the team tonight Mangan and will start as forwards, Campen will be center, and Bae ragar and Garnick will do ‘the | guarding, with Ellingen as substi- “UI!»- A al 71 be special forry will leave her this evening for the Island. Following the games there ,will be a dance in the Eagle hall to which all visitors are in vited i The Juneau Iflitoppers tangle agaln tomorrow evening in the A. B, Iall, this time with th Unalga quintet, who kave been showing better work this year than last. will | > ANCHCRAGE PINMEN ARRIVE FOR MEET ! ! ! s Anchorage pinmen arrived yhere last night on the steamer ! Alaska to participate in the Elk:' ¢ triangle bowling tournament be tween Anchorage, Ketchikan anl Juneau, schedufed to start her next Monday afternoon or eve ning. Lyle W. Larsen, the Anchorage lodge, gaw, team captain; R. D. Thomp- son, C. G. Spensley, S. W. Os trander and M. J. McDonald are the men who represent the An chorage Elks. Today the squad bowled for a while on the Elks' alleys. A rough trip across the Gulf of Alaska put them slightly under the weath- er. The local alleys are faster than those in Anchorage, the players said. By next Monday, when the tournament opens, the Anchorage squad expects to be in condition to give the other teams a good scrap. The team’s average, ac- cording to Mr. Larsen, was about 1756 during the past two months. i G S Leon o1 permanent wave, $12.50. Fern Leauty Parlor. — adv. secretary of R. S. Bra- _l | Thi is' an ideal QUESTION: What coal will give me the most satisfac- tion when I want a peppy fire. ANSWER: PACIFIC COAST NUT COAL from our New Black Dia- mond Mine. range coal and is being sold at $13.00 per ton on the dock. Pacific Coast Coal Co. C. D. FERGUSON AGENT Nobby Clark, with eastern clubs. —_—— BERLIN NOW MAKING BID FOR NEW TOURIST CROP BASKETBALL DOUGLAS NAT—TONIGHT—8 P. M. OWNED BY GODDARDS Hans Steinfeldt, prominent fisherman of Cordova and pioneer Alaskan, has returned to Juneau from a two months' stay at the Sitka Hot Springs, where he went last fall for the benefit of his health. He says he has fully recovered, and will leave on the Alameda for his home at Cor- dova. Y “I cannot say too much for the R Sitka Hot Springs’ said Mr. Admission 25 cents and 50 cents Steinfeldt. “There is no place I know where one could go for @ rest and the curative effect of mineral baths and profit more and enjoy himself at the same time. The baths-are all that is claimed for them, the accommo- dations excellent, the cuisine un- excelled and the association home-like. I am returning in the best of health and the féeling that I have had a very pleasant visit with Dr. Goddard and family.” BERLIN, Jan. 6—The German capital has started in early wich plans for capturing a generous share-of the 1928 tourist trade. A special mayor's committee has de- vised a “Berlin season”® which Is to begin May 12 and end July 15. A novel feature of the “season” will be a series of concerts by the Philharmonic orchestra and other musical organizations to be given in the historic castles of Berlin and Potsdam. The pro- grams will be made to fit the spirit. of the period in, which the various castles were constructed. Operatic productions in tha civic and the two state operas are to constitute the second quarter of the “season,” to be followed by two weeks of athletics and spor:s. During the closing quarter Ber- lin is to show what can be done in the way of show window dis- play, house decorations, and ar- ‘tistic gardening both on private estates and -in public parks, J. H. S. vs. EAGLES J.F.D.vs. D. H. S. _ Special ferry leaves Juneau 7:15 DANCE AFTER GAME In Eagles’ Hall Complete Details Iof NEW FORD CAR TODAY at JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. Orders Will Be Filled Strictly Order Received PLACE YOUR ORDER TODAY FOR EARLY SPRING DELIVERY Ask for Service Lucas SLMMER SPORY DEPENDS ON CLOTHES - - - WELL LAUNDERED ONES ® AS EACH ONE KNOWS. | ALASKA STEAM LAUNDRY PRONE 13 RGER R S S RELIABLE TRANSFER Phone 149 Res. 148 COURTESY aad Q00D SERVICE Gur Motto I.J. SuArick Jeweler and Optician . . _Watches LE Diamonds Bilverware Fresh Shipment Red Rock Cottage Cheese SANITARY | GROCERY | “The Store That Pleases” Phones 83 and 85 BROTHERS Four Cylinder Cars The fastest four in America— 0 to 25 miles through gears in less than seven seconds— uvnequal In traffic or on hills { —equipment® Includes wind- swipe, rear view mirror, stop | light, bumpers on front and rear. Five Passenger Sedan $875.00 Detroit McCAUL MOTOR CO. Will Hani Saw Mill Wood and Coal Oftice Phone 389 Residence Fhone 350! A. B. HALL SATURDAY