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'OCALA EVENING STAR, MONDAY, JULY 24, 1922 REVISED BASEBALL SCHEDULE r At Home ' Inverness, July 28. Palatka, August 3, 4, 5. Lake City, August 7, 8. Leesburg, Aug. 15, 17, 21, 25, 31. Gainesville, September 456. ' On the Road Lake City, July 31, August 1. y Palatka, Aug. 10; 11.2. V Leesburg, Aug. 14, 18, 22, 24. Gainesville, August 28, 29, 30. 666 quickly relieves a cold. Adv. BETTER insure before rather than after the fire. , Let Ditto insure yon. tf UNCLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS (RATES under this beading: are as follows: Maximum of six lises one time 2&c; three times 50c; six times 78c: one month $3.00. All accounts payable 1st advaare except to those who have reg ular advertising accounts. - FOR RENT Five room furnished apartment; private bath, private entrance. C. C. Bryant, 805 Tusea willa St. Phone 332. 22-tf FOR SALE Knickerbock odorless refrigerator, 50-lb. ice capacity. In first class condition. A bargain at $10; cost $28. Call at 702 S. 4th St., phone 304. 24-6t WANTED To trade for a good sec ond hand one-horse wagon. Might buy if a bargain. A. E. Nix, Route ; A, Anthony Road, Ocala. 22-3t LOST Goodrich non-skid tire on a Buick rim on Martel road. Finder please return to R. J. Rivers or tne f Spencer-Pedrick Motor Co. 22-3t COWS FOR SALE Small herd of seven fine Jerseys two just fresh j and three coming in between Au-; gust and , December. If you are wanting something good at a bar gain see A. Pooser, 9t B. Goldman's ' store. Box 347, Ocala. 21- FOR RENJ Three furnished rooms suitable for light housekeeping. Also auto shed. Inquire of Mrs. Geo. F. Young or phone. 543. No. 215 Tuscawilla street. 20-6t FOR SALE-rOne good second hand Ford in first class condition, cheap for cash or will sell part down and y time on balance. Here's a bargain for quick sale. Dr. Frank E. Mc Clane. '" 20-4t LOST Leather pocket check book containing about $100, lost at the White House hotel, Gainesville, on Tuesday, June 27th. $10 reward. . Finder please wire Karl Klaus, Lodi, - Calif ornia. " . 20-12t WANTED Sweet milk customers. Sweet milk 10c. a quart, delivered morning and evening. - Drop me a card. Robert O. Williams Mgr., R. A care J. T. Nelson. 19-tf FOR.SALE-Ford sedan in good con dition, good top and new tires. A real bargain. .Blalock Brothers, Ocala, Fla. 18-6t STRAYED OR STOLEN A bulldog named Duke- has bobbed tail and ears. All white except small- brindle spots on head and tail. Phone 420 and receive reward. 18M5t FOR RENT-rjTwo furnished rooms for light housekeeping; All conven iences. Apply to Mrs. J. W. Akin, 615 Tuscawilla street, or phone No. , 235. 17-6t FOR SALE Underwood typewriter in fine condition. Apply to Mrs. L. M. Murray, Ocala, Fla. . 20-6t LOOK! LOOK! LOOK Buick seven passenger 1918, Al condition, Mar mon 7-passenger, running condition. $1000 takes both of them. Spencer Pedrick Motor Co. . Phone 8. 18-tf FOR RENT Three or four furnish ed romos, furnished nicely for light housekeeping. Apply 212 Orange avenue. 14-6t H. H. SUMMERLIN Shoe Repair Shop, 2 Magnolia St., west of the courthouse. Repairing youths' shoes . 60c. and $1; adults' $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75; all others $2.25 and $2.50. lm FOR SALE On. Fort King avenue, easy terms, one lot 60 x 500. See Mrs. J. H. Cramer, East Fort King avenue. 13-tf DAYTONA BEACH New, complete ly furnished, strictly modern apart ment for rent, also garage. Com municate with owner, Mrs. A. M. Detrick, DeLand, Fla. 15-6t FOR RENT Light housekeeping apartment, furnished. Apply to E. A. Revels at Revels' Studio. 8-tf DR. K. J. WEIHE, .Optometrist and Optician $.k Eyesight Specialist 114 Main Street, Jacksonville 18 East Broadway, Ccala i QCALA OCCURREIICES If you have any local or society items for the Star, call five-one. Miss Donnie Sims is again at her place in Frank's store after two weeks of sickness. A. O. Harper and W. A. Stephens of Sparr, were among the but of town visitor in Ocala Saturday. Mrs. Clara Moore Pyles of Orlando, spent the week-end in Ocala with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Moore. Go north, by sea using Merchants and Miners steamers from Jackson ville to Baltimore and Philadelphia. Foil information as to fares, freight rates and sailings of Merchants and Miners steamers from Jacksonville ! supplied on request to Mr. C M. Haile, general agent. It Miss Meta Jewett went to Lakeland Saturday for a visit with her brother, Mr. Sanford Jewett, and family. Mr. El wood Raymond "has accepted a position at the Texaco filling sta tion, Mr. Carroll Fraser manager. I I Messrs. G. W. Scofield, C. E. Con nor and J. E. Davis, well known citi zens of Inverness, spent the day in 1 Ocala. f W. K. Lane, M. D physician and surgeon, specialist eye, ear, nose and throat. Office over 5 and 10 cent store. Ocala, Fla. tf Miss Ruth Simmons left Saturday 'afternoon with Mrs. Fred Cook and 1 party for a week's stay at West Palm Beach. Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Schreiber and Miss Dorothy Schreiber returned yesterday from a week's stay at Day tona Beach. Rev. R. F. Brennan and Mr. Cecil Clark returned Saturday from Day tona and, Miami, where they have been since Tuesday. ' SOME NEW DOLLS AND TOYS AT THE GIFT SHOP. X21-3t To prevent a cold, take 666, Adv. Judge L. E. Futch and Mr. Mack Taylor spent the; week-end at Day tona Beach withv their facilies, re turning to Ocala today. Judge and Mrs. Lester Warner, and Mrs. Jeff coat and children who have ben enjoying the past two weeks on the gulf, returned home today. Mr. and Mrs. Cappleman and daugh ters. - Miss Ruby Cappleman and Dorothy Cappleman, 'have returned from a two weeks trip to the east coast. .. The more you ee of our methods of handling fresh meats the better you like it. Come and see us. Main Street Market. ' Phone 108. tf Misses Ruth Warner and Annabelle Wesson left yesterday afternoon for Homosassa, where they will be mem bers of a house party at the Ren dezvous. Miss Carrie Barco is again on the job at the gas office after a two weeks' vacation spent in Chattanooga and Palatka, at the latter place visit ing her brother. Mr. L. S. Light of Reddick was a visitor in the city today. Although Mr. Light was on crutches as a result of his accident last March, he is as cheerful and optimistic as ever. Fertilize your pot plants and lawn flowers with Albert's Plant Food. Sold in 25c, 50c and $2 packages at the Court Pharmacy. f 18-tf Mr. Clyde M. Brown has sold his interest in the Florida Auto Supply Company to Mr. T. D. Bryan. We re gret to hear that Mr. Brown will re turn to .his former home in Chatta nooga. Miss Mary Elinor Anderson, the lit tle daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cliffford Anderson, left Saturday to visit her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Anderson in Ocala. Tampa Tri bune. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. E. Johnson and daughters, Sara and Lucy, and Mr. and Mrs. Hanley of Palatka, formed an auto party to Ocala Saturday, spending Sunday in town with friends and relatives. . f BETTER be safe thai sorry. Ditto works for your town. Why not insure with Ditto? U-tf We neyer sacrifice quality to sell at a low price. Our meats are the BEST to be had. Main Street Mar ket. Phone 108. 22-tf NEW TIRE PRICES The B. F. Goodrich Rubber Com pany announces today new tire prices, according to their bulletin, that bring the cost of Goodrich tires to the low est tire" mileage ever known. A con servative estimate of the automobile tire bill for the United States for 1922 places it at over half a billion dollars, which means that I this will save American motorists , $50,000,000. ANNOUNCEMENT Having taken over the business of the Ocala Storage Battery -Company, whjch handles the Willard in Ocala, I wish to announce that I am in posi tion to give all users of this popular battery, and all other makes, prompt and efficient service at all times. In fact, all work is guaranteed satisfac tory. Office in Ocala Filling Station at No. 20 North Main street, opposite postoffice. 24-3t C. L. IRWIN. i ' Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wilds returned last night from their two weeks' trip in the southern part of the state. They spent a few hours in Ocala Fri day on their way to Archer, where spent Saturday and Sunday with rel atives. . - Mr. and Mrs. Eric Collier have ar rived in Ocala and are at home to their friends at 219 East Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Collier are being warm ly welcomed by their friends and are receiving their heartiest congratula tions. ' " THE BOOK SHOP is showing some NEW DINNER SETS in ENGLISH CHINA. 21-3t 666 cures Malarial Fever. Adv: Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Ott returned yesterday from a pleasant visit with friends at Miami. En route home they stopped in Orlando to get their little daughter Edith, who has been visiting relatives in that city. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Booth of .Che saw, S. C, spent Saturday and Sun day in Ocala. Mr. Booth was former ly manager of the Ocala Knitting Mill and stopped in Ocala on business en route; to the southern part of the state. BETTER not wait until after the fire. Let Ditto insure you now, and carry the worry. 11-tf Rub-My-Tism for Rheumatisnu-Ad. Mrs. Fred Cook, and son, Edward Cook and Mrs. Cook's two little nieces from West Palm Beach, who have been visiting her in Ocala, left Saturday afternoon m their car for West Palm Beach. Mrs. Cook and son expect to return Wednesday.' Misses "Elizabeth and Ethel Home returned . yesterday from a two months' trip in the north. While away they were guests at . a house party in Annapolis and after leaving there enjoyed several weeks in At lantic City and New York dfcy. 666 cures Bilious Fever. Adv. Mr. C. L. Irwin of Sanford, has pur chased from Mr. Mack Taylor the Ocala Storage Battery Company plant opposite the Star office and will in future give it his personal attention. He solicits the patronage ' of Ocalans is an announcement elsewher in to day's paper. - Dr. E. G. Peek has purchased from Blalock Bros, one of. those handsome Nash six-cylinder cars. This is the last of the shipment that Blalock Eros, recently received and ever since the first car was brought to Ocala by the local dealers this car has become one of the popular sellers. THE LONG AND SHORT to that good feeling is the Satisfac tion of trading at a place that always gives Satisfaction. Our VULCANIZ ING WORK IS GUARANTEED. BLALOCK BROTHERS VULCANIZING Phone 78 for Service Car , vs. HISTORY IN HUMAN BODIES Many Long-Disused Muscles Tell the Story of Mankind Through out the Ages. For at least &VJ00.000 years the world forces hae been making the ania.al body, yet today. In the finished prt.dact of the human machine, expert InveJtigators have found no fewer tlxfM 107 organs or parts of organs which are more or less useless, says a London Tlt-BIts writer. : : Why, for instance, have we hair on our oodles? There is not a word to be said in favor of it, harboring as It does dirt and microbes. It has been artificially fostered during the course of mankind's history and is a vestige of the warm fur coat or mammals In the Ice age. . v ajuo, me pieces or gnstie or cartilage oh the sides of the head which we call our ears are similar or gans. They do not catch waves of sound as many suppose; they are too flat to do so. But if we compare them with the movable ears of the horse we see what they mean. They were once similar organs, but now only an Individual here and there can use one of the seven muscles un der the &in from which it is obvious that the ear could once be moved in every direction. There are many similar muscles in the body today which tell us about a strange past. Some men can twitch their nostrils. Some men can move their scalps. They do so by means of muscles which in most of us have gone completely out of use. In the inner corner of each eye we have a little pulpy mass which recalls to use even remoter ages of the body's past. It is of no use whatever in the body today, but is a relic of a "third eyelid." To understand it, one has to watch a parrot or an eagle in a cage and notice how the bird flashes a white film .occasionally, over its eye ball. Our eyelids are now a better apparatus for sweeping the dust off our eyeballs. ' In the remote ages there were ani mals with a third eye in tne top of the head. AVe find It In the heads of a few reptiles, but the skin has grown over It. In man it has become a small 'body about the size of a' hazel nut. rising from the middle of the brain. It is a mysterious organ, and, while it is difficult to say it has no func tion, we can clearly trace It to the third eye of millions of years ago. The "vermiform appendix" the source , of appendicitis has been - re moved from hundreds of thousands of people In modern times, and no harm has ensued in any single case, and it seems to have no use In the body. , . One of the strongest links with the past is the vestige of a tall. Some times today children are. born with distract and movable though , very short talis. In addition, a writer ln-j part 6 of "The Outline of Science," declares we have bones, muscles antj glands Inmany parts that are now the useless relics of p remote past. ,V Prohibition comes about -as near causing .the unrest in this country as booze comes' to causing the unrest in Europe. Toledo Blade. . ' . Rub-My-Tism, an antiseptic. Adv. Wonderful Defense Against Mosquito Sweet Dreams the Master Wea pon. Weapons used in any sort of war fare must be dependable. To bring the idea closer home, it may become necessary for you to start some sort of warfare against those mosquitoes that threaten your regtr When you do begin your war, start it right. With a bad weapon you're whipped in the beginning. Where mosquitoes are troublesome, Sweet Dreams offers the one depend able weapon. You never lose by a counter stroke, for Sweet Dreams keeps 'em off all night long, A trial will verify these claims. Sold by every dealer in every town. LIFE FIRE A. E. GERIG INSURANCE Ocala, Florida ACCIDENT AUTOMOBILE ;niim;iii!inm;iii;t; C. V. Roberts & Co. FUNERAL- DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS Motor Equipment Residence Phone 305 Office Phone 350. Ocala, Fla. g 217 W. Broadway NO STRIKE HERE! Our forces are busy from early morning till evening; busy pleasing the hosts of particular people by giving them just WHAT they want and WHEN t bey wan t it Fi esh M eats and' Gro ceries. Call phone 243 or 174. COOK'S MAIfflET and GROCERY WHITE STAR ONE j Negotiable Storage Iteceipte Isaned on Cotton Automobilea Etc move, pack, ship iavjs STUCK, PIANOS, BAGGAGE, MACHINERY, FURNITURE, ETC tllllttlttS The r Hotel I JACKSONVILLE, FLA ?iiiiii'iiiiiiiii-iiui!if : A VISIT TO THE CEMETERY Will show many examples of our skill as monument builders. Among them are every sort of memorial ranging from the very simplest to the most ornate and stately. ' And every one bears the hall mark of good taste and skillful workmanship. Our hook of designs will be shown to any who plan stone for their plot. Ocala Marble Works OCALA, FLORIDA SPECIAL PINNER SET, pink dec oration; only one set: special nrice. at THE BOOK SHOP. 21-3t 666 enres Chills and Fever. -Adv. Windso COMMERCIAL PRMTIN THAT'S US PUBLISHING to. v AMID) S STORAGE , LONG DISTANCE IIOVING Mi IN the heart of the city, with Hemming Park for a 'front yard. Every modern conven ience in each room. Dining room service is second to none. ROHKRT M. MEYER, ' ' Manager J. E. KAVANAUGH ' Proprietor RAILROAD SCHEDULES , Arrival and departure of passenger trains at OCALA UNION STATION. The fololwing schedule figures ob lished as information and not guar anteed. t (Eastern Standard Time) '-f SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY Leave Station Arrivo - 2:20 am Jaeksonville-N'York 2:10 am 1:50 pm Jacksonville 1:60 pm 4:17 pm .- Jacksonville . 3:50 pa Tampa-Manate- 2:15 am L Petersburg 4:C5 jub 2:55 am NTfork-St. Petrsbrg 1 :S5 aa " TmP 2:15a 1:50 pm Tampa-Manatee 1 5 pm 4:05 pm Tampa-St. Petersbrg 4:C5pm idirilANTIC COAST LINE JL R. Leaves i : Station - - aWtm. 6:42 am Ocala-Jacksosyilla 12:15 pa 1:45 pm Ocala-Jacksonville 6:45 pm 95 cm Ocalft-Kt. Ptfn!iM o.iS 2:33 am Ocala-St. Petersbrg 8:20 aa 3:25 pm Ocala-Homosassa 60 pa :10 am JOcala-Wilcox 11:59 aa 7:25 am fOcala-Lakeland 1150 an? JMonday, Wednesday, Friday. fTuesday, Thursday, Safcirday. A nice,' thoroughly modern bunra- low home for somebody is being built by the Citizens Investment Co. on a ot on Drfugherty street. Price and ' terms easy. Call and see it. Phone 285 for particulars. 22-tf 99 COMPANY G a .i I .- I ;