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Show 2, 1963 Thursday, May THE SUN.ADVOCATE, Merry Bakers Meet Mi'iri' The Illlt i'll !!.I 1. I 'll' ft ll ': i ; wi-i- nf ! t t ,i At ,j I in, j : h-- i . lin; jm-i- i i i- J lilt's, s'V!'H:i!). lin! ; Aiuu-ltreasurer, ii iit D..ine J . I r ,M I a n ; it - . t v.n-.i- . i.i ... !' Vi .j ; . im'o n w !o:' m 'iiif till' (it) ! Ti-- r M.i!-.-!,- !; d,.;i :x-- Mu- M a li.i.i .'I. a till A.,; iijv i I).', !!.!. if. .M.ll .III. ':!.! !f .1.1 i .i j'i i la t n1 I 'ii. it I Si. I Vs il.tv e Ijih'ii o'Ji' ih no .fil'd l tJi.it t!ii niiiti.ift .uMliu'l w.'l n't .it thf btwinrhg f t 0:1 S.ilnr,,..ty. u! Iu ilium. tig milt w.'.i fill .it thf ht- -i J 'iiw .iiiiui,; ui thf m.innt.g shift on W wen f!!.-c- chilling Jo.n.'.a Yum.:;. JAtrli.ti'.t 1 S.in.i. ( Merut.ih:, m.iiis - M 1963 Minors Vacation to Starf Juno 29 ( at 1. I, i '1'. ,io ,t i A V, r -i ! .. .In if.- ii n .11 ol f IN nil, the rights ul i'u- nifiuhf. .Ii p un rcjwn ter. dvr t lit respectne ug at . tiu- - N.-- 1 Tiu. lfiti-ra.,ii.t J Jitum.i',.1' .in. thf it.i'ii-fi-tiuti.il Il.tiiiiiiiiu .s Iu.il Ware tn.t tic lu'.iit d. e.ee that in iy fol-- , cutm-.l.ivnt of l'.i.iO, as amended. 13. Tiu- "itniriun Agreeme July Kmit mvoimt f..r rtiueh of the-- ' I.-li(.1!lVmv uary 1. 1P.39, and tinsli.ft ili.it starts I.',. It nif ins cardiovascular the Anthracite Wa.;e Astreement S 7 a t a. or ni. 011!). to thi' as amcndi-d- , effect. e Fehru.uy 1, ion. In c.i'inil.ir letter to t ho mem- - lh.'i!), are continuing instruments Utah Heart A ism-jat IliaWlNmilimUltmHHil'HtttillMIUmiHNUtllMimWtHmilHtil HtMU.IIUIIUtitMHmtUrilHltiiUltlilllltUIMUUHUllllttmHMIilWIIIHmtMUliMtllU lint provide for aeation and payment. CALVES CALVES CALVES The letters also 1; t the coal that already have Choice Anirus-H-il.- tcin IH-- f Cmss and Holstein Guernsey heifer the dates to eonform to t" agree,! and bull calves from three to twelve weeks old. These calves t he ltki3 vaealion and adare sorteii In uniform sizes with quality. We guarantee these vise that since some signatories calves to U healthy u;nn arrival or you need tiot accept them. to the agivement are not memThere will he a veterinarians official health certificate neeoni-panyin- g bers of these associations, lM'A these calves. You must take T or more. We deliver district offices should contact alxiut ten days after you place your order. You may order all such comjKinies for the purixi.-- e heifer or all hull calves. of making the same agreement. Our delivered prices on the calves: -- s ; r 1 -- :. , - - - s 1 -e l as.sm-iatioii- & s Ends Maintenance Course Army Specialist Four Charles 1; R. Norris, whose wife Caron lives 1 at Wellington, recently completed k 1 a maintenance coui'se at the Aviation Center, Fort I Rucker, Alabama. During the course Specialist Norris received I instruction in the maintenance of I single engine observation and util- ity aircraft. The son of Mr. and I, Mrs. George F. Norris, Welling- ton, he entered the Army in June I of 1939 and was last stationed at SotlofiOhl I'. I ITUl ks I LlW aii. five-wee- Weeks Old WmIcs Old Call or write or come and pick them up yourself at our calf barn In Bonduet. NOLAN LIVESTOCK COMPANY Bonduel, Wisconsin Phona PL fniiiitimimiiiiiiiumiiiiiinimmniimiHiiiiiiiiimiiMiiiiiiMmiiiiit lif , t if .Oft t I i' ' ul i I'.f I I ,'. i 'Ji 1,1 "III fts a. 1 Iv-or- t, He t 1. tin' 'in o, I Iti1 l tn 11 nil- - 111 f ; I i. . ! lit i r i. f.t ! ! ii It a. 1 i.i.if, ! i , I . s w o: k. iuruti it hi M. ilii.i fo d. .ft nif tilf on ;i f ,:,hn' x.indlum; .m.i d. 1110.1111, but in geli.n,; tiuk mi, she hid to it1 111,11 i- ! I' .j'.t ml lllf f.iltlf I Ul ii i ill ill i ut Jonh .i'll., ii'l.a,; b.u-!' i'o.if)i llif leaders, do. Hi; tw. ' mm tho iiuttmr iifii'.s I 1 sfin's I.., (lit tJ .ill'l ml f, n the tr.'i-f- ! .1 i Hi' i !( t r .!', hi In S'"r th, .Vo. . 'ii j - I v i.'.i tS t v iiiui. irf.ii units f.llll fiaii on nifa IVio,)s ill'll- ifil by i H 'll ,i If .in o 'o. I f Page Five hcird, Good Life at Robbers Roost a y-i- PRICE, UTAH us tlit'if tnerc in mount, iltiiH ) j Hv Pearl Taker! to Ciuitr.uy pqiul.ir ;s hard work. Killing a horse sill day in routine range work takes all the privilege out of the sport; a scrawny old eowjsike s legs don't get Ixiwed that way overnight. The life docs have Us rewards, however After the hot dusty activity ol the day, the coo evenings around the campfire resting and renewing touch with humanity, give a cowboy more pleasure than far more exciting recreation provides jX'ople who have better social .'id. ullages. These if.re sessions have true meaning and lasting values to him, and he adds his part ,11 stories ' weak in moral. rank in wit" to the colorful fabric of range lore. Tin- - hard part was brought to niv a'Vntion at a very ear'v age, hut as the years went by the other side of the coin more than made tip for it. I made my fit's! trip iio the Roost at age 1 year on a pil'ow stuffed into the saddle in front of Mama. She was supj.'osed to bring up the drag. . :iow and reach the She couldnt lean over f r enough to pick me Up unliv. hen up my arms to her. came hack one time and nmd her encouraging my with tile snapping end- the bridle reins, he tried to stay closer and help her more. Kohliers Roost, the entire eastern end of Wayne County in Utah, was. that year of l'.KUt, the wildest place left in the West, Not 10 Hutch Cassidy's Wild veal's Hunch had found sanctuary then' between daring ho!diis, and it was no cinch that these boys were really gone. This didn't bother Joe H: dd'eeonie; lie was a cowhand that he had of sih'Ii eom;x-teneinvited to leave western Colorado, where his cows always had two calves and sometimes his hulls showed up with calves following. My father didn't have any sons, hut he didn't miss them my sister (horn the year after we moved our cattle to the Roost) and I were exjxvtod to take our places in the crew wherever needed - - from shoveling out a water-hol- e to branding a hull. We were known tar and wide as givod hands lor me. In-I- to introduce you to a real thirst quencher 1, winch we were, We tix.k mil' turns at hraiid-lag- , v. r iiigli-.the burst's and neither aske.l lor nor were given (he sho: t eacle n ruUiidup Tin h all jmait o! the ar for US was the week-loncattle drive to market at tin- - railroad at Green KiVer. For tins we ''tup;x-our string. rid. tig the best burses in the country. We rude magnificently around the streets or down the Sidewalks ifnlly in our tight levis and made lioots. W t were a getiera- tloll ahead with levis, and the pnd with which we wore these badges of pr icieney Ill ide Ujs the envy of the tnwn kids. We had it made mid we knew it. During our early days at t lie Roost, ail the eowboys who worked for us or rode in to visit had known tin Wild Hunch well. Hill Tomlinson had lived at the Roost; the Gillies Uiys were cousins to Hutch (issidy; Neil mid U.irl Hanks h.1.1 ridden the range, stir- rup to stirrup, with the outlaws, and C!i tries G.hhons had served them often at his store and hotel in Hanksville. When the were in Hanksville, they wouldnt shvp in the hotel, hut bedded down in the nearby cottonwood grove lest someone he too tempted by the generous rewards always posted for them. We heard stories alxiut these stories knights of the dim trails not of their outlawry ns such, hut of their conifietenco, their their resourcefulness, and their Robin Hood kindness to the ranchers jxxir in money and starved for companionship. Out on the range, gotxl camping sjxits are always limited by water and horse feed; thus we heard these stories around campfires built, in most cases, on the very ashes of the cookfires of those romantic riders Butch Cassidy, Flzy Iay, Jack Moore, Flatnose George and the Curry Boys, Blue John, Indian Ed, Silver Tip, Joe Walker, Tom Dilley, Grimes and Ricker and dozens of others whose real names no one knew. During the day's work, we rode across the same Roost Flats they had crossed, followed the trails they had probably laid out in the cedars, dodging the same limbs they had leaned to miss. The ceand pennydars, sage, sand-pufroyal probably smelled about the same spicy way to those first riders as they did to us. We drank from the same hidden springs they had found only a few short years before, as we worked our way over the rugged trails, the Angel Trail, North and Middle Trails and the Rock Slide into Millard ways they had picked Canyon out in this jumble of cedar ridges, rolling grassy flats, canyon mazes and upthrust rock buttes. These outlaws were very real to us. We enjoyed the stories of the exciting bank robberies and payroll holdups, but we came also to know the men, their little human peculiarities, and even their horses names. We learned that Jack Moore was a famous wit who was fond of saying: They sure likd me in Texas. In fact a bunch of them followed me clear across the state to get me to go back e. ilw-s- , l . . . tad if Mintin' h.idn't f,ili r than any hui e tney had, they'll ImM' caught me, I xi." We would i h.nt lei'ogn.e.l Jack M oi e be-cu- to:' tracks; and he was better than an Indian at unraveling a cold trail. We le, ina'd Ui.it Hutch Cassidy was friendly and gtxxj ni tilled, and a line horseman; that Blinj John had i no brow n and one blue eye; lint Indian Hd Newcomb was edueated. wrote n fine hand and was an artist. While talking to a Ilian lie would sometimes piek up a twig, snnxiili off u place in (lie sand and draw tae mans like-n'sThis won many a man's friend. hip that he wouldn't have bad otherwise Isvatise lie was taciturn and reserved. Fly Iiy. we were told, was capable and smart, the brains of tlie Hunch, and wo often visited the camp he had set Up in The Pastures in Horseshoe Canyon when he brought his wife to l the winter. We learned how much these men liked and deX'ndcd on their horses, and we sometimes called our horses the same names they had used Kid, Hay Pete, Gray Eagle, Babe, Minnie, Spotlight, Bed wagon. Major and Turk. The name "Robbers Roost predates the Wild Bunch. One Cap Brown used to bring in horses stolen in western Utah, rest them for several months, then take them on into Colorado where there was a ready market at the mines. Dead Man's Hill was where one of his crew had been shot by a following posse. And Cap Brown probably built the Twin Corrals on the long grassy flats over the ridge from the Roost. We used these names, misunderstanding them now and then. We learned many years later that what we called the "Gordons were originally the "French Gardens because of their luch grass and beautiful flowers. We still wonder about Gybex Point. Crow Seep, the ranch headquarters, was named for a little black mustang that was pawing a hole in the wet sand of a wash to get himself a drink. Remembering that Mama had said she wouldn't live down in one of the canyons where the water was usually located, Papa looked at the sheltering ridge to the north and east, then down across the long level flat to the west, across the breaks to the Dirty Devil River and up the long slope of the Burr Flats to the flowing panorama of the Henry Mountains flung along the entire western horizon, and while he built a loop to catch the thirsty horse, decided this place would satisfy his helpmate. It did, and d became a home to us all. The Rost is almost as isolated today as it was when my family moved there. After my father died, I bought out my sister and my mothers interests and ran the Roost for several years, then sold it to my sister and her husband, a grandson of Charles Gibbons, and they, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ekker, own it today. It is still a valuable cattle ranch, but the richest part of the heritage lies in stories we tell our children of Veterans when, at their ages, we listened the wonderful tales of the Wild Your Answer to Bunch around a campfire burnone is As an enlisted man in the ing right where this Q reserves I was recalled to active duty and I have been told my former job will not be waiting for me. What should I do? A If you are refused reemployment and you apply for it within 31 days after release from service, you should report immediately to the nearest state employment office or, if you were working for the Federal government, to the nearest office of the Civil Service Commission. This benefit is administered in the case of private employment by the Bureau of Veterans Rights of the Department of Labor. I am a veteran, but did Q not serve in either World War II or in Korea. I am applying for a federal job under Civil Service. Do I get any veteran's preference? A There is a preference for peacetime veterans if We're the only guys they have been in campaigns or or a which for who make a change badge expeditions service medal is authorized. A well-earne- ! s. six-ni- owl-hoote- fs well-love- Heres 10-poi- between preference is granted peacetime veterans if they meet the above condition and were wounded in action, have a service-connectdisability or receive comretirement pensation, disability benefits or pension. To lie eligible for any veterans' preference you must have been honorably discharged from the service. Who receives the $350 payQ ment by the VA towards a veterans faneral expense? A The undertaken, if unpaid, otherwise the person who bore the veteran's funeral expenses. ed A refreshing new fruit drink from the Orange-CRUS- OF BUY A H people who know how to make fruit drinks best! 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