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Show THE CITIZEN 16 OBSERVATION PLANE (CoCntlnued from Page 8.) speak of only to deride and denounce capital. have replaced the man. Capital has purchased labor-savinrapid-tirproduction machines 'which have made up for the decreasing rural Dollars g, e population. When the worker enthusiastically plans to take control of industry he leaves out of consideration the prin cipal industry. In a sense he is a middleman. His labor simply helps to get a usable article into the hands of the consumer in a different form. And because the laborer has neglected the farm the farmer has supplied the want with capital-despisecapital, represented by sowers and reapers, hay loaders, seed planters and tractors. These changes in the structure of society have a direct bearing on the high cost of living. The farmer has done his best with what labor he has been able to obtain and by using all the farm machinery he can buy to dearth of make up the world-wid- e grain, cotton and wool that is to say of food and clothing. That he has not wholly succeeded is not amazing when we consider the destructiveness of war and the trend of farm labor toward the towns. If the farmers are to succeed in feeding and clothing productive and unproductive labor in the towns they must have labor and capital in proper proportions. Labor and capital must work together. It is all very well for radicals to exalt labor the wild-eyeas the only means of production and to minimize the role of capital, but the farmer knows better. He knows as well as anyone that labor and capital must work together harmoniously and that no solution of our industrial d t dAlenes, stated that in his opinion the world would bo combed for mining properties and the production of metals will be stimulated in every possible manner. Gold has practically gone out of circulation ,and silver now is about as precious a metal as is gold, from a monetary standpoint, because of the double standard. It is a question if there is enough gold and silver combined to go around. It is claimed that there is less real metal in this country today, in proportion to the outstanding obligations, than there was in George Washingtons' time after the revolutionary war, and then there was practically none. Mining men predict as a result, the coming of a period of mining expansion based upon the world-widsearch, probably in many cases financed by governments, for properties which will produce precious metals. t The mines of the west will feel the impetus when the combing process for mines begins and eastern capital, which is already looking to the west for investment, starts flowing this e way. TANK. The tanks a kind of cross between An agricultural machine fierce and pliocene; And something Over embankments, trees, and walls, Trenches, barbed wire, and forts it crawls; Nothing can stay its course the tank Has not the least respect for rank Cr file, with equal joy it squashes and All things alike men, beasts, Bodies. From The Laughing Willow. union. HAVE FAITH IN FUTURE. Mining men are not discouraged by the unfavorable conditions of the past several months. They are looking for a great expansion soon of the mining industry of the United States. Mine owners of the northwest are confidently expecting a revival of the mining industry on a big scale. They are basing their conclusions on reports brought by several operators who have recently returned from New York and who have been in touch with some of the leading metal men of the nation. One prominent operator who has expended upward of a million dollars in developing properties in the Coeur . 30th, A. D. 1919. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Sophia Cleveland Jileson, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 409 Vermont building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 27th day of October, A. D. 1919. FREDERICK I. WILLIAMS, Administrator of the Estate of Sophia Cleveland Jileson, Deceased. YOUNG & YOUNG, Attorneys for Administrator. Date of first publication August 23, A. D. 1919. 8-- 23 9-1- NOTICE. In the District Court, Probate Division, in and for Salt Lake County, State of Utah. In the matter of the estate of Edward S. Jennings, deceased. Notice. The petition of Mark Reedall, administrator of the estate of Edward S. Jennings, deceased, praying for the settlement of final account of said administrator and for the distribution of the residue of the estate, to the persons entitled and discharge of administrator, has been set for hearing on Friday, the 26th day of Septem-bpr- , A. D. 1919, at 2 oclock p. m., at the county court house in the court room of said court in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake county, Utah. Witness the - clerk of said court, with the seal thereof affixed this 4th day of September, 1919. J. E. CLARK, PIptIt By M. M. SNELL, (Seal) WM. M. McCREA, PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES. Consult County Clerk or the Signers for Further Information. Deputy Clerk. Attorney for Petitioner. In the District Court, Probate Division, in and for Salt Lake County, State of Utah. In the matter of the estate of John H. Behan, deceased. Notice. The petition of H. M. Chamberlain praying for the issuance to himself in the of letters of administration estate of John H. Behan, deceased, has been set for hearing on Friday, the 26th day of September, A. D. 1919, at 2 oclock p. m. at the county court house, in the court room of said court in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake county, Utah. Witness the clerk of said court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 3rd day of September, A. D. 1919. J. E. CLARK, By Estate of Elizabeth E. Keiser, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned- - at 400 Boyd Park Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 20th day of October, A. D. 1919. BRIGHAM CLEGG, NOTICE. Clerk. M. M. SNELL, Deputy Clerk. (Seal) T- - ELLIS BROWNE, Attorney for Petitioner. mTO RS. NOT 1C . etcTcre Estates of Simon Davis and Ade- laide Davis, formerly Adelaide Doane, deceased. Creditors will present claims with Attorney for Estate of Elizabeth E. Keiser, deceased. Date of first publication, Aug. 16, A. D. 1919. NOTICE. In the District Court, Probate Division, in and for Salt Lake County, State of Utah. In the matter of the estate of F. P. Mogenson, deceased. Notice. The petition of James Fennemore, executor of the last will and testament of F. P. Mogenson, deceased, praying for the settlement of first and final account of said executor and for the distribution of the residue of the estate, to the persons entitled, has been set for hearing on Friday, the 19th day of September, A. D. 1919, at two oclock p. m., at the county court house in the court room of said court in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Witness the clerk of said court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 26th day of August, 1919. J. E. CLARK, Clerk. (Seal.) By M. M. SNELL, Deputy Clerk. E. V. HIGGINS, NOTICE. In the District Court, Probate Division, in and for Salt Lake County, Utah. In the matter of the estate of Elizabeth Naisbitt, deceased. Notice. The petition of Wm. H. Naisbitt praying for the admission to probate of a certain document, purporting to be the last will and testament of Elizabeth Naisbitt, deceased, and for the granting of letters testamentary to Wm. H. Naisbitt, has been set for hearing on Friday, the 26th day of September, A. D. 1919, at 2 oclock p. m., at the county court house in the court room of said court, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake county, Utah. Witness the clerk of said court, with the seal thereof affixed this 3rd day of September, 1919. J. E. CLARK, Plprlr By M. M. SNELL, Deputy Clerk. (Seal) A. R. BARNES, Attorney for Petitioner. PRIVATE SALE. 3 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. d problems is worth a red apple that does not look to the symmetrical operation of capital and labor in close vouchers to the undersigned at his office, 303 Continental Bank building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 3rd day of November, A. D. 1919. T. ELLIS BROWNE, Administrator with the wills annexed of the joint estates of Simon Davis and Adelaide Davis, . formerly Adelaide Doane, deceased. T. ELLIS BROWNE, Attorney for Administrator, Date of first publication, August Attorney for Petitioner. Estate of Fred Pape, Deceased. The undersigned will sell at private sale the real estate situate in Salt Lake county, State of Utah, described as: f An undivided interest in lots 8 and 9, block 1 A, Oakley, a subdivision of part of block 78, plat C, Salt Lake City survey. All of lots 6 and 7, block 1 A, Oakley, a subdivision of block 78, plat C, Salt Lake City survey. Lots 18 and 19, block 1, Kensington, a subdivision of lot 5, block 14, plat A, Big Field survey. Lots 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13, block 15, Oakley, a subdivision of a part of sections 26, 27, 34 and' 35, township 1 north, range 1 west, Salt Lake meridone-hal- Five-Acr- e ian. Lot 35, block 3, Hyde Park addition to Salt Lake City, on or after September 15, 1919, and written bids will be received at 525 McIntyre building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Terms of sale, 10 per cent cash, balance upon confirmation of sale. HENRY uOHNSON, Administrator. EDWARD MrGURRIN, W. E. RYDALCH, Attorneys for Administrator. DELINQUENT NOTICE. Liberty Gold Mining Co. Location of principal office, 601 Judge Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice. There are delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of assessment No. 2, levied on the 14th day of July, 1919, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as |