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Show THE CITIZEN 18 2200 21 Helen P Look 6000 20 August Meier 23 August Meier, Bal. .. 275 10 W. D. Mathis, Bal. . . 6824 33 Mrs. V. A. Stickney. . 1000 34 Mrs. V. A. Stickney ..1000 35 Mrs. V. A. Stickney. . 1000 36 Mrs. V. A Stickney 480 Bal .10000 11 W. E. Weidner 12 Mrs Carrie E. Weidner 4000 ..... 5000 Walter Jensen 56 Martin Martinson, Bal. 528 2500 W. L. Nelson Oswald Wolf, Bal. . . . 1708 . H. Bartholomew . . . 5000 69 79 80 90 G. C. 92 102 103 108 113 117 Lindsay John Veick John Veick John Veick John Veick John VeiQk 126 John Veick 143 John Veick 109 Josephine HInchman 114 Otto Carlson, Bal. 120 August Nystrom 121 Victor Olong 125 Harry Flink . ... 2000 3000 3000 3000 2000 3000 5000 1000 .1000 1833 1000 2000 5500 11.00 30.00 1.38 34.12 5.00 5.00 5.00 2.40 50.00 20.00 25.00 2.64 12.50 8.54 25.00 10.00 15.00 15.00 15.00 10.00 15.00 25.00 5.00 5.00 9.17 5.00 10.00 27.50 And in accordance with law and an order of the Board of Directors, made on September 13th, 1919, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at the office of the Company, at Suite 411 Felt Building, No. 341 South Main street. Salt Lake City, Utah, on Tuesday, November 11, 1919, at the hour of 12 oclock noon, to pay the delin- quent assessment thereon, together with the costs of advertising and expenses of sale. N. A. ROBERTSON. Secretary. Office, Suite No. 411 Felt Bldg., No. 341 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, tUah. Owing to the proclamation of the Acting Governor of Utah, setting aside Nov. 11th, as a holiday, it nas been ordered by the Board of Directors that the sale date mentioned in the foregoing notice be postponed until November 12, 1919, at the same hour and place. N. A. ROBERTSON, Secretary. . poration, 22 East Second South Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. Any stock on which the assessment may remain unpaid at the close of business on Monday, November 17th, A. D. 1919, shall be delinquent and will be advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before will be sold on Saturday, December 13th, A. D. 1919, to pay the. delinquent assessment, together with the cost of advertising and the ex- pense of sale. -8 ' J. E. OGLESBY, Secretary. ASSESSMENT NO. 3. The . United Promontory Mining Company, principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. Location of mines, Promontory Point, Utah. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the board of directors of the United Promontory Mining Company, held on the 4th day of October, of assessment No. 3 of one cent per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation, is sued and outstanding, payable immediately to the treasurer at the office of the company, 420 Continental Bank building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Any stock upon which this assessment may remain unpaid on Saturday, 1919, one-fift-h -- the 15th day of November, 1919, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless paid before, will be sold on Thursday, the 18th day of December, 1919, at 2 oclock p. m., at the companys office, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the costs of advertising and expense of sale. 8 D. H. WENGER, Secy. 10-18-1- 1- -8 The North Blue Rock Mining company, a corporation. Principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. There are delinquent on the following described stock on account of assessment levied on the 12th day of September, 1919, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as follows: No. NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT. Eureka Lilly Mining Company. DELINQUENT NOTICE. Lo- cation of principal office, 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Location of mine, Tintic Mining District, Utah County, Utah. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the board of directors held October 23rd, 1919, an assessment to be known as assessment No. 11, of one (lc) cent per share, was levied on the outstanding capital stock of the corporation, payable immediately to Gideon Snyder, Secretary, 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Any stock upon which this assessment remains unpaid on November 25th, 1919, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, so much of each parcel of stock as shall be necessary will be sold on December 23rd, 1919, at 4:00 oclock P. M., at the Companys office, 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with the cost of advertising and expense of No. Shares Amt. Name Certif. 10 Theodore Erickson 1,250 $ 1.25 And in accordance with, law and the order of the board of directors made September 12, 1919, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may., be necessary will be sold at 3 p. m. at the office of the company, room 812 Newhouse building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 14th day of November, 1919, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. THOMAS CARMICHAEL, -8 Secretary. DELINQUENT NOTICE. The North Iron Blossom Mining company, a corporation. Principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. There are delinquent on the following described stock on account of assessment levied on the 12th day of September, 1919, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as follows: ggjg' Utah. ASSESSMENT NO. 4. one-thir- d (Continued from Page 7.) tyranny, but it is obvious that radical leadership is just now dominating the councils and dictating the policies of labor organization which can institute nationwide strikes and direct paralyzing blows at prosperity and the very government itself. The true course of liberty lies between these two despotisms. If we would preserve our political heritage we must succumb to the blandishments and the threats of neither the one nor the other. We must remember that men have certain inalienable rights and that among these are the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Despotisms of whatever kind invariably imperil life and liberty and limit the pursuit of happiness to the ruling class or power. There is no peace with despotism. As long as despotisms exist there will be war. Peace comes with liberty and justice; not liberty and justice for the few, but for the many; not liberty and justice for superior races or conquering classes, but liberty and justice for mankind. But remember this there can be no liberty and no justice without law. If we are to preserve in this land those rights and securities we inherited from our forefathers this must be a nation of law and order. BACK of the coal strike is the purpose of Bolshevism. And in accordance with law and the order of the board of directors made September 12, 1919, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at 3 p. m. at the office of the company, room 812 Newhouse building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 14th day of November, 1919, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with. the cost of advertising and expense of sale. THOMAS CARMICHAEL, 10-25-11- -8 Secretary. It is the same purpose that dominates the minds and hearts of those who have established Red rule in Russia. It will lead to the same excesses if the American people fail to stamp it out. It is fortunate for the United States that the principles of Bolshevism, as soon as they are proclaimed, are seen to be in conflict with the principles on which our government was founded. Our forefathers gave this republic to the people as a whole so that there might be a government of the people, by the people and for the people. The plan of the fathers is as clear as language can make it. It provides for a government by all the people and not by a class. Bolshevism declares that only the workers shall rule, but that appealing declaration disguises the real purpose which is that only those among the workers who believe in the rule of the strong shall govern. Once again the doctrine of government by brute force is preached and it is not preached by czars and kaisers, but by workingmen. conservative worker finds him- cast aside by the whirling current of radicalism. Although the conservatives are probably in the majority they are amazed to see how powerless they are. The radicals are the violent spirits who are determined, first of all to rule the workers, and then to rule the nation. They are following the program of the Russian Reds. In Russia the radicals, a minority, seized control of the government and have succeeded in maintaining' their power by intimidation, coercion, unity of action and all possible forms THE GIDEON SNYDER, Secretary. 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City. Emerald Mining Company. Principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. .Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the board of directors of the Emerald Mining Company, held on the 15th day of October, A. D. 1919, an assessment of (13) of a cent per share, was levied upon the outstanding capital stock of the corporation, payable immediately to the secretary, at the office of the cor TWO TYRANNIES of violence. Bold in the consciousness of their might they have not hesitated to aim destructive blows at the life of the family as well as at the life of the government There; is to be anarch? in the social as well as the political order. In some' of the provinces of Russia free love has been enacted into law. In both our steel and coal strikes the hand of the Bolshevist is seen. If these were like the strikes that occurred before the war not so much alarm would be felt hut the whole country is aroused because it is recognized that the spirit which guides these strikes is not one of constructive unionism but of destructive Bolshevism. Step by step the workers are being led into the abyss. Easy is the descent into Averaus, but difficult the way out United States by those who sympathize with the purposes of European revolutions we have entered upon a long struggle in which the stake on one side will be the preservation of the republic and the prize on. the other will be the rule of the people by a single class. If the American people will not be ruled by predatory wealth, neither will they be ruled by a predaof the IFarethetoworkers be controlled tory proletariat If we are to escape Bolshevism we must see to it that our government does not favor one class as against the mass of the people. There is danger in reaction as there is danger in radicalism. We should be willing to accept whatsoever is good among the ideas of advanced thinkers, but we must be resolute to reject whatever threatens just authority in government, whatever threatens family life, whatever enthrones human passions and violence. We did not defeat the kaiser to submit to a despotism worse than anything, czar or kaiser, ever dreamed of in his maddest moments. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Earl Rice and baby arrived Wednesday from New York, and are guests of Mrs. Rices parents,' Dr. and Mrs. A. N. Hanson, 1385 Yaie avenue. Mrs. Cornelia Sabin has returned from New York and Philadelphia; and is again at home with her sister, Mrs. George L. Bryam, at Fort Douglas. Mrs. James Bernard McEnany has returned from a visit to her brother, L. Neil Rudy, in New York, and is at home for the witner at the Hotel Utah. Mrs. Robert W. Hall has left for Denver, where she will meet Dr. Hall, who has been in the east and New Orleans. Dr. and Mrs. Hall will return to Salt Lake in a few days, after visiting relatives in Denver. Mrs. J. Frank Judge has arrived from San Francisco to visit her ter, Mrs. Frederick Cowans. sis- W. J. Halloran and daughter, Mrs. Lewis William Sowles, and Miss Florence Halloran, have gone to New York for a months stay. |