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- t,;. j Thursday. M E DS AND E Baseball QQssip ..4... mJto'pwymPn-; , 4 1 IE RYANS OD WITH GLEfliU BILL FROM CATS' LA!R Three Straights Gives the Locals Undisputed State Title LEAD AS YANKEES SUFFER A DEFEAT They're off. ! The oPtato King says that when we are through with the Saints we'll WILL INT have to take on Bunnell and wipe out j that sting. I EST YO r..' r ' I ! 1 (Special t tha News) Ocala, AufT. -i Putting; on jiresK aic when it was needed to win with the Tals closed their engagement with the Wildiats yesterday afternoon by. winning the third .straight victory by a score- ot a to - in the prettiest game. f the serifs. I I'etcrs was responsible for the vic tory, his single in the fourth scoring t'se first two runs, and his triple in the ninth placing him in striking drttance wth the winning run, Guinea Qainn's sacrifice fly doing the work. Hernandez, the star of the St. Peters burg club in the state league race, was in the box for the Cats while "Hugs" Ery lecoratd the knoll for the Pals, Ery having the better of the argument throughout. Brilliant play by Thomas, Kowalski and Gonzalez contributed no small bit to the victory of the Pals, and aklded materially in keeping thv hits down. Robinson singled in the fourth and went to second when Brown fumbled the ball. Callahan singled and Rob inson drew up at tthird. Callahan went to second on the first pitched ball. Thomas went out pitcher to first. Pe ters hit to If ft, Rymer trying hard for the catch but missed it and both runners scored easily. Ocala tied the count in the fifth. Rymer walked and went to third on Hernandez' single to right center. On a double steal, Thomas tried to catch Hernandez and ran him almost back to first and when he threw home, his peg was bad and Rymer scored. Bracken went out, third to first, Her nandez going to third on the play and scored when Food hit a Texas leag uer over second. Peteft hit a lin,-, drive that Brown was slow in going after, and it went for a triple and he scored the winning run after Wood caught Quinn's fly to right. The score: I lly Asoliitifc3 nre When the score came in the second ew y(,rk, August 21. The New inning yesterday, giving the Cats I York Yankees, held to five hits in nine runs without a hit and only onejtwo Kames by Cleveland pitchers, error charged to the Pals a yelp ! have relinquished the American went up from the faithful. It proved lc.aKue lt.ad to the St. Louis Browns, to be an error, the operator copying ji the second game of the series with it "nine" in stead of "none." Cleveland Coveleskie held the Yan- ikecs to three hits and won, 4 to 1, PALATKA Kowalski, 2b. Robinson, lb. Callahan, cf. Thomas, s?. Peters. If. . Quinn, rf. ... Larzo. c. . - . 'Gonzalez, '-Vo. Ery, p. ah. r. h. po. 1 I Ollinger will be the offering of the I visitors this afternoon, and Epp will decorate for the Pals. If Big Six is ! in form a battle royal may be ex pected. Ollinger has been drafted by the Brooklyn Dodgers and reports after the end of the Palatka series. ETAOIN SHRDLU CMFWW The Saints have brought the cream of the Lemon league pitchincr staff with them and have added Left Field er Hunter, of the Orlando club, to their wrecking crew. "Shotgun" Wil son, the Carl Mayes of the Florida State league, will work for the visit ors tomorrow. "Shotgun" has the original submarine ball and is expect ed to sink the Pals without warning. He weighs 112 pounds in his stock ing feet. Joe Lane is another pitching lumi nary with the Saints and will work in Saturday's game. He is also slat ed for the big time. Mallory Sanford has a charley horse that will probably keep him out of the game for the remainder of the season. Knox has borne his por tion of the pitching burdens this sea son and will be missed from the mound by the bugs. Next Monday the Pals go to Lake a . i.:. ...rn. 1.1. . n i . cuj iu ne up wun uie lerrors ior i three games, returning here Thurs day, Friday and Saturday with Gainesville. The Pals will bo at home all of the following week, the first three days being with Lake City atvl the last three with Ocala. who is not yet satisfied with results. The Cats expect to sharpen their claws before coming here again. while the Srowns walloped o-ut a (-Z victory over the Red Sox a; Button. Everett Scott, the Yankees' short stop, went through the game against Cleveland without making an assist, lie was credited with one putout. In the iatior.al, whiie New York was idle in Cincinnati because of rain, the Cardinals took a (.'-" game from the Braves. The Pirates cr.ntinued their winning streak, defeating the Phillies, 11 to 3, and Sherrod Smith, of Brooklyn, shut out :k? Cubs, 0 to 0. Cobb's Tigers suffered their first defeat of the week, falling before the Athletics, 6 to G. and Washington trounced the White Sox. 11 to 3. A record crowd is expected out this afternoon. At noon a large contin gent came in from St. Augustine, and it is expected that a hundred or more cars will come in juste before the game to see what the Pa's can do with real class. Semi-Finals Will Decide Today Who Will Meet Champs By AMMOcinted Prcasl Boston, August 24. With the two highest ranking lawn tennis teams, Tilden and Richards, playing through champions. and Patterson nd O'Hara Wood, Australian Davis cup combination, established as semi-finalists in separate sections, the na tional doubles championship tourna ment play today was to decide who .should be bracketed with then;. Below the champions in the draw. the Kir.sey brothers of California, had Little Bill Johnston and Wallace Johnson, as contenders tor plac. Immeiiiateyl above th. Australians Williams and Washhur::. :orir.-?r internationalist-, had rh-?ir "a :hal lenged ly the ?rer.ci".-Ar.i.;i:ear. .;.!?: bination of 3orot'.i and Silas . Attention was diverted .w:vt hat i do;.:bl,-!s Bill" til- today to the play now wei ider. ta'dnff a b!e title d 'jfr.se Moiia 3jy.rst-.it tempt to join ti'.t national women'; national mixed ationat v. advanced iav -,:'f : Totals 34 3 10 27 1!) OCALA Francis, ss. . Taylor, lb. . Leon, 2b. . .. B-.-uwn, cf. . . Rymer. If. . Hernan Icr.. p. Bracken, .'h. . Wood, rf. Overs' ref. c. Totals . . ab. 4 4 4 4 O 4 :i h. po. 1 2 27 1-1 Pals .. . Wildcats . Su miliary three-base earned rum struck 7; has. r.ande:'. Tayloi. insi.n. Ti "nigs: :; . . 000 2')0 1)01 -3 . 0001)20 0002 out V : Sacrifice hits, Quinn; hits, Callahan, Peters; -. Pals 2, Wildcats 1; by Ery 4, by Hernandez balls, off Ery 1, off Her itable play, Francis to wires. Clark and Hutch- Lived Thirty Years on Pillar. A lh'pho!-c n ; i;i named Simeon, now known in rliutvli liis'orv St. Simeon Stylues, w;:s the fo'inder of the SivHt.'v -ioimMihi" rnlied til'1 Air Manji'H 'mi usually known ;i Pillar Saints, mill its mosi I'on-aiiciious ex ample. With the oIij:i of uainini; the fnvnr of Ifaven ami attaining siiiin ship on earth, lie look up his r.'-iileii". on :i pillar, or column, said t'i hav.' heen till feet high, the top of which v.-us about three feet in diameter, and w as ini'lo-eil h.v an iron railing. lie is said to have lived here for 3') years, never descending, ealiiig spar ingly of food sent lip to him. always standing or bowing in prayer, and ex posed to all kinds of weather. He wore tlie skins of animals, and al ways kept an iron hand annnid his neck. At a certain hour every day lie addressed those ttalheied at the font of the pillar, exhorting them to lives of holmes-. He died on top of this pillar, and Ids body was taken to Antio'i! and buried with imposing ceremonies. The seel did nol entirely disappear till the Twelfth century. T!,o 1021 ,! 'J07. putting homing .ca- Von i-.'t.'t ;:tli toll in Alps was with our ary. low The reduc vlrio' 'i I ; ay- In ti.e riii',1 s ini! the diction "linr.v, romance fol- igii iui: d to I'.'i an's i pi n d" tile pazzlin: the familiar itnrm door. Reformers h.ip invented a new (lati'-p. All they need now is to in vent a new pir! to dance it. The nights sre growing shorter, but Tins is not the only reason why seems so long between pay days. Marie de Medici "Cold." Henry IV. must gallant and be loved of French mona relis u;i. a ten- der and playful faiher. whose children. I called him, against all court precedent, simply "papa." lint his ipieen. Marie I de Medici, says recent biography !o. M. Louis Itatiffol. was ceremonieiis. cold and severe. She did not overlook the slightest j fault, and for every t ra ngression her I ndice was. "I'se the whip." j KfH after the death of his f.ifher. ! who'i I'rinee I.ntiis had heroine I.ouis , XIII. tile ipiroii. who. history records. I never once unbent to kiss him during - her entire regency, kept up the oh! oicasionallv he- i discipline; at the same lime she rare- rliararteristics of i fully observed the eticptetle of respect to a reigning sovereign. .lust after be ing punished the little king Hnmeed to enter a room where she sat sur rounded with ladies of the conn. All. including the cpieen mother, rose and curtsied at bis entrance. He burst out. childishly. "I should lie belter pleased with less obeisance ami less whip pins !" re V ; CIS ct.-fc ecu-Mrs r.st:--.;-.'. Rwr. and champwr.s as the ioub'es :hai'.' pious. an e-'fort year. The I". Wl'ICi" faced twv ;y :a;ie : atc:vis. .ist WHERE DO A1.L THE PINS GO? sis h ie he slil! it i When a weman has an ornery bus. bund, therr are reasons why she pre fers a broom to a vacuum elesner. Why pity rent? freight ears idle uary 8. There were 64?,n73 in this country Jan Those who contend thai lighting aircraft should si rapped say there Js no reasi.n on earth for keeping it Fist fights and revolvers In the Hun garian diet indicates that things hava 'not chnKi ruucb ulnre the old dv. Maybe the man who school 41 years is waitinj geography. has been ta ; for the new Most of us will make no objection to a ta on gifts ranging from JLLOX) to $10,000,000. This is Only One of the Mysteries of Life Which Has Not 3eer Solved by Anyone. Onr ev.ri,iy life is fuii of interest ing little problems. T !;e the old ques tion as to where fls go in the winter time. We have ail decided that we don't know and that we don't want, to I I!uf there are many other conun drums. Consider the great piu ques tion, for instance. This is extremely my-rerioiis, because a pin is virtually Indestructible, asserts a London An swers wripr. The number of pins made in he course of the year, and lost, stolen, or strayed, but never by any chance even seen or heard again, probably exceeds the estimated popu lation of the globe to a considerable extent. Vet these hundreds of millions of Pins disappear like "snow in thaw" as ntiirkly as rhey are manufactured. No body ever tries to lose a pin. Nobody delibera' el-, throw s now awav as rhev do match sMcks. Where do they go? Nobody knows. It is one of the un solved . lysferles if life i Of course, Dame Nature herself is! the n.i.s: ai. lazing spring cleaner there j Is. I'.y the end of winter the country i is k; -.-. ed and scrubbed and scoured and holy-s'iitied and furnit. ire-polished, j Nov.- cotaes 'he question: "Where Jo leaves go to':" There are rhoiisnmi of leiives on , bi- ,,ak or ash or beech, ye; in J.- ini try (here is not an average of half a ieaf per free In all Brituin; and by tie- time spring is half over a dead lea:', except in the very depths of a thick wood, Is pretty hard to mid. The countless leaves have all been swept up r buried, and the country side cleared of all la year's lumber. These nre among the great mys teries, but there are minor ones equal ly puzzling. The moment there is a taxi strike or tram stoppage, out eoiiie hundreds of four-n heelers and hansom, cabs. At any other time one wonid have to so to a museum to mid j single specimen. Slmulaneos!y with these undent vehicles, at stn-h times of transport shortage, the old horse bu reappears. There Is a poem entitled. "niP Bus man's Farewell tn His Knlfn-Boani," which seems to suggest that tht last bus had been used for firewood. But no! The occasion bring tWein forth. Where have the been hibermtt-icg? The Thrifty f nature Buyer Will Appreciate the Many Wonderful Values ' Offered. We Are Grade Furim at Prices Within the Reach of All. Our Special Deferred Payment Plan Ma GEORGE WiLSHINGTOH COOK i"' ihk i Do you burn wood? All right here is the best cook stove on earth to burn wood. The nr e back and bottom of the fire box are guaranteed never to burn out. Yes the George Washington is the only cook stove made in which the fire box castings never burn out. The George Washington Cook Stove is one of the big line of Washington Stoves, Ranges and Heaters which we are always glad to show yOU. Priced from $11.65 up. Prices 50c to SI . 00 per yard including inlaids. A number of beautiful patterns to select from. Many pieces are large enough to cover an ordinary kitchen. -w-i?7 -j - w-i 'v v. ; riff-; ;r mm Reed and Fibre Plain and Upholstered Rock ers during our odds and ends sale 1-3 off. Look through our stock be fore having. ff ODD DRESSERS The general Reductions on our line of Dressers, including Walnut and Mahogany finish es are from 10 to 30 per cent. Odd Dreers Golden Ouk Finish, hih base, Solid Oak, regular price $20.00, special sale price $14 93. A few slightly used Dressers $10 each. Several wash stands slightly damaged excellent values at $150 each. kes Buying 1 uaa ceas, airongiy constructed m Maliogany and nui unisnes, sanitary rails, i nese beds are go; half price during our odds and ends ;ile. Regular $25.00 Sale Price $12.50 Each Four Piece Bedroom Suite Consisting of Bed, Dresser. Dressing Table and CI fonier 125 00 value cut to $94 00 during this sakl A big reduction on a high grade of rigs, consisting of Tapester Brussels, Velvets, Axminster. If you are going to need a r4 Buy now. Window Shades White and Green Duplex Shades 98c each. Feltolene Shades 25c each. Ci and R Furni ture and Floor Polish. 1.00 Bottles 89c 50c Bottles. . .46c We have some wonderful values in Aluminum ware priced from 49c to 99c. Ask us about our Easy Payment Plan Odd Dres.-ing Tables iu Mahogany and Ivory a j going at 15.UO.13-0a3d,Jj Chiffoniers, Oak and A:ci Walnut, reduced 25 per cea Ask us Easy Plan