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* A POOR. UNFORTUNATE FROM WHOM T'M GETTING NOTES FOR MY NOVEL LIFE Just to knock down and which went for another single to count the Elks fourth and fifth scores. Ru cut to end the on; and iwo fans fo » Mco e 1-RUN SPREE 1S WINNING MIARSH: FOR ELKS' TEAM Strikes Out § McAlister struck out eight batters during the seven i 5 — and, despite streaks of wildness t put him into some holes, weathered through his pitching chores in good le. €mith, after a beautiful start, ed down in the later innin and saw his prize pitches being past- ed by the Elk bats. MooseMeet Second Straight Defeat in 6th Inning Blow-Up first trip to the plate, as 'E?il'] Forsythe, former Moosc n up in last evening’s base- Shortpatcher, accounted for a bis bell game, Fritz Schmitz took one 10t Of the Elks defensive strength and kept the whole Purple infi on its toes; while the Elk ou ers were troubled with very of Elk Hurler Ward McAlister's fs hooks on his left wrist. That blow knocked the Moose second-sacker out of the rest of the game, anc, chances. from the way things afterward hap- _ The next Gastineau Channel pened, rapped the Elks into a 5 League game on the schedule is slated for next TPrid: evening a to 1 win over the Paps. That blow on the wrist did, how- ever, lead to the only Moose run of the game, when Jimmy Orme, tak- Firemen's Park at 6:30 o’clock, whe? the Moose {ry to avenge their open- ing battle def®at on Douglas in seven-inning contest. ing Schmitz's place on the paths was advanced to second as g Mac” MacSpadden received a trip to first when he was also hit by Team 123456 7-RHE one of MeAlister’s pitches. Tom Moose 10000001 4 2 Martin’s long fly to rightfield puc E¥ 00001405 8 Orme on third, from where h counted on Snow's single over short THE BOX SCORE to put the Moose one run in front Moose AB R H PO A with the game just bezun. F. Schmitz, 2b 0279 01 it Four scorcless innings followed: C. MacSpadn, 352 0 0 0 0 Moose twirler Lefty Smith letting Mariin, cf B0 D cenly six men face him in the first|Snow, 1b 8000108 0 and second, and though MecVey J. Schmitz, ss TSR P rapped out a single for the Elks in| Grummett, if 2.0 .0 0 the third, a snappy play by Pap B c R R e rightfielder Converse on McAlister's | Converse, rf CRE N D B line drive doubled McVey off first.' Smith, p Licibe 000 Moose Threat *Orme, 2b B Fai% 05 0 ‘The Moose threatened some dur-| {Kimball R el T O iny the second. third and fourth - frames, filling first and second once,| Totals 1 4 18 1 first once, and putting a man on «pepiaced ¥, mitz in second in- sccond in the fourth inning; bui| ning ran for F. Schmitz in firsty, it was the Elks'who'were next to get a run. Snow's muff of a throw from short paved the way for the Purples in the last of the fifth and they followed through to even the ccunt; Nowell stealing second and being driven in by Bradley's double inning. fHit for Smith in seventh inning R H cocowy o Addleman, ¢ 3 Eradley pulled a muscle rounding ..., p second and had to be replaced by ,T;.L(;,m 3 i ; z ; a newcomer to the league, Herman n; macspadm, 103 1 1 5 0 Russell, an Elk recruit from Cent- nowell of B4 B tralia, Washington. ST ik i Vo8 Jack Schmitz led off with & double yrearicior 2gey g to open the road for the Moose in | wgyccon if 1 50 0500 the first of the sixth, but the Black tpooeryy of 00507 0 Sox were unable to forge ahead .pycpon p D e ¢ aghin, as McAlister put on the screws to whiff the mext two bai- e a5 L8 g el A7 ters and Molly MacSpadden made the third out unassisted on a roller to first off Converse’ bat. Four Markers It was in the last of the sixth that the loss of Fritz Schmitz was felt by the Moose. Two blows over sec- THE SUMMARY ond that the faster Schmitz could| Errors: Moose—Snow, Blake; Elks| probably have gathered in were —Addleman, M. MacSpadden 2. just out of range for Orme and led| Stolen bases: Nowell, McVey; sac- the way to the four markers that | rifice hits: Blake, Smith; two-basc th> Purples gathered in that chuk- | hits: J. Schmitz, Bradley; double ker to annex the contest. | plays: Moose (Converse, Snow), Elks Forsythe led off the Elks’ win-| (Forsythe, Lawson, MacSpadden); ning burst by following Addlema: runs batted in: Snow 1, Bradley 1, fly with a drive into left for a single, | McVey 2, McAlister 2; bases on Foster cracked out another single | balls: off Smith 2 (Bradley, McAl- into center, then Orme was no more | ister)—off McAlister 2 (MacSpad- than able just to tip a blooper into|den, Grummett); struck out: by| short right field, the blow going for Smith 5 (Lawson, Addleman, 2| a single for MacSpadden and crowd- | Nowell, McVey)—by McAlister 8 ing the cushions. | (Orme, MacSpadden, Martin 2, McVey Hitting Star Grummett 2, Blake, Smith); piteh- Smith then put on the pressure|ing records: Smith 5 runs 8 hits in| again and fanned Nowell, but Mc- six innings, McAlister 1 run 4 hits Vey, the hitting star of the fra.cns,“l’l seven innings; earned runs: ofi followed up with his second singl® | Smith 4, off McAlister 1; winning a drive into right that counted two| pitcher MecAlister; losing pitcher runs. Behind McVey came McAlis-| Smith; hit by pitched balls: F. ter with a drive over the second Schmitz and MacSpadden by McAl- *Ran for and replaced Bradley in fifth inning. iReplaced Nowell in seventh inning. fReplaced McVey in seventh inning. 5 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1938. HAS DEALT BITTERLY WITH HIM, BUT HE HAS LEARNED TO TAKE THINGS WITH PHILOSOPHY. SR SEVEN HOMERS intwo days puts Bob Seeds, 30, veteran Newark outfielder, in class by himself. He hit four lqur»?mfl- gers, batted in 12 runs, in New- ark-Buffalo game won 22-9 by Newark. Next day with same teams, he got three more hom- ers. Newark won, 14-8. GIANTS BEAT © CUBSPINGHER . % TURNS TRICK Wild Throw.' R;ults in Bos- ton Bees Defeating Pittsburgh SEATTLE NOW IN 5TH PLACE, COAST LEAGUE Freddie Hutchihson Wins His Fifth Straight Game —Beats Los Angeles (By Associated Press) ttle has moved from seventh th place in the Pacific Coast League standings as the result o: yesterday’s win cver Los Angeles The victory was the result of the fine pitching of juvenile Freddie Hutchinson who won his fifib straight game. Hutchinson limited Les Angel to only four hits, two of them in the ninth frame. fine pitching perform- s turned in Tuesday by Bob , of Oakland, by a beat ove:r 20, to fif San A heme run in the thirteenth in- the circuit clout being made Dickey, with two men on bates, gave the League's leading Portland a win over S8an Francisco. Two hits and a sacrifice walk gave Hellywood a run in the sixth in- ning and this blanked the Sacra- mento bunch. GAMES SDAY Pacific Coast League Eeatlle 4; Los Angeles 2. Oakland 1; San Diego 0. Hollywood 1; Sacramento 0. Portland 5; San Francisco 2, thir- ional League Brooklyn 1. Cincinnati 13; Philadeiphia 1 Chicago 5; New York 6. Pittsburgh 0: Boston 1. American League ; Cleveland 5. Gastineau Channel League ; Moose 1. 0 STANDING OF CL IBS Pacific Coast League ] 5 Won Lost Pe Lie Rk o) Portland 6 19 5m Sam Le:lie's pinch hit in the ponywood 2% 20 twelfih inning yesterday gave the can Diego 24 21 533 Giants a victory over the Chicago gan Francisco 23 22 511 Cubs. Seattle 23 23 500 A wild peg gave the Boston Bees Los Angeles 2 g ‘489 a victory over the Pittsburgh team g,cramento 22 o 489 yesterday afternoon. | cakland 16 30 343 Paul Derringer pitched the Cir cinnati Reds to a victory yesterda; National League limiting the Phillies to only four Won Lost Pc blows while his teammates Wwere now york 19 4 8 strong on the batting. Pittsburgh 13 10 565 s Chicago 14 12 538 ‘ ¥ Cincinnati 13 118 500 | HOSPITAL NOTES St. Louls 112 478 - Boston 10 1 476 2 Y Breoklyn 10 17 370 Oscar Klatts, a surgical patient Philadelphia 5 16 238 at St. Ann's Hospital, was dismiss- ed today. American League Won Lest Pct M. Schneider, a medical patient at' Boston 16 8 667 St. Ann’s Hospital was dismissed| cleveland 16 9 640 from there yesterday. New York - 14 9 609 Washington 16 12 571 Cesta Stock underwent a major Chicago ¥ * 8 11 421 operation this morning at the Gov- Detroit * 10 13 435 ernment Hospital. Philadelphia ... 7 15 318 il St. Louis . e 8 g 17 292 Peter Kaln was dismissed from the Grovernment Hospital today. He has Gastineau Channel League been receiving medical treatment. Won Lost Pct R o R Eeg R — Douglas ....... St | 0 1.000 ister; left on bases: Moose 7, Elks ElkS .o 1 0 1.000 Moose ... 0 2 000 5; time of game: 1 hour 41 minutes; umpires: Shaw at plate, Coughlin at first base, Welch at third base; scorer, Clark. Max Watches as Joe Signs, Championship Fight GRS i s Joe Louis, heavyweight champion of the world, put his signature to a mighty important paper—an agree- ment to meet Max Schmeling (right) in a title fight at Madison Square Garden, New York, June 22, Almost sitting on the edge of his chair, the tense Max watches as the impassive Joe scratches his name, getting ttle help from Brig. Gen. John J. Phelan, State Boxing Committee chairman, SCHMELING IS NOW PREPARING FORTITLE 60 German Challenger Goes to Establish His Train- ing Camp NEW YORK, May 18. — Max Echmeling, who has been going to the movies and taking things easy has left for Speculator, N. Y. to establish his training quarters in preparation for the title fight witn Joé Louis next month. e e T Yesterday afternoon’s alarm called the Juneau Fire Department briefly to the Jensen Apartment at Sixth and Pranklin, where a roof gutter was slightly burned by sparks. S SRR 4 | Save date, May 28, D.F.D, dance, adv.| By CLIFF STERRETT -- BUT JESS KEEP A EYE ON HIM, CUZ I AIN'T LEARN'T T' PART WITH 'EM THAT WAY. Littlepages Go To Apex El Nido at mine investigating the p ilities the ore before eml on a development program This mormng's brief visit in Ju- neau was the first in several years of |for Mrs. Littlepage, who used her Mr. and Mrs. Jack Littlepage pass- |Stop-over here to renew acquaini- ed through Juneau this morning on|ances with old friends the steamer North Sea, bound for| e BEER MAN HERE T. E. Tucker, General Sales Man- ager for Olympia Breweries, arrivec in Juneau on the Alaska. He is a guest- at the Hotel Juneau - Port Althorp, where they will board a gasboat for Lisianski Inlet and the Apex-El-Nido Mine. It is understood that Littlepage, well known mining engineer, has taken over the option held by Cloth- | - ier Bros. of Vancouver, on theSavedate, May 28, D.I'D. dance. adv est past Boy Evangelist - Veteran Fighter flnwl}gvil me‘ MINNEAPOLIS, May 18.—When | 8-year-old Rev. Charles E. Jaynes, Jr., opens a campaign to “put the devil out of business,” he goes at it like a veteran. He is one, with five years of preaching behind him The chubby little cleric, who does his ministering atop a table before the pulpil, so his congregation can see him, has been exhorting gath- erings since he was two-and-a- half years old. Last year he was ordained in the International Min- isterial Federation at Peoria, Ill and became, he thinks, the young- in the world His evangelical equipment is a shrill, far-reaching voice, a memory. for Bible verses, and a good sense of rhythm. He can lead the sing- ing, play drums in a church band, “bully” an interviewer for smoking or pause in the midst of a sermon to scratch his bare knee with equal aplomb. His church career started, he re- lates, while he was attending evan- gelistic services in a California church. “The lady who was taking care of me said I should sit still while he went up to the altar,” he says “But as soon as she got there, if I wasn't right behind her! “I was saved then and I was saved again in the afternoon. I s very young then. I' was two- and-a-half years old. Now I am here to put the devil out of busi- ness.” HITLER HAS SAFETY VEST PARIS, May 18.—During his tri- umphant visit to Vienna following German occupation of Austria, Adolph Hitler wore a bullet-proof vest under the brown Shirt sym- bolic of Nazi military might. According to the Paris weekly Aux Ecoutes, the fuehrer;never took off this light armor — protection against the possibility that all Aus- tians were not willing to “give way before force.” During the course of several -re- ceptions the warm weather forced the German dictator to unbutton his coat, and many werg surprised to see the outlines of the metal vest under his shirt. i WOMEN OF THE MOOSE— Regular meeting Wednesday eve- ning at 8, .O.O.F. Hall. Nomination of officers. GERTIE OLSON, adv. Recorder What--- ‘ Would the Judge Say? ‘ —About Your Letters, About Your Statements, About Your Mailing Pieces, About AUl Your Printed : Forms? Would he say they are all that fine printing g should be?—or would he give them a single glance then sentence them to death in the waste basket? JUDGE for YOURSELF! Compare your present printed forms with like work from The Empire Printing Company TELEPHONE 374