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WeekrE. Serf aces CHIPLEY CLAIMS TO HAVE FAST OUTFIT CHICKENS COME HOME TO ROOST Quality Hardware at . Lowest Prices RAY HARDWARE CO. Right on the Corner. Will Play Saturday and Double-Header Sunday -Ladles' Day Saturday. if v T7 Florala for nd Kepi jSil 'C3t s 1 'ID) LI Baseball - f STANDING OF THE CLUBS. National League. Won Lost Tct. rittubunp . 18 3 -813 Brooklyn 12 5 .06 New York 10 0 .625 Chicago 6 7 .463 Cincinnati . 7 10 .412 Iloston 6 11 .333 Philadelphia 6 10 .333 St. Louis 3 9 .250 American League. "Won Lost Pet. .708 .647 .633 .600 .600 .337 .333 .333 Cleveland 12 5 Washington 11 6 Detroit i 8 7 Kew York 7 7 Boston 6 6 St. Lnuls 6 ! Chlenero 4 8 Philadelphia .......... C 10 Southern Association. Won Lost Pcu .800 . .529 .628 .600 Memphis 12 3 Atlanta 9 8 Mobile 10 9 New Orleans 10 10 Chattanooga 8 8 Birmingham 1 9 Lottie Ujck ..il 6 8 Naahvlllo . C 10 438 .423 133 Florida State League. Wron Lost Pot Orlando 10 1 .90!) Duytona 7 4 .G36 St. Petersburg 6 f .545 Tampa1. 5 6 .435 Jacksonville 5 C .455 Lakeland 0 11 .000 YESTERDAY'S SCORES National Boston 2. New York 7; Others rain. American 2i Washington I'hlladili'hin 4 (10 in. Rings). Detroit 1C; OMeacro 1. Boston 0; New York 10. St. Louis- CU-vtlanl, cold Southern. Little Rock 5: Mo'.Me 1. Memphis 6; New Orleans 9. Others postponed, cold weather. Florida State League. St. Petersburg 7; Jacksonville Inning"). Tampn 14: Dnytona 2. Lukelund P; Orlando 10. 6 (14 American Association Toledo 2: Columbus 0. . Milwaukee-Kaunas City, cold weather. Indlanapolls-Louisvllh-, cold weather. .Mil .neapolls 4; St. Paul 2. Internationa!. Newark 2: Toronto 0. Jersey City 6; liochester 1. Heading 1-t; Buffalo 10-2. Bait Irnui i -Syracuse, rain. Pledomnt League. All games postponed, cold weather. South Atlantic. Spartanburg 8; AugTiHta 8 (12 Innings). Greenville 3; Charleston 4 (13 innings). Columbia 5; Charlotte 5. (Games called ml fourth Inning on account darkness.) Virginia League. Wilson 3; Portsmouth 6. Others rain. WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY National. St. Louis at Pittsburg. Cincinnati at Chicago. Brooklyn at New York Philadelphia at Boston. Amorican Chicago at Detroit. Boston at Philadelphia. New York at Washington. Southern Birmingham at Atlai.ta. Little Rock at Mobile. Mem rhls at New Orleans. Nashville at Chattanooga. BASEBALL SCORES At Spartanburg. S. C: Spartanburg, 6; University of feSouth Carolina, . At Lexington, Va.: Guilford College, ' ; Washington and Leo, 18. t Greenville, S. C: North Carolina State, 6; Furman, 0. ' At Princeton, 6; Pennsylvania, 4. NEW YORK TAKES ONLY ' GAME IN NATIONALS NEW YORK, May 3 The New York Nationals made it four straight from Boston here today winning the lust game of the serie? 7 to 2. Bcoro: v R. II. E. Boston 010 000 0012 3 2 New York 202 003 00 793 Oeschger, Watson and O'Nell; Ben ton nd Snyder. THE NEW ESSEX PHONE 2177 FORv DEMONSTRATION Jos. Coleman toe Powjfar FriceSfore Several change have been made In the program for the week-end aeries of baseball games at Maxent Park. . , The Florala manager wired yesterday that his club would be unable to appear for the week-end owing to Injuries to his players. Thereupon Chlpley was invited to come flown -for. Saturday and a double header on Sunday and tte manager of the Chlrley outfit wire! President Bur- goyne last night: "Challenge accepted, j Will arrive Saturday morning." Becatiso of the cancellation of Friday s game the plan to hold ladies' day on that date has gone by the board and instead Saturday will be observed as Ladies' and Children's Day. All ladies will be ad- imitted free, except for war tax. ana the same rule will hold for children un !der 12 accompanied by their parents or i other grown folks. The Chipley outfit is said to d tuo strongest of the clubs which will. play in the West Florida League now being or ganised and the manager told President Burgoyn over the long distance phone yesterday morning that he has a good club and will be ablo to give the locals a real battle. It is interesting to note that the pitch ing staff now signed on the local club has a perfect record for the ueason for games plajed as members of1' the Ryan outfit. Jack has won every game he has pitched and the same is true of Os bcrn, Brown and Williams. The men who lost games for the locals have been released. It is also interesting to note the. bat ting and fielding records of the club as compofpd of the 12 men now signed. These men are: Osborn,, Kills. Showers. Scarritt. Turner. Gaines, Tiirnbull, San- RAft'chez. Villnr, Williams. Brown and Ryan. i These -men have been at bat 368 times and have mane nus icr a. icaui aveiaso of .233. They nave aorcjuea cnaucm, 445 of them perfectly, the tally being 328 putouts, 117 assists and 19 errors for a team average of .959. ARMY TO INVADE NAVY TERRITORY Teams From Barrancas Will Play Na val Outfits This Afternoon. What promises to be by far the best games so far scheduled by the Army Navy league wilT.be played today on th Biimp field at the r ivy yard, when the Outlaws from Fort Barrancas meet the Lishter-Than-Air aggregation, and the unconquered Second Company from "the fort tangle bats with the Hospital "Pill Rollers." The first game will be called at 1:15 o'clock. Colonel Brady, commanding officer at Fort Barrancas, intimated that he would be present when the first game was called with practically his entire command in a body.- To counteract this unusual display of en thusiasm, the navy is making prepar ations to have the station band on the grounds, and a big representation of rooters from each of the stations de partments, in the grandstand. This is thej first invasion of the army. Into navy territory, and from indications the Outlaws will do some scratching, or they aro likely to be "tamed" by the Lighter-Than-Wind-ers and the-Second Company stands a noticeable danger of having to am putate the 'unconquered" from behind its title, and having it soothed over with a nice coating of iodine. The game will be called at 3 o'clock.1 A picked team from the Air Station leaves early this morning for 13e Funiak Springs .where they will play Palmer college this afternoon. PELICANS COME BACK AND WIN Apparently Defeated New Orleans Pounds Memphis Pitcher, Win- . ning 9 to 6. NEW ORLEANS, May 3. After Memphla had knocked Vance out of the box by scoring four runs In the fifth, New Orleans came back strong and In a free hitting game pounded the offerings of Zahnizcr all ovter the park, knocking him off the slab and winning the game 9 to, 6. Score: R. H. 1. Memphis 011 040 000 8 11 2 New Orleans .... 020 023 00 9 13 2 Zahnlzer, ' Marks and Hungllng; Vance, Garton and Deberry. Travelers Win From Bears MOBILE, May 3. Creel. a young pitcher, had one bad inning against Little Rock here thin afternoon and the visitors won the first of the five game series 5 to 1. Score: , RILE. Ltttle Rock ..... 100 400 0005 8 1 MoKHe 100 000 000 1 7 2 Jonnard and Land; Creel, Utt, Chlng and Schulte". GARDNER WINS GEORGIA TRAP SHOOTING CONTEST ATLANTA. May 3. W. C. Gardner of the Atlanta Gun club, won the Georgia trap shooting amateur championship here today, with a record of 188 out of a possible 200 targets. W. II. Jones, Ma con, was second with 187. Henry Jnes, Macon, won the doubles with 3S. E. K. Ward, Houston, Texas, was high gun among all the amateurs with 194 in singles and 46 in doubles, but was not eligible for the state, championship. High winds and the cold Interferred with the contenders. KID NORFOLK BESTS JAMACIA KID NEW YORK, May 2. Kid Norfolk of New Yor'c, was awarded the judges' de cision over Jamacia Kid, also of this city, utter a fifteen-round boxing bout here . tonight. They are negroes. Nor folk weighed 1S1 1-4 pounds and his p ponenet 175. A starch molecule,, one of the largest known- contains about 25,000 atoms. umj Chickens come home to roost In base ball the same as ' in anything else. Last winter Miller Hugging traded George Mogridge, southpaw, and Duffy Lewis, outfielder .to Washington for Bobby Roth, the "Wandering Romeo" of the American Leasue. The Washington club has just finished humbling the Yanks by taking four games out of five from them. And in that series both Mogridge and Lewis played parts in the. downfall of the team that had cast them off. Roth didn't break into the games. That's how Mogridge and Lewis came home to roost on the mite manager's back right in their old hall yard. Baseball is full of such boomerangs. Players who don't peem to bo "there" on one club, can do wonders for another. Mogridge was an unlucky pitcher with the Yanks last year. The breaks all TIGERS WIN BY HARD HITTING Coupled With Effective Pitching by Leonard Easily Defeat the White Sox. - DETROIT, May 3. Detroit batted hard behind effective pitching by Leonard today and easily defeated Chi cago 13 to 1.. The locals gained four runs from Faber's delivery in the first inning forcing his retirement. Score: , R. H. E. Chicago ....... 000 000 001 1 9 3 Detroit 410 400 22 13 14 1 Faber, Davenport, McWeeney, Wil kinson and Schalk, Yary; Leonard and Bassler. Judge's Triple Wins for Washington. PHILADELPHIA. May 3.-nJudge's triple to right field with two on base3 in the tenth won the last game of the series for Washington today 4 to 2. Score: rt.II. E. Washington ... 020 000 000 24 10 1 Philadelphia .. 100 000 010 0 2 10 3 Zachery and Gharri ty; Moore, Keefe and Perkins. New York Blanks Boston. BOSTON. May 3. A scratch infield single by Ward in the third, followed by Schang's double, Piercy's single to, rignt, a pass to Ruth and Peckin paugh's sacrifice fly to Collins gave New York two runs today and the game 2 to 0. j Score: R. H. K. New York 002 000 000 2 9 0 Boston 000 000 0000 10 0 Piercy and Schang; Russell, Pen nock and Ruel. YACHT GLUB PLANS IMPORTANT SESSION Bost Owners Should Have, Pictures 1 of Boats and Selves for Year J . book committee. The Yacht club will hold its regu lar meeting and supper at the rooms at 7:30 o'clock tonight. Just preced ing the supper the regatta committee will hold an Important meeting. The committee on the Yacht club annual will also meet at 7 o'clock. All boat owners are expected to have pictures of their boats and of themselves avail able at the regular meeting. Since the last meeting of the club the rooms have been remodeled and all members are expected to be on hand to snote (the changes and im provements. , LOCAL NOTICE TO MARINERS. Louisiana Mississippi River Passes Southwest Pass Southwest Pass Gas Buoy 5, relighted April 28th; hav ing been found extinguished. C. and G. S. Chart No. 194. Light List, Atlantic Coast, 1921, p. 366. No. 2076. Buoy List, 8th District, 1920, p. 37. Coast Pilot, Section E, 1915, p. 103. . By order of the f commissioner of lighthouses. E. S. LANPHIER, .Superintendent of Lighthouses. Song Contest Florida Needs a Mm. New State Song 9 VlUV nAMT vnti WRITE IT You don't have to be a song writer to enter. We'll help you along. There's money and fame in it, for you. -.. ...... " Write for Descriptive Booklet. Address Florida Song Manager , LENOX COMPANY 271 West 125th St., New York George Mogrldge (left) and Duffy Lewis (right) roosting on Miller Hug gins' back. seemed to go against him. Lewis, though still a great outfielder, has never shown his old Boston form. Before he came to New York Lewis was ranked among the best. ' He- broke his ankle sliding into a bag last summer and Iluggins figured he would be too elow for the Yank3 this year. Roth, the temperamental outfielder who has played on every American league club except Detroit and St. Louis, had the speed that Huggins wanted. Hence the trade. But Roth has been idle' most of the time so far. Young Bob Meusel's hit ting has kept him in the lineup. Ping Bodie and Kuth aren't likely to be benched to give Roth a chance. What looked like a good trade for Iluggins has worked out the other Way, according to the mathematics in the case. Mogridge will likely tame the Yanks again when they meet and Lewis and his bat will cause the New York pitcherS" trouble. Mogridge knows what the Yank bat ters can't hit. Lewis knows What Yank pitchers have got. uunnttRnunuunnuKun a ti It NAVAL STORES t:3naoaannrroa Jacksonville JACKSONVILLE, May 3. Turpentine firm, 62 l-463; sales 135; receipts, 177; shipments 600; stock 15,959. Rosin firm; sales 414; receipts 234; shin ments 1215; stock, 173,928. Quota tions B 3.603.75; D 3.704.0C; F 4.25; O 4.27 l-24.35; H 4.35.. I 4.404.50; K 4.554.60; N 5.005.25; WG 5.75; WW 6.25. Savannah. SAVANNAH, May 3. Turpentine, stead)', 04 1-2; -sales 75; receipts, 706; shipments, 20; stock, 5,856. Rosin, firm; sales, 1,070; receipts 1,410; shipments, none; stock, 13,136. Quota tions WW 6.00; WG 5.50; N 6.00; M 4.25; K 4:60; I 4.50; H 4.40; G 4.35; F 4.25; E 4.10; D 3.90; B 3.75. Pensacola PKNSACOLA, May 3. The spirit mar ket was firm, 59 3-4, with sales 333; re ceipts. 3.43; shipments 215; stocks 6,190. Rosin, firm; sales 423; receipts 703; shipments 250; stocks 55,552. Quotations, WW 5.25; WG 5.00; N 4.75; M 4.65 K 4.50; I 4.35; II 4.25; G 415g)4.20; F 4.104.15; E 3.904.00; D 3.753.S0; B 3.60. BACHELORS, LOOK OUT! HOUSE MAY IMPOSE TAX (BY JOHN C. TRICE.) TALLAHASSEE, May 3. Repre sentative Goodbread, of LaFayette county, is a bachelor himself, but he is evidently not satisfied with his condition of freedom and irresponsi bility domestically speaking of course. Yesterday he introduced . in the house a bill to impose a tax on all bachelors and widowers. Being one himself, however, he makes it a nominal tax of one dollar a year while remaining in that state of cus scdness. It 'has already been sug gested that the fund so created ought to go to the support of old maids and widows. STEARNS RETURNS FROM SEA VOYAGE Harold Stearns has returned tc Pensacola after a sea voyage on a shipping board steamer which carried him from New Orleans to various Meditecanean .ports and return. His friends are welcoming him home. ow an easv wav to clear your skin ' My s kin was even worse than yours, and I, too, had tried so many remedies I was discourag-ed. But Resinol Oint ment and Resinol .Soap relieved the soreness almost immediately, and I was amazed when the batches began to disappear and the pores to clear. In . a Short tim . mv cL-tn vie rrfA-tl' healthy. Do give the Resinol treat ment a trial.. At all dmits. n Resinol A pipe's a Seven days out of every week you'll get real smoke joy and real smoke contentment if you'll get close-up to a jimmy pipe ! Buy one and know that for yourself I Packed with cool, delightful, fragrant Prince Albert, a pipe's the greatest treat, the happiest and most appe tizing smokeslant you ever had handed out! You can chum it with a pipe and you will once you know that Prince Albert is free from bite and parch! (Cut out by our exclusive patented process!) Why every puff of P. A. makes you want two more; every puff hits the bullseye harder and truer than the last! You can't resist such delight! And, you'll get the smokesurprise of your life when you roll up a cigarette with Prince Albert ! Such entic ing flavor you never did know ! And, P. A. stays' put be cause it's crimp cut and it's a cinch to roll ! You try it ! MWM WESTERN STARS WIN FROM LOCKEY SCHOOL The Western Stars defeated the Lockey School 10 to 7 at the Lockey school diamond yesterday afternoon. Paul Smith, of the Stars, knocked a home run and three base hits were made' by Valanzino, Henderson, Pres ton and J. Brewer. ,The line-up bf the team3 was: Lockey Valanzino, c; Henderson, c; Moore, ss.; Preston, lb; Roth, 2b; Touart, 3b; Peake, rf; Higgins, cf; Fisher If. Western Stars Apostle, c; Nobles, p; Causack, ss; Smith lb; Forsythe, 2b; Stearns, 3b; Hartman, If; Massey, cf, and Brewer, rf. The same teams will play next Thursday. Share of Swift & Company are widely distributed. The map shows thenumberof share holders in each state and has been dotted to indicate the pro portionate distribution. Who is Swift & Company is not a one man or one family affair. It is a company owned by more than 40,000 people scattered over the face of the globe forty thousand shareholders with voting powers and a share' in the ri3ks and profits of the business. ' Most of the forty thousand live here in the United States. But some of them live in France, some in England, others in the Philippines, Hawaii, Alaska. 13,000 of them are women.1 Nearly 14,000 of them are employes - The average individual holdings are t small about 37 shares apiece. No one person or family owns a majority of the stock. Swift & Company, U. S. A. Pensacola Local Branch, Garden and Tarragona Streets T. F. W. Zirklebach. Manager f-TkCi tSen . - pal packed with P. A An. Iff the national joy smoke San Carlos Jpress "DISTINCTD I VI DUALITY" PRINTING 713 SAN CARLOS HOTEL GILFILLAN SCOTT Trains Concert Pianists, Teachers and Beginners Occasional Lesson Two Hollers. Regular Weekly Lesson Five Dollars per Month. At Pupil's Residence or a Studio. THE PIANO SHOP. 27 WEST GARDEN. PHONE 79t. . . 'J.". I I r . . -J Iff H Swift & Company ? In fact, it would take 900 of the largest shareholders pooled together to vote 51 percent of the stock! These shareholders are the men and women whose money, in the form of .capital, makes Swift & Company possible. They are jsalous of the character and reputation of their organizationproud of what it is doing, proud to have a part in supplying to the world such products as Swift's Premium Ham and Bacon, Brook field Sausage, Sil verleaf Brand Pure Lard, Wool Soap, Swift & Company's fresh meats, etc. The executives of Swift Be Company maintain the high standards of these products as an imperative duty not only to the 40,000 shareholders, but to the public. Print Albert It mold in toppy red bag, tidy red tint, handsome pound and half pound tin humidors and in the pound crystal glass humidor with sponge moistener top. Copyright 1921 by J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Winston-Salem, N.C. PHONE 2165