Sometime in the 1930’s, a monkey named Betty escaped from the Lincoln Park Zoo. The Lincoln Park Zoo was a small zoo that was located in Grand Junction’s Lincoln Park in the early and mid-Twentieth century. According to William "Bill" Ela, who grew up to become a Mesa County District Court judge, the animal had escaped two times before. The zookeeper had been able to catch her and return her to her enclosure both times. After her third escape, Betty eluded capture. According to Ela, she took up residence on the other side of 12th Street from Lincoln Park. She resided in the trees and on the roof of prominent water lawyer Silmon Smith, who lived in the 1000 block of Chipeta Avenue. If someone tried to capture her from the trees, she went to the roof. If someone tried to capture her from the roof, she went to the trees. The zookeeper finally gave up. Betty’s escape was publicized in the newspaper. Three friends who lived in the Lincoln Park area, Al Look Jr., Bill Ela, and Robert “Bob” Johnson, decided to try and capture Betty. They set a trap baited with bananas at the foot of the tree. At first, Betty eluded capture by holding open the door to the trap while grabbing the bananas. Then, they built an elongated trap that forced Betty farther into it in order to get to the bananas. They captured her and brought her to the greenhouse of Robert Johnson’s father, Stephen “Steve” Johnson, who owned Johnson’s House of Flowers on nearby North Avenue. They informed the zoo that they had the monkey, but the zoo refused to take her back (this according to Ela). Bob built an enclosure for Betty in the greenhouse that was ten feet square and 6 feet high. There she lived for many years. According to Steve Johnson, the boys later captured another monkey, who had perhaps been owned by a Greek American named Gianna Karis. Karis owned a game farm on 1st Street and Patterson Road, and the elder Johnson believed that Oscar, the monkey, may have escaped from there. In the recollection of Ela, Oscar was a monkey borrowed from the zoo in order to breed with Betty. The monkeys did in fact breed and Bob Johnson raised the infant. Betty and Oscar eventually died of old age, but Johnson had Betty’s baby for many years, until Look, Ela, and Bob Johnson all went to college.