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Show AAAAAAAAAAAA 19 BLANDING NEWS Sloppy Joes Celery, carrot sticks Cheese and egg rolls Fudge cake Pear halves School . Lunch Tuesday, April Milk f.lenu VYVVVVVVVVVV Park Terrace Monday, April 18 Meatless vegetable soup Pork sandwiches Chilled fruit Cookie, milk Tuesday, April 19 Lima beans with salt pork Green salad Jellied fruit cocktail Cornmeal muffins with butter Milk Wednesday, April 20 Egg cheese sandwiches e slaw Honey fudge cake Chilled peaches Milk Wednesday, April 20 Potatoes au gratin w ith franks Harvard beets Baking powder biscuits and butter Cherry tapioca Milk Thursday, April 21 Turkey and noodles Buttered corn Whole wheat bread and butter Fruit cup Cookies, milk Friday, April 22 Macaroni cheese casserole Tossed green salad Cheese and egg bread and butter Fruit cobbler, milk Two-ton- rites Barbecued beef sandwiches Pickled beets Celery sticks Jellied peach slaw Milk Friday, April Meat loaf Buttered com 22 y 12 April Miss 21 Thursday, April ' Wadsworth-Rowle- Geraldine Wadsworth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clem L. Wadsworth, and Vernon C. Rowley, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon C. Rowley of Blanding, were married April 12 at the St. George LDS temple. Wadsworth is a graduate of Las Vegas High school and DarrelPs Beauty College of Salt Lake City. She attended Brigham Young university and is employed by the Bank of Nevada as a loan Miss Tossed green salad Jellied pears Hot, rolls, milk teller. Monticello Miss Geraldine Wadsworth Out East News . . . Delicious chicken 40 to Post-Denv- er Standard 39X9X9XHX9XSXi3:2XgaXHXHXHXHSHXHX94S3XaX3XHXHXHXSX3XS4XeS96X3XHXfa3X9XHXHXHXHXH H S5 H X H 3H IT TO USED BE.. Now ji ji ji ji ji ji ii ji ji ji ji ji tilt ji ji ji ji ji ji ji jTTjl Many attend Elementary Wilkin services School Several from Eastland attended News the funeral of Frank Wilkin near Mr. was graduated Rowley from San Juan High at Blanding, Dixie Junior college and BYU. He also attended Arizona State college. He is a teacher of chemistry and biology at Boulder City Salt Lake City. ' High school, and also serves as Mr. and Mrs. Wilkin lived for assistant sports coach. many years in the Lockerby community where he farmed. He was the first superintendent of the LDS church built at Eastland and steaks-frie- d did much of the carpenter work and electrical wiring. While he QUICK LUNCHES was county road supervisor he a heart attack. Because suffered To For Up People Banquets of ill health Mr. and Mrs. WilGateway To Monument Valley kins sold their farm and moved DELICIOUS SUNDAY DINNERS near Salt Luke City to be near their children. At City Prices Six Stake Sunday school board visitors from Blanding visited COLD BEER POP LDS Sunday school at Eastland. Visitors at Jaime Crowleys 9 12 Dancing Sat. Sunday were the James Barrys and Rex Johnsons. BOB'S CAFE & LOUNGE Mr. and Mrs. Bob Slavins and At the Bridge Mexican Hat, Utah son returned to their home in Bob and Sylvia Nieves, Props. Salt Lake City Friday. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Crowley went to Farmington Monday. H. U. Butt and R. P. Redshaw were called to appraise the property of Jack Dumbreck who died recently. Notice To The Public Laura and Bruce Berry have the mumps. H. W. Redshaw is sowing grass seed. Mrs. Clyde Kuykendall accomOur contract ore haulers and their truck drivers have panied Mr. and Mrs. John Estes been instructed to adhere diligently to all rules, back to Flagstaff when they came regulations, and courtesies of the highway. Any refor the funeral of Connie Sellard ports contrary to these conditions should be reported. last Thursday. Mrs. Audrey Starks of Ucolo was nominated for the safe driver Utex contract trucks are identified by U and a numof the week award in the Denver ber. Standard contract trucks are identified by "S" U. S. National Bank and a number. Reports should be made to: contest. Ross Carhart recently bought 60 acres of land adjoining his Utex Exploration Company or home near Fraser elevator. Henry Lettman is back after Uranium Corporation spending the winter at Parker, Ariz. Moab, Utah Mrs. Ted Peterson from Monticello visited Mrs. Gordon Bartell Wednesday. Monday, April 18 Pork chop suey on rice Buttered green beans ( Whole wheat bread and butter Honey butter whip Fruit cup Milk i Its iji ji ji j I ji ji ji ?i ji ii ji 'T ji ! ji j jin T Mrs. Redds Second Grade Reporter: Sherman Barber We elected officers today. n, Stephen is president; Randy vice president; and Nita, Muh-lestei- secretary. We are planning an Easter hike. We will take our lunch. We will look for things we have been studying about in Science. Mrs. Lymans Fourth Grade Reporter: Cassy Oertell Our class is studying about Utah history. We are now learning about the first white settlers ia Utah the Mormons. Twenty in our class got 100 in Spelling last week. We made posters' for National Library week and put them up in Our operetta the hall for was a success. Friday afternoon the fourth, fifth and sixth grades had a matinee dance. We have a new bulletin board of 'birds in spring. In Art we are making a mural of Birdville, U.S.A. Mr. Clawsons Class Reporter: Janie Newell This week the fourth, fifth and sixth grades presented an Operetta called The Golden Whistle. We would particularly like to thank Mr. Ellertson for teaching us all our songs and parts. Friday we had a dance for all who helped present the oper- etta. Janie Newell and Tommy Cow-e- n won the Good Citizenship for this week. On Arithmetic this week we studied how to tell military time and graphs. Mr. Jensens Class Reporter: Kelly Cooper In Arithmetic we are learning about decmial fractions. Thursday night the fourth, fifth and sixth grades put on an operetta Whistle. The Golden called With the fourth, fifth and some of the sixth grade in the chorus. The rest of the sixth grade had main parts in the play. Friday afternoon we had a dance with the fourth, fifth and sixth grades. Rubber Bands 4 3 Ths San Juan Record S By Gladys and The open space on the public square from which the brick school house was recently tom away, is to be made into a park with grass and shade, a most appropriate project. George Peterson was married recently in the Salt Lake Temple to Miss Judy Musser of Murray. His father, Ren Peterson went up to help celebrate the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Palmer of Grants, N. M., were here Sunday as guests of his mother, Mrs. Wilbur Laws. The three Blanding Wards are supporting 24 L.D.S. missionaries in the U.S., Europe, Asia, South America, Australia and New Zealand. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Blickenstaff are in Dallas, Texas, assisting with the booth there that is advertising the resources of the western states. Mrs. Blicken-stafF- s mother, Mrs. Irene Redd, is helping to care for their family and their Motel while they are away. Our roundup of news is like a net cast into the sea, which gathers of fished good and bad, some of it is available for publication, but much of it is for individual sensation only, to affcrd a relieving smile, or a refreshing laugh, or a shock of surprise. Roy Jones, our big Navajo friend, is with us again, having been released from a hospital at Shiprock. Mrs. Ralph (Hazel - Guymon) Hurst, is visiting with Mrs. Af-to- n Grover, who for some time has been quite helpless with rheumatic fever. ' The presidency of the Third Ward Relief Scoiety was reorwith ganized Sunday evening, Mrs. Curtis (Paula Adams) Jones as president, with Lucile Wright and Helen Davis as counselors, and Hester Black as secretary. The former presidency were. Hazel Lyman, Donna Black, Paula Jones and Bernice Helquist. All who have been acquainted with the annual seminary conventions will be interested in the convention to be held in Monticello on the 14th of this month. It is to include the seminary students from Moab, Monticello and Blanding, and is to be an interesting occasion. It is to last all day, with a banquet, ' a testimonial meeting, musical numbers from talented musicians and singers, and a special guest speaker, Ivan J. Barrett from the B.Y.U. in Provo. It is expected that 250 teen-agewill be in attendance, and judging from what these occasions have been in past years, it should be an affair to remember. Mrs. May Powell, mother of Grace Shumway, still lingers on, getting no better, but helplessly waiting, still conscious and 'able to converse as she has strength to speak, but looking eagerly for the end. The devotion of Grace to her mother in this prolonged sickness, is something to challenge the admiration and the sympathy of all who know them. Frank Barton died in California April 7. He and his wife, Hattie Redd Barton had spent most of the winter with their daughter, Roma, in Chicage, and went about three weeks ago to their daughter, Donna Bell in California where after two weeks, Frank was taken to the hospital and succumbed to a heart attack. The body is to be brought here for burial, and the funeral is ap- - 4 34 MONTICELLO, TSM Operated by EDDIE BOYLE 34 3H 3H 3 M 3H The San Juan Record Open 9 to 9 Seven Days A Week GIVE MAMA A BREAK . . . EAT OUT TONIGHT! UTAH Friday, April 15, Page Four 1960 Hems Miv. . ms ...Wherever fee Aral AVALON CAFE Same Friendly Service Consistently Good Food A Cook you all know BIG ED Rainbow Room Open For Meetings and Private Groups , LONGER ENGINE LIFE Diesel and heavy-dut- y gasoline engines get maximum protection with RPM DELO Heavy Duty Lubricating Oil-clings tightly to engine parts, fights friction whether your engine is hot or cold. It Special compounds prevent ring sticking, harmful deposits. ..keep your engine clean. Stretch the time between overhauls on your equipment... use RPM DELO Heavy Duty Lubricating Oil. For any J. Standard Oil product , call R. Phone "BOB" COOPER JU7-259- 5 Monticello, Utah from XJt alls jA I A JBttlu 'ROUND vmtm&rn THE CLOCK Call us in case of an fill We emergency! your tank, or deliver Ray's Northern Gas Phone JU Home Owned Home Operated Markets, water, power, labor force and raw materials all are needed to attract new industries. And Utah has them all in abundance. Particularly important is our storehouse of mineral raw materials, because 60 of Utah's mushrooming manufacturing industry is based on minerals and metals. Sound development of minerals means sound industrial expansion for our state. UTAH MINING ASSOCIATION " from the earth conies an abundant HEMSHMXMWSS4HXS4i3HHKHXIXS4XS4X54XS4MXMXMXMX9XJ4XX4XJ4WXMXHXS4XHX84XHX843;i4X 1 Wonderful Past What brings industrial growth? yj MONTICULOUTAH Wesley and Harold Barton, living in Moab. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon (Allie Lyman) Platt, ere visiting here over the weekend with kindred and friends. They have with them three of their five boys and one little girl, who were able to come on this trip because of the spring vacation from their school i Whittier, Calif., where Gordon is engaged as a teacher, and where he is serving as counselor in the bishopric. They say Whittier is a neat and delightful little Quaker city with about 9,000 people, they are much in love with it, but are delighted to visit San Juan again. rs bottles right away! 3H 3 6) 34 3H 3M 34 34 Albert R. Lyman pointed for Tuesday, April 12. Frank Barton, who was in his latter seventies, has lived his life in San Juan, and taken active and important part in church and civic affairs from the time of his early manhood. He and his wife, Hattie Redd Barton, have made an active and dependable team in many worthwhile projects. Together they filled a mission to the Navajos, and later he served as a government agent with the Navajos in the Navajo Mountain part of the reservation. He was essentially a farmer, a man of and fairly practical know-hosuccessful in all his undertakings. He and his wife spent their childhood and youth in Bluff, lived later at Verdure, and have for many years been substantial residents of Blanding, here she was recognized as a very successful teacher. They have two sons, life for all " 1923: Monument to a Vanished Culture As early as 900 A D., a large Pueblo Indian population prospered in the southeastern valleys of Utah. For hundreds of years the Pueblos developed their architecture, building huge structures thst now he in ruins. A drought which began in 1276 is believed to have brought about the eventual abandonment of the area. The people never returned. Today, the interesting remains of this cliff dwelling civilisation are preserved as Hovenweep National Monument. And today, throughout Utah, the U. S. Brewers Foundation works consta-M- y to sssi rc i.tenance of clean, wholesome BEEk and ALE . .. |