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jou cu ‘BIG LEAGUES TOOPEN FLAG RACE TUESDAY a6 ty th te ye th fil safeams in Both Circuits Are a Strengthened For 1925 Pennant Campaign at be 3a ne co “e| New York, April 13.—The nation’s saaseball-hungered hosts, _meag: pued on winter “dope” are prepa fro end the long tast and take their | ccustomed places tomorrow at the inpening of the annual feast spread wy the two major leagues. de Fandom will see most of the clubs eturning from the training camps | f the South with few lineup change nd there a recruit from t * has made the grade, dis- ing some veteran, but for the # 10st part the eight teams under the wig league tents will be made up of amiliar ¢ The National league will cel tks golden jubilee this year. Cer onies to commemorate its fiftieth tiirthday will be held in every city aa the circuit at some time during rhe season, the outstanding celebra- iton being assigned to Boston, when vhe Braves and Cubs will meet May President Coolidge has been in- Gited, but was forced ‘to decline to the pressure of official | Boston and Chicago are the only arter members of ‘the Né&tional bague, and the honor of playing is keynote game naturally goes to ese clubs. The American league, unded in 1900, inaugurates its wenty-sixth campaign Tuesday. = The paramount issue on the =f the opening of the league c aign is: Will the 1924 pennant win- ers repeat? If McGraw pilots the jiants to another pennant, it will be he fifth straight flag for the New ork club under McG "$3 man- ement. In winning the 1912 flag, IcGraw created a record in the Bajor league. Back in the palmy days of bi ll, before the reign of the National ague, Boston won four straight aces in the National association, ~ 872 to 1876, and St. Louis dup! ated this feat in the American as ocintion from 1805 to 1889, but aese achievements were out: Rrcalled organized baseba! unn’s feat in piloting the rioles to six straight pennants in ae International league is the only 2cord in organized baseball which urpasses that of McGraw. Though there is no reason to doubt the New York Giants and the sVashington Senators are as strong ‘bs they were last season, it is ex- ; pected the opposition will be stiffer “inis year, the Giants facing such itrengthened clubs as Brooklyn and bittsburgh while the Senators look ;mr trouble from the New York ‘kankees and the Detroit Tigers. tl Chicago. which fell off noticeably ouring the latter half of last season, "tl expected to be in the fight from Ihe start despite the injury which eill keep “Rabbit” Maranville, star Wfielder, out of the game until “Say 1. 3" Philadelphia and St. Louis are not “nepected to be in the thick of the ght after midseason. af The acqui on of Urban Shocker rf the pitching staff and the sensa- penal training camp play of Earl wembs. former Louisville star. will tve the Yankees Jam. yt Although himself on the sick list, ‘Cobb has gathered around him a u a strengthened » iss Rogers Gained 15 Pounds In Six Weeks 30 Days or Money P ‘ Back dear Friends: : After my attack of Flu I was thin, ndown and weak. I had a sal igmplexion, my cheeks were sunk in 'fid I was continually troubled with “4s on my stomach. I felt stuffy F Ad had Jost my appetite. I read aout ‘McCoy's Cod: Liver Oil Com- palund Tablets and decided to give ‘éem a trial. At once, I began to fueck up an‘ appetite, my cheeks filled eit and- my complexion became Hfdelthy looking and I -gained 15 unds in six weeks and am very inkful for what McCoy’s Cod Liver | Compound Table! id for me. R a, 264 W. Corr » grow strong and rous, to fill out the hollows in and neck, try McCoy’s Cod il Compound Tablets for 30 , 60 Tablets—60 cents at Fin- ‘Co, Cowan Drug Co., A. P. ? re Drag Co., and live druggists If they don’t give you p.in 30 days, eet your rou be the judge. But fe, and for MeUsy’s, the’ ‘and genuine. ONE OF BES !Johnny Hedapo, Indianapolis Major League Timber in Near Future Plant City, i his club to this city to pl ciation has shown keen man of the Indians. interest in JOHNNY HODAPP Every major league manager that hag brought! the Indianapolis club of the American A3so- IN DOUBLE A Third Baseman, Looks Like i 1 Johnny Hodapp, crack third base sell automotive trans munity. Lahr Motor Sales Co. wi. Meeting: Modern. Standards of Automobile Dealership LARGE COAL DEPOSITS TO. _ BRING RICHES Next Generations Will See Big Factories in West Part of State Throughout that vast period esti- mated to have been from thirty to forty millions of years’ ago, North Dakota and all the adjoining regions re one great sea. In this sea lime- stone, shale, and sandstone were de- posited. During the next era, known as the Mesozoic, North Dakota quite prob- ably remained above sea level though for a time a large lake or series of lakes occupied part of it. At this time, Dakota sandstone with an av- erage thickness of from 200-300 feet was laid down. On this other sedi- ments including more shale, lime- stone and sandstone, were deposited to_a depth of over a thousand feet. During the latter part of this era a general settling of the land al- lowed the waters to cover almost the entire continent from the gulf to the Arctic Ocean, including practically all of North Dakota. When the land twas again elevated and the sea withdrew—about 5,000,- 000 years ago, the area thus exposed was subject to erosion or wearing away by water, Upon this old erod- ed land surface. remained vast swamps, similar perhaps to the tam- arack swamps of Minnesota today. The trees which grew up in these swamps shed their leaves into the waters every year, they died or were blown down themselves into the ooze, and others took their places. Ordinarily they would have rotted away but the waters which covered them preserved them where they fell. rospect in in the ‘big sho . should know an infielder, The rise of Hodapp has been meteoric, the American Association, as far ays Donie Bush, , one of the greatest shortstops the American League ever turned his In 1923 he wag a Cincinnati manager. sand-lotter. He came di Throughe of the Am 3 t to Indianapolis from the corner-lot league, was never in the busies, and mace good from the hing aimoet certain to go to the major He is only 19 years cd and seems to improve if among the first five hitters th an average of .343, at the close or 1925. ith every game. w celebrated of talent and strong opposition i promised by Detroit ting his first pilot, has an the Chicago a major lea uncertain quantity in White St. Louis will present changed lineups this year and all expect to improve their standing of last year, when only fifty-two points separated jthe four clubs the curtain dropped. CONCORDIA "STARTS SPRING PRACTICE i Give Completed Schedule For | The Grid Campaign Next Fall (By peiated Press) Moorhead, Minn., April 13.—Spring {football entered its second week at Concordia college here with coach Fen Watkins ng “more lintensive trainin progress wa s training squad during the past week, the Cob mentor avers. The nucleus for next year's grid campaign is ing Captain-elect Sally Bre Chalky Reed, halt- backs; Ed Boe and Larry Lawrence tackles and Thorsen, cent r of the squad are yet untried in vy: atkin’s problem E development of ends and ance of the backfield, there bei big enough and fast enough material to fill in thé line posts. Nine letter men who are grad- uating in June are making up the coaching staff for the spring work- outs. As most of these players have been with Watkins for the last three years, they are familiar with his style of play and his innovation ha’ been working out to his satisfac- tion. In addition the graduating football players are attaining exper. ience in a line that many of them are expecting to continue in connec- tion with teaching positions in high schools. The completed _ schedule ‘for the Cobber grid campaign next fall fol- lows: September 26—open, hoped to be filled by one of the local normal schools. October 3—Jamestown Jamestown. October 10—St. Olaf’s College at Northfield. October 17,—Moorhead Concordia. « October 24.—Gustayus at St. Peter. , October 81.—St. John College at Normal at Adolphus University ut Moorhead. Homecoming game. November 7.—North Rakota Agri-! cultural College at Goncordia. NIFTY Derby and Cane Chase : Mortars After centuries of this, lakes again submerged swamps and forests. The) streams brought in more sediment of limestone, shale, and other minerals and the beds of wood were covered | over. | Between the rock layer helow and the rock layer now pressing down on| them from above, the water and gases in the wood were driven off and the matter remaining was re- duced to that form of coal we know| as lignite. (Although thousands of| years passed while these. changes | were taking place, lignite is consid- Ye have this om Rabb, healthy look oe ered by scientists to be “geologically young.” The geologically old” coals such as anthracite and bituminous took many more milleniums to form.) The waters receding left swampy areas in their turn in which forests grew, were submerged again, and compressed until other beds of lig- nite were laid between the two rocky layers. Through the centuries the process was repeated until the depth of the formation was almost 1600 feet. Today as a result North Dakota possesses not only one of the largest coal areas in the United States but the greatest continuous stretch of coal in any one locality in the world. Her 28,000 square miles of workable coal beds, containing some 516,000,- 000,000 tons of high grade lignite coals are greater than the combined deposits of England, France and Ger- many, the great coal producing and industrial nations of Europe with a population of 116,000,000. We have enough coal, it is estimated, to warm every home, turn. every wheel in every factory in this country for the next 200 years, and still barely seratch the surface of the coal re- sources of the state. Lignite can be used in its natural state in a great variety of stoves, heating plants, power plants and oth- er burners to advantage. But through Dr. E. J. Babcock, Dean of Lignite, and the School of Mines at the University, a briquet has been perfected which is clean, conven- ient to handle, and strong enough to stand the action of weather, trans- portation, and burning in every way satisfactorily. In addition, a ton of properly made lignite briquets has a heating value equal to two ton of. either anhtracite or bituminous coal. The purer the coal, the greater its value. A difference of two or three per cent in the earthy matter of the two coals mav the source of a very serious difference in their final value. North Dakota coals are al- most always free from earthy ma- terials as may be seen from the amount and character of their ash. In addition to the briquets there is obtained from a: ton of dry lignite, 11,000 to 12,000 cubie feet of gas, (a very high yield), of good quality for heating, lighting and power purposes. This should prove very valuable in the development of a large number of industries by giving cheap gas for fuel and for the production of elec- trie power. These products of the lignite will]! benefit all parts of the stete but they will prove especially valuable in the|: The next generation will see |! west. the western section of the state hum- ming with factories, i with thousands of skilled artisans living about them in peace and pros- perity. CONSTIPATION means WEAKNESS Constipation is practically universal among civilized hu- man beings, It is a national curse causing inefficiency and physical unpreparedness. It causes disease, premature old age, ns endurance and resistance, and many times fatal illness is directly traceable to its obnoxious clear eye, healthy look, vim, vigor and vitality can be had only when the bowels are free and are moving regularly, Dr. Caldwell’s SYRUP PEPSIN The Family Laxative : —promptly relieves constipation. It is not a bitter medicine nor 4 griping, nauseating, uncom: pleasing liquid combination of Egyptian physic. It isa senna, in and aromatics that Dr, Caldwell, with his long tensive practice, found effective and an aid to Nature in perform- ing her proper functions when the bowels were mis- treated through mortar : boards’ have aside by senior students at afta nd pres. 0 has wearing Traditional been la: the University of ‘Chattanooga in’ their stead comes “derbies ” is Edwin Marti already, mastered the are st ready mas' his derby. f < improper food, lack of exercise, and indif- ference to physical sanitation. t ied é Gently Restores The Bowels To Health Today fifteen million car. owners ave depending upon automobile deal- ers for the necessities of car maintenance and operation—are looking to them for satisfaction in ownership. Those dealers who are squarely meeting their responsibility for the cars they sold are measuring up to modern standards of automobile dealership, which provide that the first duty of the dealer today is to portation — not merely new cars — to his com- MAN MURDERED IN OLD SHACK | * NEAR WADENA (By The Atisociated Press) Wadena, Minn., April 13.—Circum- stances surrounding the death of a man believed to be Gust Johnson were being’: investigated today by Wadena seunty. authorities. An in- quest was to be held late today, J. J. McKinnon, Wadena county coroner announced, The pede. of the man was found in a shack owned by a construction arew and was discover- ed_by a member of the crew. Receipts issued to “Gust Johnson” by the Bethel Home of Duluth were the only ‘clues to the man’s identity. A post mortem examination con- ducted yesterday revealéd that he had been stabbed seven or eight times, once through the heart. He had been dead between twenty-four and forty-eight hours, the coroner beligves. & GOOD RISKS By NEA Service Columbus, O., April 13.—Men with hobbies and fat men usually sre good risks for surety companies, Fred M. Withey, vice president of the Na- tional Surety Company, told members of the Columbus Ad Club. “MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1925 = st ‘THE y LAHR BISM “The nut or man with a hobby.” Mr. Withey said, “is a good moral rigk because he is too busy with his pet subject to take other people’s money; the fat man is a good risk because his thoughts center on eating rather than dishonesty. Ms “The married man is a_ better moral risk than the bachelor by six-to-one ratio and the violently profane man is a good risk because he takes out his peeves in swearing rather than in stealing.” S esa TO VISIT MINOT Minot; N. D., April 13.—Minot Shriners are interested in the an- nouncement of the coming visit of James E. Chandler of Kansas City, imperial potentate of A. A. O. N. M. S., to Fargo and Grand Forks temples in North Dakota, which will take place on April 22 and 23. Mr. Chan- dler will deliver addresses at both Fargo and Grand Forks, Special pro- grams are being apranged in each city. NAME NRW CASHIER Minot, N. D., April 13—0. R. Powell, cashier of the Union National Bank, ‘has tendered his resignation and B. A, Balerud, assistant cashier, has been selected to fill the position. Mr. Balerud has been employed at this bank since 1915, starting in as @ messenger and his advancement has been steady. He entered the war said these shoes investigators recently made Impartial inquiry among hundreds of Ground Gripper wearers in various states throughout the country. Ninety-two ber cent of those interviewed stated thas i had corrected is prophecied, |; of relieved all their foot troubles! AD feet are made, not born. And the won- derful recuperative powers of the exercise gained through preper walking can soon restore your feet to their normal condition, But you must give your feet a chance! Wear shoes that allow freedom of action and your feet will cure themselves. The three features of Ground Gripper Shoes will correct most of the many foot troubles. straight give the foot muscles and oe the Secoeary far se to function as nature intended, 2. The Fluxible Arch—Every has a flexible arch which, because it flexes qwith the foot and ey retest iresdona to the seh muscles, en en t to build up it Fear Sees ae he Pi ears shes ip Ground Gripper Shoes, 3. The Patented Rotor Heel—The Rotor Heel of Shoo has a the Ground Gri discourage the walking. It is a feature Come in and see the into a pair and notice the difference right from the start. MEN’S The Rotor Het ALEX ROSEN & BRO. McKenzie Hotel Block necessary freedom Ground Gripper Shoe ” or “weak arches’ cure per Shoe is scientifically designed to I habit of ‘toeing out™ when found in no other shoe. Ground Gripper. Put your feet CLOTHES SHOP YROUND RIPPER. Ma-Pa = te Rest All were out Easter Day in “their best.” PA and SON of many families secured their outfits at our Store, the many fine suits, top- coats, hats, caps, shirts, ties in the Easter parade are walking advertisements for MOTOR SALES RCK NORTH DAKOTA MPAN Distributors of -Overland Fine Motor Cars service in 1918 and on his return be- came receiving teller and later pay- ing teller, and finally in 1921 was advanced to the position of assistant cashier. THE ANSWER ELMER—Has any other boy ever kissed you? ‘ROSEMARY—I never know how to answer that question.—Life. ROUP SpasmodicCroupis frequently relievedbyone application of Vicks one 17 ales Se BARS ——— irre Sek Nearly DR.R.S.ENGE, : Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. 107 5th St. Phone 428 Try Us For Service Open: Evenings EVERREADY TIRE VULCANIZERS ith St. Phone 944 Kodak Finishing By Professionals The ART FOTO CO. Mandan, - - N. Dak TAILORING & HAT WORKS Hats Reblocked Cleaned, Pressed, and Repaired in MEN and WOMEN’S CLOTHES. 24 Hour Service on Mail Orders. WE CALL FOR AND .. DELIVER. 1 Suits jay Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 FUNERAL DIRECTOR Parlors 210-5th Street. Night and Day attendant Phone 687