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Show THE CITIZEN 18 DELINQUENT NOTICE. Woudlnwn Copper Mining Company. Principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessment levied on the 25th the several amounts day of June, 1920,names of the respecset opposite the tive shareholders, as follows: 1477 466 1451 J. . Empy R. J. Evans It. J. Evans 266 227 257 1,343 1,343 1,343 1,343 1,343 1,343 1,343 430 100 500 470 240 G. T. Geoghegan K. B. Geoghegan R. F. Geoghegan 1317 J. C. Geoghegan 1318 L. P. Geoghegan 1314 1315 1316 1319 G. W. 1320 E. J. 1367 G. O. 1779 1440 1452 1453 550 304 130 Geoghegan Geoghegan Goodwin II. C. Graham H. H. Hall F. A. Harmon W. W. H. W. L. Harwood M. Havenor 42 N. Holland C. Holmes 1373 D. A. Homan 50 500 363 363 208 268 42 A. Homan .1376 1377 A. Homan Y. Howell1 538 K. Howell 1972 1470 M. Howell M. Howell R. Irvine 686 1991 54 1,000 100 100 510 101 500 12 500 500 500 500 40 W. James 797 Jensen 496 E. Johnson Jorgensen Kuster Lees 502 477 362 1869 1264 1265 1713 1720 37 61 86 864 198 J. Lowe J. Lowe D. Lowe D. Lowe W. McDonald 10 G A. Marrott 21 44 478 212 500 258 W. H. Marrott R. T. Morgan 971 W. Murray 1476 M. D. Olson 1981 L. A. Prater 1639 207 1472 2046 1330 2124 1923 769 437 1841 Pauli H. Pauli H. Pauli Pingree, Jr. Stanchfleld Stradlirg Stradling ..... Swanson E. Tapp H. Tempest W. Toole Tinges Will cox 725 305 2002 1378 1954 1795 City, Utah. DELINQUENT NOTICE. Howeli Mining Company, a Utah corporation. Principal place of business, 209 Felt Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. There are delinquent on the following described stock, on account of assessment No. 9, levied on the 7th day of July, 1920, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective stockholders, as follows: Cert. Name No. Shares Amt. 1448 D. Allen 1783 R. A. Padger 2128 R. A. Badger 94 1363 2066 2067 920 1885 1813 1815 1960 126 500 1,000 E. C. Bagley E. C. Bagley R. V. Barta 35 704 415 R. V. Barta R. L. Batchelor IL Blackborn 416' 200 1,000 102 500 1,000 222 269 F. Bonn W. J. Burton Carlson M. 115 M. Cardan J. Chamberlain J. Chamberlain W. IT. Child 141 W. IT. Chid 506 2001 1463 30 20 500 2010 W. II. Child 2023 D. Clark 1844 C. A. Conk 1437 A. Coffey 83 310 317 430 500 440 500 500 500 1.000 500 500 640 155 p. R. Coin 836 IT. B. Cde 1177 II. B. Cole 1765 IT. B. Cole 2059 II. B. Cde & Co 2099 IT. B. Cole & Co 2111 IT. B. Cole Co 2005 II. W. Cram 955 TI. J. Davis 1474 E. C. Davies .1018 Dern & Thomas 872 B. W. Dixon 1040 B. W. Dixon 1045 B. W. Dixon 1113 B. W. Dixon 1170 B. W. Dixon 1394 B. W. Dixon 1450 P. W. Dixon 1576 B. W. Dixon . 156 B. W. Dixon . 1853 B. W. Dixon E. A. Dority Dority Dixon 169 m. .J. T?oran 1998. M. I. Doran 4 47 537 E. A. 2073 B. W. 91 ..... 268 264 500 500 500 500 500 458 500 233 1,000 17 33 3,051 407 93 $ 1.26 5.00 10.00 .35 7.04 4.15 4.16 2.00 10.00 1.02 5.00 10.00 2.22 2.69 .30 .20 5.00 .83 3.10 3.17 4.30 5.00 4.40 5.00 5.00 5.00 10.00 5.00 5.00 6.40 .91 2.68 2.64 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 4.58 5.00 2.33 10.00 .17 .33 30.51 4.07 .93 . B. Quinn M. Reese J. Rees V. Santschi W. A. Rhodes H. Simon 1349 524 And in accordance with law and the order of the board of directors, made June 25, 1920, so many shares of each parcel of stock as may be necessary will be sold at the office of the company, room 401 Newhouse Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 28th daj of August, 1920, at twelve oclock noon, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon. together with the cost of advertisand the expense of sale. ing GEO. N. LAWRENCE, Secretary. 401 Newhouse Building, Salt Lake 11 15 6,081 363 1,740 117 300 432 500 124 48 25 745 1.000 117 71 500 540 500 66 R. Woolley 1306 82 15 500 500 356 1.000 2135 1772 2051 1938 2.66 2.27 2.57 18.43 13.43 13.43 13.43 13.43 13.43 13.43 4.30 1.00 5.00 4.70 2.40 .42 1.98 .50 5.00 3.63 3.63 2.08 2.68 .42 .54 10.00 1.00 1.00 5.10 1.01 5.00 .12 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 .40 .10 .21 .44 4.78 2.12 5.00 2.58 .11 .15 60.81 3.63 17.40 1.17 3.00 4.32 5.00 1.24 .48 .25 7.45 10.00 .71 5.00 5.40 5.00 .66 .15 5.00 5.00 3.56 10.00 And In accordance with the law and an made on order of the board of directors, shares the 7th day of JuVy. 1920, so many be as stock may of such of each parcel 209 Felt Buildat sold be will necessary ing, Salt Lake City, Utah, on the a.28th m. dav of August, 120, at ten oclock assessment thereon, to pav the delinquent together with the costs of advertising and expense of sale. J. II. DEMING. Secretary. DELINQUENT NOTICE. Silver 31 non 3llnlng Company. Location of principal office, 307 Dooly Block. Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice is hereby given that there is upon the following described delinquentaccount of an assessment of stock on $2.00 per thousand shares, levied June 15, 1920, the amount set opposite the respective names of the stockholders, as follows: Cert. Shares Amt. No Name 180 Mrs. Minnie Ames 189 A. F. 151 Frank Angell F. Billings 115 E. J. Brady 120 Robt. W. Burt 202 Jas. Cairo Jno. Duke Levi Dunham Alice M. Hartman Clarence Hill Jos. J. Holland 197 Jos. E. Jenkins 70 121 148 73 63 92 Andrew Johnson I Prohow 204 Edw. 22 90 93 58 11 R. II. R. C. F. M. Tsaac McLoren McLaren .... 100 500 100 2,000 1.000 3,000 400 1,000 500 500 1,000 8,060 4,250 1,000 ....2,000 1.620 $0.20 1.00 .20 4.00 2.00 6.00 .80 2.00 1.00 1.00 2.00 6.12 8.50 2.00 4.00 3.24 8.50 10.00 4.00 8.00 2.00 .40 4,250 Peterson 5.000 Sparey 2,000 Jno Sereu 4,000 113 J. IT. Stoner 192 Phillip Tadje 1,000 200 199 Jesse Whytock And In accordance with law and an order of the board of directors, made on the 15th day of June. 1920, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at Room 307, Dooly Block. Salt Lake City, Utah, on August 6. 1920, at one o'clock p. m. to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of adof sale. vertising and expense EDITH G. CROME, Secretary. By order of the board of directors, the date when delinquent stock shall be sold, is hereby extended from August 6th, 1920. at one oclock p. m., to at one oclock p .m. August 16th. 1920, EDTTTI G. CROME, Secretary. 307 Dooly Block, Salt Lake City, Utah. THE SILENT COMMISSIONERS (Continued from page 14) as the rural reporter would say, he left hastily for Yellowstone , on his vacation. None of the commissioners has so much as squeaked of holdt an investigation to probe Mr. Bocks management of the public safn department. Under his regime the city was wide open, as it still; Gambling, bootlegging, vice and crime were rampant. The vice rij paid thousands of dollars a month for protection. The $10,000 Bnf stole from the city was as nothing to the amount of money paid protection. In the police department are grafters who were able j buy homes and automobiles with the money they collected from t vice ring. But not a move has been made by the commissioners to uncotf I the corruption. One of their number made a move of that kind a few weeks and Bocks thefts were laid bare, but the revelations did not stf there. That is why there is to be no further investigation unless citizens of Salt Lake unite for the protection of their city from gas biers, booleggers, bunko men ; aye, and even protected burglars automobile thieves. With the state in partnership with the booze trust and the cc in partnership with the vice ring, Salt Lake is allowing an intolerah: traffic in human souls. Men are made drunkards by alcoholic c(W tions virtually supplied by the state, and citizens are robbed of tht money by gamblers, bootleggers, bunko men and thieves who hr been paying public officials for protection. I I ti; i THE AMRITSAR WHITEWASH General Dyer, who ordered his men to fire on a crowded mer. ing of natives in a park at Amritsar, India, declined to be made, scapegoat and it became necessary for the British government ; whitewash him. A committee composed of English and natives recently filed the report. The natives denounced the massacre, but the English declare that the firing was justified. The circumstances of the slaughter reveal the monstrosity of sue a verdict. Thousands of unarmed men, women and children were crowde into the square. General Dyer ordered his men to surround the squa; and open fire. The' firing continued until 500 had been slain and 1,3 wounded. Dyer then marched his troops away and refused to succt the wounded. The majority report, after declaring that the firing was j u stificc adds that the troops continued to fire too long. .,How long is too long to fire on unarmed men, women and chi f ; w dren? It is now charged by the Indian people that the meeting ua called by an agent provocateur of the British government. It ut convoked in the name of Indian patriot who has testifies that he did not know of the meeting until after the slaughter. It h been ascertained that the call was sent out by one who hail beer employed by the British government and that this one made a ."peed telling the crowd that there was no danger and asking them to rein in the park. This enabled Dyer to reach Amritsar, surround the pad and order the massacre. Great Britain is paying for the crime. India is flaming wii revolt ; 80,000 troops are in Ireland ; the British forces are being lrivc back in Mesopotamia. In a word, Great Britain is unable to l'liistc an army to fight the Bolshevik power which threatens to destn y htf an-emine- The Democrats say that Cox is a great campaigner. Af'ertto election those great campaigners, Bryan and Cox, will be able t sympathize with each other. - The Democrats think the Solid South is as solid as solid iv'-ry- . |