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Show THE CITIZEN Then out of his shuddering terror and perception, had heard of the big Indian from Uintah and upon hear10 old Dick devised a plan for dispatching his. enemy. Arming himself with ing Dicks demand shrewdly guessed a sharp butcher knife and an old that something sinister had happenmuzzle-loadin- g rifle he set forth to ed. So Tybo is dead, eh? the judge find Tybo. His idea was to cripple What did he die of, Dick?' the mans arms with the gun and then said. Oh he just die. Mebbeso rattledispatch him with the butcher knife. Dick finally located Tybos camp snake bit um. You make it a paper. in the mountains and secreted himBut I. cant give you a death certhe trail along tificate until I know self in the brush near just what caused which he knew the fellow must come his death. The judge felt that there for water. When the big Ute finally was more than snakebite to old appeared Dick waited until his foe Dicks concern. Cant you bring for the into exactly right position me the body, Dick, so I can see how 0, got the purpose of his plan. . Dick hoped he died? to break both his enemys arms with a too dead, Grantsville, the Its muzzle-loader. the one shot from the wary Indian shrewdly parried, with must Tc do this the ball pass through a look indicating something gruethe charmed body, which might bring some. Its all stinked away. Dick shooter. But on the disaster But you can surely bring me had nerved himself for the terrible something, "the judge persisted. trial. You know, Dick, our medicine men t are so smart that if you bring me months later, evidently SOME about ' what 'the officers of even one little bone they can tell what he died of. the whitemans law might think reCant find it a bone. Badger got garding the utter disappearance of um. if Tybo, Dick 'appeared before the The judge laughed and tried anJustice of the Peace at Grantsville, You win, Dick. Ill give Utah. He had evidently heard of other track. died of death certificates and thought if he you a paper saying Tybo snakebite. By the way, how did he ducument such a setting possessed snake bit him? forth that Tybo had died a natural behave when the The old chiefs withered face suddeath, no one in the future would be as with the savage arlighted denly of nature exact the into to pry apt dor of counting . coup. demise. his Accordingly, he apTybo jumpit fifteen feet in the proached the judge with a remarkdirection. air, he boasted. able show of business-lik-e By the hellity God, Grantsville, hf- pronounced with solemn dignity. You give it a me a paper, say Tybo 1 - die. The local judge, a man of keen wit ing . of Leon Sweet, Bill Halloran, Joe Galigher and Fred Richmond. They surely do battle on the links, but they are at it again a few days later and going through the same performance again. This foursome has a reserve foursome to take the place of any of absentees, and we might consider that Sam Kennedy, Sol Hart and Jim Dick were members also. They lost one of their, most popular members and good sportsmen in the death of John Tonkin during the past few days. Bill Carter and Rudy Orlob, Chet Deal and Les Gottschall are playing together quite a good deal. They are not satisfied with finishing their game on the eighteenth green but finish it on the nineteenth it is rumored. There are two Country Club Flayers; who are not regular members of any particular foursome. They ly just wait around and fill in where there is an opportunity. They arer high handicap men and always manage to get a few strokes or more handicap. So "look out for Grant Hampton and Bill Brown. They look easy but they are tough. Ask Wallace Hunter he knows. But the golf widows are not the only sufferers. Ive noticed a lot of golf widowers and believe me, when a woman starts playing golf, I certainly can visualize the cold dinners that await the head of the fam-ily. Among the most persistent of the women who haunt the links might be listed Mrs. J. H. Evans, Mrs. Wallace G. Hunter, Mrs. E. E. Finch, Mrs. W. V. Rockefeller, Mrs, L. G. Shriver, Mrs. L. Wingham and many others as well. And C. E. Foley, himself an amateur champion of many tournaments also must sit on the sidelines at times while Mrs. Foley finishes her golfing. Mrs. Foley takes the business seriously, and no mistake about it. Discusses Goto Widows and Widowers $ Now that the golfing season is in full swing the usual crop of Golf widows appear. Their number stays about the same, for new members take the place of the earlier ones who have been able to convince their hubbies of the error of their ways. Not all wives, however, consider themselves golf widows in the strict sense of the word for many of them are glad of the opportunity to have their hubbies take this form of exer--- cise. It is interesting to note -- some of the foursomes that have been playing 1 to- gether for many years and are still' friends, notwithstanding that during the course of the game a few unpleasant words may be spoken. ' Take the" foursome of Walter Lewis, Lester Freed, Ed. Culbertson and Dr. Donoher. They have been playing together eVery Sunday morning for years and they still talk to each other. Then there is the original Sarah Daft foursome consist- - |