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Show rr MILLARD COUNTY CHRONTCLE. DELTA. UTAH Smart Shktwaister for Women keeps you looking neat as a pin. Short or long cuffed sleeves are provided note the vestee effect with a striped fabric. Pattern No. 8226 is in sizes 14. 16. 18. 20, 40, 42. 44 and 46. Size 16. short sleeve. Alt yards of The Fall and Winter FASHION Is a complete guide in planning a wearable winter wardrobe. Special designs; fabric news-fre- e pattern printed Inside the book. 25 cents. 8EWINO CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 680 Sonth Weill St. Chicago 1, lit Enclose 25 cents in coins for eacb pattern desired. Pattern No. Size Nam Address 'ii, I Neat as a Pin "PHIS button front shirtwaist style is tailored to perfection, Buy U.S. Savings Bonds! J ( IMASINE THIS NEW fleischmann's A J PRV YEAST NEEPS NO I rom j f hx fniMO BAKE AT HOME) ' ' ONLY st makes women kpjy u. P3M ' ?' v Hi- J STAVS ACTIVE FOR. h Ft W fL fJ 1 MONTHS ON THE M i NO MORE WORRIES I r . ! - AfMyAJ (rtsallmy favorite (jjljffl H RECIPES TCOj ' . 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MENTHOLATUM medicated STICK . ,,.(.Jv,;;..-i.....ju.'.jiar- ' s ., ; Uniform Shape lSA I Slightly Rounded Top ija. ry JL Evenly Browned Crust ' iia. l' Tender Crust cv 'J-f sK I" Tender Crumb 4 !' Velvety Even Grain gA $t'JJ Good Flavor gajJj1 on every count when you 7 bake the Clabber Girl way with yOjjp?8'',i , Clabber Girl, the baking powder mf$t' Gihlt 5 with balanced double action . . J? JOo Y ' ., rico' Q 1 ai v $tcry y ... fHIMH BOATS wen . m iill ''-- ' ' v , 2 " p . . life '" u -- y v 1 l - ' 1 1 V V it ( - The moon was full, the breeze was balmy and Mar-garet Truman was there as a judge as youngsters and their parents at the Carmel, N. Y., Gypsy Trail club en-joyed their 20th annual Theme Boat pageant, a spectacle both beautiful and frolicsome. First prize for the most beautiful boat-flo- at in the pageant went to the occupants of the canoe (top photo) dubbed "Con-stellation." At left, Karen Ince and Patsy Burns came up with a lovely production they called "Night and Day." Contestants planned, designed and executed their themes with utmost secrecy. us t - , ?vM . $ ' I i Photo above shows the finished ' float of Karen and Patsy as it wend-e- J its esthetic way along the lake- - 'bore to the delight of the spectat-ors. This is the sort of thing that mokes life worth living for Gypsy ' Trail club members. - I if i t i s JS, j - ' --T j - x t i t . ' i ' - ' r " i 3 Ml f"t 'i r J; - : J ' .4, . 1 - ,! ! ' fi I; b V; j -- " s v U ' ' ; :. 1" ' . H ' 1, s I " ! I - ? ' V- ' - ' , j .1 ii : ; ' ' ' 1 Miss Margaret Truman was one of the judges who selected the Statue of Liber-ty, in the person of Mrs. William Hynard, as the best theme boat in the show. As "Queen of the Moths," Jeanette Scott (left) drew deep sighs from fko nuHienre. 5IP(DIgS(DPI rno BURLY LEFT-EN- OF NORTH --X vS MA CAROLINA WHO LED THE lP48 K V TARHEEL FOOTBALL SQUAD IN PASS RECEIVING, PLAYED HIS FIRST COLLEGE GAME AGAINST i VIRGINIA TECH AND SCOReO 3W 1 A TOUCHDOIVN ON HIS V I V Dick mccwthy,pl LAKE DELAN,we.,PUTHISTEE SHOT TWO IS; A( TmJPJn ) WCIDWESTCWLY-D0U8LEEVE- P iv. DRfvl'H5SEr?A?LY0N: 0s toS&tcrdb,: AUGUST 26, WO. Lepers of the World More than 97 per cent of the two million lepers in the world are residents of India and Africa. Avoiding Spillage To avoid the spillage that usual-ly occurs in carrying a freshly-fille- d ice tray from the sink to the refrigerator, place an empty glass upside down on the center of the tray. I SPORTLIGHT Narrow Fairways Stymie Champs By GRANTLAND RICE TNUDLEY ROBERTS AND Bill Kent, two Easthampton golf-ers, arranged an exhibition recently that I had wanted to see for a long time. It was the slugger against nature the big hitter against the hazards of water, sand and wind. It was a matter of power vs. control. The four men in the tour of Maidstone were Sammy Snead, P. G. A. champion, Cary Open Champion, Lloyd Mangrum, champion, and Skip Alexander. These four had been shooting from 64 to 68 on much longer 10 courses than Maid-ston-which is only 6,400 yards. But at the finish their range in scor-ing was from 70 to 76, and only one of the four equalled par, Snead had a 75 and Middlecoff a 76. (With a nor- - at Maidstone, which,- as the years roll hi, is an added feature. Each year the hills get higher. "Maidstone is a pretty narrow target," Sammy Snead said. "You can't turn loose like you can on those big fairways. And the greens are pretty small." Why not? Most greens are much too big. Putting is much too im-portant. Putting where a stooping gentleman of 75 might outputt Sam-my Snead. For the true test I believe in narrow fairways, smaller greens and shorter marches. The Snead - Middlecoff - show proved I was right. Control is more im-portant than uncontrolled pow-er. There should be a serious penalty for every shot off-lin-e. The Rules of Golf Golf happens to be a game, quite an ancient game, that has far more players than baseball and football combined. The number runs into several millions. It is a playing game, not a spectator's game. But in recent years, the rules of the game have slipped badly under poor control. The original rules of the game,, being an outdoor com-petition covering some 200 or 300 or 400 acres, was that the ball be played where you found it without any caressing or lifting. Recently I was following a match with two of the U. S. G. A. They were John Jack-son, an eminent lawyer, and Ar-chie Reid, whose father was one of the six men who formed the Apple Tree gang at St. Andrews, Yonk-er-in 1892. This was a match-pla- y round. The sun was shining the sky was blue. As each player came to a green he promptly picked up his ball marked it and stuck the ball in his pocket. "Why?" asked messrs. Jackson and Reid, who know more of the spirit and. purpose of golf than most of the players. "The ball is not supposed to be touched," Archie Reid said. "If it were raining and muddy and a special rule were made for the day, that would be different. Under the rules of golf, they have no right to lift the ball and clean it." Mr. Jackson concurred. Both were 100 per cent right. I should like to know why the presidents of the U. S. G. A. and the P. G. A. permit this drift. Grantland Ricemal1JW'nd been ey two or three strokes higher.) It so happens that Maidstone is a links not a course. A links is a course by a sea or an ocean. No trees are involved. The only haz-ards are winds, sand dunes and sea grass. Maidstone looks more like Scotland than St. Andrews does. It has more dunes and more water and more sand. If this be treason to Scotland, let Scotland come to Maidstone. Johnny Kieran, the sage, once a 76 shooter in golf, gave up the game years ago. "I would never have quit golf," he told me re-cently, "if I had seen this links." The point is that Maidstone was too narrow, too d for Snead and Middlecoff, the two champions. At so many other courses around the country, Snead and Middlecoff, two of the greatest, could wander 40 yards off line and have a good lie. Not at Maidstone, where each waver-ing or e shot exacted its penalty. You are in sand or sea grass or some form of sea-side trouble. The greens at Maidstone are small and the fairways narrow. This is my idea of a great course. I don't care for the big greens and the wide, spreading fairways, now so much in vogue. Maidstone, at 6,400 yards, is much tougher than most courses at 6,900 or 7,000 yards. There are no hills to climb IMI yitf --J By Tom Gregory CEMENT SPREADER r:!0 A LOT OP TIME CAW BE SAVEP IN LAYING ROLL 'Jf ROOFING BY USING THIS NT.' VX--- SPREADER TO APPLY" CEMENT. IT CONSISTS DH.i OF A FUNNEL PROVIDED V-- WITH A HANDLE AMD A V-N ;'r""C LEATHER FLAP FOR V X- - CONTROLLING- THE I " ,wJtITij. 1 CEMENT FLOW. FASTEN f , THE FLAP TO THE " ("X spoea p,ece V '&fdi i' l ml i.br'rijjwi...J tojT PIPE CURE i:ki e. MOISTEN THE INSIDE OP A grv. iW?iti':- NEW PIPE BOWL AND COAT "XrflJ"i'dTtis!??: I IT WITSHUGAPORWDWEIRLLED BUSRUNGAR. I K AND COAT THE BOWL WITH 'J:licW-'-- I ' E FIRST SMOKE. THIS r.rSDi8?.? VVILL BREAK IN A NEW - Zy P'PE' Thanks, J.C.H., ,v U'SS''' Jenkins, Ky. |