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Show PAROWAN TIMES. PAROWAN. UTAH te'nA J iIM!!L iiiV3 .! -- J " HomI ro. tytt 4 country m oni chlldhood- o b4 bd There b .ucb fa" ibered. Cr-- a tbu remembered Md with th. K. Tl Ue wndeel ma be bad Mr.. old'r T'and Ida. pUymata. ..ml bie rbildbood but w!U terrify. by Newt -.- T tbe eacelaatlnf that moved over tba .remalipoa. the thlny theybavV.L threatened, a tramp d dead of Ua dlaeata. K.'dy; i - MUtourl. bt B0Hbur ,hildM NEIGHBOR . . . br HOMEn fcl d?l , sasgga23aBEC - iwrur varioloid and came out with only one mark on my face. Our farmers were a sort of aristocracy of the soiL They had always lived on their farms; they always expected to. Sometimes, however, a farmer decided to move to town and take it easy." But, when he got to town, there was nothing to do. He would come downtown and sit on a park bench in the courthouse yard and watch the teams go by. At noon he would walk slowly home; after dinner he would walk slowly down town again. He would go into the harness store and talk to Mr. Wad-leAfter a while he would be on the park bench again, watching the teams go by. It was hard work. He e, y. cnArttB ii had been the children. I L children going toward Tie. all knowing something I u going to happen; but were tak- ptrt and mother,must be all everything people frt,-n-u- i tl 1 the L 'wtofa,. capej pa ' soon died. There was always tremendous Interest when a farm "changed hands. This meant a new neighbor was coming in. Usually this person was from another school district or another township, or another county. Sometimes a farmer crossed the line from Iowa. Sometimes farmer moved in from Nebraska, t toKt Giot. t tlilrj (be rourerw fn yisH CdAJta chil--ind- ,it pa i his ad dries them on the roller tikes off his coat, dips the reservoir, washes . j wa-- be cheerful. Well, rd girls! weve got a little s to attend to. but it wont snd won't hurt much and rtends to ibe over. 00 s into the sitting room, but its usual cheerful appear-roo- m is bare except for a & glasses, cotton batting some drugstore box. By the side are two empty, table omi-i-jir- s. wants to be first? he asks. wants to be first; in fact c to be at alL But the wants 1 the occasion, the Intensity, these can no more than wind from the importance ire bust Sited noril I leu loiptffc tour trifled girl is coaxed i wsoe Into one and Newt sits down in iof her and tries to smile. He her and tells her she is a nice .kt she is not deceived. Trou-- i coming. And it does come, k begins to roll up her left a. there is her white arm and trembling and so I verily that I am older and have id of my own is Newt chairs buacjf ifeUMtl ltd and . going to hurt," says the not gp' UU- igredki be-mo- w I 1 psaS M of b: h hu3l silence over all, back and forth the Ser goes, blood rolls down the I arm. And now the most trying 1st of all. Newt picks up one I points made out of white the size of a steel pen somewhat like it Broad iabout at one end, tapered Ah! I have no trouble $ it Nor feeling it, either. For fj its scar today. tense, MOOT) abuse! heavy-breathin- g panger ht Midst the end was the medicine. the living flesh he thrusts the and holds it there, moving it Ping it so the virus will come hen drops it into the coal t Now it's time for the band-s- d time for the little girl to is all right to cry afterward, you are brave you wont cry S all is over. ahcr J another, the children to Newt who is no longer to be cheerful. Then comes pe and I go up and I die . . . f I I't seems. it is all over; I iast there is a white bones in the coal children are going about JJeir left arms drawn up. The ome m from the outside and kughing and talking; and Others find chairs and get the children on their laps. 1 Kennedy takes the dishpan top of the range and strips Ver off the pan it is filled 0rt j r I 1 1 ft J sugar-coate- d heavenly balls. In each have a ball in our nd and are gnawing away PPies at bones. Newt goes y L fam child to child, mak-endadvances. e k) go home. The men who quietly tied their teams, now calling back and forth other as they do so. Newt ly i iZ a e; Ih 0 cbll y hold j eXt o buggy and Ust t0 make orgiven. He is. No one out against g Newt day we are tn school rough friend-'Standin- games now. No 8ames; ,iecver. sbcked, as I look back, ever suffered great- vaccnation. Some of ?fv.UnduIy sore arms, but ..., lnd 1R'aS ater bad the small- token to the pest- but woik I for I had what was called of us J li , Smart Shirtwaister for Women JOE MAHONEY keeps you looking neat as a pin. Short or long cuffed sleeves are provided note the vestee effect with a striped fabric. cnoy None of our farmers ever their wive do that. We found out also that he som times teamed a cow with his horse That was the lowest yet The worsi thing that had ever happened tc our section was when this Anton OF NCKTH 6t?tY IEFT-CNCAWXlNA WHO LEO THC IC43 TAx" ilO. FUOTBAU. SOuAO IN Pattern Leonard, in his ridiculous clothes, sat gazing silently at Ida because of her good looks. 2d ssr piavS ICWINO CIRCLE PATTERN DEFT. UI fteatft Walla ftL Cklaa 1. UL Encloaa (ioli to eotna for aaeft pattaro desired. Psttans No. Sif - Address Lepers of the Uorld More than 97 per cent of the two million lepers in the world are residents of India and Africa. Dick playing at lake lawn VOMH WIS.CUT AKE HIS TEE SHOT TWO TIC PIN. HIS PARTNERS SHOT KNOCKING IT WTO THE Clf: SINCE NY CAR THY HA0 HACC ONLY ONE DRIVE, 1C CLAIMED AN ACE ! FEET HIT MS WC Avoiding Spillage E tOWCST EVER PAID WAS 6.W FOR A 2. TCKET AT STAMFORD BARK, AUGUST 26, 1040. ball, -- 14-4- 4 Neat as a Tin HIS button front shirtwaist style is tailored to perfection, GRANTLAND Buy U.S. Sayings Bonds! RICE- - at Maidstone, which, as tha two Easthampton golfyears roll in, is an added exhibition feature. Each year the 4illls get ers, arranged an higher. recently that I had wanted to see for a long time. Maidstone Is a pretty narrow It was the slugger against nature target, Sammy Snead said. "You the big hitter against the hazards cant turn loose like you can on of water, sand and wind. It was a those big fairways. And the greens matter of power vs. control. are pretty small. The four men in the tour of Why not? Most greens are much Maidstone were Sammy Snead, too big. Putting is much too imP. G. A. champion, Cary portant. Putting where a stooping Open Champion, Lloyd gentleman of 75 might outputt Samchampion, Mangrum, Snead. my and Skip Alexander. For the true test I believe In These four had been shooting narrow fairways, smaller from 64 to 68 on much longer greens and shorter marches. courses than Maid-The Snead - Middlecoff is ; stone, which show proved I f f only 8,400 yards. was right. Control Is more ImBut at the finish portant than uncontrolled powtheir range in scorer. There should be a serious ing was from 70 to penalty for every shot 76, and only one of the four equalled The Rules of Golf par, Snead had a Golf happens to be a game, quite 75 and Middlecoff an ancient game, that has far more nor76. a a (With than baseball and football players w n d bhey G rant land Rice mal, have been combined. The number runs into several millions. It is a playing two or three strokes higher.) It so happens that Maidstone Is game, not a spectators game. But in recent years, the rules of a links not a course. A links is a course by a sea or an ocean. No the game have slipped badly under trees are involved. The only haz- poor control. The original rules of tbe ards are winds, sand dunes and sea grass. game, being an outdoor competition covering some 200 or Maidstone looks more like 300 or 400 acres, was that tbe Scotland than St. Andrews ball be played where you found does. It has more dunes and it without any caressing or more water and more sand. If lifting. this be treason to Scotland, let Scotland come to Maidstone. Recently I was following a match with of the two a once the sage, Kieran, Johnny 76 shooter in golf, gave up the U. S. G. A. They were John Jack-soan eminent lawyer, and ArI would never game years ago. have quit golf, he told me re- chie Reid, whose father was one of the six men who formed the Apple cently, if I had seen this links. The point is that Maidstone was Tree gang at St. Andrews, Yonkfor ers, in 1892. too narrow, too the two This was a match-pla- y Snead and Middlecoff, round. The sun was shining the sky was champions. blue. As each player came to At so many other courses green he promptly picked up his around the country, Snead and ball marked it and stuck the ball Middlecoff, two of the greatest, in his pocket. could wander 40 yards off line and have a good lie. Not at asked messrs. Jackson Why? and Reid, who know more of the Maidstone, where each wavere shot exacted its spirit and purpose of golf than most ing or The ball is not of the players. penalty. You are in sand or sea grass or some form of seasupposed to be touched, Archie side trouble. Reid said. If it were raining and The greens at Maidstone are muddy and a special rule were small and the fairways narrow. made for the day, that would be This is my idea of a great course. different. Under the rules of golf, I dont care for the big greens and they have no right to lift the ball the wide, spreading fairways, now and clean it. so much in vogue. Maidstone, at Mr. Jackson concurred, Both 6,400 yards, is much tougher than were 100 per cent right. most courses at 6,900 or 7.000 I should like to know why the yards. presidents of the U. S. G. A. and There are no hills to climb the P. G. A. permit this drift. Kent, (WO BAKE AT HOME) ONLY Mid-dleco- ff. Wfiat makes Women happy off-lin- e. HEY Buy 3 packages at a time. n, Extra-activ- e . . . always handy! 3 times as many women prefer well-trappe- d FLEISCHMAIItrS YEAST off-lin- TOFtXTf By Tom room. People began arriving; they blew he moved in he had his out their lanterns and set them i wagon a row on the front porch. Mrs things on a drawn by one horse. The horse had Kennedy tried to introduce thi hames big brass hames and over the silent Delinskys; each time the Dewas an arch. None of us had ever linskys would say something in i seen such a way of doing; nor even foreign language, then again stari heard of such a way. Our people, silently around the room. Lizzie wa when they moved onto a new farm, asked to interpret, but was so il e wagons and, at ease that she made a bad jot had big sometimes, had to take two or three of it and, finally, Newt and Minnie loads. gave up trying to use her. The last thing in the world we Leonard, in his ridiculous clothes like wsnlsd was an outlandish man sat gazing silently at Ida because ol that living in our neighborhood. her good looks. But Ida didnt warn It Trying to farm wifh one horse!even anything to do with such an oddity would take at least two horses, Only once did Mr. and Mrs. Befor a farm of that size. But there linsky show the slightest in teres he was with one horse and several in what was going on; this wai children. On top of this he had a when one of the neighbors arrive queer beard and wore a fur thing with a basket of food. Mr. and Mr! on his head that was about halfDelinsky glanced at each other . . a cap. way between a hat and then again stared silently aroum We found his name was Delinsky the room. Their presence threw a pall ove He may really have been a Pole, everybody; now and then one of thi but to us he was a "Roushan. ad Mr. Willhoyte went over to ask if neighbors would make friendly no encouragement there was anything he could do for vances, but got The ppople talked about crops.' th him. The man looked at him fiercethat price of hogs and who was sick, bu ly and made him understand these sub he didn't want anything to do with vuthnul the deep interest had. For there wer always jects him. Other things came to Unht He the silent, crazy foreigners. (TO BE CONTINUED! made his wife woik in the field two-hors- Narrow Fairways Stymie Champs usual- a freshly-fille- d ice tray from the sink to the refrigerator, place an empty glass upside down on the center of the tray. 8226 SPORTUGHT- By that To avoid the spillage ly occurs in carrying el They went to town in their ridicue lous wagon with the brass hames and the big arch, and tied to the hitch racks. People walked by just to see the contraption. Anton Delinsky, with his wife and his children, walked up and down the street together as if afraid to separate. They spoke to no one; hardly anyone spoke to them. The word got out to have nothing to do with them. Then Newt announced he was going to give them a Welcome Party. This was always done when a new family moved in; but the Delinskys were not the kind of people we wanted to welcome. It would be better if they pulled out But Newts kindness of heart and his friendliness toward everybody made him go ahead. The neighbors were given the news, but they held back. It was just as well not to encourage the Delinskys. Lizzie was told the plans; the family was to come on a certain night. Lizzie didn't seem to understand very well, but that was be' cause the idea was new, we de cided. It was the custom for the family, in whose honor the party was given, to wait and come in last; this made it a kind of ceremony. Lots of laughing and good feeling, then. Suspense hung over the household like August heat over a cornfield. Chores were done early, the - Nams day. run-dow- n, When Tall and Winter FASHION la In pi.mnlnit a wtambl tfuid watdroh, Sprctiil design; (brie pattern printed Insula the book. cents. winter stared at the outlandish things that par-cel- 1ft forttfil! high-toppe- came out of that brown paper we laughed and snickered. All our people didn't go to church, but no one would have dreamed ol working on the Sabbath unless il was to save a crop. But Anton Delinsky got out his horse and single-shovand plowed on Sun- 14. 14, abort ol 4IHncb. V4fJ Th TA .S RECEIVING, PLAN ED M-- 3 FixVT COLLEGE GAME AlAinGT VIXL-INITECH AND SCbXCQ A TOUCHDOtHN ON MS Delmsky moved in. The oldest was a boy named Leonard who seemed as strange and eccentric as his father. Ths oldesl girl was Lizzie; she started at out school. She had tremendous brass earrings; her hair was in plaits and she wore boots. No girl wore d boots to school; the boys did, but not the girls. She didn't have tin dinner bucket, as the rest of ui had, but brought her eating in a brown paper parcel. At noon we mostly from the hardpan sectioa But this wasn't often. Most of the family scrambled about getting farms changed hands to people we dressed. knew. Ida looked out the window and Behind the poor farm was a said, Theres a lantern coming." It was early; maybe it was one miserable, farm of forty acres. It was of the neighbors coming to help most unusual to have a farm of this with the work. We saw it was the Delinskys. We number of acres, for farms are not looked at each other, flabbergasted; so divided. It had this strange number of acres because the county had when they came in there were Mr. bought a farm for its inmates and and Mrs. Delinsky and Lizzie and there had been this much left over. Leonard (which was the number we Nobody wanted to buy it because it had expected) and three small chilwas too small. In addition, it was dren; and Mrs. Delinsky was carrysituated behind the poor farm; the ing a baby in her arms. house was so far back you couldnt see it from the road. There was a The Party Proves wooden gate, that led to the house; A Painful Ordeal you had to get out and open the People never brought a baby to a gate, then shut and wire it behind called we and, for that matter, they was what farm party The you. in litigation; no one wanted to didn't bring small children, either buy a farm where the heirs were these were left at home with Grandno fighting. Also the farm was run pa or Grandma. But there was Dedown; gullies big enough to throw a Grandpa or Grandma in the henhouse into. The house was run linsky family; and they didn't know any neighbor they could get tc down, too. come in and stay with the children We heard the farm had changed That was all anyone knew. so here they were. hands. Newt and Mrs. Kennedy went Then came the news it had changed heartily forward, but they couldn'i hands to a foreigner. stood There were no foreigners in our talk to them; the Delinskys the at children their with staring a had a family section. Sometimes a word not room and saying with sitting grandpa or grandma who spoke Finally, after a great deal ol a German or a Swedish accent; and gesturing and sigr pointing all. that was old cradle was haulec an making, Then came the startling news out and a place fixed for it in the to hands had farm changed that the downstairs bedroom; then, without a Russian. None of us had ever seen a word, the queer Delinsky. a Russian; all we knew was that saying of their pulled chairs back, placed them ir out brides their threw they a row against the wall and sal sleighs to the wolves. We didnt down as stiffly as if in church. our want that to get started in The Delinskys were in the waj neighborhood. rush, bu during the they didn't seem to know this; jus1 A Welcome Party sat and stared at everything in thi For the Foreigners' No K27A 1 tn 40, 42. 44 and 40. Su ttf 4 one-hors- sting odor of melted sugar rcorn. were at J the children heels, but not today; they Tmething Is wrong. He tries ,;.idly. but they edge away. come up from the barn go in the house but dont r :.3;de. talking in low tones, move here and cjd Lucy .xking after the young nts behind the kitch- - iturt to w. ininsed brle of overshoe, on the porch, opening and .hutting, the the I ctung m the kitchen, love-- T the floor; I smell the Mproajti, TtU o now LPLRirCD!PIE Dont give in to the Demons Fast, safe Mentholatum soothes smarting nostrils, helps open stuffed-u- p passages so you can breathe again in comfort. Eases painful chest congestion and coughing, too. In jars, tubes. NIHOffltUl Gregory Relieve dry, cracked, chapped lips! tips all rough from chapping? You need new Mentholatum Stick Mentholatum medication In pocket-siz- e stick. Quick relief for sore, chapped lips. Only 354. CEMENT SPREADER LOT OP TIME Medicated NEW I MENTHOLATUM BE SAVED IN LAYING ROLL ROOFING BY USING THIS SPREADER TO APPLY CEMENT. 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