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Show THE CITIZEN 18 which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. This action is brought for a Judgment dissolving the contract of matrimony existing between the parties hereto. H. J. FITZGERALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. 425 Atlas Block, Salt Address P. Lake City, Utah. O. .1-10-2- -7 SUMMONS. 32028 In the City Court of Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Harry S. Joseph, Plaintiff, vs. George Collins and Georgia E. Collins, Defendants. Summons. The State of Utah to said Defendants: You are hereby summoned to appear within ten (10) days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise within twenty (20) days after this service, and defend the above entitled action; in case of your failure to do so, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint, of which a copy is herewith annexed and herewith served upon you, and will take judgment against you for the sum of Forty Six and 30100 ($46.30) Dollars, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum since the 9th day of January, DELINQUENT NOTICE NO. 1. The White Star Mining Company. Location of principal place of business, 1378 South 11th East Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account of Assessment No. 1, December 4, 1919, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as follows: No. Name Shares Amt. . together with PIERCE CRITCHLOW RETTE, and defense M. Palnleve makes IN his of errors of fact in the Wythe William narrative, and he is quite effective when he describes how the Nivelle attack failed on the first day, but he neglects to touch upon the "defeatist state of mind which had reached the front lines and palsied the arms of certain French regiments. He admits that the plans of one army were evidently known to the Germans, but the truth is that the Germans knew all the plans of all the French armies. It is manifest that General Nivelle was justified in his resolve not to divulge the plans to a wide circle of officials. Nevertheless they became known in their entirety to the foe. This is an ugly aspect of the mystery and one that M. Painleve does not deal with fully and frankly. He hints, however, that General Nivelle,. while concealing his plans from the premier, imparted them to others. BAR- Plaintiffs Attorneys. P. O. Address, 307 McCornick Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Dated January 9th, 1920. SUMMONS. No. 27951. Alma Trudell, Plaintiff, vs Arthur Trudell, Defendant. Summons. The State of Utah to the said De-- . fend ant: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. This action is brought to obtain a decree of divorce, dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and defendant. CARLSON & CARLSON, SUMMONS. In the Third Judicial District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. F. Anselmo & Company, a corpora- tion, Plaintiff, vs. Nick Vario and Rosie Vario, Defendants. Summons. The State of Utah to the said Defend- 9 ants: You are hereby summoned to appear -7 COMPLETE description of the offensive is not essential to this narrative. It may be sketched briefof ly. Beginning on the morning and April 16 between Sorssons Rheims, it had spent its initial force by that evening and, according to M. Painleve, was called off by Nivelle himself. The former war minister says that the purpose was a "brutal rupture of the German lines which, to be successful, must succeed within twenty-fou- r or forty-eighours. He maintains that the French, contrary to the statement of Wythe Williams, did not break through a single German line. To make clear his point he stresses the difference between a line and a position. A line may be very deep, as were the German lines in this battle, and may comprise many positions. It is true the French, took numerous enemy positions on the first day, but they did not get through anywhere to the second line of enemy defense and were thus remote from the Hindenburg line, which was the third line of defense in that region. A Attorneys for Plaintiff. P. O. Address 310 Kearns Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court, wherein the plaintiff seeks judgment against the defendants on a certain account for goods, wares and merchandise sold in the sum of $599.84 and interes'. JOE V. ROZZELLE, Attorney for Plaintiff. 417 Kearns Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. (Continued from Page 7.) plan was adopted, but without its details having been completely divulged. The session was dramatic. Ribot insisted on the rights of the government to know in detail the plans elaborated by the High Command. Nivelle protested against this claim by demonstrating that it was important to the success of the operations that the detail of the plan be known only by the smallest number of persons possible. Ribot, insisting, the French Generals point of view was very energetically supported by Bonar Law. The latter, addressing Haig, asked him if the two generals were agreed on the plan, and upon the reply of the English general: We are perfectly agreed Bonar Law sudenly ptu an end to all discussion by this declaration: Very well, from the moment that our generals are agreed and desire to keep their plans secret we have but to bow, and we have neither the right to know them nor to ask them for them. ' the plaintiffs costs and disbursements herein. 1920, THE TERROR OF 1917 ht made on December 4, 1919, so many shares of each parcel of stock as may be necessary will be sold on Febur-ar- y 14, 1920, at 4:00 o'clock, P. M., to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. H. S. SCHOFIELD, Secretary White Star Mining Co., 1378 South Eleventh East, Salt Lake City, Utah. The fighting continued fiercely, on the following day and the French advanced. At the left they encircled and captured Fort Cohde and General Mangin persued the enemy, inflicting much damage. ; The offensive, wtih modified objectives, was kept up with energy until April 21 and thereafter with lessening activity until the twenty-nintMeantime Lloyd ' George, enlightened by the British intelligence service in France, went to Paris to protest against the suspension of the offenr sive. v Painleve insists that the offensive, having failed to effect the sudden rupture of the German line on the first and second day, was ipso facto a failure and was stopped by the com- -' manding general. i , h. ' . WILLIAMS, in his story, a state of affairs in France which M. Painleve says did not exist. For example, the narrative speaks of the panic accounts of the battle in the Paris newspapers, but Painleve ( counters triumphantly by citing the papers themselves as' evidence that the accounts of the battle were all couched in triumphant language. This, he says, was by his express orders. Moreover, according to Mr. Williams, the Germans, who had been in a panic themselves, were reassured when they received these journals. Patently this is a misrepresentation, for there was nothing in the papers that could give the enemy any other opinion than that the French' believed their armies victorious. WYTHE . , SUFFICIENT has been told to show Nivelle did not have a chance of victory. Even had. all of his troops been in an ecstacy of confidence and courage as most of them were despite defeatist propaganda he could not have overcome the military obstacles. And naturally enough M. Painleve seizes upon this obvious truth and exploits it in his own defense. He clinches his' argument by quoting General Foch to the effect that the offensive of April,-1917- , convinced that great military authority that the allies could never undertake an offensive with secure hopes of triumph until they had at least 1,000,000 Americans in the field to aid them. There is no doubt that Foch was right. At all events the victory was not attained until the Americans arrived in the numbers Foch counted on. Then he took up the plan which had proved abortive in 1917 and developed it to complete victory. : REFUSED TO TIP. An American visiting London, aiid goaded to desperation by the inces- - sant necessity for tips, finally entered the lavatory of his hotel, only to be faced with a large notice which read: "Please tip the basin after using. "No! said the Yankee, turning on his heel. "Ill go dirty first. -- j |