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4 4 : i PAGE SIX Sports| INDIANS WIN LONGBATTLE | FROM TIGERS While Sox Defeat Browns 11 to 10 in Wild Slugging Match | Detroit, April 21.—Cleveland won a 15 inning game from Detroit, 5 to | 4. Detroit failed to hit effectively, | although Manager Cobb rushe | his reserve forces into the | making his own first appearance t sen in the seventh when he batted for Holloway. Johnson also | pitched great ball, but lost control in ith when he forced the win-| un across, | RHE ia | nd 112 000 000 000 OA01—5 10 14 200 000 000O—4 10 1) well, Myatt; | Johnson | BROWNS SLIDE | puis, April 22. St. Louis | fell back into their losing | dropping the third game of series with the White Sox, 11| to 10, in a slugging mateh. er’s | two singl ave him a of | having hit safely in every game of | the season thus far. . 400 300 112 003 00: onnally t, Blaeholder Rego, Dixon. DS TRIN and CHICAGO CUBS + i Defeat Reds _ in! Hurling Duel Phillies wet grounds, Chicago, April 2 bby” Hart- nett, young Cub catcher} continued his sensational home run slugging here, getting his sixth cir- cuit wallop in seven games. Hart- nett’s hit was only one of four the Bruins garnered off Sothoron, who twirled the St. Louis Cardinals to a 2 to 1 victory. Hartnett’s drive came in the sec- ond .inning. If he continues home run work even to a minor de- | gree his will soon be in a position to lenge Babe Ruth's _ record. Hornsby got a homey today, his first of the season. FAMILY POLO TEAM LATEST IN SPORTS Firestones of Akron, O., Present Unique Combination on Florida Fields, and What Is More, ROM, LET | By NEA Service When it comes to these thing a little dilferent. Down here where polo is a favorite hare! to beat. ists many fumily tes enough family polo team in all the Miami, Pia. Sport 4 Boston at New York Washington at Philadelphia. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis at Louisville. St. Paul at Indi City at Toledo, aukee ut Columbus. AN LEAGUE AMERIC. ; St. Louis 10, + Detroit 4. AMERIC St. Paul Minneapoli Milwaukee Kansas City N ASSOCIATION Toledo 1. 4; Columbus 1. KITTEN BALL. PLAYERS TO TO RIGHT LEONARD, RUS. $ postponed, cold weather and wet grounds. It’s Tough One to Beat family affai astime the the broad jump and the century dash. Both athletes have been show- ing remarkably well in indoor com- petition this season and should bring hack some points from the eastern affair. CLAY DEPOSITS IN STATE TO BRING RICHES \Fine Pottery Can Be Made With Soil Product of North Dakota Eastern North Da toned Red River, central North Da- k its clay-deep roads, western h Dakota, its clay-banded buttes. e seen them, but how h to the a has its clay- 1 resource R. HE » | e ure our ed and extensive 101 000 000—2 8 0 MEET TONIGHT |: ate gun varied i 010 000 000-1 4 3 — — There are the Berton Shales in . Sothoron and Schmidt: Blake, Persons interested in forming kit-|the Pembina Valley and atong the Keen and Hartnett. ten ball teams here are asked to! western border of the Red River meet at 7 p. m. today at the office] Valley, the Pierre Shales widely MEADOWS BEATS REDS of the Underwood Typewriter com-| distributed throughout the eastern Cincinnati, April 21—Lee Mead- ows pitched in mid n form and | Pittsburg defeated Cincinnati 4 to 2. The Reds were able to score in only | @—-————______—— the entire western ‘half of one inning, when they put over two] | . Overlying the Laramie alice tie detest seantheckeds: to} | The Referee the rich and second place, giving New York the |@——--—-———~-————--—_@ s of the Terti league lead. 4 cee rdonaliuent MBE ral thousands RH. E] p Wien did Benny Leonard vent] miles and found sometimes in beds Pittsburg. .....,001 010 011-4 10 11 4itfe and how many rounds did the| 50 to 100 fect deep. Cincinnati 000 op0 020 —-2 7 2) title, and, : Considerably more than half the Meadows and Gooch: Rixey, May | "4h 80" i Welsh in 1917,{ State is covered with glacial drift ee Meratave. winning ona kayo in the ninth ses-| composed pf cl Heh ate a a pa : mixed toxéther and varying in thick: aT —-——-—————® | “id George Mullin of the old De-| ness from a few feet to several hun- b+ yet yerpay an aia -hit| dred feet. Much of this is not suit- ‘ BASEBALL | tit TE TE onda ct y, "Sable for clay industries because of a Tee Mlnhunled: 3 no contest | the sand, gravel, and lime in it, but American Association Louis in the afternoon|in many places pereolati ly 4, 1912 has purified it sufficiently War 3: , Collett. ever competed | mon uses, Other states, not so rich Indianapolis 4 667 | for the British women’s golf title in| 4 Dakota in higher grade St. Paul . .4 667! the past?—F. R. T. ¢ have to get a Minneapolis . 4 3 +571 | No, this will be her first foreign clay by sere Columbus .. Boi 8. 1/4600) neagion: otherwise artif Louisvill oh Caras eae ao preparing it. 3 2. 4 MICHIGAN Thousands of years ago great 4 4 Cleveland . Philadelphia . Washington . 3 Chicago» 4 New York . 2 H Detroit 2 | Roston 1 | St. Louis 21 | a = i National League Ww. iL. Pet. New York . 4-1 800 Cincinnati By eo nade St. Louis 4 3 AAT Philadelphia Bi aid 500 | Chicago . ioe 4zy | hbrookiyn 2 3 400 Pittsburg 2 5 286 Boston 1 8 260 | GAMES TODAY e NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis at Chicago. Philadelphia ct Boston. New York at Brooklyn. * AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at St. Louis. Cleveland at Detroit. Try Joint-Ease for LAME BACK Rub it on tonight and ten to one “you: backache or lumbago will be gone in the morning. That’s quick saougs for iho ‘sand may give you a big surprise. Bu pleose hear in ~ind that the quick action of Joint-Ease no longer sur- ses the millions of people who lave used it for stiff, creaky, swoi- len, pain tormented joints; neither will it surprise the tens of thousands jin the pole vault event at the Pi ter part of thi 206 Broadway d pany, sion will be ussed. T Michigan will enter Jim Brool relay games the 1 month, Plans for the TER. RELAYS Dehart Hubbard will proba- \bly also make the trip, appearing and central parts of the state, and \the Laramie formation “(including the Fort Union beds), which covers laid down on the siz and Lake Sour- er beds of Luke Aga is in the e parts of the x valley Counti Trail, in | Grand Pembina, who have discovered that it brings almost instant relief to ¢ ae he i , sciatic: a fey, bronchitis, chest colds, ore feet wht in thr in down to the seat of troub! sath blessed relief fol- 4 : rp at Ser te ‘He's tue captain towed No. 3 in the famous races;as well as the eiewtiess a i A. M.'AWELSON of the Yale varsity eight for this season. In 1924 ous Blue’ sell that copped all its Amer:can Olympic epen. to, another. @ CAPTAINS BLUE EIGHT A. M. Wilson Hopes to Lead New Haven Crew to Another Successful Season title ‘at Paris. He hopes to pilot thi ELL, HARVEY $. Sr, RAYMOND AND HARVEY S. JR. n sport, the Firestones of Akron, 0., offer some- restones are able to present a family front that is ms in baseball, basketvall and the like, but without doubt this is the only '|tacks of sun, and wind, and and four central counties, Bottineau, McHenry, Rolette, and Pierce,’ are richly supplied with a yellow: modi- fied drift or Pierre clay, which gen- erally form a strong and most ex- cellent sub-soil, capable of supplying for a long time many of: the ele- ments needed in the soil for agri- cultural purposes. These clays’ are itable of course for only common and tile and not everywhere for this purpose. What little devel- opment the clay industry has had in this state has been confined so far almost entirely to the production of. brick and tile. The investigations which have been carried on in the School of Mines at the University have proved that there are a great veriety of ex- ceptionally high grade ‘clays, Dean E. J. Babcock says,—especially in the western and southwestern part of the state. Among these are the fire clays and potter's clays. The fire clays can withstand extremely high temperatures and are there- fore, excellent clays for the manii- facture of fire brick, furnace lin- ings, ovens, gas works, metal works, steel furnaces, ete. These clays co pare very favorably with many’ of the best known and widely used ‘fire clays of the country. Another type of important clay in the, state ia suitable for stoneware such as jugs, jars, sewer pipe, etc. ‘Other clays found especially in the southwestern part of the state are so pure and fine and plastic that the most beau- tiful and delicate pottery can be made from them. Some of these in their natural state are very similar in composition and purity to the tificially prepared mixtures used in the great pottéries, Remembering that millions of years ere required to build up the rock tions from which these clays e derived, it is startling to reatize. that eras more were required to ldy down the clay deposits of rth Dakota. Clay is made by the break- ing down of rock substance by chein- ical action and by, outside agencies such as rain, frost, and sun. When the rock cliffs have been cracked and crumbled off by the at: fo: roots, water begins anew to dissolve out and change the character of the debris. Some parts.of the rock re- sist such action, their quartz for example, remaining as sand, while other portions soften down into a mass which eventually becomes clay. Then another cycle of change be- gins, that of _nature’s method of. washing, — purifying, transporting, sorting, and depositing the clay. This is'done by the action of; streams, lakes, inland seas, etc. In many cases the finest clay material transported long distances from the parent rock and finally deposited slowly, in still water, have built up great beds of clays of various kinds. Some of the extensive deposits of fine clay in North Dakota were pro- duced and transported from the foot hills of the Rocky Mountains prob- ably and laid down in a remarkable state of purity in the western part of the state. In connection with her vast clay resources, North Dakota has an ad- vantage which few other states and probably few other countries pos- sess. Clay beds cannot be develop- ed without cheap power. Cheap pow- er cannot be developed without cheap coal. Pittsburgh, the steel centre of America, is not located in north- ern innesota near the iron minés, but in Pennsylvania, near the coal. The Ohio Valley, the pottery center of America, has comparatively little high grade clay but it does haye coal nearby, and so the raw: materials imported .from great distances to source of power. In North Dakota coal and clay lie practically side by side. ‘And for good measure trans. continental railways pass” wi almost a stone’s throw of both.:: Dakota clay will be more fully rea) ized Jand utilized. The aoal . give the cheap power and electritity necessary to run our factories, and. superior raw materia portant for many im- manufacturing industri ‘Then North Dakot chiefly for its agricultural resour- e ces, will win new fame as’one the great industrial states of ~ th Union, r i —VERA KELSEY: LEGION MEET - The, American Legion meeting scheduled for ‘Wednesday night in Legion hall has been pos <d-intil next Monday © night. nouncemeént of the, meeting ‘jl be made later. " even |. (B Far; rd istrict Conven ation at Hibbing, Min and "Friday. Bismarck will-p Valley City and Jam NORTH DAKOTA The Associated Press). *. D. April Rotarians and their wives ffom North Dakota and Western Minnesota will eave here tomortow. to attend the, tion at fie orga, A special coach ‘from ick up delegations at: and will up i chica beexs For Many n Some day the possibilities of. North | 2¢ the clay will supply a: variety pf] i bi deal, My-k by, either. 2 Farther’. an-| Pills and 0 Fargo, train ie srhedile folate aut Pp. m Jelegates from Fergus Falis. and Wakpeton will. also if Fargo ri here, fe. Alexius Hopsitay | Aclnitted to the.St. Alexits iHos-: pital for; treatment: Mr. and Mrs. Wm. city; Edgar Rosen, Steel Ssh eta Sprecher, New Leipzig; ae Mi Mandan;. Lloyd Brousseau, Steele ;) Mrs. Mary Sebery, city; (Den OH! MY BAOK! |. Mate Titd wodesae) it Bismarck People. —- \ 'gHely tecom , kidne; Sdneys. di ded EOE METS EOE AL 1s all a matter of Abasests deli C2) rand taste is a matter - of tobacco quali fe state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used in Chesterfield are of finer quality [and hence of better taste] than in any ather cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co, - Chestertfie CIGARETTES ’ NOTICE TO WATER CONSUMERS In order to encourage. the plant- ing of lawns and gardens the ‘Board of City Commissioners have direct- ed that the lawn rate for water be placed into effect one month earlier than last year. Commencing after the April 20th meter readings and continuing throughout the immer months the rate -for water.for lawn, and garden purposes will be 17c per 100 cubic feet after Seales a, cane feet to the average amount of wate! pital for:¢reatment: . lag the period between Miss “Helen Schulz, Roscbud; |,consumed during the period te Paul Hjelmseth, Mandan; Gottlieb ‘The Board Hochhalter, Wilton. r White me srt’ tegen struck,” but that I -Earta; ‘Baby Andrew ‘Lid-} len tru strom, “Glen Ullin; Mrs. Mike ‘Ko-|seeded to grass. | The appearance of zak, Wilton; Edward Bauer, Gol- the city ae mreatly earer vent den Valley; Mrs., Wm. Stark, Tut- Parry uns! y PI s 5 sa) eter FsGonte elgnardtan: ‘WATERWORKS DEPARTMENT, ' “HB WHO GETS | roo cose uanmony ell, ‘Solen; W. T. Jagd, Braddock; Geo. Smith, Huff; Peter Loeb, Ral- el LOOK OUT FOR Neglect of the liver results in selfspoisoning! ‘Not ao quickly, perhaps, but just as surely as it you girank polsop out of a ‘bottle. If your liver is not doing its work of helping digestion, eliminwting waste from the bowels ‘and purity- ing the Blood, you will.always be troubled with sick headaches, nau: sea, ‘biliougness, wad breath, gas, sour ‘stomach, or constipation. Cleanse and tone your liver! Put your aystem in -egndition so asain! ‘Try S ‘Discharged: Miss Erna Hille, city; Mrs. Ed. Adams, Moffit; Mrs. Jobp Frank, Flasher; Peter Shu- ren, eity; Geo. Ggll, Burnstad. 21 ut “150 Rismarck Hospital Admitted to'the Bismarck Hos- tirsday’ wn, :n route join a special join the ) aiearis oes Germiny, April gale piano with quarter tones ‘was demon- ere recently, but the verdict, sePattfiastwan that the human ear Is! not ‘trained ‘to appreciate such fine divisions of the scale. inthe way -you -eat, sleep, Jook feel—the return of sechcte. vigor e@nd-eneray. You. will be complete: ly. satisfied; otherwise there will be no cost. Dr. Thacher’s Liver and Blood Syrup is sold and rec- ‘ommended -by Finney’s Drug Store, and all oma legate druggists. 2 (Adv. —S—SS————S— Baby Arthur Baldness is gaid to be increasing among civilized people, particularly those living in’ cities. jor; aver, filmed: with al ever, film wil alli delicate ‘artistry .at Veraiét‘on’ “He ‘Wh Gets ;Slapped,” Victor Seastrom’s) econd American picture, which: ‘0 e engagement of three days a the Capitol Theatre last night, ‘Adapted to: the, géreen from, ithe lay. by the noted Rassian \ author, Konia Andree’. be Wig "deta a presents, ¢, Intense tate ofan unhappy clown. The pic- i set jn:the colartnl dogite a ec Guard « a ainst “Flu” usterole . | Yefiuenza, Grippe oh poe ee ie Ea p it on with your tek ret sercle handy fof | ene y fopemnergency | : ToMathere: 4 made-tn ‘milder f. fe j ‘ and ‘w as ad ne ha tate what is Dubey his great- est pletyre’of it. AY meng rs § |dn’t. set -reguler-