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Show f PTil i? nit f jiji liifi?!? jiji San 76e ?ctan MR. AND MRS. GEORGE E. JONES, Published every Thursday The Od Settler &ecvid at Monticello, Utah Entered in the Postoffice at Monticello, Utah as Second Class matter, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Juan County i ji ji ji ini j? jiji ii i?ji ii 0 I? Mrs. ben Schafer and Linda spent Saturday and Sunday in Moab visiting with Mr. Schafer who is working there temporarily. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Howlett itook their daughter Karen to Cedar City where she will enroll at the College of Southern Utah. Kathryn and Bill Nielson and Gary Wilson left for St. George today where they will attend Dixie college. Helen Pehrson, Linda Schafer, and Kathy Schrafel left Wednesday for Salt Lake City where they will attend Hennegar Business college. Jeanne Redd left last week for Provo where she will attend Brigham Young university. Legal Notice UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT NOTICE OF CONTEST To: CLARIN W. TAYLOR, GERALD OCONNOR, Contest 9166, Lil Nos. against Pip Nos. Biz Nos. Jiggs Nos. Irene Nos. Irene Nos. The Doug No. 1, and Doug Nos. 4 lode mining claims as being within Sees. 13, 18, 36, T. 33 S., R. 13 E., and secs. 17, 18, T. 33 S., 14 E., SL Mer.; DAVID APPEL, CLARIN W. TAYLOR, GERALD OCONNOR, Contest 9223, against Sam Nos. Billy Nos. and Barb Nos. 4 lode mining claims described as being within secs. 29, 30, T. 33 S R. 14 ,E., and sec. 1, T. 34 S-- , R. 13 E., SL Mer., Utah. You, and each of you, your heirs, representatives, and assigns, are hereby notified that the United States of America has instituted a contest pursuant to 43 CFR 221, and Title 30 USCA, section 40, against those certain mining claims set forth above situate in the County of Garfield, State of Utah. A complaint has been filed by the United States of America requesting that said mining claims be invalidated and declared null and void on the charge that: (1) the land involved is nonmineral in character; (2) no discovery of valuable minerals has been made in the mining claims. The contests are pending in the Land Office, Bureau of Land Management, Darling Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Unless an answer to the complaint is filed in such office within thirty (30) days after the last date of publication of this Notice, the allegations of the complaint will be taken as confessed and the contests will be decided without a hearing. This Notice will be published on the following dates, to wit: September 14, 1961 September 21, 1961 September 28, 1961 October 5, 1961 October 12, 1961 being at least once a week for 30 days. Dated this 1st day of September 1-- 9, 4, 9, 1-- 7, 4, 7, 2-- 23-2- 6, 4, 4, above-describ- 1961. UNITED STATES OF AMERI- CA By Ernest E. House Manager, Land Office Bureau of Land Management Salt Lake City, Utah year year Phone JU liiiiilj jijiji Events in the Queen City of the Golden Circle $3 a $1 a Deputies attend training session Four San Juan County deputy sheriffs were presented certificates of completion at Cortez Friday to atttest to their successful law encompletion of the four-da- y forcement training session conducted at Cortez. Deputies from San Juan County participating in the clinic were Rigby Wright and Dick Smith, Chauncey dear San Juaners: Henry was dead. That ended the argument without settling it. He had succumbed to his chronic infirmity, and I envied him. Not that I wanted to be dead; I had as yet, no aspiration to that honor. And I wrasnt shedding a tear for him; in fact, although I was much disturbed and thrown out of gear that he up and quit me at this particular moment, I knew 'he deserved my congratulations for having found such an excusable and opportune occasion for getting away. I remember a dream of mine in which I was fighting with a big, burley fellow, and when I got him down, with my knee on his chest, and was ready to dictate the terms of surrender, he wasnt there; I was kneeling in the mud. My feelings of the moment returned to me when they told me Henry had gone without any preliminaries. We had been in a continued series of controversies for 28 years. It had become the only absorbing business to which we gave our spontaneous attention; everything else we did us under the lash of to necessity, and in pressing obligation. Our argument began when he challenged what I said about the age of the earth, but it mushroomed into a contest between what each one of us knew, or what we could find out. We soon got to a point where belief, opinion, tradition or hear-sa- y didnt go; nothing went but facts as nearly as they could be reached. To his final argument, which he thought couldnt be answered, I had crme cocked and primed to explode it completely, and he was gone. I looked at his cadaverous face and begrudged him his victory. He had died happy. From our initial clash about the age of the earth, we got into the facts, and the accepted theories of paleontology, the origin of species, the man. I p contended that the paleolythic age ended and the neolythic age began about 6,000 years ago. We dug into volumes old and new, unearthing material which neither one of us would have been interested in, but for the sake of crowing over the other. He had the start of me to begin with; he had been going to school while I had been punching cows. I got a notion that he was just having me on, pretending that he had to dig when really he could answer me without effort, and was laughing up his sleeve at my feverish effort. When I discovered he was buying and borrowing books, and studying late at night, and had to work to keep so often in the lead, it fired me with new hope of really coining out in the lead. It wasnt so much a test of which one knew the most, but which one could find out more than the other. Somehow, Henry's way of telling things, made them interesting to know, and his dignity and charm of expression intrigued me. He wasnt exactly handsome, but his My jijiji ji jijiji ji jiiiiiiiiijijiiijijijijijijii Monticello; Black, Blanding; and John Duffer from White Mesa. Over 40 law enforcement officers from Colorado and Utah attended the four-da-y session which was conducted by the FBI and included both classroom work and practical pistol usage with firing at Towaoc range completing the course. hush-respon- Appreciation Letter (Editors note: The following letter was sent to the San Juan hospital from an Illinois boy, one of the persons who was hospitalized here after being in collision jured in a Aug. 9 near Monticello.) car-truc- . . gray eyes and slight trace of Owners and Publishers SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In San Outside San Juan County Box 428, Monticello, Utah Utah Medical President Frozen Chocolate Drink-on-a-Stic- k By Albert R. Lyman EDITORIAL NATIONAL ji jiii ji Dr. Jorgenson named jiji jiji jiji jiji jiji jiji jijiji jiji jiji jijijiji? ji ji k 250 ( Town Acres Lane Roselle, Illinois September 8, 1961 San Juan Hospital Monticello, Utah Attention: ALL THE NURSES Dear Ladies, This is just my way of saying thank you for the million wonderful .things you have done for us while my dad and I were patients at your very fine hospital. I know I neglected to say goodbye to some of you when I left after our accident. This was partially due to the fact that some of you ladies were at home and not at the hospital. There is no doubt in our minds that there is no finer hospital in all of the United States and no finer nurses in all the world. We will be forever indebted to you and will always cherish the knowledge that we were patients in the best little hospital in the U.S. I am going back to school the 13th of September, thanks to your wonderful help. Both my dad and I are very much recovered. I will have to have some plastic surgery done on my face and we have contacted a fine sturgeon who will take on in about 7 months. He is of the opinion that my face should be completely back to normal in short order after another operation. I had my teeth fixed (somewhat temporary for the present) and I understand that they will be crowned for the Christinas season, so I have some-thi6-- ng to look forward to for Christmas. Again, let me say thank you for all the help you have given us, and I remain Forever grateful, se ice-ag- e, Robert F. Schuehle LOCAL NEWS NOTES Harriet Gurley, 11 year old Indian girl, is making her home with the Rell Argyles and attending school here. Harriet is the sister of Ruth Jane Gurley who lives with the Bennion Redds. The girls are from Two Grey Hills, N.M. for- eign brogue, gave him a polish I could not acquire. One day as he was eating a delicious, red apple, he started our controversey in a new direction by declaring that that kind of apple came down through the generation from the Garden of Eden. 1 didnt believe it; I said that our apples were little sour things to begin with, no more than half an inch in diameter, as they could be found growing wild in our country and many other countries. It was impossible to prove anything definitely one way or the other. We did trace apples and other fruits to a poor little unimportant ancestor; the same with grain, vegetables, flowers. We got lost in the big field of botany, delving into a maze of interesting things which neither one of us would ever have found time and inclination to hunt out but for the sake of exulting over the other. If and when anything became tiresome, or we settled it as a draw, or in his favor or mine, that didnt end the contest, it had become a habit, an ambition for supremacy. From our contentions about the neolythic age, we became tangled in the problems of the first reliable accounts of man; the where of the Garden of Eden, The Flood of Noah, Babylon, the history of Israel. I said it was Shalman eser who took, the Ten Tribes captive, and he proved that it was Sargon. The next thing of course was European history. He had the start of me there having grown up in Europe, with access to sources beyond my reach. The nature and history of the Catholic church and the rise of the Reformation, brought us to the Atlantic coast, the Thirteen) Original Colonies, the revolutionary war, the birth of our United States. That was where our arguments generated their greatest heat. He was a foreigner, and viewed the United States as a huge experiment, something fantastic in the way of government, a thing never tried before in the history of man, and with little liklihood of becoming permanent. Now our sources were limitless, records, facts, volumes beyond our power and .time to digest. Now we had reached a point where it was not the facts to settle the controversy, but our interpretation of those facts. I could not reconcile for a minute to the idea of the United States being a fantastic experiment. To me it was founded ton everlasting principles of truth, and would endure as long as sane men lived on earth. This was where I was determined in spite of theory, tradition and all the sophistry that men could heap up, to prove that my dearly beloved United States was everlasting. Henry had come up with interpretations and arguments which he thought could not be answered, and I, by the most resolute effort I ever made, had framed facts and interpretations which I knew would upset all his contentions. And now, when 1 was all agog to fire my deadly petrol at him, he slipped away through legitimate channels beyond my reach. I looked at him in his casket, and figured it was somehow unfair. I was a sail without a breeze, an electric machine with the current turned off. I felt desolate, no incentive to carry on with my absorbing study. He had provoked me to do what I would otherwise never have done. Then, as I thought it over, trying to see the bright side of it, I realized that these had been the most profitable, the most progressive years of my life, and it was just because I had been lured into a race with this Scotchman, Henry. I knew I must find another Henry, and keep going. I found that the world is full of Henrys; I can stay safely in the lead of some of them, run neck and neck with others, and plod hopefully along far behind the millions. It isnt necessary to waste time reporting and crowing over those who are wrong, but to pursue those who are beyond challenge, and thank Henry for arousing my ambition to see and interpret things i DR. RALPH JORGENSON Im proud to be elected president of the Utah State Medical Association, an organization whose members contribute so much to the well being and welfare of the people of our state. Recent sur- veys show that between 12 and 14 of a doctors professional time is given to public service. This was Dr. Ralph E. Jorgensons response when elected to head the 1000 physicians who now comprise the Utah State ' Medical Association. Dr. Jorgenson succeeds Dr. Wallace S. Brooke of Salt Lake City. Dr. Jorgenson also pointed out that: Few people know the time spent by doctors of Utah in serving the needy. Utah doctors have promised that help will be available for those who need it, whether they can pay for it or not. Our doctors have ' done a great and unselfish job in fulfilling that promise. Other officers elected included: Dr. John F. Waldo of Salt Lake, Dr. Edward L president-elec- t; honorary president; Dr. Drew M. Petersen of Ogden, delegate to the A.M.A.; Dr. Stanley R. Child of Salt Lake, alternate delegate. Dr. Russell N. Hirst of Ogden was named speaker of the House of Delegates with Dr. J. viceClare Hayward, Logan, are made from Carnation Company s These new dry instant chocolate flavored drink mix that is sweetened without sugar. They provide a simple, wholesome, snack for children and adults. Richly chocolaty and refreshing, they are as easy to make as ice cubes. stir 1 cups dry insTo make 24 tant chocolate flavored drink mix into 3 cups cold water. Stir in y teaspoon vanilla. Turn into refrigerator tray or trays. Freeze until mushy; then insert paper or wooden spoons for handles and continue freezing until firm. For flavor variations teaspoon substitute choice of the following for the vanilla; teaspoon lemon extract, 1 teaspoon peppermint extract, orange extract, 1 teaspoon pineapple extract (or to taste), 1 cup mashed ripe bananas (about 3 medium bananas). drinks-on-a-sti- ck non-fatteni- ng drinks-on-a-stic- k, ( imviomumvi? ) WrffH!Tr X MONTICELLO LUMBER AND HARDWARE nntrftTuuinmim speaker. Dr. John B. Reckless, featured speaker at the state medical convention, pointed out: Socialized medicine is not the fight of the doctor, but of the patient. It is the patient that suffers. England has found this out. Anyone who can compare medical service in America and England would certainly fight to keep what we have here in the United States. LaVar Abrams and Dave Christensen went to Logan Friday to get Daves Jeep. They returned on Sunday. True Kentucky Bourbon The San Juan Record Monticello, Utah Thursday, September 21, Page Two 1961 Old-Sty- le Ocroe KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY early times DISTILLERY COMPANY ins 86 PROOF LOUISVILLE. KENTUCKY as they are. TANK OF GASOLINE Guess the amount of gasoline your car will hold before automatic nozzle kicks off first time . . . and get it free! You must guess within h of a gallon. one-tent- (OVER OR UNDER) Freshen-u- p In your fall finery Get your family set for a festive fall. Give their wardrobe a lift with dry cleaning that keeps their deep-dow- n clothes bright And, prices. looking crisp and as an autumn leaf. of course, reasonable ED'S AMERICAN OIL Abnfo Cleaners the Service Private FT. RUCKER, Ala. Nolan Argyle, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rell Argyle, Monticello, comk pleted the apprentice aircraft mechanics course at the U. S. Army Aviation school at Ft. Rucker, Ala., recently. Argyle received training in the servicing and maintenance of fixed and rotary wing aircraft. He entered the army in February this year and received basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif. He attended Monticello High school. five-wee- PHONE IN YOUR NEWS Order Nov! Don't Bo Caught Let us service cl! your gas equipment for economy sake . . . Call JU 7-27- 55 m |