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Show Personal Mention FOR SALE Columnar Pads SAM JUAN RECORD ' 'HI' ' ''A '- y .. 4 I 'ii B By MRS. H. E. BLAKE Mrs H. E. Blake has been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mi. F. L. Wilcox m Green River the past week. Mr. and Mis. Eail Goshom and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lewis and children fiom Famnngton, weie here Saturday for a days Msit ith the F meat Hurra'll family and other Monticello fi lends. Mrs. Donald Blake, Susan and Llovd went to White Canyon Wed nesday for a few days visit w ith Donald and Don at the mine. Mi. and Mis. Richaid Mason took Mis. Masons mother, Mis. Lydia Dilton, to Salt Lake City Wednesday to sptnd a few weeks visiting her mother, Mis. Emma Johnson. Robert Chiistensen is home from the hospital but is still to tlie house. Mrs. Max Dalton and girls weie visitors in Cortez Saturday. Barbaia Chiistensen is attending college in Logan and Clyde Christensen is attending college in Salt Lake City. They aie the son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chiistensen. 1 con-lin- $ x- vtk ' byy. i jr' til tSSSTlSESggu&flg WANTED RAGS No V - - JV U" if One V- l- ' a, &V39fcr,. vs - 4yji v Silk, 4 v. vf , J jr - . u Rayon Pieces 10 Lb. Small or SAN JUAN RECORD s - VL.W - V at noon, one at night, One along the way You never outgrow your need for Milk, Drink three glasses every day! . . -- Advertising Key fo Business OF UTAH AMERICAN DAIRY ASSOCIATION LANDING NEWS of the many interesting Msitois to Blandu g leeently is Mi'S Rita Flahetka of Mulligan City, Ind. She became acquainted with this country seteial yearn riago through Tiank ver tups, and makes it a po nt to come back eveiy summer. She was familiar with the riveis, the budges and the monuments, and row with a trip over our lofty mountain along with the Wnght family and a renewed resolution to be sure and come again, she is almost a San Juaner. She is headed now for a Jeep ti,p Aspen, Colo. Mrs. Jean Harris Pease of Pio-v- o has been visiting heie with her paients, Mr. and Mrs Jos. B. Hams. She and her husband and four childien left for Salt Lake Monday morning. Three Jeep loads of explorers ?ie on their way to find out exactly what the country is like between Hite and Escalante. Sylvan Johnson and Loien Hawkins left Sunday evening for Hite, to have breakfast ready in the morning for two more Jeeps bringing Frank Wright, Dr. Norwood Porter and his father, and Bishop Kline Black along with Pailey Hurst. Their idea is to go between the smaller south mountain of the Henrys and the other peaks north of there, following a dim road part of the way. When they have found what seems to be the most suitable route, they will invite the road officials to go over it with them, and fiom this should more definite come something than we have had before. Another outfit taking advantage of the little vacation w as One Wr-ght- s Pauline South, who left Thui'd'y afternoon for Rocky Prut, on the gulf of California. Dm and his daughter Dorna en-- j scuba diving, while the childien and the women l.ui ted sea shells and Lasted on the scenery. They found the Pi it ip buiMii m full harvest, and bra ght a suppy borne on ice, liadui.g litre ite Sundiy even-upThty are much in love with ;d er -- 1 thar vista liiur as a illustrated talk flannel-boai- d spoke on m W jrm i MONTICELLO, UTAH Friday, October 7, 1960 Pat e Three n Li non i . . . quicker-than-eve- r warmup so you start saving sooner a new extra-cos- t optional heater that warms everyone evenly. Riding along with this extra economy: more room inside for you, more room up front for your luggage (sedans and coupes have almost 12 more usable trunk space). ... The newest car in America: the CORVAIR 700 STATION WAGON. rt And our new wagons? Youll love them LAKE-WOO- D think theyre the greatest thing for famdies since houses. The Lakewood Station Wagon does a job with cargo, up to 68 cubic feet of it. The Greenbrier Sports Wagon youre going to have to see it gives you up to 175.5 cubic feet of space for you and your things. man-size- d Corvairs whole thrifty lineup gets its pep rear from a spunkier traction, same engine. Same 145-cu.-i- rear-engin- air-cool- e independent-suspensiosmooth ride. See the polished and refined 1961 Corvair first chance you get at your Chevrolet dealers. n CORVAIR 700 CLUB COUPE. Like all coupes and sedans, it has a longer range fuel tank. 4 i--f s- vx IT; - t '9 'W ? At Spare tire is in sedans front. 03 r iMlVrvr SEDAN. Provisions for CORVAIR 700 ing ducts are built right into its Body by fisher . a San Juan Record The budget-pleasin- g 4 Choosing n. To start with, every Corvair has a price tag. And Corvair goes on from there to save you even more. With extra miles per gallon . . . cold-sta- on Dale existence by Shumway, which was followed with a talk by Kay Black on Choosing companions. pioper After a solo byr Mrs. Raymond The Loid is my Shepard, Sipe, Meredith Harris spoke on Why I joined the Church. Iva Lou Pel kins the rear in coupes and p ! for pie-moit- al Heres the new Chevy Corvair for 61 with a complete line of complete thrift cars. SMte vehicle The MIA. of all thue waids met jointly Sunday evening at 4 p m. in oidtr to be early enough for the Fm side Chat in Monti-c- i ho wher tin x would hear over tlo'd cuuit from the head of he Chuich in wha.t is to be the fust of this seasons monthly boidca&ta. The meeting here was presided over by Glen Shumway, and ' the pi ogrum conducted by Kmreth Blown, began with a more spunk and wagons, too! I -. making h.i g ti ip. More space Js Albert R. Lyrran Mis fc.hr 'H By Dm etui Guen Smith and thur four ih dnn and Dons mother, ( U The Old Settler By 4.LBERT and GLADYS LYMAN to its width at the Hog'bach, e a mu of water and it ht fore it i aihed to Mexican Hat. The Goose Necks, wed of the Hat, and the tingle of ciooks and turn-- , in the riva from thep to the Coloiado Rivoi, were made bv water, rot bv ice. We flew up crooks over the many riu'e-'ho- e and hui p n tarns of the San Juan fiom its r outh, to Mexican II. t m the noming, and leading a d point when we could look Con b reef With i istw-ithe li'iig san in Oar fues, we coud see the gleaming surface or the in r miles and miles in a comp ua'ivtlj stiaight course to the southei't wheie the flow of ue Lad made a ch mnel exec mal'v ii light oc inpipmd t"4 tha-anmad the coik-scieby the watei below what was once the teinnnal moiaine. T' e b dd locks and the div with 'and, the broken cliff-facc- s lavei upon lajcr exhibited one bove the othei are by no means just a mans of clour and meaningless element, but an extiaoidinarj letoid of changes and concht ons which are to be envisaged as a of infinite panorama thrilling ages past. For me, as I go south-wai- d fiom Blanding, I envisage in the wide valley before me, not a deep goige in the cliffs as we see today, but a stieam of slow lj moving ice m the bottom of the wide vallej, and a temperature unlike any we have known in modem San Juin. oir Mj dear San Juaniis: I miht have loved some othei lountrv as much as I love Sin Ju,.n if I had been taken btfoie is weired into that othei tounti v, and lmd livid the tnulls of 80 jeais within its bordi is Every countiy has its peculiar il al, but San Juan, so far as I am e ntrimd, is un'qae m its to what outspoki n invitation mountains and pairies, deseits, tovveiinpr locks and solitudes have to pive to the souls of men. San Juan is the marmficient umvei-sit- v wb eh I have been attending, and it has in its compi ehensive ounai i him so much lume than I have been able thus far to grasp, that I would like to sign Up f0r at lemt one c term tv as a begin ning to its full course. Its blanches of study aie not written in books, but they are made more apparent and more easily undei stood by actual Instead of getting account of the pria second-han- d mary, secondaiy and teitiary layers of creation, they are made plainly visible as they are. How much more is to be learned from seeing a sermon than to hear it. Here in San Juan are to be found wondrous facts and principles winch are not available in punt. What it has to offer as a whole can be spoken of only in veiy general terms with any degree of consistency. Its magnitude in its entirety is so incomprehensible that we slump down into some one blanch more easily understood When I go fiom Blanding to Bluff, and look off into the wide and valley of the San Juan, I trace the course of the glacier which was crawling slowly across the southern end of the county about 85 million years ago. I have tiaced it on the upper leaches of the river in New' Mexico, especially where it cut its way through the Hogsback above Shiprock. Its course is to be seen along benches and across the mouths of canyons in unmistakable marks beyond the mouth of Comb Wash. It cut its way through the reef of the Comb in the same w ay, only w ith a more narrow channel than the bed it made through the Hogsback. Sometimes in the early aeons of its history, its bed was the top of the gravel hills high on the clifts north of Bluff. Any one doubting that, will have to reason out how those polished stones could have been placed on the top of that hill. They were not placed there by water, and they were not placed there when it was a hill, but when it was the level of the rest of the valley. Millions and millions of years later, when the great stream of ice had cut its wray down through the thich stratum of sandstone to the layers of red rock, what on the grais now the grave-yar- d vel hill was the bed of the glacier. Stand on the hill, consider its great depth of gravel and polished stones that have been laid down there; look down at Bluff and at the cliffs and read the W'ondrous story of how that part of San Juan was made. Somewhere west of the Comb was the terminal moraine of that glacier. It was small where it crossed Comb reef as compared 1 v 1 1 p-- U s , -- Rudy kopf, AEC geologist of Monticello, has returned from a two week say in Eaiope. He touied Gei many and the cential countnes, leports a wonderful time. Rudy was born in Germany but left at an early age. He made the tour w ith lus parents. Eddies Texbuiger plans to stay open till the end of October, reports Eddie Boyle. OR SALE RENT FOR New Olympia Portable TYPEWRITERS $119.50 and Adwell Adding Machines $125 Hand Operated Electric $179 APPLY RENTAL FEE ON PURCHASE See at THE SAN JUAN RECORD LIFE FIRE Kay R. Johnson Insurance Agency wn it i 4 i; I K yL Agent for . . . COUNTRY MUTUAL AND UTAH FARM BUREAU INS CO. Monticello N. 188 W. 2nd CASUALTY heat- Our contract ore haulers and their truck drivers have ItTAWz v a 3 W r z b nt . vrr " .? . ft , v v( vr. v 4 passengers sit pretty, thanks to Corvairs practically flat floor. Even 1 jj. Conairs and the GREENBRIER SPORTS WAGON with up twice as much room as ordinary wagons ( third seat co1). optional at to r-- , " Deen instructed to adhere S to all rules, e'n the new Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's regulations, and courtesies of the highway. Any reports contrary to these conditions should be reported. Utex contract trucks are identified by U and a number. Standard contract trucks are identified by S and a number. Reports should be made to: Utex Exploration Company or Standard Uranium Corporation Moab, Utah REDD diligently t Now in production 4 iff See the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy middle-sea- Phone JU Monticello, Utah 7-22- 58 4 Phone , ' t I Notice To The Public a. 3 AUTO |