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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 1937. _I:IFIHII"I"lllIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUH|IIIIIIIIHIIHIlilllll"l|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII[ RRIVED # lineup . abling him to hold Manning to ! when Gray lofted » man muffed and Manning was safe. Addleman, made a useless throw to- Fall. It ap- Be sure Wear black th pears everywhere. to choose one dress of rhum brown or wine shade. Dress- es that are appropriate when worn with a fur scarf on early Autumn days. . . . Styles that will carry you successtully through a busy winter! $1850 $215 - B.M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” i IiIIIIIIIII[I|IIIflllll|lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII (of feet, combinea with a double off |Tom Martin’s menacing bludgeon ) {for the second Moose marker. Claude [with which Fritz Schmitz followed | up. i hit top stride for a while after| e | Double Ends Hopes Paps Go to Fore in Title| LS Hotied [ [that though, and set three Pap| swingers back on four pitched balls!| % gt 3 | Martin started off the sixth for| Series Saturday with Gal- |the Moose with the second of his axy of Smashes 1S ‘lit was up to the Paps, but they i in the fourth. A dazzling, sprinting |catch by Johnny Niemi robbed Joe | |fifth ana rendered futile the double | [three safe blows, but the Islamli |second base combination came up |with a double that put an end to Werner’s waiiops proved poison any Moose hopes at that time. | to Island pennant progress in two| The third of the Pap scores was| title series ball games battled here|trotted across in the seventh, when| over the weekend, accounting for Jack Schmitz and Stan Grv-amett| a sizeable share of the ten runs the|reached base safely, on a weak| Juneau Moose piled up to down, throw made by Roller and a boot Douglas on Saturday evening, and by Manning, and Bob Kimball sin- | opening the road for the fun that|gled to count Schmitz. Roller, Bon- let the Paps go on to a draw with|ner and Andrews, however, then the Islanders in a ten-inning battle co-operated in a second twin-slay-| Sunday. ing, to halt further antics by thel| The Black Sox rapped out 15 Moose. safe blows, three each for Werner| When three men went down in a and Snow, in scoring their 10 to 1/row before Kimball in the last of triumph Saturday, a triumph that|the seventh, all looked mighty rosy put them one-up on Douglas in the|for the Moose. They had a 3 to 0 “Little World Series.” But Sunday’s|lead and had only to stop the Is- contest ‘did nothing one way or the|landers once more to_protect their . |Andrews scoi'e. - :]ubxluncl‘ was not appreciatively : doused & |gathered in a pop foul for the third ‘lout, to give the Moose a brighter & |sending Snow to third for no pur- &lin the first of the ninth, a Moose Werner of a long hit to open the|s enough when Bonner grounded out| to third, but Roller then came up| with his second one-baser, and when Manning sliced ohe down third base way, Werner, trying for double murder, attempted to throw the pellet before he really had it, with the result that Roller established residence on second and Manning was ready to receive cal- lers at the initial bag. The big of Douglas pill powderers was then on tap to do its stuff. Erskine almost did all that was needed when he blasted a mighty blow to the left field fence. But the ball fell a foot or so short and ear- omed off the fence to Haglund, en= third and Erskine to second, only Roller scoring. Andrews drew the third of four walks that were to be his lot for the day, and the bags were filled a fly to center. Haglund topped off a brilliant day afield by making the catch and whipping a beautiful heave to the plate, seemingly in plenty of time to head off Manning’s atfempt to score after the catch. But Addle- Then Kimball, who had backed up ward third, though Erskine was al- ready esconsed there and Andrews had attained second. Two More Runs Kimbs throw sailed ten feet over Werner's head into left, and Grummett completed the rectic pro- ceedings by kicking it around long enough to let both Erskine and Four runs were in Ifor the Islanders to put them out in front, and the Moose gloom grew deeper when Jensen singled and Niemi was hit by a pitch. Douglas’ though when Addleman| outlook. With the tables turned on them, | were to get nowhere in the last of the eighth, a walk and a single | pose. Neither did Douglas go far double single. The last of the ninth dawned for the Moose with rfo great promise when Grummett fanned. But Wer- |ner chose the time as opportune to make up for his boot, and laced a triple to the scoreboard in deep ! for redemption, and he did not muff it. Instead he raisad a sacrifice fly to center to let Werner spike the home plate. play nullifying Bonner's | Shades of Night | Night was swiftly approaching | on his streamlined black steed when Douglas came to bat in the extra | inning. Picking a pitch cut of the gloom, Erskine rapped it for his cond double, but though Andrews drew his fourth walk, Kimball again | throttled the Island attack, forcing | Gray to hoist his fifth fly-out, and fanning Jensen and Niemi. Stiil, it was not to be the Paps’ day either; Martin’s single being the best they could do before Um- pire Nowell declared all bets off, sending the series lingering on. SATURDAY'S BATTLE Just a breeze for Johnny Smith and his Moose cohorts was the sev- | en-inning fracas Saturday evening against a Douglas nine immensely handicapppd by the absence of backstop Red Gray. Hurlers Jimmy Manning and Mark Jensen tried hard to stem the Moose artillery, but their best defensive efforts were punctured by fifteen Pap wallops which accounted for a half-score of runs, nine of them earned. Manning weathered through the first four innings, though his doom was foreshadowed when Frltzl | Bonner reach third and Balog sec- lund, & | ~|l cecccrcococoom | - el o on a double by Jack Schmitz, Wer-| DOUGLAS ner's single, a pair of pilferings and 'Roller, Haglund’s single. | Manning, Four Out on Eight Pitches | Erskine, 3b., If. Johnny Smith started off on the|Andrews, 1b. hill for the Moose by retiring the|Jensen, c., 3b, p first four Island batters to face him Niemi, cf on eight pitches. Then Erskine op- | Bonner, 2b ened a short-lived threat with a Balof, If., rf. single which Niemi duplicated. But, Stragier, rf it was not fill the fourth that thel *Nelson, c. Islangieys were to score. Thrn.] —— Niemi prevented a shutout when he Totals 28 72113 2 trotted home following his own and | *—Replaced Stragier in first of fifth Bomner’s double. Douglas l()uk(‘di inning. about to score another in that ses- THE SUMMARY sion when Werner booted to let Stolen bases: F. Schmitz 3, Hag > E|MOOSE 1'F. Schmitz, 2b. 0 Haglund, cf Martin, rf. Snow, 1b. Addleman, c. J. Bchmitz, ss. Grummett, If, Werner, 3b. Kimball p. E ] 0 p., 3b. 0 @0 e omoo oo N © e w A 2 4 00 00 20 10 4 0 0 0 01 4113018 4 OO MM [ Totals 1 | THE SUMMARY bases: Andrew Nelson, Snow, Addlems |bit, Jensen; two-base hits: Erskine Snow, Werner, Smith; two-|2, Snow, Martin, F. Schmitz; three- ond, but Jack Schmitz bottled up base hits: J. Schmitz, Grummett, base hit, Wern double plays: the menace with a mighty hice stop|Niemi, Bonner; three-base hit, Wer-|Douglas (Roller, Bonner. on a hard drive to short by Roller.|ner; double play, Mo (Werner,|drews), (Roller, Bonner, Andre Dynamic flelding by Haglund, in|Schmitz, Snow); runs batted in:|Moose, (F. Schmitz, J. Schmitz the last of the fifth, spoiled what|F. Schmitz 2, Haglund, Martin,|Snow); runs batted in: Erskine, looked like & einch double to second|snow J. Schmitz, Grummett,|Martin, Grummett, Kimball 2; by Erskine, Erykine being tagged at|Werne Bonne against |struck out by Erskine 9, Kimball 9; second when Haglund took a re-|Manning 24, Jensen 13; innings|walked by Erskine, Snow; walked by bound' off the fence for a sweet|pitched by Manning 4, Jensen 3;|Kimball: Andrews 4 sen, Niemi, throw to Fritz Schmitz. A double hits off Manning 11, Jensen 4; runs|Nelson; earned r off Erskine play ruined the last Island spurt, in|off Manning 5, Jensen 5; charge d Kimball 1; hit by pitched ball, the sixth. feat to Manning; struck out by|Niemi by Kimball; left on bases: All the Moose but Pitcher Smith,|Smith 7, Manning 2, Jensen 1; walk-| Douglas 9, Moose 7; time of game, 2 who was not supposed to hit, got u"m by Smith, Erskine; walked by hours 10 minutes; umpires, Nowell Haglund; earned runs off|Nostrand; scorer, Clark. piece of the ball during their Snt-innsm, urday evening's shelling. Joe Wer- Smith 1, Manning 5, Jensen 4; pass- - HE iy ner, with a triple and two singles,/ed balls: Jensen 3, Nelson 1; left on | {bises: Moose 7, Douglas 7; time of SIayer Bhased Also Airplanes Joe Snow, with three singles, and i hour 41 minutes; umpire (](‘l' § IS Run DOW“ mn Fritz Schmitz, with a double and a|game, i single, taking over the Big Bertha Nowell, M. MacSpaddes scorer California—Admits Killing Two roles. | Clark. MERCED, Cal, Aug. 23.—Ygna- clo Ayerza, 51, was captured by a Stolen Niemi, acrifice 2 SUNDAY GAME Score by Innings 23456789 10T Douglas 0 00040 0—-4 1 SATURDAY GAME Score by Innings 123 456 7T 003 2 3-—-10 N 0 01 Moose 34 0o Douglas 10 1 0 1 Moose 0 00101 0—4 ‘ IMur THE BOX SCORE : DOUGLAS AB Reller, ss 5 Manning, 3b. Erskine, p Andrews, Gray, ¢ Jensen, If. Niemi, cf. Nelson, rf. Bonner, 2b. 1 1 0 0 THE BOX SCORE ABR H R H PO A E| 5 1 1l MOOSE F. Schmitz; 2b. Haglund, cf. Martin, rf. Snow, 1b. Hawkins, c. J. Schmitz, ss Grummett, 1f. Werner, 3b. Smith, p. 1b. 0 0 0 croramorwd Seormoomey 32 an, Ayerza admitted the ff Lucius Cornell said. slayings, Totals 37 10 15 21 16 108,000,000 advertisements in U. S. magazines Totals QUESTION: 70 kow many U. S. housewives will Canned Salmon advertising go in 1937 2 ANSWER: Salmon advertising will go into nearly fwo out of every three homes in the United States. In the cities this proportion will be even greater—13,237,600 of the 18,021,200, or 74%, of all families living in U. S. cities. In rural and farm districts this advertising will g0 to 5,219,000 housewives—slightly less than half the total of 11,130,- 000 rural families. One hundred and eight million advertisemeénts on Alaska salmon will be published in U. S. magazines this year. Sabmon Gecgpe of the Woek SALMON BACON-PATS 1 cup soft bread crumbs lightly with first mixture. Shape 6 patties, " | Bethel other, to decide the championship That far, Kimball had had issue, the score standing 4 to 4 when | margin everything his own way. Only 25 batters had faced him in those seven nightfall pulled the curtain. Yes- rday’s stalemate was the second|innings, and of them only Roller drawn battle of the current flag had been able to scratch out a series, and will necessitate the play-|lonely single. The Moose flinger ing of at least one more game to/had already come through with return a verdict. ‘hc\‘t'll of the nine strikeouts he was This Evening's Tangle i to net during the game, and though, The next game in the series has'as usual he had been liberal with been set for this evening; com- walks, they had done no damage. mencing at 5:30 o'clock at Firemen's| Two free strolls he had handed out Park, and scheduled for seven full in the second inning had let an innings. Should the Moose win, Islander reach third, but no fur- the pennant will be theirs for thether, while when he had again do- second straight season. Should the|nated a pair of strolls in the fourth, Islanders emerge victors from to- Haglund had eased the situation night's fray, one more game will by encroaching on second base ter- be necessary ritory to harpoon a fly with a be- Opening as a hurler’s joust, be- wildering running stab. tween Claude Erskine and Bob Kim-| But the first of the eighth was| ball, Sunday's ten-frame stand-off |the time set for the turn of the tide.| developed into something of a slug-| Four closely joined errors and the/ fest, with plenty of punch packed first unleashing of the noted Island into nearly every inning Three |plate power were to change the at- swiftly-paced double plays, and nu-|/mosphere over the Black Leg en- merous other bits of sweet flelding,|campment from rosy red to deepest along with a couple of misplays,|indigo. were tossed in to add spice to the| The fateful canto started tamely | Schmitz pasted his first pitch for a |single. That doom drew nearer when |the Paps marked up one run in the opener, another in the third, and put three additional runms, plenty to win the ball game, across in the fourth. Singles by Jack Schmitz and Grummett, followed by a triple from Werner's rejuvenated bat, ac- counted for the three fourth in- ning scores. And the Moose went right on with their work in the first of the fifth, when Snow and Hawk- ins tipped Manning for singles and Jack Schmitz for a two-bagger. That was plenty for Manning. He gave over to Jensen, who had been relieved from duty behind the bat by Nelson. Jensen got the next three hitters to hold the Moose down to only their one run in that inning; but he was to succumb to the Black Sox’ assault later, when a single, a passed ball, a walk, and a double steal add- ed two Moose counters in the sixth. Then in the seventh, the defending champs tolled their three last runs program for the hooting, tooting,| rooting, ranting throng of apprecia- tive spectators that braved the oc- casional showers to witness what might well have been the wind-up of Juneau'’s baseball for 1937 Erskine Goes In With defeat meaning finis to their title hopes, the Islanders set their big bet, Erskine, on thée rubber, but Erskine found the road a bit rocky from the outset, being nicked for a harmless single in the opening frame, and for a double and a sin- gle that spelled the first run of the game, in the second. However, the big flinger shut off further trou- ble in the second stanza by whiffing three batters, giving a strong hint of the pitching prowess that was to net him nine strikeouts before the game was over. The third inning saw Haglund's second straight single, and his speed | at reasonable cost. FOR HOME OR BUSINESS REFRIGERATION SERVICE and REPAIRS Phone 34 Our Refrigeration Expert, JOHN HOUK, is equipped to give you Quick, Efficient Service 1egg % cup juice from cans of salmon wrap slice of bacon around each and fas- ten with toothpick. Bake in hot oven 1 thsp. scraped onion 2 thsps. chopped parsley Dash pepper, sage % tsp. salt 4 cups (2 Ibs.) Canned Salmon 6 slices of bacon (450° F.) for 15 minutes, until bacon is crisp, Remove from oven and arrange on platter around nest of grated carrots filled with peas. Garnish with canned pear halves, baked. Serves 6. JUST FOR TWO. Get the half-pound can. Divide above amounts by four, using egg yolk only, 2 strips of bacon, and season- ing to taste. Combine bread crumbs with slightly beat- en egg and salmon juice. Add onion, pars- ley and seasonings. Flake salmon and mix This recipe is typical of those appearing in the national magazine advertising of the Canned Salmon Industry ~ ALASKA FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSH. You have probably dreamed for years of the home you would like to own some day. Nothing in this world equals the sense of security and the joy of owning the home in which you live. You want a home for your children . . . a haven of rest ... 4 place to return to at the end of the day. Why not let us help you? We will supply up to 809 of the cost under the FHA insured mortgage plan. OUR CURRENT RATE ON SAVINGS 4% Accounts Insured Up to $5,000.00 Post Office Box 2718, Juneau, Alaska Rice & Ahlers Company Temporary Office: Columbia Lumber Co. Telephone 3 U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinily, Rain tonight and Tuesda; LOCAL Barometer Temp. 29.69 60 20.63 54 2959 52 Time 4 p.m. yesty 4 am. today Noon today Max. temp. Station last 24 hours Anchorage Barrow Nome 46 54 58 54 62 50 58 64 . 62 60 59 Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Bitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York Washington b4 56 54 58 66 ( | ’ l r | Seattle (airport), cloudy, toria, cloudy, 53; Alert Bay, partly Triple Island, cloudy; Princ dy, 53; Ketchikan, cloudy, 54; Crai Wrangell, raining, jway, raining, 53; Juneau, raining, 5 thorp, cloudy; Soapstone Point, |dova, clear, 52; Chitina, cloudy, 43 |clear, 54; Portage, parily cloudy, 43 fana, cloudy, 48; Fairbanks, cloudy |c 50; Kaltag, cloudy, 46; Unalakle |gamute, cloudy. WEATHER Juneau, August 24. — Sunrise, grey Alaska, northwestern Canada, and Low tem). Rupert, raining, 5! 4; Petersburg, cloud, raining, THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weathe: Bureau) beginning at 4 p.m., Aug. 23. moderate southeast winds. DATA Humidity Wind Velocity 0 s 10 87 SE 12 93 SE 10 Weather Cloudy Lt. Rain Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS TODAY st 4am. 4a.m. Precip. temp. velocity 24 hrs, 34 16 46 14 46 16 46 48 4am, Weather Fog Rain Cloudy dy 4 in 50 52 50 51 54 54 54 54 56 54 60 66 Cloudy Pt. Cldy Cloudy Rain Cloudy Cloudy Rain Cloudy Clear Rain Rain 50 0 52 52 88 14 12 1 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY tempe ure 55; Blaine, cloudy, 52; Vic- cloudy, 47; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 52; Langara Island, clou- raining, 54; Sitka. 56; Tenakee, raining; g Radioville, raining, 52; Port Al- 50; Y: cloudy; Cor- 3; McCartl nchorag Nenana, partly 48; Tan- 47; Ruby, raining, 48; Nulato, clou- eet, missing; Flat, foggy,- 42; Oho- SYNOP: 4:40 am.; sunset, 7:23 pm r e Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning from the Alaskan 0 posse with bloodhounds, aided by and Arctic coasts southward over the Gulf of Alaska and southeast 0|airplanes. He is accused of Killing 'Alaska eastward to Manitoba, the lowest reported pres 0lhis marriage bound daughter, Tser- |inches at Dawson and 2058 inches at Cordova. High pre sures being 29.56 ure pre- a, 19, and her fiance, Julian Gal- vailed from the Aleutian Islands southward to the Hawaiian Islan San Francisco tavern keeper. the crest being 30.60 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 44 de- s and longitude 154 degrees. This general pressure distribution has been attended by unsettled weather and precipitation over most of over the Pacific Northwest states. QUESTIONER LOSES LIFE | | COUPEVILLE, Wasn., Aug. 28— Sheriff Tom Clark announced that |Harry Jewitt, 61, was slain on Whidby Island Sunday when ques- jtioning Sam C. Heath, 47, worked with Jewitt on a game farm. No other particulars are given. | R S A total of 27,209,579 persons en- tered the U. S. from abroad by auto in 1936-—3,584,094 came by water. who | TRAIN CRASH; TEN INJURE LOS ANGELES, Cal, Aug, 23. — | Ten passengers of a Southern Pa- cific train were injured when it | crashed into an empty baggage car at the Central Station here. The injured are recovering from cuts, sprains and bruise: D Currency bills no longer coniain silk threads fragments of fiber hav- ling been substituted. Fresh Fruit and Vegeiables HOME GROCWN R ADISHES, ONIONS and FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Y Prompt Delivery Magnus Hanson on are invited to pres-nt .ais coupon at the box office of the -Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for your- self and a friend or relative to see “Pennies From Heaven” Asa patd-up subseriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for Your Name May WATCH T current o_tféririg. Appear Tomorrow 'HIS SPACE The First National Bank IUNEZAU CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS—$100.000 COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts