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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY. 1934 Opens Two Game Series Against Jamestown Tonight Bismarck MANAGERS FOR ALL-STAR GAME MAKE PLAYER SELECTIONS Umpires Chase Three Cardinal Men 2 As Chicago Cubs Win 7-4 Decision WILL PLAY FEATURE JULY FOURTH GAME IN NEW BALL PARK Locals Wind Up Road Trip With One Win and Two Losses to House of David CARTER CHECKS BEARDS Benton Harbor Club Captures Night Game, 4-3; Simle Allows Only Six Hits Bismarck's baseball club, backed by five wins and only two losses on their four-day, road-trip series, prepared ‘Tuesday to fight off the challenge of the dangerous Jamestown nine in two games, the first of which will be play- ed in the new park, here, tonight. The second game will be played ‘Wednesday in a feature Fourth of July contest with a special train bringing scores of Jimmie followers to watch the contest. Wednesday's tilt is scheduled to start at 3 p. m. Vincent to Pitch Vincent will probably get the call in the mound for the Capital Citians in the game tonight, which is called for 6:30 p.m. Monday he pitched and lost a morning game to the White House of David at Winnipeg. Mor- ris, who returned from Jamestown Sunday after the game, has been un- der doctor's care since then and will be available for the hurling duties ‘Wednesday. In their three games with the White House of David Monday, Bismarck ‘won one and lost two. The Capital Citians outhit the bearded club in the first encounter but were unable to convert those hits into runs and lost the game, 7 to 5. Vincent hurled for the locals allowing eight hits. Carter tock his turn in the after- moon game and the Bismarck players squeezed out a close 5 to 4 decision. Both teams played errorless baseball with the Davids collecting nine safe- ties and the locals, seven. Davids Win Second In the night game the whiskered Players took another close game, nick. ing Simle tor six hits to score four runs and win the fray, 4 to 3. Each team committed one error. With the score on games two to one against them, Jamestown comes here intent on evening the score Tuesday night and swinging it in their favor Wednesday. The Jimmies won the first contest this year when they Scored an 11-inning viciory on M:mo- rial Day. Bismarck came back and took the next two, the last one Sun- Gey-by-a-narvow margin of 2 tc 1. Cards Beat Cubs In City Tourney Collect 24 Hits Off of Two Hurl- ers to Win, 26-7; Casper Makes Double Play In a free hitting contest the Card- inals lambasted two Cub pitchers for 24 hits and scored a 26 to 7 victory in the High School League of the junior baseball tournament, Monday. Casper made a double play unassist- ed and one other double play was made, Goetz, to Reff to Stratton. Rott nd Peterson led the Cards attack with home runs. McGuiness, also for the winners, had a perfect day at bat getting six hits in .s many trips to the plate. The b-x score: Es 3 Bay low mem enone S| menwrnanaatt Rl eworrnowoe Beleoeesceen re alooroccom en ne IB] smn wwomuen® Bl ronconmunne Bl eocoostmucne e a 105 836 3—26 24 Cubs ..... +» 200 200 3-710 >—_______—_—"_-* | Yesterday’s Stars ¢ (By The Associated Press) ; Travis. Jackson, Giants—His 13th homer helped beat Braves. Len Koenecke, Dodgers —Clouted Phil pitchers for two home runs and single. Vernon Gomez, Yankees—Blanked Red Sox with seven hits. “ Goose Goslin and Marvin Owen, uted four hits apiece i) OF TH’ MOUNTAIN 74 11m AEG. U8, MOUNTAIN OUR BOARDING HOUSE P\\s THE NEWS? OL LIMPY SCANLON HAS HIT IT ON THE OTHER SIDE ! Par. 15 1938 By NEA SERVIC By Ahern | The Champ Sends a he gets in the swing of a song. mw YOURE wi | TELLING ME You have it right from your Uncle Charlie Harvey that his fighter, Steve Hamas, will fight Max Baer for the heavyweight crown in September or October . . Dr. A. Alekhine, world chess champ, will give Jose Capablanca a shot at his crown ... if Buenos Aires promoters will guarantee him 10,000 berries . . . and not coffee berries, either... asserts he'll be back with the Braves | OUT OUR WAY YORE LIVES, MEN! A CloupBuRsT! TH’ DAMS BUSTED! ‘Tigers—Contrib 4m first game victory over Indians. Bob Holland, Indians—Doubled in Rabbit Maranville now | High One to the Ea You can depend on Maxie Baer to show his old sing generalship once Here you see the champ hitting a high one for the benefit of admiring night club lasses who visited him at his New York hotel. Standing beside Maxie, in dark suit, is Brother Baddv. = Aug. 1... and a month ago it was July 1... . Guy Bush says the Pi- rates are the best fast ball hitters in the National League... should be a hunch to throw those Bucs nothing but slow babies... .. Purdue lost only four games on the gridiron in the last five years... . Mickey Cochrane is getting the repu- tation as the best dressed guy in the American League . . . his color com- binations are enough to make the Tigers see red and go out there and smack that pill... . The Pittsburgh and that Amateur Boxers to Trade Wallops On Outdoor Fight Card Thursda Ring and Bleachers Will Be Set Up Northeast of Memorial Building Amateur boxers will meet in a spe- cial outdoor fight card Thursday night under the sponsorship of the Bismarck board of recreation, accord- ing to Myron Anderson, athletic di- rector. Bleachers and a ring will be set up northeast of the World War Memorial building for the exhibition bouts. O. W. Roberts is furnishing the ring for the fight program. Local amateur talent will be used entirely on the card with the curtain raiser scheduled to open at 7:30 p. m., featuring a pair of Bismarck’s youth- ful scrappers. Six or possibly eight bouts are be- ing arranged for the main program with fighters being taken from the ranks of relief workers, the transient bureau and the host of amateur fight- ers in the city. The bouts will be three, two-minute round affairs with the main go sched- uled for four rounds. There will be no admission charge. “We are planning on a series of fight cards,” said Anderson, “that will give every amateur fighter a chance to test his mettle in the ring.” The completed card for the program will be announced Thursday. Hayes Opposes Grant In Clay Court Match Chicago, July 3.—(?)—Walter Hay- €s, @ veteran who won the title the same year Bryan “Bitsy” Grant was born, was given an opportunity Tues- day to stop the tiny Atlantan’s rush toward the National Clay Court Ten- nis championship on the Chicago ‘Town and Tennis club courts. As Grant sat under a shade tree Monday, loafing into the third round with a bye and a default, Hayes swept into the same round and into Grant's way by defeating Art Bakewell, Chi- cago youngster, 6-4, 6-3 Frankie Parker of Milwaukee, de- Pirates, pro grid outfit, have George Kavel, great Carnegie Tech back, just zbout signed up. fending champion, and the other seeded players expected nothing but easy sailing in their drive toward the fourth round. By Williams (CRONIN IGNORES FAN BALLOTS IN NAMING AMERICAN LEACUERS Picks Higgins at Third Base in Place of Dykes; Alters Pitching Staff TERRY AGREES WITH VOTE Undecided on Whether to Use Jackson or Vaughan at Shortstop Position New York, July 3—(?)—After blue- pencilling the recommendations of Gus H. Fan on how the rival major league all-star teams should take the field for the battle at the Polo Grounds, one week from today, Man- agers Bill Terry of the Naitonal League and Joe Cronin of the Amer- ican League made public Tuesday their selections for each 20-man squad. The two young pilots, who take over the jobs handled last year by Connie Mack and John J. McGraw, were vested with final authority, in the effort to put the strongest possible teams together. The final results of the newspaper balloting were made public Monday and Cronin and Terry lost no time demonstrating where they differ sharply with the fans who had the final say-so a vear ago. Names Higgins at Third Cronin, besides naming Frank (Pinky) Higgins of the Athletics to piay third base instead of the veteran Jimmy Dykes, White Sox manager, who had a 10-to-1 margin in the poll, and selecting Al Simmons of the White Sox to start the game in the outfield in place of Earl Averill of the Indians, radically shifted the pitching list. Cronin agrees with the fans that Vernon (Goofy) Gomez of the Yan- kees is the No. 1 flinger in the league but instead of picking Earl Whitehill of the Senators, Lefty Grove of the Red Sox and Willis Hudlin of the In- dians, the next three choices in order in the popular poll, he has selected Red Ruffing of the Yankees, Mel Harder of the Indians and Tommy Bridges of the Tigers, with Jack Rus- sell of his own Senators for mopping: up duty. Lou Gehrig, Charley Gehringer and Cronin himself will round out the in- field with Higgins while Babe Ruth and Heinie Manush will share the cutfield duty at the outset with Sim- Giants Wallop Braves; Gomez Wins 13th Game Shutting Out Boston Red Sox (By the Associated Press) The heat, the humidity and two torrid pennant ‘races are shortening baseball tempers these days. Players, managers and coaches, casting asper- sions on the eyesight of harrassed um- Pires, are taking early showers by em- phatic request. Monday Bill Klem calmly waved! Manager Frank Frisch, Coach Mike Gonzales and Dizzy Dean of the St. Louis Cardinals to the club house after they disputed his ruling on a Play that paved the way for the Car- dinals’ 7-4 defeat by the Chicago Cubs. The New York Giants wallop- ed the Boston Braves, 7-4. Len Koenecke’s two home runs helped the Brooklyn Dodgers top the Phillies, 7-5. Lefty Gomez's 13th triumph of the year against only two defeats marked the New York Yankees’ 5-0 shutout 0? the season of the Boston Red Sox. The Tigers beat the Cleveland Ine dians, 9-2, in the first game of the doubleheader but the Indians won the’ zecond, 6-5. Washington beat the Athletics 7-3. St. Louis and Chicago were idle. AMERICAN LEAGUE Indians, Tigers Divide First Game— Detroit . Lee, Connally, Bean and Myatt. Second Game— RH {Detroit ... -101 111 000— 5 11 3 Cleveland 000 111 201— 6 12 2 Cochrane; Weiland, Winegarner, Har- der and Pytlak. Gomez Blanks Red Sox RHE Boston . 000 000 000— 0 7 2 New York. :010 110 20x— 5 8 0 Ostermueller, Walberg and R. Fer- rell; Gomez and Dickey. Senators Beat Athletics RHE Washington ....021 002 002— 710 0 Philadelphia ...100 000 011-3 7 0 Thomas and Sewell; Dietrich and Berry. Only games scheduled). NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants Down Braves RHE New York 003 000 004—7 13 3 mons, Cronin selected Dick Ferrell of the Red Sox in preference to Rollie Hemsley of the Browns for back-stop- ping aid to Bill Dickey and Mickey Cochrane. Terry Undecided Bill Terry hasn't decided yet whether his teammate, Travis Jack- son, the popular choice, or Arky Veughan of the Pirates, will start at shortstop but otherwise he has com. paratively few differences with the verdict of fandom. The only note- worthy shift is that Mel Ott of the Giants will be a starting outfielder along with Joe Medwick of the Cardi. nals and Chuck Klein of the Cubs, leaving Wally Berger of the Braves, third choice in the poll, for reserve cuty. Pie Traynor, Frank Frisch and Terry complete the infield. Terry named only two catchers, Al Lopez of the Dodgers, and Gabby Hartnett of the Cubs. He chose Fred Frankhouse of the Braves, leading National League pitcher, in prefer- ence to Paul Dean of the Cardinals or Guy Bush of the Cubs. But Terry agrees with the fans otherwise in naming Carl Hubbell, Dizzy Dean, Lon Warneke and Van Mungo for pitch- ing duty. rand ings ———— (By The Associated Press) AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Club— Ww Minneapolis Columbus .., Indianapolis ... Louisville ... Milwaukee . Pet. 442 St. Louis... Philadelphia . Chicago .... Eoston - 100 002 100-4 7 2 Bowmt Mancuso; Smith, Bar- rett and Hogan. Dodgers Defeat Phillies RHE Philadelphia ... 010 012 010—5 12 1 Brooklyn 400 010 11x—7 14 0 Darrow, Johnson, Collins and J. ‘Wilson; Babich, Leonard and Lopez. Paul Dean Chased RHE +++ 000 001 030-4 7 2 ago. + 003 000 40x—7 11 5 P. Dean, Lindsey and Delancey; Warneke and Hartnett. (Only games scheduled). MAJOR LEAGUE (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Terry, Giants, .365; Vaughan, Pirates, .363. Runs—Vaughan, Pirates, 66; Med- wick, Cardinals, 63. Hits—Moore, Giants, 101; Medwick, Cardinals, 100. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 19; Klein, St. Louis .. Auker, Fischer and Hayworth, _ MILLERS, BACK AT HOME, PLAN | COMEBACK; HAUSER IN LINE-UP Mudhens Win Final Game, 10- 6; Indians Defeat Colum- bus in Night Game Chicago, July 3—(?)—Back home for an 18-game stay, with Joe Hauser back in action, Donie Bush and his Minneapolis Millers Tuesday were laying plans for repairing their hold on the American Association leader- ship, The Millers took another beating from Toledo Monday, 10-6, but Hau- ser returned to the lineup after an absence of nearly a month, and rapped out three singles. Indianapolis went back into a tie with Columbus by a 5-3 victory over Milwaukee in a night game. The final of the Kansas City-Louis- ville series was rained out and the St. Paul-Columbus game was saved up for @ future date. Mudhens Take Final RHE .001 221 000— 6 9 3 003 200 14x—10 12 4 Marrow, Holsclaw and ; Perrin, Bowler and De- Minneapolis . Toledo .. Indians Win in 8th RHE Milwaukee ......000 030 000—- 3 9 0 Indianapolis ....010 020 02x— 5 11 0 Polli and Rensa, Young; Turner, Tising, Logan and Sprinz, Kansas City - Louisville postponed, in, St. Paul-Columbus postponed to la- ter date. Americans Advance in British Net Tourney Wimbledon, Eng. July 3—()— Helen Hull Jacobs, United States champion and top-seeded favorite, Tuesday won her way to the semi- finals of the all-England tennis cham- pionships with a 6-0, 6-2 victory over Cilli Aussem, former ranking player of rf On the nearby No. 1 court, mean- while, Dorothy Round, England's chief hope to win the title and a finalist last year against Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, was defeating Lolette Payot, Of Switzerland, 6-4, 6-2. Lester Stoefen and Carolin Babcock, the California mixed-doubles com- bination, advanced to the third round of that division without playing, Eli- zebeth Ryan and Ernest Maier, of Spain, defaulting to them. CANADIAN BANTAMWEIGHT DIES Washington, July 3—(P— Howard Mayberry, 36, one-time ban- tamweight champion of Canada, died in a hospital Monday night a few hours after his left leg was amputated at the thigh. Sharks never sleep, says an au- thority. Many @ sucker who lost his margin in Wall Street will agree. Cubs, 18, Pitching—Frankhouse, Braves, 13-2; Bush, Cubs, 9-2. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting — Manush, Senators, .410; Gehringer, Tigers, 381. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 68; Gos- lin, Tigers, 62. Hits—Manush, Senators, 118; Geh- ringer, Tigers, 104. Home GIANTS PLAY RETURN GAME A return game with the Kidder county aggregation from Steele will be played Wednesday afternoon, July 4, in the Grove Giants state peni- SEND UPA BOTTLE OF GLUEKS — IT TASTES JUST LIKE HEY- HOW DRAFT BEER ABOUT A STEIN OF Boelter Will Enter Gopher Track Meet John Boelter, representing St. Mary’s school, left Sunday for Northfield, Minn., where he will be entered in the Carleton track and field meet for high schools, Thursday. ‘The star St. Mary's athlete will be entered in four events. He will toss the shot and heave the discus in the field meet and run in the 100 and 220-yard dash events. Boelter planned to wind up his training at the Minnesota city in the three days prior to the meet, To enable firemen to fight fires beneath wharves, a hose nozle mounted in a vertical position on ® floating buoy that can be guided by @ long handle, has been invented. Professor Judine, chief of the sure gical service of the Institute Sklifas- sovsky of Moscow, transfuses blood from dead bodies to living ones by & process which he has worked out. Experiments with soybeans are be- ing conducted in Russia with a view to making them a major food product for the masses. ‘The estimated average weekly movie attendance in the United States in 1933 was 60,000,000. MORE TIRE FOR YOUR MONEY As low as °A.95 4.40x21 450x20 5520 450x201 $540 4.15x19 *5 70 5.00x19 "GOS yop Governmental tex er levy, FAMOUS QUALITY AT SUCH LOW PRICES Don’t let anybody tell you that some unheard-of manufactures makes as good a tire as Good: rich at prices like this. The tires, to give you real tire value, Stick to known quality, Good’