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HAZARDS 10 STARS, FLAG RAGE CHANCES VIEWED BY OWNERS ; Terry Scoffs at Reported Rift i With Frisch Over Not Start- ing Schumacher GIANTS AT PITTSBURGH Yankees Open Against Indians Very Much Aware of Victory Drive of Tigers (By the Associated Press) The major league all-star baseball game, it seems, is going to be the erux of some torrid argument in the hot-stove league this winter. Already the welkin is ringing with the screams of the baseball moguls who, although readily admitting that the all-star game is a boon to base- pall, insist that it 1s the bane of their peace-of-minds because of the ha- zards to which it subjects the big stars. It brings a wealth of publicity to the game and the crowd that it at- tracts is no music in this case be- cause, heretofore at least, the pro- ceeds have gone to charity. The solons are not the only ones to complain. The managers, whose goal it is to win a pennant, object on the ground that it interferes with their chances. Terry Scoffs at Rumors Bill Terry, manager of the league- leading New York Giants, was in Pittsburgh Wednesday scoffing at re- ports that he and Frankie Frisch of the Cardinals had words in the club- house after the game because Hal Schumacher was not chosen by the latter as the starting pitcher. The Giants open against the Pirates in the first game of their western swing Wednesday with Schu- macher in shape to take the hill and undoubtedly turn in another of his tine performances. Meanwhile the Yankees open against the Cleveland Indians at home, very much aware of the victory-mad De- troit Tigers who are visiting the Sen- ators down at Washington. The Yanks lead the American League by only one game and the Indians, in fourth place, have been playing some good ball at times. The ‘Tigers have had 10 consecutive wins and meet a seventh place club in Washington. Max Baer Admits Rift With Bride Wife of 11 Days Unaware of Marriage Trouble Over Dif- ference in Religion BULLETIN ee Newark, Juiy 10. — (>) — Max Baer; former world’s heavy- weight champion, denied Wednes- day he had separated from his wife, the former Mary Ellen Sul- Uvan of Washington, D. C., as he boarded a plane at Newark for Baltimore. “There's nothing to it,” Baer said. “I’m coming back tonight to join my wife at Long Branch.” New York, July 10—(7}—Max Baer, leaping a hundred paces ahead of the gossipers, says that he and his bride of 11 days are parting. The bride was somewhere ahead or behind with a paradoxical com- ment: “We are very happy.” For such conclusions es can be! fawn from the reported facts, here ey are: The former heavyweight boxing champion, accompanied by a girl who ‘was formerly believed engaged to him, met a group of friends in a mid- town restaurant Tuesday night, and @aid of himself and bride: “I'm Jewish and she’s Catholic, s» {t's no go. The marriage is on the Yocks.” Mrs. Baer, the former Mary El'en Bullivan who married him in Wash- fngton, D. C., on June 29, was in- formed Tuesday night of the state- ment at the Baer cottage in Long Branch, N. J. She laughed and seid: ‘Happy,’ Says Mrs. Baer “We are very happy. I talked to Mex at 5 o'clock today and if there ‘was anything wrong then, he failed to mention it.” As to her husband’s being in the company of his former fiancee, Mary Kirk Brown, Mrs. Baer said: “It’s all-right with me. I didn’t want to go to the city.” Mrs. Baer’s father, James P. Sul- livan, Sr., said at Ithaca that he had heard nothing about a rift. Friends quoted Baer as saying he Yeft his bride late Monday after her {nsistence that they be married again by a Catholic priest. They were mar- tied by Judge F. Dickinson Letts. “I didn’t know she took her rei- gion so seriously,” he added. He planned to fly Wednesday to Baltimore for treatment of his hands. injured when he lost his champion- ship to James J. Braddock. Pacific Coast Hitter Holds Minor Bat Lead Durham, N, C., July 10—(%)—The | field of .400 batters was whittled to three during the last week as Oscar Eckhardt of the Pacific Coast League Missions took a firmer grip on the batting leadership of the minor leagues. George Ferrell of Richmond, in the & iH i | ¢ Piedmont Leegue, stands @ good sec- t i ' } just ‘with an average of .407 to trail 415-of Eckhardt. Ralph Hodgin, with Pieldale of the Bi-State , had .402. '” Goldfine, Superior, Northern, with ) 358 was in 17th place. MINNESOTA AMATEUR STARTS All-Star Game Provid COME OUT OF GARDEN |[—41 pases | OUR BOARDING HOUSE CAN YOU TE THAT SS AND WHERE DO THEY ALL HEAD FOR, WHEN THEY TH HIVE RIGHT OVER THE FENCE INTO MY FLOWER NN ORDER To GO OUT AN’ POTTER IN TH'YARD, TLL HAVE TO WRAP UP IN NETS / —WHEN DOES OUR LEASE -RUN OUT ON THIS PLACE’? IS A PRIME PEST TO_ NEIGHBOR, BAXTER == GET YOURSELF WORKED UP}! HELL SOON GET RID OF THE BEES, AFTER A FEW STINGS ON THAT BIG NOSE OF QA ‘7. M. REG, U. 8. PAT. OFF. 11= 10 @ v916 By NEA SERVICE, INC. OLYMPIC CLUB A Winnipeg Turns Back of the Northern League nearly ad- ministered a paddling to proteges of the Winnipeg Maroons, first half) champions, Tuesday night, but a) three-run rally in the ninth fell one shy. The score was 5-4. | Johnny Anderson, managers third) baseman, boomed a homer over the left field fence in the ninth with two on, but previous slugging. off Jack/ Knight, Fargo-Moorhead pilot and) former Philadelphia Nationals pitch- | er, counted too heavily. | The Maroons, with Lefty Bertrand Knight for three runs in the fourth| and two in the sixth. Bruno Haas; blanked them the next two innings; in the fast encounter. Jamestown. Edges Out Mexican All-Stars, 3-2 Jamestown, N. D., July 10—(4)— Bailey White, Jamestown first base- conquest of the La Junta Mexican nine. In the first half of the inning, Al Schauer cut down Gomez at the plate on a throw from left field. Ray Starr gave the Mexicans ten hits while Jamestown got nine off Cabal. Score by innings— R La Junta.. 010 100 000— 2 Jamestown .. 200 000 02x— 3 Cabal and Arjona; Starr and Bodie. NEW RACE TRACK OPENS Boston, July 10—(?)}—The new two million dollar Suffolk Downs race track, considered by many the perfect racing plant, opened its gates Wed- nesday, giving Massachusetts its first running horse races in a quarter of a century, A Mrs. Helen Hicks of Fort Wayne, Ind., is one of Indiana's better women golfers. She's no relation to Miss Helen Hicks of Hewlett, L. I. the business-woman golfer, Berkeley Bell, the tumbling Texan, has finally given up hope of getting a tumble by the Davis cup squad Pickers, and says he intends to turn Pro next winter. OUT OUR WAY th AIN'T WorRVIN! TUG? Winnipeg, Juy 10.—()—Managers | man, stole home in the eighth Tues- | day night to give the Red Sox a 3-2) ITHOUT SAYIN! NOTHIN', WHY, 1 ABOUT \ A LITTLE DISSATISFACTION, AT HOME —ARE YOU, CE SETS NEW AMERICAN TWO-MILE RECORD Eulace Peacock Defeats Jesse Managers’ Nine, 5-4) Owens Third Straight Time | Minneapolis In Century Dash New York, July 10—(@)—A new star has appeared in the track firm- ament, and his name is Bright. Norman Bright of Bellingham, Wash., who wears the colors of the San Francisco Olympic club, raced to a new American two-mile record Tuesday night on the rain-soaked track of New York University at Ohio Field. ihe: It had been expected that the vet- eran Joe McCluskey of the New York A. C. would romp in first with plenty to spare. f Bright breasted the tape 30 yards in front in the new American time of and Witham hitting homers, cracked/9 minutes 13.2 seconds, more than two seconds faster than the former mark of 9:15.4. Eulace Peacock, the latest Negro speed sensation, turned in his third victory over Jesse Owens of Ohio State in the century dash, but Owens evened matters for the meet by tak- ing the broad jump. Peacock won by a scant foot in 9.7. Owens gathered himself from a slippery takeoff, however, to leap 23 feet 9 inches in the broad jump. Devils Lake Defeats Colts Behind Babbitt Devils Lake, July 10.—(#)—Eugene Babbit hurled Devils Lake's semi- Pro hall team to a 7-3 triumph Tues- day over the Grand Forks Colts of ithe Northern League, settling down after an uncertain start. Sellers led the Devils Lake offensive with four singles in the third straight victory over Northern League mem- bers, adding Grand Forks to Fargo- Moorhead and Superior in the list of | victims, After granting three runs on a balk, three walks, and two doubles, Bab- bitt limited Grand Forks to two sits the remaining eight innings. HI-LINERS VICTORS Valely City, N. D. July 10—(®)— Valley City beat Page, 3-1, on three hits yesterday. Jimmie Crimmings, former Luther College ace, allowed Page just six blows. RHE Page ...... . 000 100 000-1 6 3 Valley City - 000 200 10x—3 3 1 Leonard and Dunbar; Crimmings {and Hancock. BE ANY ‘TIME 1 KIN SAVE MY MOTHER A A sicktt i} { Winnipeg Fargo-Moorhead . Duluth .... Crookston . Brainerd .. Grand Forks oe 22 Eau Claire . 21 Superior . 20 Tuesday's Results Open date. Toledo 8; Kansas City 2. St. Paul 18; Louisville 7. East Moline, Til, (7). Won Lost 50-32 Indianapolis 43 35 Kansas City, 4134 Milwaukee 39 36 Columbus 40 (38 St. Paul 3838 Toledo 34 43 Louisville 23 52 AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost New York 45 (6 Detroit .. 46 «(29 Chicago . 388 Cleveland 38 33 Boston .. 38 34 Philadelphia 29 39 Washington . 30 32 St. Louis .. 19 40 NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost New York . 48 21 St. Louis 42 29 Chicago . 40 32 Pittsburgh . 41 34 Brooklyn ..... 330037 Cincinnati ..... 31042 Philadelphia ... 3140 Boston AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 4; Milwaukee 0. Indianapolis 5; Minneapolis 3. | ESET eae Se et ORS Be) SACS | Fights Last Night | (By the Associated Press) Chicago — Gene Stanley, 160, Detroit, stopped Kid Leonard, 160, By Ahern | | HAVE YOU HEARD THE LATEST Z PESKY GAG THAT FATHEAD, HOOPLE, 1S SPRINGING’S— A HIVE FULL OF BEES IN HIS BACK YARD /-—BEES | STANDINGS | (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Pet. 67/are Harvey in the seventh district, NATIONAL AND AMERICAN oo Miami Beach, Fla, — Frankie Hughes, 145, Clinton, Ind., out- ° pointed Tommy Romano, 15414, Cleveland, (12); Mickey Dugan, 170, Cleveland, outpointed, Benny O'Dell, 18114, Syracuse, N. Y¥., (8). By Williams | YOU FELLER GET A GUY IN IT WAS ar WITH CAN THINK OF MORE WAYS TO AP NAL IL 1 AA resis “al district champions of 1934 for the N. D, JUMOR EVENT WILL BE HELD HERE JULY 26, 27 AND 28 Drawings Pair th and 3rd, 8th and 1st, Sth and 2nd, 7th and 6th Districts FINAL IS SLATED SUNDAY Several Strong Teams Will Challenge of Last Year's District Titlists Pairings by districts for the North Dakota American Legion Junior base- ball tournament, which will be held here July 26, 27 and 28, were an- nounced Wednesday by Frank J. ‘Webb, state athletic officer. First round pairings for the district | champions, games of which will be played Friday, July 26, and the en- trants from each district last year are: Morning games: Fourth district (Bismarck) vs. third district (Jamestown). Eighth district (Grand Forks) vs. first district (Hankinson). Afternoon games: Fifth district (New England) second district (Hannaford). Seventh district (Minot) vs. sixth district (Rolla-St. John). ‘Winners of Friday morning's games will meet in the first semi-final con- test Saturday afternoon and the vic- tors in the two afternoon games will clash in the second Saturday contest. Finalists will meet in the cham- pionship encounter Sunday afternoon. Drawings were made by Webb Tuesday night in the presence of William Ellison, Mandan, a member of the state athletic board; Theodore Mark, Hebron, fifth district athletic Officer; E. M. Davis, Bismarck, fourth district athletic officer and K. W. Simons, commander of the Bismarck vs. t. Grand Forks, last year’s champions are back this year with another strong entry as are all other teams that took part in the state tournament. Strong entries expected to press the right to compete in the state event Cooperstown in the second and Graf- ton in the eighth. Even officials and club owners of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY. JULY 10, 1935 es Fuel for Argument in Hot-St ove League WEBB ANNOUNCES PAIRINGS FOR STATE JUNIOR LEGION TOURNEY GREAT E ‘When Gene Sarazen scored his amazing double eagle in the Master’s Tournament at Augusta the gallery could not have been more excited than was the one at Oakmont which saw Sam Parks, Jr., sink a 45-foot chip shot on the ninth hole of the third round. That shot won the National Open championship of 1935, for had the 26-year-old South Hills Country club Professional only equaled par on this 447-yard, par five hole, he would have been tied by the long-hitting Jimmy Thomson at 301. Parks believes that it was the best shot he played in compiling 299, the only sub-300 score recorded in the three days of competition by a field composed of the world’s best golfers, is Parks played the chip shot with the ball of the right foot. Ice used a five iron, took a slightly open stance, and hit the pellet a descend- ing blow. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Tommy Connolly, traveling umpire- in-chief for the American league, during his active days of calling ‘em officiated in eight world series—and the American league won seven of them. Al Schacht, coaoch and comedian of the Boston Red Sox, does some of the team’s pitching in exhibition games. He hurled three innings at big league teams have to pay to get into the annual all-star games. Williamsport, Pa., giving up but one hit and no runs, Ryba of Columbus Blanks Brewers; St. Paul, Louis- ville Engage in Slugfest Chicago, July 10.—(}—Pastures on the other side of the fence were not lush for Indianapolis on its last road trip, hut the Indians have been get- ing a better break on the home lot. They trimmed Minneapolis, Amer- ican Association leaders, Tuesday night to split even on their four-game series and climb to within half a game of the second place Kansas City Blues. Stewart Bolen allowed Minne- apolis only one hit until the eighth, when they got three more hits and all of their three runs. The Indians banged out 11 hits for a 5-3 victory. Mike Ryba of Columbus also did some four-hit pitching as the Red Birds entertained Milwaukee. Co- lumbus won, 4-0, and put themselves half a game behind the fourth place Brewers. St. Paul and Louisville sluggers made a big evening of it at the Col- onels’ park, but the Apostles got bet- ter results from their 20 hits, win- ning 18-7 as Rosenthal and Giuliani hit homers. Counted among Louis- ville’s 18 hits were homers by Adair and Brack. Kansas City could send only two men around with nine hits, while To- Tedo let everybody but Pitcher Lawson score on 11 hits. The Mudhens won, 8-2. Red Birds Blank Brewers Columbus — The Columbus Red Birds blanked the Milwaukee Brewers 4 to 0 in a game under the lights RHE Milwaukee ......000 000 000—0 4 1 Columbus .. -000 000 13x— 410 1 Hamlin, Larkin, LaMaster and Rensa; Ryba and Ogrodowski. - Hens Trounce Blues Toledo—The Toledo Mudhens col- lected 11 hits to gain an 8 to 2 victory over the Kansas City Blues in a night R game. HE Kansas City. 000 001 00O1I— 2 9 3 Toledo .... Struss anc ‘Madjeski; Lawson and Susce. Indians Halt Millers Indianapolis — Indianapolis de- feated the Minneapolis Millers 5 to 3 under the lights, RHE Minneapolis ....000 000 030-3 4 0 Indianapolis ....002 021 00x— 511 2 Sundra, Marrow, Kolp and Har- grave; Bolen and Sprinz. 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In the third game, Morris again car the slab, shutting out Kamarisx, Relieving Smith, borrowed from the Monroe Monarchs for the Can- Earl Averill of Cleveland, whe missed this year’s game, was the best runs-driver-inner in '33 and '34, scoring one with a pinch the first year and three ertienaetiory double and a triple in ‘34. Louisville . Stine and Peterson and jears ago, when thousands of bison toamed the West, nat- uralists frequently found these usually timid animals engaged. in savage fights with other beasts. They discovered that the herds were battling over possession of salt licks to which instinct led them for elements absolutely essential to animal life. He'd fight ANYTHING for what’s in Budweiser beer— wholesome, severe fatigue and even heat exhause tion may result. To replace these eles ments, nothing is more essential than a balanced diet. Top it off with whole= some BUDWEISER! — America’s favorite is a most healthful hot weather drink for another reason. It contains enough warming alcohol to prevent harmful chilling of the stome ach when a cold drink is desired. Drink BUDWEISER—the health drink —the natural drink—the all-year- *round drink. i LouIsS udweiser THE ALL-YEAR~"ROUND DRINK BISMARCK GROCERY CO., 521 Main, Distributors.