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Show 0 M T N Leaving the latter part of this week, Joel Norton will enter the LDS Mission Home in. Salt Lake City, Monday, for a weeks training before he begins his labors as an LOS missionary in the Western garet Nielson. Entertaining last Thursday Mis- Spamsh-Ameriea- n HEWS end their son. Bishop Guyton Perkins, all of Salt Lake City, drove down Sunday to attend the funeral of Dans s'ster, Mrs. Mar- sion. His farewell testimonial Sunday evening attracted a large croud, many of them friends and relatives from out of town. them was his brother. Jerry, who came from Salt Lake City to complete the family cir- j A Salt Lake City Mis Maud in and Mis. Daniel was Scene is written bv 17 - v ear old M o n t i c e llo (Teen -- senior High x. ' Virginia ij Who is the most pomi'ar person you know ? I dont mean a world famous figuie. I refer to the Joe or Jane m your circle of friends who could easily top a popularity poll. The password to popularity is a little seven letter word. It is the key to being well liked. Its a kind of next door neighbor to sympathy, but it goes beyond it. The vvoid is empathy. The definition of this word is: The imaginative identification of Geoige S. Park has recently been appointed President Elder of the LDS La Sal Branch. He is taking the place of Alfred Frost v ho has acted m that capacity for a number of years. Wilford Christensen and Leroy Wood are both receiving medical attention in Salt Lake City. When ordinary vehicles get stuck-'Je- ep' double traction action gets through. Drive vehicles Equipped with snowplow-'je- ep clear snow quickly from driveways, service areas, lots, anywhere! Call us in case of emergency ! We THE GROWING INDUSTRIES KAISER an fill ple. your tank, or deliver bottles right away! VEHICLES BY WILLYS MOTORS... ONE OF oneself w ith another person or with a group. In simple language it means putting yourself in the other persons shoes, no matter what the circumstance. In doing this, we feel, we un-dstand. In a small way we become part of the other person. Oi.e of the mo.st popular girls I know has been gifted with this quality to the nth degree. Ill call her Macy. One day, Bill, a classmate, rushed up to her after school, his face one w ide grin. Guess what, Macy, my Dad w on that sales contest and were f'ying to Hawaii next month! With a little cry of delight, Macy grabbed his arm excitedly, and Bills books tumbled to the ground. Im so thrilled for you, Macy explained as she helped him retrieve the books. Bill laughted as he repeated the incident to others. Laughed, and like Macy all the more for her waim enthusiasm. Self centered persons refuse to develope empathy. They are the one who use flip phrases as they brush aside some tale of woe. They cant be bothered. They wont probe into their own hearts and ask: How would I feel it this happened to me? What would I do? It didnt happen to them, therefore, its beyond their interest and comprehension. So they shrug their shoulders and give out an any I feel for you brother, and thats that. But these are the people who are hit the hardest when trouble does come. For them, there is no outstretched hand of friendship. Thats when they discover how lonely an ivory tower can be. Now, the problem is: How can we acquire empathy? If you werent born with this sensitivity to others feelings, you can acquire it. It will take work, but so do most of the good things in life. It means digging deep inside yourself to establish rapport with others. It usually means discarding snap judgments of peoei Redd. With the exception of Mi's. Norma Young, all of her guests were former San Juan residents who now live in and near Salt Lake City. They are Mis. Fiancis Hoops, Mrs. Alene Jones, Mrs. Venice Shields, and Mis. Edith Perkins Peterson. cle. Mr. 0 I C E L L Individuals REDDS' MONTICELLO, UTAH Phone JU Owned Home Operated Home devel- others troubles with a heart felt I know how you feel. Those who lack this quality, give out a lightly tossed I feel for you. You neednt be told which type has the most friends. Ray's Northern Gas Come in for a demonstration with a well oped sense of empathy respond to spirits, hut thtv aiet ha i lookers. IVrk rs of Dn a d Maig.-'Salt Lak City weie vs ting here Sunday, having cone to attend BLANDING NEWS By ALBERT and GLADYS LYMAN the funeral of h s si-Magspo Funeral servkes for Artimisha Washington, and anotht r fvrn a Nielson. Black were held in the Blending sihool in C..1 forma to be rt th (. ant L. L'a le, accom p .med by Don a"d Caen huth were chapel ft 1 n. m. Thursday, Bis- funeral. The fifth son is artendLa hop Kline Black of the Second ing school in I.lji ding. After a Vintuig tie L D.y. 1 ... m j. y , ai J Dm went on ti Ward presiding. A quartet: A aron violin soto by Joe Hunt, pm d AI Albeit S .It lake on bumie-- s. by Mamie Ah'P'-Harvey, Jos. F. Lyman, Mrs. Allan Black and Mrs. Marirn Jones, R. Lvnnn spoke of his acqua l' an! Mi . C..il M ihon and with the Navjjos fr m thi fam.ly went to MaiimeUi Sunday sang, I Know That My Redeemer Lives, ?Irs. Mamie Jones at the davs of the old fort m Bla'T. Two to xuend the ttnUnion.ul given organ. The opening praer was little granddaughters, childrt n cf in th 2nd Ward for Joel Norton, I offered by Allen Black, a nephew. Jenny Red-dthink a in. phew cf Mis. M..hon. They sang A violin solo, Face to Face, was when I read that sweet stoiy of were acconipaii eJ by Mi. anl by Margiivt Mm. Albeit R. Lyman. played by Joe Hunt. Larene Black old, aecompinied mces e'ear Oui visit to the big ne.'. hosand Sheppaid gave somewhat of a Redd. With of sketch duet their her an l.ttle vu sweet, sister, biographical pital on us Open house day was Artumsha, relating instances of appealing feature of the occa- a pleasant suipiise. It seemed their long and intimate acquant-anc- sion. After closing lemaiks hy haidly possible that anything of and magnitude and Marrilyn Black, a niece, Alma Palmer, the benediction was such splendor rendered an organ solo, In the pronounced hy Rex Harvey. Bur- could be built in San Juan, but Garden. Harvey John Kartchner, ial vvas at BlautUng cemetery, and we dont agree with people who a nephew by marriage, spoke of the grave dedicated by E vm say it is too good for San Juan; the way Aunt Mish had been as Guy num. nothing is too good for our coun-ti- y vvheic wo hue lived and loved a mother to his w ife and childAccording to all that is known ren. Ellis Palmer sang, That Is about it. Randolph Benale, vvas and tolled thiough a long and deMine Today, after which Bishop horn about 75 yeais ago at lightful lifetime. Black spoke of the many good He must have been about qualities of Aunt Mish, her 20 when he began working for to readiness help everybody, Jos. F. Barton, and some time and her habit of being always after that he attended school. He Nay lost his first wife, by whom he busy. The quartet sang, Speak No 111, and the closing had one child. By his second marprayer was offered by Melvin riage he has had 10 childrn. He Yir.t Redd and Mr. Jones fiom Black, a nephew. Burial was in was an interesting person to Ilia. ding were . ;Joakers at the the Blanding cemetery. meet, a good entertainer, always LDS chinch at 1 astland Sunday Artimisha Black was bom in cheerful, with an optimistic vevv mormrg. Mr. Jones had returned Huntington, Utah, May 27, 1888. of life. last August from a mission in Her parents later made their FOR PROMIT and efficient in- northern California. home in Fruitland, N. M., and come tax service, see the Karl R. Mr. and Mrs. Herin Butt called moved to Blanding in 1910. She Lyman Insurance Agency. c on the D.ck Redshaws Wednessuffered from a severe fever in Richard Dwight Laws, son of day. early childhood from which she Asa and Marie Black Laws, is J. H. Stew nt is the new bus never fully recovered, and had to answering a call to a mission in of the Eastland bus. driver battle with a hindering handicap the North Central States. lie is W. Ibslshaws wt re dinII. The life. She never the of rest her all going from the 1st Ward in Salt ner guests at Mr. and Mrs. Gormarried, but she had an ardent Lake City. He is a graduate 'of love for children, and took pleas- the West H.gh school and has don Bartells Friday evening. There was a basketball game ure m making them happy. been attending the University of at Eastland Saturday morning beis a laid Johnson with up Lyle Utah, is a talented musician, and and Ueola broken arm after a collision with from childhood has been active in tween the Eastland in a tie. resulting boys, Dean Bartlett in the northeast the ward organizations. This will . Max Johnson and Mr. and part of town. Due at least in be interesting to all who rememleturned from a recently family part to icy roads, Lyles car was ber his father and mother, and trip to Salt Lake. struck broadside at an intersec- how his father died from the efMr. and Mrs. Cloyd Johnson tion, damaging his car to the ex- fect of falling into a vat of hot tent of $600, and the Bartlett car acid in the old Cottonwood Mill. spent the Christmas holidays in about half that amount. Lyle was Elder Hal Black, writing from Texas visiting friends. Mrs. Walter Wilkins returned taken to the hospital where the Huron, Mich., the Pheasant Capbones were set in his arm, and he itol of the World, where pheas- Saturday from a trip to Califis home again, but not in shape ants are seen eveiy where, relates ornia to visit her daughter. Mrs. John Stewart prepared a for work. Curtis Hunt was riding that he and his companion lodged with him in the car at the time of with a fine old lady 84 years old, birthday dinner for James Barry the collision, but neither he nor and she became so interested in Jan. 5, with their families for Mr. Bartlett were hurt. their message that she joined the guests. FOR FROMPT and efficient inMr. and Mrs. John (Maurine Church, She oflered to buy a R. Lyman) Halliday are here from turkey and have them help pre- come tax sendee, see the Karl Show Low, Ariz., where the snow pare a big Christmas dinner to Lyman Insurance Agency. 50-lMrs. Louise Ilarvcy attended became so deep that Johns truck- which they could invite their inthe foie-noo- n wedding of a niece in Salt the had be to spent discontinued, They vestigators. ing job Lake last week. Christmas the and he is looking for some other day preparing Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Crowley and big feed, and all afternoon washactivity till the snow goes. Mrs. Lucretia Lyman Ranney, ing dishes, and regard it as about Jaime Crowleys went to Pagosa who for some time has been visit- the most pleasant Christmas they last Thursday for the funeral of a cousin of J. W.s., a ing here, returned to Salt Lake ever spent. with Homer Black, after the funIt vvas pleasing, but not sur- school boy who was accidently eral of his sister, Artimisha prising to hear that the State killed when the vehicle he was and turned Black. Health D 'partment, after anal- driving hit an icy spot over pinning him under it. A seven pound, the fiom well water our yzing Dwayne Crowley left last Friounce boy was bom on the seven- north of town, pionounced it suitfor Salt Lake and will go day th to Mr. and Mrs. Gordon able fot tow n use. We made that from there to Ft. Ord, Calif., to Adams. pionouncement after drinking the enter the National Guard for Mr. and Mrs. Clisbee Lyman re- first sparkling cup of it. months. turned on the 8th from Salt Lake Mrs. Wallace Burnham is home eight The Redshiws ftoni Ucolo and where they' went to take Yvonne from visiting with her children in East-lan- d Lyman back to school. They were several towns in the northern part a number of people from the attended open hospital Dora Mrs. accompanied by Wright of the state. in M irticello Sunday evewho visited with her sister, Mrs. A government experiment sta- house M. W. Anderson. tion in Canada has developed a ning. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Snyder are Park Guymon is spending two new grain called whye, a cross beweeks at a military camp in tween wheat and rve. If it is as spending a few days in Phoenix. Dr. Washington state. persistent as rye in growing Hawes of the superintendent Rocky Mountain will some it of without the of death afford Report water, Maggie western confeience was speaker Parkins Nielson in Monticello very interesting possibilities, and at the Methodist church in Dove stirs many cherished memories maybe some new legal embargoes Creek Sunday morning. He vvas in reaching back into the very eaily on its lim.ts of production. conferring Saturday Blanding A wise philosopher advises that days of Bluff, where we knew her M.E. church board there. as a little girl, a young woman, if you have no hobby, to get one with the The James Banys had Sunday and then as the mother of a big right away, it will enable you dinner with the Jaime Crowleys to become and over a a for time perfamily, long pleasantly goofy and Robert Hart is was Sunday, son of considerable influence and something you like, instead of from Monticello. also there importance in the little town. She going completely haywire over We hear Cedar Point people hate. and her industrious husband, many things you line to At six o'clock Saturday eve- are building a telephone Freeman Nielson, were about the Dove Creek. last of the original Bluffites to ning, when Alma Jones. Mcrril connect up to disappear from the old scene, and Stevens, A. Shumway, Mrs. JenThe Monticello Camp Daughno one remains of the old guard nie Peterson and Mrs. Britta of Utah Pioreeis were enters who used to constitute the little Bradford had leached Soldier tertained Friday by fir. K. S. Summit on their way home from community. HappenThe funeral of Randolph Benale the Manti Temple, their car skid- Summers. The lesson, in The Valley was treated was conducted by LDS Missionary ded on the ice and struck against ings Mrs. Wesley Norton. AccompAlma Palmer in the Blanding In- a post, w recking the ear, and by Mrs. Alfred Fiost, Mrs. anied dian Chapel at 10 a. m. on the leaving them so much battered up Penmonby Redd I Love Thee 8th, with a generous attendance that a passing car took them back and Schubertssang ChrisSerenade. in to the of white people and Indians of Provo. Alma hospital Swanee River. Lewis tina sang both tribes. The program began suffered head injuries and A, a SI e vvas accompanied by Katherwith a vocal duet by Mrs. Jolen broken leg, and will be there for ine Bailey. Next meeting will be Holt and Mrs. Margaret Redd. an indefinite time. The women Jar. 29 at the D. B. Perkins home. Prayer was offered by Grant L. weie not so badly hurt, and will Bayles, followed by a speech by be released soon. Merril Stevens Grace Shumway who, as a long- suffered only minor injuries and The San Juan Record time and missionary special will be home about the 13th. They MONTICELLO, UTAH friend of the Indians, has an ap- were visited in the hospital by Piiday, January 15, 1960 preciative understanding of them Mis. Hortens? Powell Leatham, Five Page and their problems. Karl Barton and she says they are in good told of his lifq-lon- g acquaintance with Randolph, who came to his fathers home in Bluff in 1906, and went with them next year when they moved to Verdure, and was with them for years after that time, and considered always as pretty much a member of the family. He said Randolph was a willing worker, having the knowhow to do things, and always reliable. After an organ solo by Mamie Adams, O My Father, President Leland V. Redd told of how he had from childhood been acquainted with Randolph, and knew him .to be outstanding for honor and industry. He particularly admired Randolphs big and grand family of children children, and his four stalwart TRANSFER & STORAGE sons, one of whom had come from T R I - C ! T Y a military camp in Georgia, an666 SO. of CORTEZ PHONE LO other a camp in the state of 1 i mp-anie- e, e, Den-lhots- o. News From Out East 50-lt- M-s- tc n s Vyj 4. w Jt 4 4x Y g ,V s, ft" 4v;. ' V..' 0 r ? v 7,ST l. :..t f A V'S Ji 1 I ixj! Vi s. 5 YvYJv.y ( t r lf f ,4? V, y 7 IjV e v; J i tv 7" ; 'A'N'VVa. 'X W ' ' A v if" VV f s fsTSl y 4j$ , " , - ,,y " . ly. A - ; 4 v fit h District ox v,7 J , l e ' ' 4' v T - av' - v O I Sy ' .4I - E . -- t 5 x M o . A v A . l- 5 .. o ' y''- ; V y. j, - ZEALAND ' it 7-' 71 X'v"0,.4 ijlt 5 s W 'iJu&k! x Xi NEW -- ,vOi . Ns vj l' - v J'V - V SKv v't" i' fv w ' v W ' I ,i. '7'i 1 , t -- .Vi X' x ... MEXICO ' 4 VLX - k A O. MeKAY of the Church of Jesus Saints (Mormon), is shown speaking Christ of Latter-dato the vast audience of young people in the keynote address ciith pri ,rari. of the Churchs rvmunolh intcnai'enal Others scheduled to sj cak arc, L to E, above: L.de.a viurul J PRESIDENT DAVID y - s' A f. 200,000 Young People Assemble Fireside in Huge lo Learn Answers to Problems of Their Generation to B. Lee, Howard W. Hunter, Marion D. Hanks, and Spen- cer V. Kimball. Elder Hanks is a member of the Church 1 irst Coarci! of the Seventy. The other three are members cf the Quorum cf Twelve Apostles. In a giant campaign conducted out the nation and outside its KSL in Salt Lake City, which will be picked up by more than a Latter-da- y Never let us lose sight of the score of cooperating stations Saints (Mormon), nearly a quarter of a million fundamental fact that the home throughout the west Outside youth are receiving instruction is the basis of civilization, and the range of these broadcasts addesigned to protect them that we have the obligation to vance tape recordings of the to put talks will be made available for against tendencies toward de- build ideal homesto and rear exem- release concurrently with the forth every effort linquency. plary families, he told his great radio addresses. The move was launched early audience of 12 The young people, assembled closed circuit a in m January listeners. address by Each Sunday evening, through in upwards of 5000 firesides, and 86 year old Church Pre-ideMarch 27. a high ranking church will listen to the talks and then David O McKay, to youth as- leader will continue the theme in conduct their own discussions on sembled in 169 centers through broadcasts over Radio Station the subject of the evening. by the Church of Jesus Christ of borders. through-26-year-ol- d -- nt Subjects covered will include: adherance to high standards of conduct, responsibilities of young men and women to each other m social dating, guarding against the evils of petting and necking, the problem of going steady, and guideposts to and preparation for the right kind of marriage. In addition to the continental United States, groups in Hawaii, Canada, Mexico and New Zealand are also participating in the mammoth program. Y |