Wow! All of the replies. I used some square unistrut washers to make "fake" low profile edge clamps. The held it ok.
Milled off about .020" to get a cut across the entire face. But Near the end, I discovered that in some areas, every time I passed the cutter over it, it took a hare more metal off. But not every where. So it must have been warping more as I made each pass. And this is all with one locked setting for the depth / vertical. So yes, I have ordered flat stock that has specs for flatness. The project is for my 3D printer - the stock bed is made from what must be just ordinary 1/4" thick aluminum. It's dished at least .020" I have 5 of these that I maintain, between the work owned ones, and mine. Every one has a different warp to the build plate. It causes problems with the first layerd of prints - they don't stay stuck, it matters where you place small parts on the bed, etc. The first 2 [for work] I made new plates out of 3/8" specified plate from McMaster, but it was EXPENSIVE. I just got my own printers, and figured I'd try the mill on the original plate, since it seemed like it could work, and I'm not making $ with them... I also recently got feedback from another 3D printer forum, someone found a source [direct from a metal supply house] for similar speced metal for a fraction of the price, so I decided to give it a try. Those should show up next week.
I still learned stuff trying this, also, trammed the mill, it wasn't off much, but I had most of the 8x8" plate flat with no line between passes that I could feel a step. So that's a good thing too.