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Show history. Saturday he displayed s, tiques from Beaver Com' from Beaver City to the Silver. Yes, he even has' branding iron from Bi Rock that once belonged ' Walter James. 4 As he showed the artiiac,. he told their history and " cited several of his po His most famous, Thunder Mug", was acccj anted by the most eleci' receptacle. The poem previously published in t? COUNTY NEWS in 1971, the author listed as !j. known". The guests spent a Vtr enjoyable day at Black Ranch. Guests have good day at Black Rock left to teach at the Mander-field Mander-field School, a building featured fea-tured on the Civic Arts Council Coun-cil historic calendar. But' the feature attraction was Owen Sanders, well known salesman for Scholt-zen Scholt-zen Products, out of Hurri-.cane, Hurri-.cane, Utah. His travels brought him close to many people' and he kept an eye out for bits and pieces of About thirty-five friends and former residents joined the Vic Kaufmans at Black Rock Ranch, Saturday, May 29th, for a potluck dinner, a card shower for Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jeppson, former naturalist at Zion Canyon Nat'l. Park, and to hear Owen Sanders, poet and collector of things from the past, from Hurricane, Utah. Former residents included includ-ed Hamp and Beniti Burke, who ran the ranch when the Kaufmans bought it. Beniti's parents and grandparents owned the ranch since it was bought from a squatter, and filed on as a homestead back in the days of Frisco and the Horn Silver. Also included as former residents were four members mem-bers of the Scott family, who as children homesteaded with their parents at Malone, four miles south of Black Rock, and their families, all from California. A sister, Drue Phillips, told of the early days and how she'd |