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Show Cindy Kay Bailey and Mrs. and and Marva and Marilyn Sines, Ray Gambill. New employes Karen, Diana, Duggie and Cook- their wives are Mr. and were James ie Newlon. Refreshments Mr. Higginbotham, served at the close of the party. Dick Howell and Mr. were Personal. Mention celebrated third birthday, March 17, The Continental Oil crew gave with a party in her home. Guests a combined farewell and welcoming party Saturday night at their The San Juan Record office. Honored guests who are MONTICELLO, UTAH leaving Monticello were Mr. and Friday, March 25, 1960 Mrs. Pat Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Page Two Jim Kennedy and Mr. and Mrs. her s r j&if i, , - Mrs. Mrs. Brown. Calvin 7& Special NATIONAL guests were members of party 15, an experimental group, from Ponca, City. Okla. The political race shapes up missing ever since. I fear he has Deer hunter success was 84 per and Symington against fallen upon a jar. If seen, please Kennedy cent last year, says game protec- Nixon and anybody. A Denver head him toward the Pinto Bean tor Cecil Jones. Post writer says it would be a Capitol of the World. His wife calumnity to have a Californian is offering a reward, why I know in the White House because of not. the water bickering between ColoMILLION OIL rado and California. FOR COUNTY We dont see it that way. Nix- MONEY on, such as he is, is a better reRentals, bonuses and royalties course than rule by labor un- from mineral leasing on federal ions, which will surely follow a lands during 1959 amounted to W e $2,593, 000 for Utah administration. Democrat and the would rather have our pockets lions share was returned to San pilfered by Big Business than Juan County. the unions, since BB is taxed to The money is used for the supthe hilt and constantly regulated of public schools and of the port by the government. 29 counties in the state. Higest rebate to any county was to San It is, alas, income tax time, Juan County, which will receive and if you feel particularily Grand $345,566. County gets shocked at what you have paid, and Emery $103,314, County or owe, our Uncle, $127,938. Salt Lake County gets fell remorse for Elvis Presley, $121. kicks in 91 per cent of his who , , gross for last year. It should '4 happen to a Hound dog! LEGAL NOTICES &AW One of the bills allowed at last city council meeting was $7 for snowshoes. (I would hate to be in the snowshoe business.) Anyway, on Thursday city manager Homer Chandler strapped on said snowshoes and tramped up the mountain to check future water supply. Two days later he had a heart attack. Calvert Reserve has more Power to Please ENJOY FUU PfrW BLF'iOEO WHISKEY 6a o GPU SPIRITS 1960 CALVERT DISTILLER? CO V Estate of Margaret Nielson, also known as Margaret P. Nielson, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the residence of Milton C. Nielson in Monticello, Utah or at the Law Offices of Adams & Anderson, in Monticello, Utah, on or before the 1st day of August, 1960. Milton C. Nielson Freeman L. Nielson The wife of Editor Kisling (newspaper scion of Dove Crick) Executors was on the phone late Sunday trying to locate her husband. Date of First publication March Seems he had disappeared at 9 25, 1960. a. m. to borrow six tablespoons Date of last publication 'April 22, of sugar for a pie, and had been 1960. IT TONIGHT! NEUTRitL Scut 'Icuui Second C Published every Friday EOlTpRIAL at UMticelM Utah A First nails Publication Entered in the Fostoffice at Mood cello, Utah, at Second Class Matter, under the Act of March 3, 1879. year outside Sam Subscriptions: $3 a year in San Juan County; $4 Juan County. W. J. OLDS GEORGE E. JONES Box 428, Monticello, Utah Owner, Editor and Publisher Assistant Editor and Foreman Phone JU i ji ji jiji jiji jiji jiji jiji jiji jijiji I' ji ji ji jiji jiji jiji ji jiji jijijijijijij The Old Settler . . . By Albert R. Lyman stration of the dead end they had run into. Coming up out of the gulch onto the shelf, they saw the Piutes on the ledge above them. The idea seemed still to be pursuit, regardless, that was in the mind of at least two of them, a scout named Worthington and a named Wilson, nicknamed Roudy. They too rushed on' to go up that perilous trail below the Piutes guns reaching out from behind the rocks. The fire from those guns left them woundMy dear San Juaners: There was noise and commo- ed and helpless, and the rest of back tion, the pounding of many hoofs, the posse had to withdraw the jingle of spurs, voices, the below a rim and hug that position rattle and squeak of leather as a all day. If a hat, or any part of of cowpunchers and a horse came to view from above, cavalcade soldiers rode up the hill from Ver- it was shot through at once. And dure and started west on the trail all day long the two wounded of a gang of Piutes in the sum- men called for water. No one mer of 1884. That snarl of Paiu-te- s, could go to them. WTien darkness came, so one somewhere ahead along the of them told me, the posse had south foot of Blue Mountain, men, old and no alternative but start back the women and children, they linyoung, were not disturbed in the way they came, though to know that long enough gered knew least. They their country, the wild men came down from knew where were gothey they their and worried the two ing, as in the height of their men toledge death with their wolf-lik- e beheaded for their glory they loved rocks which had been their dogs, stripped them of their hats and clothes and left security from tribes they had boots, to them decay under the fierce in and recent ages from robbed, the strange breed of white men July sun. Later their bones were buried by two prospectors, and a coming into the west. fence of dry cedar trees That foolhardy posse of white rough and limbs made around their men could have been trapped, surLater still, the Boy Scouts rounded and annihilated without graves. of Blanding, put a fence of boards seeing anybody at whom to shoot. around the place with names and Such a thought seems never to dates. have entered their minds and they The Piutes crossed Mossback, followed the tracks, pressing so Mesa, Red Canyon and into North near to the Piutes as the Piutes Gulch, from which they climbed would permit. The ping of a bulout at the lower sand-slidAt let uncomfortable near was an the foot of that slide, five years admonition not to be in too much Joshua Stevens - found a of a rush. On along the brushy later, silver uatch which he carried t foot of the Blue, across Cotton- the time of his death in Old Mexwood across Elk Mountain they ico. From the rim of North Gulch could have been ambushed and in the Lake the Indians massacred at forty places on the killed cattle Country, and left, leavright route. Where did they think they them to rot on the ground in ing were going? And how could they or whole. When the Bluff so much as dream of tangling part men got in there after guessing with the Piutes on their own what might be happening, they chosen ground, and then still livcould not tell, and no one knows ing to tell the tale? yet which way the Indians went Down the far side of the Elk, out of the country. down into the cavernous depths of White canyon like rats into a FEED THE BIRDS hole, following faithfully along the lure of the Piutes tracks, the posse strung along the narrow LITTLE THEATRE jj trails, or the winding guts in the Sandstone. It may be due to a I; UTAH little milk of human kindness in MONTICELLO, the Piutes blood, or to the fact SHOW TIME 7:80 P. M. that they were having too much Matinee Saturday 3 p.m. send reelfun to the white men THURSDAY, FRIDAY ing back before they did. What i; and SATURDAY ever their reason for not leav1; March 24, 25 & 26 f the men to ;; ing the bodies on the sand hot the or putrify IT STARTED WITH j: bald rocks, and appropriate the outfit to their own use, they must A KISS be credited for not doing what they had in their power to do. On the south shelf of White SUNDAY, MONDAY and TUESDAY Canyon, the Indians had played March 27, 28 & 29 the game as long as they wanted to, and preferred to travel the THE FBI STORY rest of the way into the sanctum of their retreat alone. Climbing up a narrow trail to a ledge of , WEDNESDAY Mossback Mesa, they shouted deMARCH 30 fiantly to their pursurers, making it known they were not to be folCAST A lowed farther. It was early in the LONG SHADOW forenoon, a clear July day, at what has been known since that ij time as Soldier Crossing. If that posse had recognized the futility ii i: LIFE GO TO A of their situation, they might all j: have come back alive but first v they had to have a tragic demon- cow-punch- er e. The continual introduction of modem equipment has kept copper production a successful business in Utah. At Kennecotts Bingham Mine, for example, huge electric shovels handle enormous quantities of ore and waste rock efficiently something men with picks and hand shovels couldnt possibly do. In the same tradition, accounting machines are used by Kennecotts comptrollers department. This machine accounting system supplies management with information vital to operations more promptly and accurately than could have been achieved by yesterdays methods. Working with enormous numbers of facts and figures, machine accounting is fast, efficient and thorough. For example, it calculates pay rate, hours worked and any of 200 payroll deductions to produce 1,000 pay checks an hour. It keeps an inventory of 46,000 supply items and makes information on them available at a moments notice. It provides needed metallurgical data in less than a tenth of the time it would have taken before machines came on the job. Even now, plans are under way to achieve tomorrow what is impossible today. The machine accounting system will be expanded to be a more valuable aid to management in the future. This is another step by Kennecott to help assure conup-to-da- te tinued copper production by improving operations. mm Adding Machine 251 each Utah Copper Division. J Bbnnecott Copper Corporation PROUD TO BE PART OF A GROWING UTAH of - Tape 5 for $1.00 SAN JUAN RECORD |