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é. f + near Z 1d 8 8 6c se) a i Oy Th hea so cee > o te y t th ay ic te st el ol 4 tl fi: o fe ea) 7 oe Pp tt ze ooh 5x SCOOP ALL THIS Tak ABOUT BEING AFRAID TO z 1 Se et e084 * O88 ee 88 lin the. Buropean ‘war. haves equally |* AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. — *j violated international law. ee ee eK Ke He eH HH HH 4) They have declared that the delay- Club 5 Le ing of a mail sack was as important Indianapolis 4 as the murder of 200 American Pe ee ee ) Kan; City 4 Many times they have declared * NATIONAL LEAGUE. » | Louisville 6 that the British created the first eee eee ee ee ee we ow | Milwaukee F 4 mine zone in the North sea and that Club W. L. Pet., Columbus Brees the German operations with mines New York . ea) 727 | Minneapolis 6 00/and submarines were only forced up- Ste Louies: Salat 3 St. Paul 7 .200/on Germany in self defense. AG Toledo ... pe Are Really Simple. aes, Sea I have even heard senators assert 39 SEARCH eet eliaes ‘that the first American vessel to be | ce ee SU Pani toledo Ge sunk was sunk by the British and! Pittsburgh 5 1 Blea, Raeivleb erate ne later privately inquire what was the} Brooklyn Bret | (Other panes postpone (Rain) | difference between the French flag| = , Miiwaukee at Toledo a and the German. | Games Friday. Ki City ae India polls | 7 have heard some of them say that Pittsburgh 3; Cincinnati | Kan: ity at Indianapolis, i fale sae Ma 7 if 8 : M maiolis ak. ville. to sink American ships and kill} New York 1; Philadelphia a a a Ca American sailors was no violation of | z - org St. Paul at Columbus, ie 7 bh . (Other games postponed; rain.) | American rights and then ask me if; Games Sunday. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, Chicago at St. Louis. (No other games scheduled.) Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, KR (Ga bs Pittsburgh oo... Ls 7 0 Cincinnati .... Ba) Ratteries—“Tony and Wingo; Mil- Jer and Schmidt, New York at Philadelphia. its Ns Ws New York Lae | Philadelphia ere Frees Matteries anand = M Lavender and Killifer. ee ® AMERICAN LEAGUE, > ee ee Club Wi. Ue ‘Pet: Chicago ..... seer, 5: Gy BOStON is sericea cas i 4 New York . ucts tn ol Cleveland BG St. Louis Philadelphia Washington Detroit 8 Games Friday. St. Louis 1; Detroit 2. Cleveland 2; Chicago 1. (Other games postponed. (Rain.) Games Sunday. St. Louis at Cleveland. Detroit at Chicago. (No other gam cheduled.) St. Louis at Detroit. R. H. St. Louis ere Detroit : . srexafesapstaer nek! Sak Batteries—Weilman and Severeid; Dauss and Stanage. Cleveland at Chicago. R, H. E. Cleveland re eee Chicago Sawaal: 16 | ‘Batter' Klepper, Coveleski and O'Neill; Williams and Schalk. it THE CUB REPORTER = ‘| read a line about the war. IVE GOT AN (DEA THAT \T NEVER WOULD BOTHER_ ME! MACHINE SSS > Jue, —S Oe Wee << Kansas City at Louisville. Roo a u i 1) atteries—MeConnell and Berry Davis and Clemens St. Paul at Toledo. Te 1h St. Paul tiene mone OW ‘Toledo ae 14 tatteries Neihaus, Criner and fLand; Lynn, Keating, Brady and Bresnahan. NIGHT SCHOOL SUGGESTED “read anything about the do not know what they do war, | }read, if at all, but they have never No doubt they have heard of it, but only in a ago heard one of its members from his place on the floor declare that the origin of the war was the Morocco incident, and although he might as well have said it was the scarcity of Limburger cheese in Stam, nobody called him down for an exhibition so 0} humiliating. Again and again this member and others have declared that both sides vague and uncertain way. Farmer Corntossel came into the store one day and he w about it and they heard him say something, but it made no particu-) lar impression on them because what they wanted just then was some fresh chewing tobacco. Humiliating. Exhibition. Unfortunately this is no fancy sketch or imaginative flight. The senate of the United States not tong! der a strict interpretation of the sta- tute upon which Governor Frazier could nominate for the approval of the senate successors to J. A. Power and Emil Scow, whose terms expire! by law July 1. Instead of nominat- ing two candidates, the governor, placing implicit reliance on the opin- ion of Langer, submitted the names of five men—Dr. W. G. Brown of Far-| 80, for six ; (Robert Muir of Sarles and Kev. C. E. Vermil Valley City for four years, | George Totten of Bowman and Ros-! coe Deigle of Sawyer, for two years. Nominations Rejected. The senate promptly rejected the nominations and returned them to Luxemburg is a province of France. H In the de MeLemore | resolution (wo senators and Li representatives declared that all the! ytrouble between Germany and the ; United Stites was caused by Ameri- | Feans that insisted upon traveling up: j yon the armed ships of the entente, although at that time not one armed ship of the entente, carrying p: “net gers, had ever entered an American port. These are the minds that are ing to have the volunteer s “tried first,” that are sure we send no troops to Europe, tha | lieve American honor is repres: | ™ should | be | ed by American dollars, and waste time | it T am |school, And I-believe that if part of | the community that is not doped and | can read and write will get behind it, we can put it over! HANNA BOARD WINS Jin fiddle-faddle while the world won-| ders when we are going to wake up. } \ Yes, in favor of that night sg WIGTORY OVER FRAZIER (Continued from Page One) the law when he nominated members for the board Mareh 4, 1915, and ap-} pointed the same, with the approval of the senate, several days later, Langer Started It. The famous squabble = which brought forth this decision began on January 15, when Governor Frazier submitted to the senate, in executive session, a lengthy opinion from At- torney General Langer, holding that {the present board of regents was il- legally appointed and that the go’ ernor had authority to name succes- sors to every. member of the board, January was the last date un- nies. we are drilling. We are only Midwest Pipe Line. 5 erty. property. selling for. Oil Operate: Hundre Ti Inte Wyomias: Drilling for Oi NEW HJORTH WELL | OUR FIRST WELL In Being Drilled NOW in the Sait Creek Wyoming Oil Fields WHERE MILLIONS HAVE BEEN MADE by the Midwest and Ohio (the Standard) Oil Compa- New wells are being brought in all around us. ig Hjorth Well is only 3,000 feet from where ao are arin 1,500 feet from the Ohio Oil’ Company has con- tracted to drill 52 weils adjoining the Hjorth prop. This puts the stamp of expert approval on our Our shares are worth more than they are Millions have been made by large oper- the small investor is also making money. the wise in America Are Flocking of New Wells Are Being Contracted Fer. Our first well will be drilled to the lower oil sands from which the Hjorth Well is esti- mated to be producing 500 to 1,000 barrels per day. There are producing wells all around us. _TWE SALT CREEK PETROLEUM COMPANY, 630 First National Bank Bldg, Denver, Cole c 3 YOU SHOULD KNOW Who you are dealing with, where the prop- erty is, the standing of officers and what pros- pect the company has to make money for you. Nee 2h FAS 2 po ~~] Big producerd Owned on acre tract is pro oil men who kno stockholders. d shares left. share, If you wa possibilities and take enough tion, We. reserve Our 960- wire us. THE SALT CREEK PETROLEUM COMPANY shares are now selling at 50 cents, Write Us Today or Wire Reservation allotment is oversold, Thousand of barels of OL peodusced, ven. The officers are experienced w how to gct the best results for Only a few thous- The next allotment will be $1 per mt a safe oil investment with big time to maké a thorough inyestiga- the right to return subscriptions if For full particulars write or | of regents folded its tents and quiet- | candidates the governor, President Crawford and other members of the board of regents hastened to Eismarek, where they were s ed with a formal no- tice from Governor Frazier advising that “pursuant to an opinion ren- dered by the attorney general of the state that the board of regents is not legally constituted, and for other reasons, | deem it for the best in- tere of the state that I declare; the office held by you as a member of the state board of regents — of} North Dakota vacant.” At the governor's invitation there was a conference, at which he ad- vised that he intended to stand pat, and when the regents borrowed the} league's slogan, “We'll stick.” Eleventh Hour Strategy. The names of Frazie five pro- teges again went to the e and second time came bac Finally, when the Sin its eleventh | hou nations quietly bobbed up one And through a quick raily of me ty members, who had been taken somewhat by surprise, whether intentionally or otherwise, the Teague minor again was over- ruled, and the session came to an end with no nominations having been made for members of "the state board of regents by and with the approval of the senate, New Board Organizes. Then came a solemn day when Governor Frazier’s own board of re- gents, each with a shiny new com- mission in his hand, and with the chief executive at their head, filed! into the office of the board, which then was in session, and informed the old board that the new board was ready to go on the job. And the old board very calmly informed Gover- nor Frazier and the new board that it (the old board) couldn't see them at all, and Governor Frazier and the new board filed out again, and the old board proceeded with its busi- ness, which it has been doing dili- gently ever since that time. Given Mileage Books. Governor Frazier’s board spent a day or two closeted in the executive chambers. It organized by electing Dr. Brown president and Herbert A. Hard of Fargo, secretary. Then it lingered around a day or two wait- ing for 2,000-mile mileage books, which Governor Frazicr's auditing ‘board had kindly voted to present them at the expense of the dear, down-trodden people. And when Deputy State Treasurer Lyngstad de- clined to stand for this little drag on the public purse, the new board ly stole away. Ouster proceedings already had been filed by Attorney General Lang- er, The case was in court—avowedly a debatable question—when the state auditing board, which includes the governor, Attorney General iLanger and State Auditor Kositzky, all leag- uers, voted to open the state trea- sury to five men whose status as be- tween public servants and private citizens was_yet in doubt. The Hearing. The supreme court accepted juris- diction in the ouster proceedings, and the case came up for argument in due time. Attorney General iLang- er, a trifle dubious perhaps, was sud- denly called away on the eve of bat- tle, leaving Assistant Attorney Gen- eral Daniel V. Brennan to appear on the firing line as chief of command for the Assistant Attor- ney Genera . Bronson as aide. Aubrey Lawrence appeared for the defense, with former Chief Justice C. J. Fisk and former Attorney Gen- eral Henry J. Linde as counsel. A day was devoted to the argu- ment, and then everyone settled down for a six weeks’ wait, relieved only temporarily by an ex-cathedra rsonal opinion from Justice J. BE. nm, who led all other league in the race for the su- preme bench last fall, This greatest leaguer of them all, former partner of “Bill” Lemke, the legal brains of the league, privately, in one of his famous *Saturday night letters, de- clared the whole affair a “kinder- garten case.” Press Agents Busy. In the meantime league press agents have been very busy. Mali- cious reports to the effect that Dr. E. F. Ladd, president of the state agricultural college, and most high in the esteem of the Townleyites, was to be removed; that Professor Bolley and Professor Arvold and ever s0 view to creating. sentiment against the present board of regents. The case was in court and a decision | Coach “iLitz’” Rusness, jenlistments from the institution are pending, but matters with a direct bearing upon the case were freely discussed in the news columns and editorially by Townley organs. No: ruse nor wile which could occur to shrewd and astute publicis! famil- iar with this form of battle was lett untried. In view of all the circumstances asi ated with this litigation the coming of the supreme court's de- cision brings a very general sense of relief. Refers to Three Only. Today’s decisions refer to the ten- ure in office of three members only of the old board—President Crawford, White and Taylor, The question of the governor’s authority to appoint ssors to ‘Scow anu Power, whose duly 1, inasmuch as he led to do so at UI proper time, was raised in the respondents’ argu- ments, but it was not given consider- ation by the court in arriving at the opinions handed down today. ni "THE dumbest oyster can make a better pearl than the bright- est man. The oyster uses Nature’s methods. 9; i oe WAR PLAYS HAVOC IN NORMAL SCHOOL RANKS (Special to Tribune.) Moorhead, ‘Minn, April 28--The war has played havoc with the base- ‘ball squad of Moorhead normal school, according to an announcement dy Among twelve ATURE SAYS smoking tobacco is at its best after two years’ ageing, That is why Velvet is “aged in the wood” two years—tho natural way, the slow way and the sure way, AULLADLASRNERERGLOCREREROIAG 2 Arthur Storm, catcher; Adolph Jobn- son and Rutz Engh, outfielders, and William Curran, catcher-outfielder. The 1917 Tire - Sensation NN NN 4 N’ QW PSION q a MN NE, war wan COST LITTLE MORE ‘These handsome husky Tires at little more money make a DELUXE FORD CAR, Price cach: 375 (31x33/) . . $18.95 30x34 (Regular size) 16.60 SAS PMN TI NIIN TNE NI x, NAS ZT, », PALS 7 ~~ PAL ey / SIZE(3IX354 INCHES) ho ¥ fo} BLACK SAFETY TREAD TIRES: GAIN a rubber masterpiece springs from the skill and experience of Goodrich’s forty-eight years of rubber- making — the Goodrich “THREE-SEVENTY-FIVE” that new SUPERSTIRE for Ford cars. If you have not seen this husky yet graceful tire, a Ford car tire of HEROIC SIZE, go at once to your dealer and ask for it. Just say: Give me— i Goodrich’s ‘ Three-Seventy-Five’ You will find it a tire of burly size, burly in extra rubber, extra fabric and extra service. Made in the regular Goodrich five-finger Safety Trcad ONLY, it is built an inch bigger around the circumference than ordinary Ford car tires, and thicker in thecross section, It fits 39-inch rims. Its slightly higher outset cost is cancelled by the cconomy of longer life, and the greater satisfaction you get from a more stylish and more efficient Ford car. The B. F. Goodrich Rubber Co., A‘ron, Ohio iF