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Show 1 MA VOA DUKE by Ande on & teeming ilt--- k r'k ( t6 ),.., A A ,AtLi A , ..... I ' By - WEEKLY 01' WE 11, WOW urte one, 16WW(11 4, t.. ACK ANGUS BEEF CO 141 Ntie 131'1 cod Au fsf , 1' i. Fr, & TENDER Trturs. - Closes Wad., Sat St cg so. Ac S4m. PSONE STATE BRING t Yield I 3617 1 ,CRAIN 2 ZEEF SALVES ) 66e rb . SOCIAL SECURITY 1 'ors- PRIMAL SECTION USDA Choice Hind Iltrs. 1 USA Fancy Good Halves ' ' ! Pilis""""' MEMMNME,,NO,ONIMONdl.OMINIMINOW4 40100. pwel- "" - , 4 - FORDNO , , 't , AVI FWSHOP AT ! E5c lb. 86c lb. Section !Round Section 1.02 lb. 'Rib Section 63c lb. ;Loin Section lean Ground Beet I e lb, Choice 1 ,I FED LOCKER BEEF USDA 3 N.....0, vo'.,a1 2- t Chuck , ,, 5, K 11; 205cl - A001 !Nav, Lpoice - GRAIN FED BABY , 7 't Porth and USDA 74 INtPEZIED p.m. Tut& p m. 1 ARRANGED) AGES 18.50 PLASMA FRACTIONS INC. -- 363-546- 2 TERMS WhOefott Yi-s- ;44O 4 Phone S GIS 1 04G 1.m.-- 7 (rear) I I 42 South State . DELICIOUS C'T 4 ...44, ek nat: 2 Times a ' b$'44,. qV 414 41 kti ' A VIOMEN Lltil ....,,...... ..f4114 ROM OGOZN SALT LAKE -- -, ,;k24t7A4F1,A! "It sayt OUCH!" Inflation figures St r Bums, :ord .1,0.enmomewr,P.,t0. 6 1 Butz said. In related developments: Russian grain sales. Ford Motor Co. vice lic said the forces behind president William Benton iiigher grain prices are said Sunday 15.000 unempistoppable," but only at a loyed company workers tfeavy future cost. "I don't would be back on the job by Wok . we ought to ir.fringe on the end of the year. He said our foreign economic policy 8,000 laid-of- f workers bad ly tring to manipulate the been rehired in the past 30 pLrice of farm products," days. Burns, said Ford Motor also an.The increase in the nounced that car sales during , Imre of wheat, in corn, in were slightly soYbeans I deplore. But above a year ago. Industry ttere's some things in life analysts estimate that car liat we just have to accept." sales for the entire domestic would Butz, in a speech at a industry in levels by about trail year-ag- o Ihilite House agriculture cond ference in Milwaukee, said: 9 percent as We sold the Russians very car buying continued slow tttle,grain last year, yet despite pending price increases. rbetall, food prices rose 14.5 And more than 80 iercent. United Auto Workers utrcant o! that rise came president Leonard Woodcock tcom: costs added after the said economic recovery will raw product left the farmer's falter until the government ate." cuts taxes and spends more The main factor in higher money. He told delegates at ttod prices has been higher. an economy symposium in tsts for labor, traneporta- Los Angeles Saturday the recession ended because of eon, :fuel, packing, machinthe emergency tax cut earlier ry and other farm, procesling and distribution costs, this year. Cbu tinued from A-- 1 : . . , ' mid-Augu- st : mid-Augu- st model-yenr-en- F., .4; ' 1 k&;4:' , 7; t Jsisaells, Egyptians tart writing accord ' Continued from I ficulties," Kissinger said, sitting on a lawn chair outside Kissinger, who spent the A-- afternoon with Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmi while and his aides worked Sadat ladat's Maamoura rest on the new agreement, arlouse. rived at Mamoura at 6:30 "I don't find, up till now, p.m. (9;30 a.m. MDT) for his ;any unexpected difficultes, last talks with the President lind I'm satisfied with the before setting out again for 4a11;s we've had here today," Israel. 3Cissinger said. "We will Kissinger said he would 7nove as fast as we can," the come back to Alexandria 'Secretary said Tuesday afternoon "or at the : Diplomats said Sunday that latest Wednesday morning." major breakthrough came Despite the "speed up" prowhen Egypt agreed to let cess of moving between Alexlsrael man its major early andria and Jerusalem, Ki:warning spy post at Umm ssinger said he would ,:Klashiba on the western "definitely" travel to Saudi mnuntain Arabia and Jordan Wore OD lopes of the Cidi 1)asS. They called it a key returning to New York at the end of the month. concession. El ,ir , :, ' - r 't- 4 ., AY' Oi , V ,t .., ' MUM WAN s, , 4..4, ;UMMER CLEARANCE .7!(1,illirtnTA-At,.,7w-:I. ,t, 4 c, Extra-fir- m 14. , ,,,,t. , :'' 20 ...,., - - ,' ,''';',-."..:,., ",. Quilted Mattress and fetakbing lax Springs - .. , :,, always low prices.' , tl, , - .. ,.4., .tp:74-Fcl- lw,, i''''W. ,,,, , ' v igt. i ,,,,,, - , );''' ' ' '''''.4 , , ,i tio4cibar fi- ,,I.,. - -' 'V ,:e,- ,.i, Keg. 423.90 QUEEN - Reg. 330.00 ,?. . . hi , ?.: , stlyn90 Sole Prici 7 .,.,. 4 FULL SIZE r ,j. ;;:,,,,,:ei..., ::i :, ...:iii Res. $230.00, , 11 t, 1 ( z ,,, ,' . ;; - tit : i,!"' ,I ill i ;,,-- ,i,t A ' -,,- :TWIN hag. . , 01 QUEZN itg Sokl 240.90 $ i 9090 OTHER PAATTILISSiS AND FOUNDATIONS FROM: 5990 KNO $159.90 QUEEN... ..... $129.90 FULL 219.90 Ite."9- - $1 1 TwiN Itoo. - s1 199.90i, 7993 i ,, , -- C090 AJ7 Seta 4. Sale Price $1 00ARAINMEE 339-9- , Rea. $223.00 . TWIN lcto 0 sun-ende- , century of Commercial Security for Utah residents. 1875-1975...- A ...... 0,,set .S4 -- ozwzo' A rmimollitallinbiglIMPRIMMIENOWINPOINIINIMMOSMUM,ewPalcataltat.F0WORIOMMETHNONSB ' inhabitant forced to "dance to the tune of a The two Utes were brought to trial and Posey's band was in attendance when the verdict was announcedguilty! In the ensuing transfer from courthouse to jail, one of the accused grabbed the sheriff 's gun and fired into his stomach. The gun miraculously misfired, and the confusion it created allowed an unchallenged getaway for Posey and his convicted comrades. The sheriff and several tovmsmen gave chase in a car(Yes. a car!). But pursuit ended when the Indians left the road. A sizeable posse was soon deputized to follow the Indians into the hills, and fighting continued for a day and a half, both sides giving and taking ground in the craggy terrain near Natural Bridge Monument. Posey kept his pursuers undercover almost singlehandedly with the use of the only high powered nfle on either side. but eventually the white man's numbers won out. They surrounded the Iles, broke them up into small leaderless groups arid forced. Chief Posy wasn't so lucky.' Wounded by one of the sheriffs men in a 'small skirmish away from the main battle, he escaped only to die from gangrene WI a desolate gulley. His body was found eight days later and buried quietly, without $79.93 FULL 1 In 1923. a Ute Indian named Posey, with the aid of numerous local renegades. turned San Juan County into a battleground. It was America's last Indian war and it was no sudden thing. In the mid 180if5, the arrival of early Mormon settlers in the Great Basin area began a slow but irreversible infringement upon the lifestyle- of the Ute Indians, driving them eventually into the less populated areas of southern Utah. At the turn of the century, the Indians were assigned to reser,;ations as a cure-al- l for the situation. but it didn't work. They complamed the land they were given was too Poor to raise even good h6rses, much less farm. The most vocal of these displaced Utes was an Indian named "Posey". A veteran of countless clashes with whites and Navajos (bitter enemies of the litcsl, he always came through without a scrape sayin g. "me all same Jes'Christ. White mans bullets no can hit." His band of folloWets swelled with discontehted Utes during the eally years of the century, and by 1923 the stage was set for America's last battle between Indians and settlers...often referred to as "Posey's War." In the fall of 1922, two members of Posey's band held up a sheep camp, its lone - ; (,--, FIRM 000.T10 toutrmiss Atitt MATCH040 SOXSPRINOS ' ;, America's Last Indian War Takes Place in Southern Utah and Commercial Security Bank is 48 Years Old. I .,.. , KING s , '''1' t; ,, - ,- ;',:' ft ' ' 1 I Sale P n. ce $31990. ,1127:1 2 A. KING : , - YEAR GUARANTEE - .:0, , ,:!44est t- - from our factory to you ',;' ;,gi:i.441iii,UWt,,,.:., ! , ATTRESS SALE F,T, trl Z;:;?,, in Utah &trice 1935 TOrMS of Arranged or Alt &mit Canis Atatoted ' Overman Mattress Co. IA re Setter UYX :t ;tti kit kWh-asse- OPEN l ,. Are Mode s S'UT trtt; 1"-L11 2764 S. ' 4 CITY Ves ik o 8 in a serizz;''f'Jt 10 hisiorica advertisements. ' ,1 Momt:1,:g PIA( Al r, A ;ar.,;o4. , |