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Show MEXICAN HAT HEWS Donna Brown, reporter (Too late for last week) Mr. ard Mrs. Ernie Swanson after returned home Tuesday spending- the weekend in Grand Junction. They surprised everyone by driving in with a new car. Betty Black and Kay Wagner drove to Blanding last Tuesday to spend the day shopping. Also in Blanding Tuesday was the Morris Brown family and George James. George visited his wife Betty and their family while the Biowns shopped. Dale Steerman drove to Cortez Tuesday to have medical checkup. Mr. and Mrs. Gay Stavely entertained the Geoige Parsons at dinner Saturday evening. fine. Mr. and Mrs. Konald Davis returned this weekend after being on a vacation to Las Vegas and Tijuana. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Chapman and family left Friday for Spring-fielColo., to visit and hunt pheasants for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. A1 Grames and daughter moved from the trailer court into house No. 28 last week. Bob Wells and Jack Martin spent the weekend in Durango. The Girl Scouts wrent on a picnic-hike Saturday. They planned to go last week, but it was raining so postponed their hike for a week. They all had lots of fun. Bill Kolisch sent word that he is in the hospital in Del Norte, Colo. He drove to Creede w ith plans to stay a few days, but took ill while there. The Bruce Stevens family still havent come home after Bruce underwent surgery last week in the Monticello hopsital. The last wre heard, he is getting along d, Ceramic Tile tw'o-we- CHART UTAH STATE REVENUE ek USE THE SAN JUAN RECORD FAST RESULTS CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR Plastic Tile I IC;wE include licenses Tor aotor vehicles - $ ,983,848, drivers $i96,28; hunting sad fishing - t?, 012,1?, j agriculture corpora ions other occupa ions and businesses $565,863 --o- Door Mats Floor Tile MtJCELAhbXS EXCISES include special axciaes on alcoholic baveragea public Utilities - $99,226; insurance - 2,142,868; cigarette $f 76,337 oieonargarina $ NOW OPEN The Ceramic n. hides severance taxes i,- 99,503, contributions $1,09, 4 8. - $2,584,859; PREFARED - Cut To Any Size o-- We invite you Hardware to come in and Title 1 mer) look around F Improvement Loans A 11 WHY DO SO MANY TEEN MARRIAGES FAIL? Remember back in grandfathers day it was said any man over 20 years of age and unmarried was a menace to the community? Well, that was then. They W'ere more fully matured at the age of 20 in that time and age than they are now because they w'ere put out on their owrn sooner then to get started in their businesses. They had a lot more to contend with, more troubles to face sooner in life than the American today. Thus, they grew faster and matured a lot earlier. Financing ENGLEHMT CABINET & CONST. CO. Just South of Blanding Phone 3966 WE HAVE THE MEN AND TO GET EQUIPMENT YGUR JOB DONE 1 V $867, ani $1,517,932; and iidserit: aiscel-laneo- us 0RO31 includes liquor profits to local government - $1,000,000; protective Inspection - $594,537; bui Id ng and insurance - $,16,385; aeronautics - $400,223, and niseellaneous - $1,090,6 8, M RJBLIC WXUJUvE expenditures include disbursements from medical care pool fund tut not deposits to fund. During f seal 1959 disbursements from fund were $195,652 greater than deposits to the fund. PREFARED UTAH FOUNDATION its different that their marriage was a mistake. Of course, a divorce is the result. The boy leaves town and the girl goes crawling back to mama. This is just one example of a teenage marriage. In closing Im asking each one of you who fancies themselves in love to think twice and consider all aspects before you decide to get married. PLATTER CHATTER CAPITOL: Frank Pourcel and that great solo saxophonist, Jo Krasko, combine in a snperb hi-of life in Paris as lived through their great instrumentals . . . While some of the songs are American, the whole mood set is strictly Parisian and strictly terrific for hi-- fans who are always fi fi looking for something different . . . This is different, all right . . . Songs include All or Nothing at To My Lover, AII, Kisses, So Many Violins, When I Fall in Love, Rain on the Seine, Paris Serenade, Azure, Two Lips Image, and others. The San Juan Record MONTICELLO, Friday, November, Page Six UTAH 27, 1959 BY UTAH FOUNDATION Receipe of the Week The robust taste and aroma of Busbees Best Navy Bean. Broth has captivated a panel of gourmet judges and has been declared the Navys most delectable bean soup for 1959. One of 105 entries in a Navywide competition sponsored by the Daily Commercial Appeal and the Chief of Naval Air Training, Memphis, Tenn., the winning recipe was compounded by Edwin H. Busbee, commissaryman first class, USN, of the Naval Station, Norfolk, Va. Busbees soup narrowly bettered a second place recipe which represented the combined culinary art of the ships commissary department of the escort destroyer USS Phillip (DDE 498) based at Pearl Haibor. Here is Commissaryman Busbees winning recipe: BUSBEES BEST NAVY BEAN BROTH 2 cups Navy beans IV2 lbs. ham (butt end) 3 qts. water 4 tsp. celery salt 2 tsp. salt Vs tsp. black pepper 1 tsp. monosodium glutemate 1 minced onion (medium) parsley flakes Soak beans overnight in water to cover. Prepare soup stock by simmering ham in 3 quarts of water for two hours. Add beans, celery salt, salt, pepper and monosodium glutemate. Slow boil until beans are tender. Remove ham and grind. Add minced onions and simmer until soup begins to thicken (approximately one-ha- lf hour). Add ground ham and serve, sprinkling each serving with celery flakes. Serve with cheese croutons (bread slices cut to form diamond diagonally shapes, buttered, sprinkled with parmesan cheese and toasted in oven). GO! Two boys left for the army November 16, according to the local selective service board. They are Jerry Edwards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Edwards of Monticello, and John Clifton Crawford, formerly of Summit Point. Called to the army on Dec. 14 will be Peter Kendall Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Bailey of Monticello, and Elmer Delores Hurst, son of Mr. and Mrs. Del-orHurst of Blanding. es I ot $302, 0L2; $1X1,417; OFF WE . I I tar - - A person is finally out on his own after he has had an education for the particular field he wishes to go into. Then he thinks about getting married and raising a family. There are some people who seem to fall in love a lot sooner in life. Say at the age of IB, 17, or 18. At this age he feels he is in love with his steady so he marries her. Every thing is rosy for the first month or so. Then the newness of this new and different life has worn off and he and his teenage wife settle dowrn to everyday life. The couple finds they have a family on the way so they both have to quite school and work steady long hours. This really makes the newness of getting married rub off real quick and he comes home tired and worn out night after night. His wife, being the same way (tired and worn out) from the days w'ork, greet each other with a snap or sarcastic remark. Night after night the same thing. They find themselves drifting further and further apart, and becoming more unhappy with life every day. Pretty soon they learn how much they hate one another. They argue a lot and say many many ugly things to each other that decent people never would dream of saying. All too late they find ym u'L "ALL the time, I have been in agreement with the trade at home theory because I realize that it takes money in circulation to keep a community booming. I cheered for trade at home all right but I didnt practice what I preached. I felt that my problem was to get the most possible out of a secretarys salary and looked for bargains and weekend specials wherever and whenever I could find them. Not any more. found that when I trade with people I dont know it's a one-shtransaction. If am dissatisfied with my purchase, I cant always get my money back or obtain a suitable ac. jetment. A let of my bargains were bargains in price only. And, when discovered that the best merchandise usually costs less here in the home town, well, that really did it! Me buy out of town? Not any more. Im a local fan, for now and always. My money goes farther, I get credit when and where need it, and satisfaction is always nuaranteed. How about you? BY Today Doors Adhesives properly froa local govertwents - $1,888,373; Plywood Thru Saturday Formica tax - Tile Joint Filler O- 5 p. m. Monday -- o- UTHfeJl 'Dewk' Our Shop Open From 8 a. m. to Consoveld JUNE 30. 1959 Dr. and Mrs. C. D. Goon and Mr. and Mrs. Swede Odette flew via Blanding Flying Service to Las Vegas Saturday and returned home Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Cozakos and family will be Thanksgiving dinner guests of her mother in Price. They will go up Thursday morning and return home Sunday. -- o- Linoleum FISCAL YEAR ENDED Personal Mention Carpets -- o- UTAH STATE EXPENDITURES JUNE 30,1959 FISCAL YEAR ENDED 2 CHART I e . I k I V v h 12 Hour Flower fr Delivery Yn Floral Arrangements For I Thanksgiving Wired or Delivered Locally . It pays to buy at home wher SARABETH BLANCH w; if Phone JU Hours Before 8 a. m. and After 5 p. m. (Agent for Glenns Floral, Cortez) |